Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐

61.4K posts

Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 banner
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐

Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐

@Fast72W

Relations industrielles, History of pol-econ, comparative pol-econ of labour market policy, and the future of work. Tweets & Typos are my own.

Canada انضم Mart 2016
1.7K يتبع822 المتابعون
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
💢 Israeli strikes across Gaza kill 5 as attacks continue in central and southern areas On Wednesday, March 25, an Israeli airstrike on the “Al-Sitt Amira” camp south of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza killed Abdulrahman Qanbour, 22, and wounded at least seven others, Wafa reported. On Tuesday night, four civilians were killed in a strike near Al-Sawarha cemetery in central Gaza. Earlier Tuesday, 13-year-old Khaled Arada was shot and killed inside his tent in the Mawasi area of Khan Younis. Additional drone strikes Wednesday morning wounded several Palestinians near a goods distribution site south of Deir al-Balah, according to Wafa. 🎥 Video filmed by journalist Ashraf Amra.
Gaza Notifications@gazanotice

🚨BREAKING: Horrifying moments as the Israeli army bombs a tent among densely packed tents of displaced families on Al-Baraka Street, south of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, resulting in casualties.

English
8
130
205
14.7K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐
@leighbeadon The real problem: landlords who are financing are trying to get bank profit (interest on the debt the landlord is financing) + an inflation proof asset + revenue to maintain the physical capital + a revenue stream. It's a bad play. Only makes sense with major asset appreciation.
English
0
0
1
24
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
🎶𝗖𝗹𝗮𝘀𝘀𝗶𝗰𝗮𝗹 𝗠𝗲𝗹𝗼𝗱𝗶𝗲𝘀 ✨
Why The Cat Concerto still fascinates classical music lovers 🎹✨ Released in 1947, this Oscar-winning Tom & Jerry short is set to Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2—one of the most technically demanding piano pieces ever written. What makes it special? The animation doesn’t just follow the music—it matches real piano technique. Every movement of Tom’s hands reflects how a pianist would actually play this virtuosic work. Add in perfect comedic timing, synchronized with every phrase and flourish, and you get a rare masterpiece where classical music and animation truly become one. A timeless reminder: great music—and great comedy—are all about timing. 🎶 #ClassicalMusic #Liszt #Animation #MusicLovers #Piano
English
14
203
620
15.1K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Jenin Younes
Jenin Younes@JeninYounesEsq·
As I said in a QT (where I also ratio'd you, incidentally), your essay is about people quitting their jobs because they can't handle hearing criticism of Israel and Zionism at work. That's not being purged from public life. There is zero evidence that any alleged reduced acceptance and representation has anything whatsoever to do with Jewish identity, but rather advocacy of genocide, occupation, and ethnic cleansing. Anyone who advocates for genocide, occupation, and ethnic cleansing is likely to face pushback by their colleagues and others, as they should. In short, your entire argument is predicated upon conflating antisemitism with anti-Zionist sentiment, and also conflating Zionists' discomfort with hearing Israel criticized with being excluded from public life. The reasoning is entirely circular, and you're upset because people can't be fooled anymore.
Jesse Brown@JesseBrown

An argument from the legal director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee: since Jews have reached a certain level of acceptance & representation, it does not matter if that acceptance & representation is suddenly & drastically reduced due to racist discrimination.

English
9
96
551
13K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Jason Hickel
Jason Hickel@jasonhickel·
It's actually enraging how the World Bank can suddenly change its mind about industrial policy like "Oops, for the past 45 years we systematically prevented you from using the most obvious tool for sovereign development, keeping you stuck in poverty and dependency, lol".
English
18
632
3.4K
96.2K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Nadira Ali🇵🇸
Nadira Ali🇵🇸@Nadira_ali12·
🇮🇱Amit Halevi: “In the maternity ward 300 terrorists were born” Interviewer: “They're Children not Terrorists” 🇮🇱Amit Halevi: “Yes, Terrorists” Amit Halavi is an Israeli Knesset member who called newborn Palestinian babies Terrorists.
English
381
4.9K
8.7K
202.1K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
In 1996, a guy in Portland who’d already had one novel rejected figured he was never getting published. So he stopped trying to impress anyone and wrote the angriest thing he could. He sold it to a publisher for $6,000. Fewer than 5,000 people bought it. Fox picked up the film rights for $10,000. They gave it to David Fincher. Gave him $63 million, Brad Pitt at $17.5 million, Edward Norton on a redirected pay-or-play deal from a completely different movie. The studio was buzzing internally. Executives loved it. Then they actually watched the finished film. The marketing budget quietly got slashed. The world premiere was at the Venice Film Festival, September 1999. Giorgio Armani was in the audience. The head of the festival was in his seat. Pitt and Norton had smoked a joint and were sitting up in the balcony together. Helena Bonham Carter delivered the line. The festival director stood up and left. The audience booed. Loudly. People walked out. Norton remembered the boos drowning out the film. Two people in the entire building were laughing. You could hear them cackling from the balcony. It was Pitt and Norton. As the credits rolled, Pitt turned to Norton in the dark and said: “That’s the best movie I’m ever going to be in.” Norton said, “I think so too.” They hugged each other. Norton says they were both almost crying. Not from embarrassment. From joy. The film opened to $11 million. The producer got the weekend projection fax and called it “a stab in your heart.” Within a month, Fight Club was out of the top ten. $37 million domestic on a $63 million budget. The Wall Street Journal, Entertainment Weekly, the LA Times all destroyed it. One British critic called it “an inadmissible assault on personal decency.” Fincher printed that review on the DVD case. That DVD sold 13 million copies. Fox had to reissue the special edition after fans bought out the original run. $55 million in rentals on top of that. Entertainment Weekly ranked it the #1 Essential DVD ever made. The novel that sold 5,000 copies became the film rated 8.8 on IMDb with a 96% audience score. The New York Times later called it “the defining cult movie of our time.” The people who booed were sure they were right. The two guys cackling in the balcony knew something the room didn’t. Every generation’s most important work gets rejected by the audience that sees it first. The audience that makes it immortal always comes later.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic

Fight Club was booed when it premiered at the Venice Film Festival (1999) Edward Norton remembers it “got booed hard.” and organizers walked out. During the backlash, Brad Pitt turned to Norton and said: “That’s the best movie I’m ever going to be in.”

English
37
149
1.4K
233.1K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Dr. Annelle Rodriguez Sheline
The student literally reads the names of Palestinian children Israel murdered, and Blinken responds by talking about the trauma of Israelis.
Jonathan Guyer@mideastXmidwest

How does Tony Blinken reconcile his Gaza legacy? Speaking at the Harvard Kennedy School, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked yesterday about how he sees Gaza — and whether the Biden administration should have cut off arms to Israel. The moderator, New York Times journalist David Sanger, described Gaza as probably the "weakest" part of the diplomat's legacy. "Of course, for me, coulda woulda shoulda, is something that will always be there when it comes to Gaza," Mr. Blinken said. "Given the level of human suffering, given the horrific loss of of life among Palestinian women, men, children — you can't help but ask yourself on a regular basis, could we should we have done something different?" A Harvard student pushed further during the Q&A. He asked the former secretary of state more specifically about the 2024 USAID conclusion that Israel had blocked aid to Palestinians despite Mr. Blinken telling Congress the opposite, overriding experts to continue sending weapons to Israel. "You had opportunities to distance yourself and your administration from arming Israel, which committed what leading Holocaust scholars and human rights agencies call a genocide," the student said. "You rejected them and continued arming Israel. This is your legacy. How do you justify to the countless Palestinians, including thousands of children, that died from your decisions?" The student then read the names of several young children were killed in Gaza. "How do you reconcile with this and how do you reconcile with your legacy?" "This is something that I grappled with and will continue to grapple with for as long as I can see into the future," Mr. Blinken said. "Could we, should we have done things differently such that the suffering that people endured, the loss of the children you just listed and so many others could have been averted. The short answer is: Maybe yes. "We had to make judgments. We had to make judgments in real time about how to try to get to a better place. We made those judgments. People will make their own judgments about what we did and what we didn't do. "But let me just add a few things... and my great friend Samantha [Power] is here and we had this, you know, ongoing discussions in our own administration on the question of the assistance that was getting or not getting to Palestinians in Gaza throughout 2024. I was on this every single day, literally every single day. And we had a series of reports come out suggesting that there was an imminent famine that was about to happen. And then the next report would say actually fewer people are in danger even though people were leading terribly hard and difficult lives. "That didn't just happen. It happened because every single day we were on the Israelis to try to get assistance in, to open more crossing points, to flood the zone. They did that profoundly inadequately. They did that in ways that were not the way I would like to have seen it done, but we got some of that done. "When the report that you referred to came out and this was the product of the so-called NSM, the national security memorandum. If you look at that report, it lays out a lot of the actions that Israel were taking that were of more than deep concern to us. And I think that report actually served a very useful function in motivating the Israelis to do better. Not to do as much as they should have and as we would have wanted, but to do better. And at various points the aid went up, the number of trucks going in went up. The distribution even with the trucks going in was a huge problem. Looting, criminality, etc., all difficult problems that are really hard to control for. "But yes, of course, you couldn't be and I wouldn't be human if I didn't ask myself every day, could we have done things differently. "The one thing I want to suggest to you as well… I believe and look maybe I'm wrong that the nature of the the trauma in Israel, which is, there's no hierarchy of trauma, the trauma in Israel, the trauma among Palestinians, the same. The loss of a Palestinian life, the loss of Israeli life, the same. But on the Israeli side, the trauma was such that I believe the determination across that society to take the actions that they took in Gaza was such that irrespective of what we did, they would have continued to do what they did. And cutting off arms, sure, that was an option. But I don't actually believe that at least in the near term, it would have changed things. "And I also believe it would have led to an even wider war as Israel's enemies, and they were multiple, jumped in and that only would have extended the war in Gaza, not ended the war in Gaza. "We thought that the best way to get to an end, to protect people, to help people, was to get to a ceasefire, with hostages coming out and with aid going in. And you know I fully—more than respect—I empathize with people who felt this so, so deeply. I do remain with a question in my mind about why barely a word was spoken in all those months about Hamas, which was an actor too and is responsible for so much of what happened. "But yes, we all look at it, I certainly look at it, and say maybe we could have done differently. Maybe we could have done better by the people. I wish we could have."

English
39
632
2.3K
84.6K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Sameh Ahmed 𓂆 🇵🇸
The child who was subjected to torture (including having cigarettes extinguished on his body and a metal rod inserted into his feet in front of his father)— In a delayed video released by the occupation, the moment of his handover to the International Committee of the Red Cross is documented in the “Yellow Line” area east of Gaza, days after he was detained along with his father. During his detention, he was subjected to severe abuses, while his father remains imprisoned by the occupation to this moment.
English
702
11K
21.5K
958K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Davide Mastracci
Davide Mastracci@DavideMastracci·
Yesterday, @TheAtlantic published an article falsely claiming The Maple listed two specific synagogues in Toronto as being complicit in Israel’s genocide. The author did this by citing a quote from a September 2024 article I wrote about complicity in Israel’s crimes that did not even mention either of these synagogues, and then not telling readers where the quote was from or when it was published. This was seemingly intended to give readers the impression that it came from a December 2025 database of mine the author mentioned that did include public information about those two synagogues. It did not. Moreover, that database did not claim the synagogues are complicit in anything, nor did it even use the word “complicit” anywhere. The author of the piece was almost definitely aware of these facts when they stitched together the paragraph. The Atlantic editors/fact checkers should have caught it and edited it properly. I alerted them to this serious error yesterday, but they have yet to respond or make a correction. The article also didn’t link to or name either piece, so readers weren’t able to check the sources themselves. Here’s the September 2024 article: readthemaple.com/are-canadian-j… And here’s the December 2025 database: gtatoidf.com
English
1
270
786
18.1K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Parody Jeff
Parody Jeff@Parodyjeffx·
ERASING THE WEST BANK. Israel is tearing through Palestinian towns with a mechanical fury, destroying everything. Making daily life impossible until people are forced out.
English
233
4.1K
6.4K
97.7K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Daniel Lambert
Daniel Lambert@dlLambo·
Israel has now approved a law: - Palestinians who resist (their legal right) are executed by hanging - only applies to Palestinians and not settler "terrorists" who continue to murder with impunity as they illegally steal homes The state of Israel needs to be deconstructed
English
241
4.9K
13.2K
142.4K
Travis W. Fast, 收費員, Professeur agrégé 🫐 أُعيد تغريده
Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald·
Someone named Tony Dokoupil, married to an Israeli, angrily berated Ta-Nehisi Coates for his book about the repression of Palestinians in the West Bank, and Bari Weiss thought: "that'd be a great person to make the CBS News anchor and save the show." Just a few months later:
Nick Field@nick_field90

"Weiss’ relaunched “CBS Evening News” with Tony Dokoupil is on track for its lowest-rated first quarter of the 21st century in both total viewers and the advertiser-coveted 25-54 demographic, according to preliminary Nielsen ratings obtained by Status" status.news/p/cbs-news-rat…

English
54
328
2.3K
106.7K