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The case for all-party primaries

Dec. 2nd, 2025 02:54 pm
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Posted by Gintautas Dumcius

The running theme of a number of initiatives primed for the 2026 ballot is that of a fist shaken in Beacon Hill’s direction. Depending on the measure, a finger may extend from the fist.

Count a proposed law eliminating political party primaries as the latter gesture. A group of Massachusetts election reformers is looking to instead create a single all-party primary with everyone in the same pool, regardless of party affiliation.

The current primary process, the reformers contend, is dominated by insiders, leading to Massachusetts earning a reputation for one of the least competitive states in the nation.

Under their proposal, the two candidates with the most votes would move onto the general election, not unlike mayoral elections in Boston. The proposal is one of several initiative petitions that keep clearing hurdles, but still face a long and winding road to get before voters in November. Rent control is on that list, as is placing the state Legislature and the governor’s office under the state records law.

But the all-party primary is among the proposed ballot questions that have flown somewhat under the radar. That’s despite the motley crew behind it, which calls itself the Coalition for Healthy Democracy. (Not to be confused with the Coalition for a Healthy Massachusetts, which has pushed a ballot initiative outlawing recreational marijuana use.)

Danielle Allen, a Harvard professor who dropped out of the 2022 Democratic primary for governor, is one of them. On her way out, after she acknowledged the delegate math in the caucuses wasn’t adding up, she vowed to “blow up ballot access,” as POLITICO put it. Nearly four years later, she’s attempting to follow through on her vow.

“This is a way of rebooting competition in this state,” Allen said on the State House steps Monday before supporters delivered the signatures, collected by paid gatherers, to state officials. 

“An all party primary incentivizes elected officials to be responsible to the whole electorate,” she added.

Tanisha Sullivan, president of the NAACP New England Area Conference, who lost a 2022 Democratic primary bid to longtime Secretary of State Bill Galvin, also endorsed the measure, as did Jennifer Nassour, a longtime GOP donor, former party chair and fundraiser.

Nassour backed Nikki Haley, the former US ambassador, over Donald Trump in the 2024 GOP presidential primary, saying both he and Joe Biden have nothing but the “rearview mirror” to look at.

She said if all-party primaries were available at the national level, Haley would have had a “better shot” against Trump. Nassour said if a “beta test” succeeds here, there will be a stronger case to take it to the national level.

“I just think that both sides are very, very hesitant to believe that this works,” Nassour said. “And I personally think that this would benefit the Republican Party. I think that a lot of our super strong candidates would come out of an all party primary in the top two and then move on to a general election and be able to be victorious.”

Would you vote for the all-party primary measure? Let me know what you think of the proposal: gin@massterlist.com.

HAPPENING TODAY

8:00 | Boston Biotech Summit takes place featuring panel discussions among industry leaders on topics like capital flows, policy shifts and Boston’s ecosystem outlook. | Boynton Gateway 495 Columbia St., Somerville | Tickets and More Info

9:00 | New England Power Generators Association hosts the New England Energy Summit in partnership with The Dupont Group. Alex Fitzsimmons, acting undersecretary of energy for the U.S. Department of Energy, will be the keynote speaker. The event will feature discussions among industry leaders, end users and policy makers on the financial market and policy impacts on energy, AI and data centers. | The Colonnade Hotel 120 Huntington Ave., Boston |Tickets

11:00 | Supporters of the proposed ballot initiative that would limit annual rent increases to no more than 5% gather before turning in signatures to the Secretary of State to qualify the measure for the 2026 ballot. | Church on the Hill, 140 Bowdoin St, Boston

12:00 | Auditor Diana DiZoglio speaks to the Woburn Rotary Club. | Woburn Public Library, 45 Pleasant St, Woburn

4:00 | Meet Boston hosts its annual meeting. Discussion topics include details about the recent Michelin Guide selections in the area, the new Greater Boston Sports Commission, Frostival and a “Supplier Diversity” effort with Conan Harris & Associates set to launch in early 2026. The event will also offer updates on 2026 events like the FIFA World Cup, the 250th Anniversary of the American Revolution and the return of Tall Ships. Mayor Michelle Wu and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll are expected to give remarks. The event is not open to the public. | InterContinental Boston 510 Atlantic Ave., Boston

EARLY ED ADVOCATE WEIGHS RUN AGAINST COLLINS

Latoya Gayle, an early education and childcare advocate who lives in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood, is considering a run against Sen. Nick Collins.

“I am exploring it very seriously,” she told MASSterList. “It’s something I’ve been thinking about for a while.”

Gayle, a 46-year-old mother of four, brought up Collins’ role in the death of Mayor Michelle Wu’s property tax shift proposal in 2024. Collins questioned the numbers behind the proposal, which would have temporarily shifted more of the property tax burden onto commercial properties to avoid a jump in residential tax bills. Wu pointed to the Senate shifting the goalposts on what it would take for a vote in the chamber.

“Over the last year, people have been asking me when I’m going to run. Some of that has been in response to the way he responded to Mayor Wu’s proposal to raise commercial taxes in the city,” Gayle said. “People weren’t happy with that.”

MASSterList reported last month that Wu had privately expressed interest in helping candidates who would run against Collins and William Brownsberger, another state senator who opposed her property tax proposal. “I will say this, I’m not running because the mayor asked me to run,” Gayle said.

She cited the high cost of housing in the city. Her oldest just graduated from college, she said, and young people are wondering whether they can afford to keep living in Boston.

Gayle, who previously considered a run for District 3 City Council in 2023, opened up a Senate campaign committee on Monday. She said she expects to make a decision on her run in the coming weeks. 

Dorchester resident Malik Shaw has also filed paperwork for a Senate campaign committee.

FROM BEACON HILL

EDUCATION STANDARDS: State officials, including Gov. Maura Healey, sketched out educational standards for high school graduation. The “framework” calls for mandatory courses, senior projects and an “end-of-course” assessment, which drew a rebuke from the Massachusetts Teachers Association. The union was the main backer of a ballot question that removed the MCAS test from graduation requirements. – Boston Globe

LUCK RUNS OUT: The state Lottery plans to stop offering “Lucky for Life,” and start selling higher-priced tickets for a “Millionaire for Life” game instead. – State House News Service

NEWS NEXT DOOR

RENTS COOLING: Asking rents in Boston are down, despite supply constraints. It’s happening for the first time since 2021 due to economic uncertainty and a drop in international student enrollment. – Bloomberg

MOULTON ON ICE: Rep. Seth Moulton called conditions inside ICE’s Burlington facility “inhumane” after an oversight visit. The congressman, who is running for Senate, said not much has changed since his last visit in June, when he highlighted lack of access to adequate food for detainees. – Newburyport News

TAKE TWO IN SPRINGFIELD: Johnnie McKnight, a teacher who came in 245 votes behind Springfield Rep. Bud Williams in 2024, is making another attempt to unseat the longtime incumbent. – Western Mass. Politics and Insight

BOSTON SIGNS ON: The city of Boston has signed onto a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration’s restrictions that deep-sixed $29 million that would help homeless people. – Boston Globe

SELF-DEPORT ORDER: A family that came over from Ecuador, regular attendees of immigration authority check-ins and without criminal records, were told at a routine check-in last month that they needed to self-deport. – GBH News

250TH CELEBRATIONS: Arlington is one of the municipalities celebrating a 250th birthday, applying for government grants that can boost its tourism and promote lesser known Revolutionary War battles. – Your Arlington

MORE HEADLINES

Rep. Trahan pitches standardization for paying college athletes

Malden-based housing nonprofit receives $5 million from Bezos

The post The case for all-party primaries appeared first on MASSterList.

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Posted by Joel

Book 6 of the Iliad may be one of the most carefully structured, most dynamic books of the epic. (And likely one of the most read books as well.) It is also crucial for fleshing out the world within which the Iliadic conflicts unfolds: it provides a rare view into the city of Troy, lets us hear the voices of the women in the city, and takes “man-slaughtering” Hektor out of combat and close to his home. There are three major scenes to consider: (1) the scenes of violence prior to Hektor’s return to the city; (2) the famous exchange between Glaukos and Diomedes that runs while Hektor is going to Troy; (3) the exchanges between Hektor and the people in the city, including Hekuba, Paris, Helen, and Andromache. 

Interlocking Themes and Structures in Iliad 6

One of the things that makes this sequence really effective is how moments in each scene anticipate the contents of what follows. For instance, the catalogue of deaths to start the book provide “obituaries” of Trojan warriors that contain some curious detail and Agamemnon’s promise to kill even male Trojans in the womb echoes poignantly when we see (and hear about) Hektor’s son Astyanax at the end of the book. Consider as well, the narrative Diomedes provides at 6.130-140. He explains that it is dangerous to rival gods, but uses a strange narrative of how Lykourgos opposed an infant Dionysus and drove the baby god to the sea. Zeus punishes Lykourgos with blindness.

In this tale, Dionysus is rescued by Thetis, and summarizes that no one lasts long, “once they have become hateful to the gods” (ἦν, ἐπεὶ ἀθανάτοισιν ἀπήχθετο πᾶσι θεοῖσιν, 6.140). This theme is echoed later when Glaukos summarizes the later days of Bellerophon, wandering the Aleian plain after he also “became hateful to the gods” (6.200). And details from this scene may also anticipate what follows: Christos Tsagalis has argued that the invocation of the Maenads and Dionysus in Diomedes’ speech foreshadows Andromache being compared to a mad-woman in Troy and the odd inclusion of an infant Dionysus, saved here and only here by Thetis, may also prime audiences to think about infants on the coast of Asia Minor who survive and those who don’t.

These thematic interconnections are joined by a surprising structure in book 6.  Hektor’s brother, Helenos, instructs him to go tell the Trojan women to sacrifice to Athena. Hektor leaves to do so at 6.116 but he does not arrive there until 6.237. As an audience, we are supposed to imagine that the intervening conversation between Glaukos and Diomedes takes place while Hektor travels through Troy. This is interesting in part because it is fairly unique in Homer, although it is not entirely strange. Often actions are delayed to create suspense, as when Patroklos waits several books to return to tell Achilles who is wounded (from book 11 until 16). But at this scale, this scene has interesting consequences for thinking about Homeric narrative structure.

There is an phenomenon described by “Zielinski’s Law” that suggests that Homeric poetry can only move forward and does not have flashbacks or show simultaneous action. The structure of this book certainly complicates this observation. At one level, it is clear that in real time performance, a poet cannot literally depict two scenes at the same time (although two poets could!). But, at another, the “law” (which really isn’t binding) implies a misunderstanding of the limits of epic art. Homeric poetry tends not to show simultaneous action, but it is certainly capable of doing so. Book 6 has multiple instances of simultaneous action: pay close attention as well to Paris’ departure from his abode and when Hektor catches up with him. 

Homeric ‘Obituaries’

As you can observe from the catalogue of deaths that tends to accompany the aristeia of individual heroes, there’s a connection between the glory attached to a hero and ‘fame’ or at least naming of his victim. Indeed, as Hektor puts it in book 7, there is some connection between the fame of the victor and the vanquished:

Homer, Iliad 7.89-91

“…They will heap up a mound [sêma] on the broad Hellespont
And someone of the men who are born in the future may say
As he says over the wine-faced sea in his many-benched ship:
This is the marker [sêma] of a man who died long ago,
A man whom shining Hektor killed when he was at his best”
So someone someday will say. And my glory will never perish”

σῆμά τέ οἱ χεύωσιν ἐπὶ πλατεῖ ῾Ελλησπόντῳ.
καί ποτέ τις εἴπῃσι καὶ ὀψιγόνων ἀνθρώπων
νηῒ πολυκλήϊδι πλέων ἐπὶ οἴνοπα πόντον·
ἀνδρὸς μὲν τόδε σῆμα πάλαι κατατεθνηῶτος,
ὅν ποτ’ ἀριστεύοντα κατέκτανε φαίδιμος ῞Εκτωρ.
ὥς ποτέ τις ἐρέει· τὸ δ’ ἐμὸν κλέος οὔ ποτ’ ὀλεῖται.

Peter Gainsford has done an analysis of all of the named killings in the Iliad and it provides two really important observations: first, far more Trojan dead are named than Achaean and, second, despite that imbalance, Hektor kills the most named people in the Iliad, followed closely by Patroklos and Achilles. The ‘obituaries’ of these heroes, how they die and who they are, can be said to increase the glory or at least magnify the accomplishments of the chief warriors.

But I think there’s more to it than that. Book 6 starts with a series of Trojan Deaths at the hands of the Achaeans. The stories increase in length and provide interesting detail

Homer, Iliad 6.20-28

“Euryalos killed Dresos and Opheltios.

Then he went after Aisēpos and Pēdasos, whom once

The water nymph Abarbareē bore to blameless Boukolion.

Boukolion was a son of noble Laomedon,

The oldest by birth, but his mother gave birth to him in secret.

He had sex with the nymph while shepherding the sheep.

She became pregnant and gave birth to twin boys.

Euryalos, the son of Mekistes, undid their lives and shining limbs

And then stripped the weapons from their shoulders.”

 In their commentary on book 6, Barbara Graziosi and Johannes Haubold write on the Boukolion passage:

“The poet provides recondite information on Boukolion’s family and draws attention to this fact: Boukolion and his sons are born in obscure circumstances and marginal settings…Commentators debate whether the genealogy should be considered ‘conscious fiction’ or whether it reflects a local tradition…. The text, however, does not encourage us to view these options as alternatives: the poet tells us about a family that would otherwise remain obscure, and its history has a strong local flavour, rather than enjoying Panhellenic fame. ”

As they put it, just as with the catalogue of ships and other seeming digressions, the death scenes provide an opportunity for acknowledging local traditions by integrating their stories into the Homeric narrative. Given some of the details of this passage, however, such as the names “Cowherd” (Boukolion) and “Mud-woman” or “Not-foreigner” (Abarbareē), this passage could be seen as “improvised” for the context.

I think the somewhat legendary story here–a herdsman having a tryst with a divine woman–both echoes other Trojan stories (like the affair of Aphrodite and Anchises) while also preparing us for the actions of book 6 that, in sequence, show us (1) Agamemnon threatening to kill even infants in the womb; (2) Diomedes and Glaukos finding common ground across the war because of their genealogical narratives; and (3) the women and families of Troy, centered around a warriors brief return home. There’s a kind of anticipation in the themes of the initial deaths in this book, differing in an important way from the theomachy of book 5.

Some guiding questions for Book 6

What is the effect of the exchange between Diomedes and Glaukos on book 6 and on the whole?

How do Hektor’s conversations with Helen, Hecuba, and Andromache serve to characterize him and what impact do they have on the larger narrative?

What is Andromache’s advice for Hektor and why doesn’t he take it?

Red figure vase: Side A: Scene of fighting from the Trojan War; Achilles dismounts from his chariot to kill the fallen Eurymachus. Side B: Scenes of fighting from the Trojan War, with Glaucus (frontal, centre) and Menestheus. Subsidiary decoration: rays from the base and a lotus/palmette band above the panel. Much added red and white for details. There are holes at the base of the handles and a channel/drain hole in the base, suggesting the vessel was used for cooling wine.
From National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne: ca. 540 BCE from Chalkis, Greece. Lidded belly amphora, black-glazed with figure panels.

On Zielinski’s Law and Book 6 in general

n.b this is not an exhaustive bibliography. If you’d like anything else included, please let me know. I will have a separate list for posts on Agamemnon’s violence and the Diomedes/Glaukos episode

Arthur, M. B.. “The divided world of Iliad VI.” Reflections of women in antiquity. Ed. Foley, Helene Peet. New York: Gordon & Breach Science Publ., 1981. 19-44.

Bowie, Angus. “Narrative and emotion in the « Iliad »: Andromache and Helen.” Emotions and narrative in ancient literature and beyond: studies in honour of Irene de Jong. Eds. De Bakker, Mathieu, Van den Berg, Baukje and Klooster, Jacqueline. Mnemosyne. Supplements; 451. Leiden ; Boston (Mass.): Brill, 2022. 48-61. Doi: 10.1163/9789004506053_004

Carbon, Jan. Mathieu. “Zielinski’s Law and Its Validity.” Diss. 2003.

Frazer, Richard McIlwaine. “Hesiod’s Titanomachy as an illustration of Zielinski’s law.” Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies, vol. XXII, 1981, pp. 5-9.

Barbara Graziosi, Johannes Haubold, Homer. Iliad, Book VI. Cambridge Greek and Latin classics. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Griffin, Jasper. “Homeric Pathos and Objectivity.” The Classical Quarterly 26, no. 2 (1976): 161–87. http://www.jstor.org/stable/638263.

Nünlist, René. “Der Homerische Erzähler Und Das Sogenannte Sukzessionsgesetz.” Museum Helveticum 55, no. 1 (1998): 2–8. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24821098.

Pratt, Louise Harrison. “The parental ethos of the « Iliad ».” Constructions of childhood in ancient Greece and Italy. Eds. Cohen, Ada and Rutter, Jeremy B.. Hesperia. Supplement; 41. Princeton (N. J.): American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2007. 25-40.

Purves, Alex C. “HOMER AND THE ART OF OVERTAKING.” The American Journal of Philology 132, no. 4 (2011): 523–51. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41415775.

Scodel, Ruth. “Zielinski’s Law Reconsidered.” Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-) 138, no. 1 (2008): 107–25. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40212076.

Slater, W. J. “Lyric Narrative: Structure and Principle.” Classical Antiquity 2, no. 1 (1983): 117–32. https://doi.org/10.2307/25010788.

Tsagalis, Christos. 2008. The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics. Hellenic Studies Series 29. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies.

Vergados, Athanassios. “Rethinking Zieliński’s law and its application on Hesiod’s « Theogony ».” Paideia, vol. 74, no. 2, 2019, pp. 1239-1257.

 

graphics/partio - 1.19.2

Dec. 2nd, 2025 02:26 pm
[syndicated profile] freshport_news_feed
graphics/partio: update the port to the latest version 1.19.2

Replace our SWIG interface patch with two ones from upstream:
- Add typemaps to ensure that the std::map parameters work
as expected
- Add overloaded methods to avoid ambiguous parameter errors
in newer versions of SWIG

Reported by: portscout
letzan: (Default)
[personal profile] letzan

High-level stats for week of 2025-11-18 - 2025-11-24


  • Total works categorized F/F on AO3: 9992 (-256 from last week)

  • Works I classified F/F: 5516 (-155 from last week) (2351 new, 3165 continued)

  • 0.57% of all 961364 AO3 works I've classified F/F were updated this week






A few callouts this week:


  • Wicked is back in the top five on the strength of the new movie. Since we still have strong showings from KPop Demon Hunters, League of Legends, Hazbin Hotel, and Wednesday, the result is that Harry Potter falls from the top five for the first time in four years.
  • Alien Stage returns after a week away, and Game of Thrones returns after a few mnths away. They replace Once Upon a Time and Boku no Hero Academia.
  • Wednesday celebrates 160 consecutive weeks on the chart, and Project SEKAI COLORFUL STAGE! reaches 180 consecutive weeks.
  • Elasticella's dreamwidth-based sapphic stocking stuffers exchange is ramping up for its seventh year. Sign-ups are open until December 6, and fills are open through the end of December.



Full top-20 table and description of methodology after the jump )

Rule 34 Time - the author trifecta

Dec. 2nd, 2025 08:06 am
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[personal profile] petra
This Tumblr post has Salman Rushdie's account of meeting Umberto Eco and Mario Vargas Llosa after each of them had trashed the other two in the press, and discovering that they got along extremely well in person.

OT3!

Having read none of them save a little Vargas Llosa en español, I can't begin to write it, but I can Want it.

*puts it in the Maybe Someday Yuletide tag*

The Expanse season 5

Dec. 2nd, 2025 07:52 am
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[personal profile] tassosss
I spent Sunday watching The Expanse season 5, that tracks to Nemesis Games and part of Babylon's Ashes. I just started reading the latter yesterday. The show continues to deliver, and my only complaint was Amos's haircut (felt too styled for a trek through the wilderness.)

spoilers for book and show )

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