| Daily Comment Money Is the Oxygen on Which the Fire of Global Warming Burns What if the banking, asset-management, and insurance industries decided to move away from fossil fuels? By Bill McKibben | | | News Desk An A.C.L.U. Attorney on Fighting Trump’s Asylum Ban Lee Gelernt says that the recent bans have failed to meet the most basic standards laid out by Congress, which invalidate policies that are “arbitrary and capricious.” By Jonathan Blitzer | News Desk Where Does All the Plastic Go? Roughly one per cent of all the plastic that has ever gone into the ocean is floating on its surface. What happened to the rest of it? By Carolyn Kormann | | | Books Edward Snowden and the Rise of Whistle-Blower Culture In his memoir, he chronicles his life game by game, from Nintendo to the N.S.A. By Jill Lepore | Culture Desk “Midnight Traveler” Expands the Refugee Documentary The ethical dilemma of looking does not evaporate because Hassan Fazili filmed his own family in crisis—in fact, it mushrooms and multiplies. By Doreen St. Félix | | | PAID POST A revolutionary new argument against the false promise of meritocracy “A sociological masterpiece. Far too many readers will recognize themselves in this brilliant critique, and they will feel a rush of anger, a pang of regret, and a burning desire to remake the system.” - Franklin Foer, author of World Without Mind | | | | Page-Turner The 2019 National Book Awards Longlist: Translated Literature The ten titles on the longlist, originally written in ten different languages, include seven novels, two memoirs, and a collection of essays. By The New Yorker | The Art World The Amy Sherald Effect In the painter’s realism, race applies as a condition and a cause for resetting the mainstream of Western art. By Peter Schjeldahl | | | Postscript Ric Ocasek’s Eternal Cool The Cars singer, who died on Sunday, channelled powerful emotion and seemed to float above it, as mysteriously as the ever-present sunglasses that obscured his eyes. By Sarah Larson | On and Off the Avenue Tender Buttons, a One-of-a-Kind New York Business, Closes Shop The Upper East Side institution wasn’t just a shop; it was performance art. It presented a new parsing of common objects, with Wunderkammer charm. By Troy Patterson | | | | | Daily Shouts Literal Writing Exercises Flex your writing muscles with these workouts, including the seated poor-posture press, the blinking-cursor warrior pose, paper crunches, and more. By Irving Ruan and Mia Mercado | Daily Cartoon Tuesday, September 17th By Robert Leighton | | | | | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment