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The New Yorker @NewYorker
On George Eliot’s birthday, revisit Rebecca Mead on “Middlemarch,” the classic novel about how to bear one’s share of sorrow, as well as to enjoy moments of hard-won happiness. https://t.co/NGmXID6B1s — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Panicked, we rush to attach history and meaning to mass shootings, so that we can assimilate them into our minds,” @mashagessen writes. “But the meaning of terror is senselessness.” https://t.co/yDZWXm7DeY — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The U.S.’s power grid has been called “the largest machine ever built by man.” Decarbonizing the grid is feasible—but the barriers to doing so are many and myriad. https://t.co/utThbwnnSW https://t.co/shtk71IJ6H — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
To say that amazing work is being done to combat climate change and to say that almost no progress has been made is not a contradiction; it’s a simple statement of fact. https://t.co/utThbwnnSW https://t.co/o7Lex8qxCW — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Climate-change narratives typically foreground doom and gloom—they emphasize risk. What’s needed instead, some argue, are narratives that empower people to act. https://t.co/utThbwEqUW https://t.co/fNvYbJBaqv — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@HeidilBlake speaks with David Remnick about the cloud of scandal surrounding FIFA, and how Qatar came to host the World Cup. https://t.co/9LLfrTiP0M — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Sam Bankman-Fried, who founded the cryptocurrency exchange FTX, painted himself as a new type of smart guy who was going to change the world. This type of story has become the perfect vessel for fraud, @jaycaspiankang writes. https://t.co/Xk2gvekybX — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In the aftermath of President Kennedy’s death—he was killed on this day in 1963—New Yorker writers remembered his final days and his political legacy. https://t.co/vAkH95F8SJ — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Carbon dioxide hangs around in the atmosphere for a long time. How long, exactly, is complicated; what matters in terms of the math, though, is not annual but aggregate emissions. https://t.co/utThbwnnSW https://t.co/qRSamwtkq7 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@Rebeccamead_NYC profiles the director Sarah Polley, whose new film, “Women Talking,” contends with the aftermath of sexual assualt—how to process it, or avenge it, or live with it, or even forgive it. https://t.co/CxCdOZBffd — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Mastodon’s interface looks much like Twitter’s. “The template feels comfortingly familiar,” @chaykak writes. “Yet in other ways Mastodon is designed to cultivate an environment very unlike Twitter’s.” https://t.co/5Qwrby1vxD — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Leapfrogging is when less developed countries essentially “skip” carbon-intensive technologies and go straight to greener ones. Instead of ever building out a grid that relies on coal, a country could invest instead in a grid that relies on solar power. https://t.co/utThbwEqUW https://t.co/JVBLZVSGdj — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Americans consume roughly 11,000 watts of energy every moment of every day. An American household of four is responsible for the same emissions as 16 Argentineans, 640 Ugandans, or a Somali village of 16,000. https://t.co/utThbwnnSW https://t.co/jWVqkX9jf1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
J is for jobs, jobs, jobs. https://t.co/utThbwnnSW https://t.co/1NveVQX0ZN — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by @steinbergart. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/rOnkqRDt3V — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In 2013, engineers predicted that the Alaskan island Kivalina will be fully under water by 2025. But relocation—which will take years and could cost as much as $400 million—has barely begun. https://t.co/JO0UYRsWoP — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“I had pictured icebergs as diamonds jutting from the sea, but the ones we encountered were flat slabs 100 feet high,” @dwbwriter writes. “These were mountains in motion.” https://t.co/BqXyQ6L7Rn — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The mystical mumbo-jumbo that saturates much of “Star Wars” is entirely absent from the new series “Andor.” “I began to wonder whether ‘Andor’ was prestige TV masquerading as a ‘Star Wars’ story,” @jonmichaud writes. https://t.co/MK372wFhoG — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Mark your calendars: between Monday and Thursday, select New Yorker Store products are on sale for 20 per cent off; on Black Friday, shoppers receive a 30-per-cent discount sitewide. https://t.co/ZVsntTnr3X — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@billmckibben writes about the risks of solar geoengineering, which some scientists see as a last resort to combat the climate crisis. https://t.co/CSAK3ouMp6 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@IChotiner speaks with an expert in elections law about what the 2022 midterm results mean for 2024, and what longer-term threats to American democracy remain. https://t.co/fyPvb1s9j0 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“No, I haven’t published anything. I almost wrote a tweet last month about how I like cheese, but I deleted it because I didn’t want anyone to get mad at me.” https://t.co/lJazfma9xk — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In his recent photo series, the photographer Carlos Jaramillo, a first-generation American born to a Mexican mother and a Colombian father, explores the flux that exists between two cultures. https://t.co/Q20rxJMX3g — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Birds, over all, are not faring well. Ornithologically, these are dystopian times, an avian apocalypse. But not for wild turkeys, whose numbers in New England are still rising. https://t.co/k2JDTYyOsY — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The World Cup is soccer’s marquee event and grandest showcase. “But it’s not, by a long shot, where you’ll see the best playing,” @jodyrosen writes. https://t.co/XMKp1grla0 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“I drank a lot when I lived in Qatar,” @ClareMalone writes. Read her essay on the emirate’s strict regulation of alcohol consumption, and why the last-minute beer ban before the World Cup comes as no surprise. https://t.co/6g0j78asRB — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
West Virginia, once reliant on a coal economy, now has more than 400 wind turbines, which collectively can produce enough energy to power more than 200,000 homes. This is the first generation of West Virginians to trade work underground for work up high. https://t.co/dhdyqMWZiF — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Is the kind of mastery we associate with “prodigies” actually available to every child, with the right encouragement? Shinichi Suzuki believed so. https://t.co/TLAwcoGVrl — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by Trevor Spaulding. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/Nu10qKkz69 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The Lebanese French trumpeter Ibrahim Maalouf’s preferred instrument is a unique trumpet with four valves (one more than the usual three), which allows him to play the quarter tones of classical Arabic music. https://t.co/qSnsyW0tAF — PolitiTweet.org