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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The confusion and the lack of ideological rigor in Trumpism “is part of fascism’s nature,” @AdamGopnik writes. https://t.co/Njafesjtg5 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

A new comic offers some interjections to break up one-way conversations. https://t.co/Dnhl93ROCd https://t.co/qWQyVLzphw — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

There is a lot to like about gentle parenting, which centers on acknowledging a child’s feelings and the motivations behind challenging behavior, as opposed to correcting the behavior itself. But what does it neglect? https://t.co/JepfwwOODq — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

In the spirit of his collection’s title, Matthew Morrocco bares as much skin as his subjects do, as if to mimic their vulnerability. https://t.co/e7boiw7XQP — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

”During the lockdown’s early period, sometimes my own instinct was to burrow even deeper into bed.” How COVID made us stir-crazy. https://t.co/AsOrs8KdKH — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The factors that colluded to bring you, once again, to Pret A Manger. https://t.co/jqJH0OU3To — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“All we can do as humans is make life bearable at worst and pleasurable at best, and negativity is such a waste of time and energy,” Wolfgang Tillmans says, in a new interview. A new retrospective of the artist’s work is now open at the @MuseumModernArt. https://t.co/QOlVoDwJPu — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“If you worry what people will think, then you can’t write”: in an excerpt from his forthcoming book, Darryl Pinckney remembers the woman who showed him that a life of writing was possible. https://t.co/amEIdo0U8m — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Will voter suppression become the law? On #NewYorkerRadio, the attorney Mark Elias, who is working on two critical Supreme Court cases challenging voter suppression, talks with @suehalpernVT. Listen here. https://t.co/qA815pc6AQ — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

In as many ways as we have domesticated dogs, they have also perhaps domesticated us. https://t.co/9KN3VpBzMo — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

In this week’s cryptic crossword: Grammy-winning siblings find fault with records (10 letters). https://t.co/eqEJ0raU5Z — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

A once-in-a-century virus demanded trade-offs. Now we seem to have arrived at another judgment, @DhruvKhullar writes: the value of normalcy exceeds that of caution. https://t.co/CAOtwhg5pb — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

.@lsjamison on the best-selling children’s-book series that offered multiple endings, reconciling two conflicting desires of childhood: autonomy and protection. https://t.co/quRtrkUdGM — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Ken Burns, now 69, is perhaps the most acclaimed American documentarian of his generation. His latest project seeks to show that the Holocaust forms part of a decidedly American history. https://t.co/7cuKHWw6yL — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Writers from Tolstoy to T. S. Eliot have written about the mystery and majesty of voyaging by train at night. https://t.co/evPvs4JdSY — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Samuel Johnson was born on this day in 1709. What was the great literary man like in love? https://t.co/ExgrEH6jaL — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Do hermit crabs feel pain? How do scallops “see”? What do whale songs mean? Two new books explore the effort to understand animal communication. https://t.co/cgWomqaezV — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The latest Labor Department report confirmed that over-all inflation pressures are gradually easing—although not as rapidly as many consumers would like. https://t.co/bg87GGpQx2 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

It’s a standard, eight-month interview process that includes an Enneagram test, an overnight camping trip, and a 30-minute TED-style talk to an auditorium of 600 employees. https://t.co/PbEIuxeAb0 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Recently, Ron DeSantis conceded that transporting migrants to Martha’s Vineyard wasn’t really about the struggle of the border cities to take in larger numbers of them. It was about owning the libs. https://t.co/Mv714ypDWo — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

In @newyorkerhumor, a research team reflects on the American experiment, 246 years in. https://t.co/YOS0vcJUyJ — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Nationally, only 19 per cent of kids graduate high school having taken calculus. How far should those kids be required to go in math, and how much should remain optional? https://t.co/vFXVhYjBvc — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The challenging circumstances of Hidetaka Miyazaki’s early life, and his hard-won achievements, provide the template for the emotional trajectory that many players experience in his video games. https://t.co/Hu32xAUTNj — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Most of Hungary’s civic institutions—the courts, the universities, the systems for administering elections—have been debilitated, delegitimatized, hollowed out from within. Will America follow in its footsteps? https://t.co/XtpTJoP8Gu — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

How learning about pattern and motion and symmetry and scale produced in one writer a sense of the divine. https://t.co/HttaBqDbF6 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The challenge of preserving video games isn’t just technical: it’s also about convincing the public that game history *is* history, and that it’s well worth saving. https://t.co/DLgsegW5tz — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Though twice as many Ohioans work in health care, education, and retail than in manufacturing, factory labor persists as a Rust Belt obsession—and that’s reflected in Ohio’s Senate race. https://t.co/QOdeD2YPK8 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

At this year’s #NewYorkerFest, join the king of Carpool Karaoke, @JKCorden, in conversation with @rachsyme. Get your tickets here. https://t.co/8HgwMpnz2J — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

In the hip-hop podcast “Drink Champs,” hosted by the Queens rapper N.O.R.E., friends and enemies talk for so long that they inevitably stumble onto the truth. ​​https://t.co/4w6aGYrVl8 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“The Furrows,” by Namwali Serpell, reclaims and refashions the genre of the elegy, charging it with as much eros as pathos. https://t.co/X1S02ckigu — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Sept. 18, 2022