Why do so many Americans have to go so far to get to the nearest grocery store? The problem is especially bad in rural America. "Tens of millions of Americans live in low-income communities with no easy access to fresh groceries, and the general consensus is that these places just don’t have what it takes to attract and sustain a supermarket. They’re either too poor or too sparsely populated to generate sufficient spending on groceries, or they can’t overcome a racist pattern of corporate redlining." But it turns out that, like many problems, food deserts are the result of a policy decisions. In fact, the phrase Food Desert didn't even show up until the mid-nineties, shortly after the widespread emergence of the reality it describes. Stacy Mitchell in The Atlantic (Gift Article) on The Great Grocery Squeeze. "Food deserts are not an inevitable consequence of poverty or low population density, and they didn’t materialize around the country for no reason. Something happened. That something was a specific federal policy change in the 1980s. It was supposed to reward the biggest retail chains for their efficiency. Instead, it devastated poor and rural communities by pushing out grocery stores and inflating the cost of food. Food deserts will not go away until that mistake is reversed." 2Flush With Kash"Patel vowed to sever the FBI’s intelligence-gathering activities from the rest of its mission and said he would 'shut down' the bureau’s headquarters building on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., and 'reopen it the next day as a museum of the ‘deep state.' ... In a separate interview with conservative strategist Steve Bannon, Patel said he and others 'will go out and find the conspirators not just in government but in the media.'" Yes, it's true that, even given the current lineup of nominees for key posts, Kash Patel is a particularly bad and dangerous pick to lead the FBI. But it's worth backing up a bit to remind ourselves that a president firing an FBI director before their term is up is itself a particularly bad and dangerous move. David Frum in The Atlantic (Gift Article): A Constitutional Crisis Greater Than Watergate. "Something that was regarded as outrageously unacceptable in 2017—treating an FBI director as just another Trump aide—has been semi-normalized even before President-Elect Trump takes office. The firing of Wray is the real outrage. The obnoxious nomination of Patel slathers frosting and sprinkles on the outrage." 3Hunter Slatherer"President Biden ultimately believed his son was 'singled out politically' and they 'tried to break his son in order to break him.'" How President Biden came to the decision to pardon his son Hunter. There has been a lot of criticism of Biden for making this decision, including some from his own party. It's a topic worthy of debate. But the notion that this pardon gives Trump a greenlight use pardons (especially as they relate to family members) more liberally is nonsensical. In 2020, Trump pardoned Charles Kushner (Jared's father) and over the weekend, he nominated him to be ambassador to France. 4'Tis Folly to Be Wise"Aristotle taught that all human beings want to know. Our own experience teaches us that all human beings also want not to know, sometimes fiercely so. This has always been true, but there are certain historical periods when the denial of evident truths seems to be gaining the upper hand, as if some psychological virus were spreading by unknown means, the antidote suddenly powerless. This is one of those periods." Mark Lilla in the NYT(Gift Article): The Surprising Allure of Ignorance. "Mesmerized crowds follow preposterous prophets, irrational rumors trigger fanatical acts and magical thinking crowds out common sense and expertise. And to top it off we have elite prophets of ignorance, those learned despisers of learning who idealize 'the people' and encourage them to resist doubt and build ramparts around their fixed beliefs." (Other than that, we're pretty clear headed...) 5Extra, ExtraSyrian Pound: "Russia’s indiscriminate bombing, in particular, turned the tide against the rebels. It also transformed then rebel-held cities such as Aleppo and Homs into moonscapes of rubble and rebar. In all, the U.N. has documented more than 350,000 deaths but says this is 'certainly an undercount. Today, however, Russia, Iran and Lebanon are distracted and depleted." What’s happening in Syria? How an old conflict in the Middle East erupted again. The rebels are betting that a distracted Russia and a depleted Iran/Hezbollah created an opportunity. What to know about the complex, long-simmering civil war. 6Bottom of the News"In China, there are a registries of haunted apartments. If you’re willing to live somewhere with a sinister history, you can get a discount of 30% ... Avatar Robot Cafe Dawn in Tokyo is staffed by robot waiters that are remotely controlled by workers with disabilities working from home ... Photographs of sporting events in the 1960–70s have a blue haze in the background that’s absent in modern photos. It’s because everyone was smoking in the arena." Tom Whitwell's always interesting list of learnings. 52 things I learned in 2024. |