I was recently talking to a couple teenagers about their reading habits (or lack thereof) when one of them explained: "Usually when you see someone our age reading for pleasure, they're just being performative." Reading seems like it requires a lot of work to virtue signal — compared to wearing a T-shirt with a catchy slogan, affixing a sticker to your bumper, or just having the NextDraft app on your iPhone homescreen. But it got me wondering about the current stats related to American reading habits. The latest research is not promising. "Leisure reading among U.S. adults 15 and older has dropped 40 percent in the past 20 years." WaPo (Gift Article): Why so few Americans read for pleasure. This article won't impact the trend, since browsing its findings definitely doesn't qualify as reading for pleasure. 2This is Not OK, Boomer"Officials from the Trump administration have applauded the net outflow, asserting that pressures on government services have eased and that job markets have rebounded. And some supporters of the immigration crackdown say it hasn’t gone far enough. But experts predict looming negative economic and demographic consequences for the United States if the trend persists. Immigrants are a critical work force in many sectors, and the country’s reliance on them is growing as more baby boomers retire." NYT (Gift Article): Immigrant Population in U.S. Drops for the First Time in Decades. For some proponents of this shift, reversing demographic trends trumps the economic damage. 3MEGA: Make Empathy Great Again"Empathy is usually regarded as a virtue, a key to human decency and kindness. And yet, with increasing momentum, voices on the Christian right are preaching that it has become a vice. For them, empathy is a cudgel for the left: It can manipulate caring people into accepting all manner of sins according to a conservative Christian perspective, including abortion access, LGBTQ rights, illegal immigration and certain views on social and racial justice." Is empathy a sin? Some conservative Christians argue it can be. (Maybe they have a point because I have zero empathy for this perspective.) 4Check This Out"Here’s a short but by no means comprehensive list of items that patrons of Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick, Maine, can check out for free: A dumpling steamer. Cannoli-making tubes. A ukulele. A heated leg massager. A Happy Birthday sign. Easels. A foam ax throwing game. A KitchenAid mixer, in chrome or red." NYT (Gift Article): Why Shop? In Maine, the Library of Things Has It All (Almost). "Items in high demand can be checked out for only a week, and include a grain mill for grinding fresh flour, a nut wizard to gather acorns and other nuts, and, this being Maine, a blueberry rake." (As a city boy, I assume those are used to shovel blueberries into your mouth at a faster clip.) 5Extra, ExtraDo One's Damnedest: For those who subscribe to the pay attention to what they do school of thought, there's this: "Two Russian cruise missiles slammed into an American electronics factory in a remote corner of far western Ukraine ... The attack came as Russia carried out one of its largest airstrikes of the war." 6Bottom of the News"There it was: another A&W bag, containing a dozen or so french fries and, this time, two packets of ketchup. This was the fifth night, the fifth bag of fries, the fifth 'Rodolphe.' Two was a potential coincidence, three an oddity, four a puzzle. But five? I was obsessed." The Great French Fry Mystery. |
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Performance Anxiety
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