Hi đ | Another Monday, another Lazy Reader reading list ⨠| Last week turned out to be a relatively bad reading week for me. Took a couple of days away from the Internet and my phone, so I wasnât really able to go through my usual volume of longform articles. That said, the few that I did read turned out to be incredible hits. So this weekâs list might be shorter, but itâs definitely still stacked. | In any case, if you missed last weekâs email, here are a few choice picks: | | As with last week, please let me know what you think of the list this week by voting in the poll below. | Happy reading and see you again next Monday! | | | One of the best features ProPublica has ever run. | Of late, the publication has built a name for itself as being brave and unapologetically progressive about its reportage, which is something that I respect and love and want to see in more outlets. But there is also a lot of value in investigations that are more subtle in their storytelling and make their points not in direct ways, but instead let the narrative breathe and hope that the point finds it way to the readersâ hearts. | This piece is a perfect example of this latter. For much of the article, the story follows two different threads that arenât obviously immediately related. In the back fourth of the article, though, the two narratives meetâbut even then, not a head-on collision but just the two threads running side-by-side in a tragic, unjust way. | | | Speaking of tragic: This story starts in some of the most tragic ways imaginable, but then it looks at how crises can forge people to become stronger versions of themselves. | As the title reads: This is a love story. The piece follows two people who were put through the worst life can give, and were brought together by twists of fateâand by sometimes over-eager parents. Inasmuch as this is a story of tragedy and suffering and coming out the other end of it, itâs also a story of how two people can grow and thrive in love, despite their traumas and histories and pain. | | | The current discourse around the political meltdown of the U.S. has, overwhelmingly, revolved around Donald Trump. That the vagaries of this one manâhis greed and corruption and hubris and painful incompetenceâhave led this great country to ruin and has brought the rest of the world along with it. | But, as this piece argues, thatâs just half the story, if that. A more complete look at the U.S.âs history shows that Trump is a logical continuation of the countryâs presidential pedigree, and that his policies are more in line with his predecessors more than we care to accept. Before Trump ever became a political realityâand long after he fades awayâthe U.S. was already and will continue be an imperial force that impedes on other countriesâ sovereignty and deny crucial rights to a certain sect of its own people, often resorting to violence to feed its wants. | The writer says it best: | The American story, it is always worth remembering, is as much a narrative of continuity as change. Division has been the default. Angry contestation is the norm. Liberal and illiberal forces have always been at loggerheads: over race, guns, federalism, how far government should encroach into the lives of its citizens, who those citizens should be and what voting rights should they have. |
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| | How did you like this week's list? | | | | A clarification upfront: This is a republishing of this story, which originally ran on Rolling Stone and is now posted on the authorâs blog. | This story chronicles a boy who is the quintessential loserâfat, antisocial, spoiledâwith a disability to boot. But he has one thing going for him, which is that he has superhuman hearing. He can hear the series of beeps from a phone and know with complete certainty what number was dialed, and can even use that information to hack into other phone lines. He can even impersonate people after hearing their voices, a skill thatâs gotten him into some supposedly secure corporate networks. | But as losers are wont to do, the boy here uses this superpower for nefarious purposes, SWATting people based on false intelligence, among other crimes, leaving a series of borderline terror attacks on random people. When he turned 18, and came within reach of the criminal justice system, his luck ran out. | | | Incredible feature about how fraught our modern concept of âdevelopmentâ can be. This one resonates particularly strongly with me as I spent a lot of time during my days in uni protesting against many of these development projects that would encroach on Indigenous lands and put Indigenous communities at risk. | Iâve mellowed since then, mostly in the way that being employed drains you of your excess time and energy to care about other people. Itâs an insidious machine that leaves us siloed and tired, and helps make our rich overlords even more rich and powerful. But clearly, I still care about this subject deeply. What Iâve come to realize is that struggles closely mirror each other across different communitiesâand so it should also be easy for us to sympathize with one another and support each other. | Governments and big corporations often try to divide us and pit us against each other, but itâd be much easier for us to band together. Clearly this is all much easier said than done, so much so that itâs been a pipe dream for most of history, but stories like this always fill me with hope. | | Thanks for reading! Please, please reach out if you have feedback, suggestions, or questions. Alternatively, you can fill out this super quick survey form. I promise it wonât even take five minutes of your time, and itâll be a HUGE help! | | ALSO: I know some of the stories I recommend might be behind paywalls, and maybe I can help you with access to those. Send me a message and letâs see what we can do đ | Until next Monday! đ |
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