'Tis the Season for Shame and Judgment - The Atlantic - 0 views
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Pandemic shaming, a national pastime since the spring, intensified in the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving. Thousands waited in line, some for many hours, for a preholiday coronavirus test, only to be rebuked as careless, selfish violators of public-health rules. "I do want people to understand that testing on Thursday so you can party on Saturday: That doesn't work," said Barbara Ferrer, Los Angeles County's director of public health. "It's not effective, and you really are in some ways wasting a valuable resource." Those long lines included people whose families were begging them to visit; students whose campuses had just closed for the semester; and people who were observing state rules requiring visitors to get tested 72 hours before arriving. Yet even people who were trying to be careful weren't spared from criticism: Many news articles and comments from public officials portrayed Thanksgiving travelers, regardless of the precautions they were taking, as irresponsible people. On social media, they were maligned as #covidiots, recklessly endangering themselves and their loved ones.
Thieves of Experience: How Google and Facebook Corrupted Capitalism - Los Angeles Revie... - 0 views
From Pariahs to the Privileged: On Keri Leigh Merritt's "Masterless Men" - Los Angeles ... - 0 views
Fabulous, Tragic Kurt Tucholsky - Los Angeles Review of Books - 0 views
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"PERHAPS IT IS COINCIDENCE, perhaps prescience, but Berlinica Publishing has rereleased an out-of-print book in English translation called Germany? Germany! Satirical Writings: The Kurt Tucholsky Reader. A collection of 65 short essays written between 1907 to 1932, the book starts with a spirited introduction by Ralph Blumenthal, who aptly calls Tucholsky "an astute eyewitness to history" and "a puckish critic of the universal human comedy." In a secondary introduction, Harry Zohn (the book's late translator) adds that the man was "the heckling voice in the gallery, and the conscience of Germany.""
The Ashtray Has Landed: The Case of Morris v. Kuhn - Los Angeles Review of Books - 0 views
Deprovincializing Philosophy - Los Angeles Review of Books - 0 views
Beautiful Questions: "How Humans Learn" and the Future of Education - Los Angeles Revie... - 0 views
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