Dan Drezner/Substack:
It’s important to know not just what’s covered but why it’s covered. That’s part of what we do here. Cover the why.
Zachary Wolf/CNN:
Helen Branswell/StatNews:
Jamie Dupree/Regular Order:
Nathaniel Rakich on Democratic control, at state level:
YouTube Video
Faith Hill/Atlantic:
NY Times:
Heather Long/WaPo:
The Dog Not Barking about a U.S. Recession
The mainstream media is not yelling about a recession. Here is why that is surprising.
As the old aphorism goes, if your neighbor loses their job it’s a recession, but if you lose your job, it’ s a depression. The addendum is that if a financial journalist loses their job, it’s the end of the economy as we know it.
...
Conservatives would likely suggest that this is an example of the mainstream media’s leftward bias overwhelming their own economic gloominess; they do not want to be bearish on the economy while the Democrats control the White House. But there are two other explanations that are more compelling. The first is that, as noted above, the aggregate economic data paints a more complex picture, and the economic coverage reflects that complexity.
The second is that even in media and tech, the story is not just about layoffs but about churn. In tech, for example, Insider’s Aki Ito noted earlier this month that even as there have been waves of layoffs, those laid off have found new (and sometimes better) jobs:
It’s important to know not just what’s covered but why it’s covered. That’s part of what we do here. Cover the why.
Wages have been growing much, much faster for workers earnings below the median than for workers earnings above the median. This means that wage inequality has been falling. pic.twitter.com/mwoTcJ58Xs
— Michael R. Strain (@MichaelRStrain) December 27, 2022
Zachary Wolf/CNN:
Why 2022 was a tough year for Trump and 2023 may not be much better
The ongoing end-of-year revelations chipping away at Trump’s facade of power include large developments like the January 6 committee report – and smaller details.
Hidden in court documents is the inconvenient truth that even his loudest acolytes on Fox News knew his 2020 election fantasy was false.
Sean Hannity, the Fox News opinion host, admitted he didn’t “for one second” believe the fraud claims he helped push.
It might be nice for Fox viewers to hear that from Hannity, but the admission came off the air and in a deposition as part of Dominion Voting Systems’ $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against the conservative network, according to the New York Times.
Hannity, as we know from text messages, was in close contact with Trump’s then-chief of staff, Mark Meadows, in the days leading up to January 6.
That the conservative elites in Trump’s circle knew the truth adds context to the fears of fraud they pushed to encourage Republican lawmakers to pass new election security laws in key states.
The biggest threat to democracy is not just Trump, but a Republican Party obstructing all attempts to hold anyone accountable, remaining fully committed to the quest of installing authoritarian rule by a reactionary minority. That was decidedly not the Committee’s focus.
— Thomas Zimmer (@tzimmer_history) December 27, 2022
Helen Branswell/StatNews:
Three years on, the pandemic — and our response — have been jolting. Here’s what even the experts didn’t see coming
In the hope that important lessons for next time can be found in the things we didn’t anticipate this time, STAT asked 23 experts what had surprised them the most about the pandemic.
The TL;DR version: We have a lot of learning left to do.
…
Many of the people STAT interviewed cited SARS-CoV-2’s evolution as their biggest surprise of the pandemic. “It’s been wild, in my view,” said Marion Koopmans, head of virology at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Old and busted: Fake news New hotness: Fake Jews https://t.co/u1tqAMvAT2
— Sir Humphrey ?? (@bdquinn) December 27, 2022
Jamie Dupree/Regular Order:
New Rep. admits lying repeatedly about his resume
One week to go - McCarthy still in limbo
Congressional Democrats were having none of it. "George Santos should resign as Congressman-elect," said Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-TX). "Just about every aspect of his life appears to be a lie." Rep.-Elect Dan Goldman (D-NY) echoed that, saying Santos ‘has now admitted that he’s a total fraud.’
SEAT. Santos made one very clear declaration - "I am not a criminal." "I don’t believe this lie either," said Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ).
BIG APPLE. Maybe the funniest part about the Santos media offensive on Monday was that he went on a radio show where he was being asked questions by ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY). Yes - that Anthony Weiner.
Nathaniel Rakich on Democratic control, at state level:
YouTube Video
Faith Hill/Atlantic:
THE NOCTURNALS
While most people are fast asleep, some ultra-introverts are going about their lives, reveling in the quiet and solitude. They challenge a core assumption of psychology: that all humans need social connection.
They don’t all want to live this way. Some of them have to; they have sleep disorders, or night-shift jobs. But some of them want this very much—enough to seek out those night shifts, to train themselves to wake in the dark. They do this because of the isolation, not in spite of it. I talked to people who painted me a magical picture of their nighttime world: of exquisite, profound solitude; of relief; of escape.
A Trump-supporting patriotic Republican ? https://t.co/AMcKknlZkx
— John Cleese (@JohnCleese) December 27, 2022
NY Times:
The Webb Telescope Is Just Getting Started
The first scientific results are coming in, and the $10 billion instrument is working even better than astronomers had dared to hope.
The telescope, named for James Webb, the NASA administrator during the buildup to the Apollo moon landings, is a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency. It was launched on Christmas one year ago — after two trouble-plagued decades and $10 billion — on a mission to observe the universe in wavelengths no human eye can see. With a primary mirror 21 feet wide, the Webb is seven times as powerful as its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope. Depending on how you do the accounting, one hour of observing time on the telescope can cost NASA $19,000 or more.
But neither NASA nor the astronomers paid all that money and political capital just for pretty pictures — not that anyone is complaining.
“The first images were just the beginning,” said Nancy Levenson, temporary director of the Space Telescope Science Institute, which runs both Webb and the Hubble. “More is needed to turn them into real science.”
Constant MAGA shitposting and trolling when your core consumer base is educated urban liberals turns out to be not great for your massively overvalued business, who knew https://t.co/dStNR19eRR
— Scott Lemieux (@LemieuxLGM) December 27, 2022
glass onion making fun of el0n musk the entire movie and then perfectly summarizing it with this pic.twitter.com/WLHRi6K1MI
— not lena (@bluegreytan) December 25, 2022
Heather Long/WaPo:
America’s teacher shortage will last until pay rises
In October, nearly half of public schools were still struggling to fill at least one teacher vacancy, according to a recently released Education Department survey. But schools in high-poverty neighborhoods were significantly more likely to have unfilled positions. Similarly, school districts report having an especially hard time finding special education, computer science and foreign language teachers, and bus drivers and custodial staff.
This isn’t a new phenomenon, but many signs indicate it worsened during the pandemic. Teachers experienced extreme levels of burnout from Zoom classes and safety concerns during the early days of the pandemic. Then came the culture wars that put teachers and staff under constant scrutiny over any conversations involving history, racism and sexuality. Throw in the Great Resignation, a tight labor market and rapidly rising pay in other professions, and the net result has been some teachers and staff retiring early. Others have quit and gone to work in different professions. And some recent graduates have decided not to enter education at all.