I skipped last Saturday’s post, since it was Christmas Eve (iiin the drunk tank…), but since the last roundup I’ve written up the Daulton Varsho/Gabriel Moreno trade and the still in-limbo Carlos Correa signing with the Mets.
Over at Paste, I ranked the ten best new board games of 2022, and posted reviews of two of them – Kites, a real-time cooperative game; and Lacrimosa, a heavier game based on the life of Mozart. For those of you interested in my board game content, I’m going to do some small giveaways of promos and small expansions via my Instagram account starting this week, so feel free to follow me there if you’re interested.
I’ve got a bunch of non-work writing to do this weekend before I get back to prospect calls on Monday, with a new issue of my free email newsletter next up once this post is done.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: This is about two weeks old, but the New York Times had an extremely in-depth investigative report on the toll of Putin’s war on Ukraine.
- This week in “anti-abortion laws are going to kill women,” a woman in Louisiana was having a miscarriage and two ERs turned her away because they were afraid of prosecution under the state’s draconian anti-abortion law.
- Meanwhile, an Arizona anti-abortion law has allowed a man to sue the clinic that gave his ex-wife an abortion, claiming wrongful death.
- I know there was A Discourse around this article, but you should read the actual piece about the so-called “nepo babies” that ran in Vulture, as it’s more nuanced and thoughtful than the title or cover might imply.
- Also from the New York Times’ investigative unit, this December 19th story started the flood of revelations about Representative-Elect George Santos’s fictional resume.
- Rolling Stone talked to Dave Coutts, the singer of the 1990s band Talk Show, which was Stone Temple Pilots without singer Scott Weiland, about his experience in that one-album band and his post-music career.
- The hoax about computerized voting machines that flipped votes from Trump to Biden comes from a longtime fraudster named Dennis Montgomery, who sold a bunch of his so-called evidence to Mike Lindell and also has a history of selling bogus information to the federal government.
- Des Moines, Iowa, removed police “school resource officers” from schools and tried restorative practices instead. In These Times looks at some of the results from the first year, where arrests dropped by about 80% but police calls only increased from 9 to 13. Not really mentioned is that this system, in addition to improving outcomes and keeping more kids in school and out of prison, is how much less it costs taxpayers, too.
- Slate’s Justin Peters wrote about the finale of the “great Internet grievance wars” and what the so-called Twitter files actually say, even as some loud right-wing accounts on the site are still complaining about “shadowbanning” as we speak.
- Aaron Rupar wrote about his experiences getting suspended from Twitter by a petulant Elon Musk. This came as the billionaire claimed an Internet account was responsible for a stalker trying to find him, even though police found no link.
- Two journalists for the Bend Bulletin were reporting on the impact of a severe cold snap on the city’s homeless, and decided to get involved to try to help one such woman despite the dictum that journalists shouldn’t become part of any story they cover.
- Texas hired a man to train school board members, even though he’d been convicted twice of defrauding federal agencies. Of course, this training was supposed to be an alternative to so-called “woke” agendas. Grifters have realized how easy it is to target these people.
- Vox has a list of seven reasons why the planet might not actually be doomed, based on the proceedings at this month’s COP15 summit in Montréal.
- This New York Times story on a South Korean tour group that was stranded in Buffalo by the snow, only to find themselves taken in by a local couple who just happened to have a bunch of Korean ingredients in their kitchen, is both a rare bit of good news and a testament to the power of food to bring people together.
- The anti-vaxxers and other COVID denialists who’ve sown distrust and ignorance around COVID vaccine have led to rises in chicken pox, measles, and other vaccine-preventable diseases as the dupes fooled by their misinformation are now skipping other critical vaccines.
- The Atlantic points out that Republicans’ anti-vaccine policies have killed more Republicans than Democrats, although the article doesn’t try to pinpoint a death toll from this.
- Meanwhile, Florida’s hyperpartisan Supreme Court has impaneled a grand jury to “investigate” COVID-19 vaccines. I assume they’ll find whatever Gov. DeSantis tells them to find.
- DeSantis also reached out to Chaya Raichik, the hatemonger behind the anti-LGBTQ LibsOfTikTok account, after her identity became public, offering to hide her at his Governor’s Mansion even though she is a California resident. I don’t understand why Florida taxpayers are okay with this sort of use of their money, but it appears they are.