A weekly dispatch taking aim at the relentless absurdity of the ďťż24-hour news cycle.
The Israeli military temporarily released a Palestinian prisoner bound in zip-tie handcuffs to tell the thousands sheltering in a Khan Younis hospital to evacuate before the facility would be bombed; among the refugees was the prisonerâs mother, and Israeli forces shot him fatally after he delivered the message. âWe donât expect Gazans really to be able to return to their homes until this mission is completed,â said Matt Miller, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of State. President Joe Biden phoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and conditioned his support of Israelâs air strikes in Rafah on âa credible and executable plan for ensuring the safety of and support forâ civilians therein; since then, a member of Netanyahuâs cabinet planned a ground invasion of the city, Netanyahu said that Israel would âfinish the jobâ in Gaza if hostages taken by Hamas were not returned by Ramadan, and the Biden Administration declared its intention to supply Israel with still more munitions. âI will be damned if Iâm going to give another nickel to the Netanyahu government in order to continue this war against the Palestinian people,â said Senator Bernie Sanders. Senator Chris Van Hollen condemned Israelâs actions in Gaza as war crimes, then voted to send the country $14 billion in aid. The Water Transport Workers Federation of India refused to load and unload weapons cargo meant for Israel, and Yemeni Houthis disrupted Israel-bound shipments. Container ship arrivals in the Gulf of Aden were down 92 percent.
The state of Wisconsin adopted legislative maps that will reduce a long-standing Republican gerrymandering edge. Nearly one-fifth of Americans believe in a conspiracy theory involving the strategic government use of Taylor Swift to increase Bidenâs reelection chances. The White House announced Bidenâs imminent annual physical, which will not include a cognitive test. In a poll, 62 percent of respondents said they thought Biden was not mentally sharp, while only 47 percent said so of Donald Trump. Wind farms were found not to be âdriving whales crazy,â despite Trumpâs assertion that they were. Campaigning in Pennsylvania, Trump attended Philadelphiaâs Sneaker Con to reveal the design of his âNever Surrenderâ line of footwear, the MSRP of which is $399; the announcement was met with a chorus of boos even as the shoes sold out within hours; the day before, Trump received a fine of $355 million that would require the sale of an estimated 1,127,820 pairs to pay off. âNobodyâs paying their bills,â said Trump of NATO member countries that do not devote at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product to defense. âIf theyâre not going to pay, weâre not going to protect,â he continued. Trumpâs deputy director of communications posted a video clip of the former president watching high school cheerleaders dance for him; Trump made for an audience of one, and shimmied in return.
A New York man exploited a housing loophole that allowed him to live rent-free for five years in the New Yorker Hotel; he later filed paperwork claiming ownership of the building and charged another tenant for rent. A school in Florida asked parents for permission to teach âa book written by an African American.â âIâm hit! Iâm hit!â cried a Florida deputy after mistaking for gunshots the sound of falling acorns. A virgin stingray in a North Carolina aquarium is pregnant. Senator Elizabeth Warren said that the Rock would be in her âdream blunt rotation.â The NYPD dance team performed a choreographed routine on a local New York news station; they received poor reviews. âHow many school music programs got defunded for this?â asked Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez upon seeing the footage. âLake Micah
WTF is this ADHD collage of unrelated articles?
Ha ha, itâs from the Harperâs Weekly Review newsletter.
Launched in 2000, this free, weekly email collates and reflows news from the past seven days into a satirical chronicle. Itâs like the Harperâs Index or Findings, but takes aim at the relentless absurdity of the 24-hour news cycle.
Fun stuff. The Harperâs Index is great too but I think (not 100% sure) that itâs subscriber-only content.
Yes and I do appreciate you copy and pasting the entirety of the article up there. Because you are right, the official link wouldnât allow me to read much further without subscribing.
Huh, odd, I can see the entire content at the linked (substack) page w/o being logged in. The harpers.org version has an annoying pop-over but you can read it all there too for $0. I actually DO have a paid sub to the print+online mag so maybe theyâve set some magic cookie in my browser? BTW Harperâs Index != Harperâs Review & I think the former is paywalled from the unwashed masses but you might be able to read archived versions of it if youâre so inclined and suitably unwashed.
I was wondering what the movie Fallen Leaves had to do with this article. They donât appear to have a default image for social sharing so it picked up the picture from the first ad.
Fallen Leaves looks good by the way.
Interesting. I donât know if this is a Lemmy problem or a Harperâs problem, or both?
Harperâs or Substack as the link is from Harperâs account on Substack. Not a Lemmy issue. There is a lead image for each post, itâs just that the ad is first image on the page and is getting picked up when sharing. Theyâll figure it out I guess.