WORD OF MOUTH: WTF Edition

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If you have the stomach to think about what is happening, read on. If you’d rather skip the news, and immerse yourself in something else, skip ahead to the ESCAPE section.

ENGAGE

Non-Fiction: What If We Get It Right? Visions of Climate Futures — Ayana Elizabeth Johnson

The Atlantic: The Attack on Birthright Citizenship is a Big Test for the Constitution — Adam Serwer

Podcast: Amicus, with Dahlia Lithwick: The Federal Funding Freeze, with Steve Vladek

Podcast: Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara: The Kiss the Ring Presidency, with Ian Bremmer

Podcast: Brian Lehrer Show: What to Know About Deportation, with members of the Immigrant Defense Project.

Non-Fiction: Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza, a Reckoning— Peter Beinart

ESCAPE

Good news, for a change: Reasons To Be Cheerful — David Byrne

Mystery: Death at La Fenice — Donna Leon

Podcast: Ezra Klein: Burned Out? Start Here, with Oliver Burkeman

Podcast: Radiolab: The Wubi Effect: how Chinese programmers solved the problem of getting 70,000 plus characters of Chinese onto a computer keyboard.

Podcast: On the Media: Wars are Won By Stories — Brooke Gladstone interviews Elyse Graham, author of Book and Dagger – How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War Two

Documentary: Inside the Mind of a Dog — Andy Mitchell

TV: Daisy Jones and the Six — Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Webber

On Protest: 1, 2, 3

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1. When hate comes to your hometown — Jodi Rudoren, The Forward

    With police forces in between, pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli protesters stand across the street from one another in Montclair, New Jersey. Photo by Shayna Rudoren

    Say it loud and say it clear, the guy in the black hoodie began. We don’t want no Zionists here! He punched his fist in the air as the crowd joined in. We don’t want no Zionists here! We don’t want no Zionists here! We don’t want no Zionists here!

    Welcome to Montclair, New Jersey, circa 2024. A New York suburb of 40,000 known for its racial diversity, liberal politics, magnet schools, impossible real estate prices (and taxes), panoply of restaurants, annual film festival, frequent Yacht Rock concerts and, now, hate speech. Stephen Colbert’s hometown, and mine. …

    I know a lot of my Jewish neighbors, the folks that were on an adjacent corner with Israeli flags and signs like “Denying Jewish history and our connection to Israel is an act of hate,” heard the “No Zionists here” chant as equivalent to “No Jews.” They rightfully point out that it’s impossible to imagine a similar scenario in Montclair targeting any other religious or ethnic group. …

    And whichever definition [of Zionism] you choose, whichever group you target, I’m going to be uncomfortable with people chanting that they should not be allowed in my hometown.

    Which, I should be clear, does not mean those people should not be allowed to chant it. I believe one of the proudest moments in our history was a Jewish ACLU lawyer defending neo-Nazis’ right to march in Skokie. If the Montclair City Council added a Palestinian flag under the Israeli and Ukrainian ones on our flagpole on Church Street, I’d be fine with it.

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    2. The Campus Protests Make Me Uncomfortable. And They Fill Me with Hope

    —Peter Beinart, The Beinart Notebook

    It’s important not to get distracted by one particular video you might see and to focus attention on the core demands of this movement. … The core of this movement is the demand to end university and American governmental complicity with Israel’s system of oppression, which is now culminated in this horrifying slaughter of people in Gaza.

    This complicity must end. It must end because, among other things, it puts Jews in danger. We must see the lie that you can construct a system of Jewish safety on the destruction and brutalization of another people. We should recognize that October the 7th is just a taste of the horrors that will come to everybody if this system of oppression is deepened and entrenched. Because a system of violence breeds violence. That does not excuse Hamas from its moral responsibility for the horrors of October 7th, not for a second. That’s why I said it’s critical that we promote the idea, that we argue for a movement that makes the distinction between ethical and unethical resistance.

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    3. How Protesters Can Actually Help Palestinians

    — Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times

    Student protesters: I admire your empathy for Gazans, your concern for the world, your moral ambition to make a difference.

    But I worry about how peaceful protests have tipped into occupations of buildings, risks to commencements and what I see as undue tolerance of antisemitism, chaos, vandalism and extremism. I’m afraid the more aggressive actions may be hurting the Gazans you are trying to help.

    I’m shaped in my thinking by the Vietnam War protests of the 1960s. Students who protested then were right on the merits: The war was unwinnable and conducted in ways that were reckless and immoral.

    Yet those students didn’t shorten that terrible war; instead, they probably prolonged it. Leftist activists in 1968 didn’t achieve their goal of electing the peace candidate Gene McCarthy; rather, the turmoil and more violent protests helped elect Richard Nixon, who pledged to restore order — and then dragged the war out and expanded it to Cambodia.

    I think that history is worth remembering today. Good intentions are not enough. Empathy is not enough. I’m sure we all agree that it’s outcomes that matter. So the question I would ask you to ask yourselves is: Are your encampments and sacrifices — more than 1,000 protesters have been arrested so far, and unknown numbers have been suspended or expelled — actually helping Gazans?

    I’ve been strongly criticizing Israel’s conduct in Gaza since last fall, and President Biden’s unconditional support for the war. So while my heart’s with the cause, it seems to me that the campus upheavals have distracted from the crisis in Gaza, rather than called attention to it. …

    Protest itself is a good thing: Students can write letters to the editor, circulate petitions, hold peaceful rallies and call their members of Congress (or flood the comments section of this column!). I’m all for demanding more humanitarian aid to Gaza and a suspension of transfers of offensive weapons to Israel until it adheres to humanitarian law, plus a major push for a Palestinian state.

    Finally, let me offer two concrete suggestions for how we can meaningfully help Palestinians that don’t involve occupying campuses, getting kicked out of college and risking the prolongation of the war.

    First, raise funds for organizations actively helping Gazans, like Save the Children, Gisha or International Rescue Committee. That may seem discouragingly modest but it will help real people in desperate need.

    Second, this may sound zany, but how about raising money to send as many of your student leaders as possible this summer to live in the West Bank and learn from Palestinians there (while engaging with Israelis on the way in or out)? West Bank monitors say that a recent Israeli crackdown on foreigners helping Palestinians, by denying entry or deporting people, has made this more difficult but not impossible.

    Student visitors must be prudent and cautious but could study Arabic, teach English and volunteer with human rights organizations on the ground. Palestinians in parts of the West Bank are under siege, periodically attacked by settlers and in need of observers and advocates.

    Those students returning at the end of the summer would have a much deeper understanding of the issues and how to help. It would be life-changing, an education as rich as any you’re getting on campus.

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    Word of Mouth: Really, Truly, Almost Spring

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    Musical: A Sign of the Times Lindsay Hope Pearlman, Richard J. Robin, Gabriel Barre, JoAnne M. Hunter, Joseph Church.

    Extrauterine Children: The IVF Ruling Is About Who Gets to Raise Your Children — Dahlia Lithwick in SLATE.

    Novel: Lady in the Lake — Laura Lippman

    Podcast: The Wars in Ukraine and Gaza Have Changed. America’s Policy Hasn’t — Richard Haass on the Ezra Klein Show.

    Podcast: Trump and the Age of Disinformation — Barb McQuade on Stay Tuned with Preet.

    Double Standards: Israel, Gaza and Double Standards, Including Our Own — Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times.

    TV: Avatar: the Last Air Bender — Albert Kim.

    Movie: Shortcomings — Randall Park.

    Idea: Dobbs was never self-limiting to abortion—it was a save-the-date card for the religious right’s plan to come for the rest of our reproductive freedoms. …

    This is the two-step wherein the state forces women to have babies they cannot raise, does nothing to help support them, then swoops in to seize the babies when their parents are seen as endangering them—a phenomenon that of course predominantly hurts poor women and women of color. The state also ensures that adoptions flow in the direction of more “worthy” parents, which means heterosexual and Christian parents, a regime also built into the legal framework. The list of people who cannot assert autonomy and control over their potential children has, in the course of a few weeks, now expanded from LGBTQ+ parents, single parents, poor parents, and parents of color to anyone who has started the process of IVF in Alabama.” —The IVF Ruling Is About Who Gets to Raise Your Children — Dahlia Lithwick in SLATE.

    Word of Mouth: Almost Spring Edition

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    Memoir: Go Back and Get It: A Memoir of Race, Inheritance, and Intergenerational Healing — Dionne Ford

    Non-Fiction: Fluke: Chance, Chaos, and Why Everything We Do Matters — Brian Klaas

    Movie: American Fiction — Cord Jefferson

    Movie: The Meyerowitz Stories(new and selected) — Noah Baumbach

    TV: Mr and Mrs Smith — Donald Glover, Francesca Sloane

    TV: Magpie Murders — Anthony Horowitz, Peter Cattaneo

    Idea: “President Biden has thus far declined to impose consequences on Netanyahu for his repeated disregard of U.S. positions and interests. Ending the double standard which sets a lower bar for Israel, and requiring the mutual recognition of the right to statehood and compliance with the other Quartet Principles, would be an even-handed place to start. It is essential for the U.S. to enforce this mutual recognition, as it seeks to not merely end the current war, but set a course to finally resolve the underlying conflict, and ensure that the horrors suffered by Israelis and Palestinians never happen again.”

    Both the Israeli and Palestinian governments should be obligated to recognize the other’s right to statehoodDylan Williams in the Forward

    Idea: “It’s tempting to see Navalny’s apparent murder, as some American analysts have, as a sign of weakness on the part of Putin. But a dictator’s ability to annihilate what he fears is a measure of his hold on power, as is his ability to choose the time to strike.”

    The Death of Alexey Navalny, Putin’s Most Formidable Opponent — Masha Gessen in the New Yorker

    WORD OF MOUTH: Mid-Winter

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    NONFICTION: DOPPELGANGER: A Trip into the Mirror World — Naomi Klein

    YES! A Handy Manual for Republicans Commenting on Mass Shootings — Jamie Raskin

    TV: Schmigadoon! Season 2 — Ken Daurio, Cinco Paul

    TV: The Brothers Sun —Brad Falchuk, Amy Wang, Brian Wu

    MOVIE: The Woman King — Gina Prince-Bythewood

    PODCAST: “Chaos Theory Explains It.” Brian Klaas, author of  Fluke: Chance, Chaos, and Why Everything We Do Matters, on the Brian Lehrer Show.

    SPIRITUAL REWIRING: Train Yourself to Always Show Up — Rabbi Sharon Brous

    IDEA: “The spread of lies and conspiracies online is now so rampant that it threatens public health and, quite possibly, the survival of representative democracy. The solution to this informational crisis, however, is not to look to tech oligarchs to disappear people we don’t like; it’s to get serious about demanding an information commons that can be counted upon as a basic civic right.” Naomi Klein

    IDEA: “It’s time to pass the universal background check and restore the expired ban on military-style assault rifles, which was constitutional and effective. Weapons of war are unnecessary for hunting, recreation or self-defense in the home, which are the purposes of individual gun ownership outside of military service protected by the Second Amendment.” — Jamie Raskin

    WORD OF MOUTH: Early Winter

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    Novel: The Bandit Queens — Parini Shroff

    Non-Fiction: Your Face Belongs To Us: A Secretive Startup’s Quest To End Privacy as We Know It — Kashmir Hill

    Psychology: Spite: The Upside of Your Dark Side — Simon McCarthy-Jones

    Memoir: Foolish: Tales of Assimilation, Determination, and Humiliation — Sarah Cooper

    Memoir: Misfit: Growing Up Awkward in the ’80s — Gary Gulman

    Movie: Nyad – Jimmy Chin, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi

    Novel: The Thursday Murder Club — Richard Osman

    Podcast: What Now? –– Trevor Noah