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  1. PEN America Is Fighting For Its Life In 2015, PEN America, the organization devoted to defending free speech, chose to honor the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo at its annual gala. A few months earlier, Islamic extremists had murdered 12 people at the publicationā€™s offices in Paris. The rationale for recognizing the magazine seemed airtight: People had been killed for expressing themselves, and PEN Americaā€™s mission is to protect people targeted for what they express. For some writers connected with the organization, however, this reasoning was not so obvious. Six of them boycotted the gala, and 242 signed a letter of protest. In their eyes, Charlie Hebdoā€™s editorial staff, including those recently killed, embodied a political perspective that was unworthy of plaudits. The magazine frequently mocked Islam (and, in particular, caricatured the Prophet Muhammad), and this was a form of punching down, insulting a population that, as the letter put it, ā€œis already marginalized, embattled, and victimized.ā€PEN America defended itself, the gala went on, and Salman Rushdie, a former president of the group and a writer who knows what it means to have his life endangered because of his art, was given the last word in a New York Times article about the brouhaha: ā€œIf PEN as a free speech organization canā€™t defend and celebrate people who have been murdered for drawing pictures, then frankly the organization is not worth the name.ā€[Read: Salman Rushdie strikes back]Rushdie, who helped found PEN Americaā€™s World Voices festival two decades ago, had no confusion about what the organization represented. Its role was not to take a position on the place of Islam in France or comment on the French stateā€™s aggressive secularizing policies, which Charlie Hebdoā€™s editors had championed through their cartoons. No, PEN America was simply there to protect the right of artists to draw, of writers to write.The clash over Charlie Hebdo felt, in the moment, like a blip. It was not a blip. The forces that demanded PEN America stand for moreā€”that it fight for issues its members considered to be matters of social justice, as opposed to the squishier but essential liberal ideals of openness and dialogueā€”have in the past two months managed to bring the organization to its knees. Unsurprisingly, the events of October 7, and all that followed, were the precipitating cause.This afternoon, PEN America announced that it is canceling its World Voices festivalā€”this year was to be the 20th anniversary of the annual international gathering of writers that Rushdie conceived as a way to encourage cross-cultural conversation and champion embattled artists. A cascade of authors, either out of conviction or under pressure, felt they couldnā€™t take part. PEN America had already decided last week to cancel its literary awards for the year after nearly half of the nominees withdrew their names from consideration. And its annual gala, a black-tie fundraiser scheduled for the middle of May, also seems hard to imagine right now. The language of the protest, too, has reached new extremes, with the most recent salvo demanding the resignation of PEN Americaā€™s CEO, Suzanne Nossel; its president, Jennifer Finney Boylan; and its entire board. Everyone Iā€™ve spoken to there is in a state of high panic and deep sadness.The existential conflict surrounding PEN Americaā€”the letters and counter-letters, withdrawals and statements of principleā€”captures the enormous rupture on the left since Hamasā€™s invasion of southern Israel on October 7 and Israelā€™s deadly response in Gaza. Can an organization that sees itself as above politics, that sees itself straightforwardly as a support system for an open society, be allowed to exist anymore? For the protesting writers, this lofty mission represents an unforgivable moral abdication at a moment of crisis. But if they have their way and PEN America doesnā€™t survive, where will these authors turn when they need defending?From my own reading of the various letters of protest, the main demand of the now dozens upon dozens of writers protesting PEN America is this: They want the organization to say the word genocideā€”for PEN America to declare that what Israel is doing in Gaza is a deliberate effort to wipe out the Palestinian people, and act accordingly. From the perspective of the protesting writers, this interpretation of what has transpired since October 7 is both irrefutable and cause for repeating the charge as loudly as possible. ā€œPEN America states that ā€˜the coreā€™ of its mission is to ā€˜support the right to disagree,ā€™ā€ reads the most recent open letter. ā€œBut among writers of conscience, there is no disagreement. There is fact and fiction. The fact is that Israel is leading a genocide of the Palestinian people.ā€Plenty of arguments exist on the side of those who do not see what Israel is doing as genocideā€”and they are compelling even for people like myself who believe that Israel has acted recklessly and in a way that constitutes collective punishment. But the writers protesting PEN America do not seem interested in a conversation or scrutiny or trying to contend with what Israelā€™s post-October 7 motives might be. They seem driven instead by an understandably deep emotional response to a devastating death toll and, like the greater pro-Palestinian movement, have decided to use the word ā€œgenocideā€ as the most resonant way to describe a conflict in which, according to Hamasā€™s Health Ministry, more than 33,000 Palestinians have now been killed. It has given them a sense of righteousness that is impossible to contain within an organization built on the ā€œright to disagree.ā€To follow the volley of letters and responses from PEN America over the past two months is to get a close-up look at the growing irreconcilability of these positions. The first serious sign of protest came in a March 14 letter from a group of writers, including Naomi Klein, Michelle Alexander, and Lorrie Moore, who declared they would boycott the World Voices festival this year. Their stated reason was their unhappiness with what they took to be PEN Americaā€™s anemic response to the death and destruction in Gaza. They accused the organization of taking too long to call for a cease-fire and then, when it finally did, of demanding that it be ā€œmutually agreedā€ (a reasonable phrasing given that, according to the U.S. State Department, it is Hamas that has rejected the latest cease-fire proposal). This was not ā€œa clear call,ā€ the writers said. Moreover, why had PEN America, they wanted to know, not joined the movement to boycott, divest, and sanction Israel? Sure, PEN America had put out a number of statements of concern about Palestinian writers and the worsening situation in Gaza (more than 40 statements, actually, since October 7), but where was the ā€œactionā€?The letter sought redress; it was not an attempt to burn it all down. And PEN America responded. In a letter that appeared a week later, the organization reasserted its mission without apology: ā€œFor some, referencing nuance is moral betrayal. For others, failure to do so is unconscionable. As an organization open to all writers, we see no alternative but to remain home to this diversity of opinions and perspectives, even if, for some, that very openness becomes reason to exit.ā€ The response also included an unambiguous call for ā€œan immediate ceasefire and release of the hostages,ā€ an invitation for open dialogue with the protesters, and a commitment to increase the financial contribution to an emergency fund for Palestinian writers.An excess of ā€œopenness,ā€ the writers insisted in a response, was not their issue with PEN America; rather it was ā€œa series of specific failures to act with urgency and substance in the face of ongoing war crimes, including a failure to use language to name these crimes as such under international humanitarian law.ā€ To uncover what they saw as the bias behind this failure, the writers were calling for ā€œa thorough review and examination of the conduct and performance of PEN America,ā€ on the issue of Israel and Palestine. And they got what they wanted. On April 16, the organization announced to its staff the creation of a working group that would look back at the previous decade of statements on Israel and Palestine, and also make sure there was consistency in PEN Americaā€™s public remarks with regards to other conflicts, such as those in Ukraine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Myanmar, and Sudan.But things continued to get worse. As PEN America geared up to announce the finalists for its awards, a large group of authors declared that they were taking their books out of contention. In a letter last week, Finney Boylan, a writer who became the organizationā€™s president in December, tried to stanch the bleeding, calling Israelā€™s actions in Gaza an ā€œabominationā€ (though not a genocide), arguing for the value of ā€œconversation,ā€ and lamenting that ā€œsome authors would rather silence themselves than be associated with an organization that defends free speech and dissent.ā€Nothing seemed to convince the growing number of protesters. On April 17, those who had boycotted the awards delivered a letter, one which was then endorsed by the original group of writers protesting the festival. This one had none of the conciliatory tone of the original letter. It accused PEN America of propagating ā€œahistorical, Zionist propaganda under the guise of neutrality,ā€ of ā€œparroting hasbara talking points,ā€ using the Hebrew word for ā€œexplanationā€ that anti-Israel activists associate with Israeli government spin. Nossel in particular was singled out as someone who apparently had ā€œlongstanding commitments to Zionism, Islamophobia, and imperial wars in the Middle East.ā€ The letter was nasty, absurd in its histrionics, suggesting essentially that PEN America was in cahoots with the Israeli military. PEN America was guilty of no less than ā€œcomplicity in normalizing genocide.ā€The people at PEN America that I spoke with were left speechless by this letter, but also felt that it confirmed their perceptions of the protesters and their true motivesā€”I understand, for example, why some who read the letter wonder whether the personal animus directed at Nossel is not just because she is the organizationā€™s leader but because she is Jewish. The demand of these writers from the beginning, it now seemed clear, was not about the number of statements PEN America made about Palestinian writers and whether they matched the number made about Ukrainian writers. At question was language. And if PEN America was not willing to use the word genocide, then it existed on the other side of a bright red line, outside the encampment. The breach was complete. The organization now appears broken in ways that seem impossible to imagine repairing.When I spoke to Nossel last week, before the news about the canceled awards ceremony and festival, she put a brave face on PEN Americaā€™s predicament and insisted that she was staying true to the organizationā€™s mission. Nossel is a former State Department official and was the executive director of Amnesty International USA before joining PEN America as its CEO in 2013. ā€œWe see ourselves as guardians of open discourse,ā€ she told me. ā€œWe really believe that we have to bring about a moment when these conversations can be had, and that, ultimately, the defeat of dialogue and the turning away from dialogue is something dangerous for our democracy. We donā€™t want to just throw up our hands.ā€ The festival, she said, was supposed to exemplify this philosophy. One of the events now canceled was to be a panel on ā€œThe Palestinian Exception to Free Speech,ā€ about threats to those who speak up for Palestinian rights. Recent statements put out by PEN America have criticized the banning of Students for Justice in Palestine on college campuses and the decision by USC to cancel the valedictory speech of a pro-Palestinian student.The fundamental misperception at the center of this conflict is that PEN America sees itself as a free-speech organization, while the protesters see it as a channel to express their political views. Iā€™ve read some of the letters addressed to PEN America from writers who decided to opt out of the festivalā€”some after first saying they would participate despite the pressureā€”and there is a clear pattern: Many seemed worried about failing a political litmus test, that they would be throwing in their lot with the normalizers of genocide if they took part in a panel on translation or memoir writing. One letter from a prominent author who had chosen to withdraw mentioned ā€œongoing harassment.ā€PEN America has grown enormously in the past 10 years, from an organization with a budget of $2 million to one with $24 million, and a staff that went from 14 to nearly 100 in that time. It has worked on a wide range of issues, from cataloging book banning to reporting on writers under assault in Latin America. Some of the people Iā€™ve spoken with who have had leadership positions at PEN America have wondered, though, if an outsize focus on threats to free speech from the right has unwittingly contributed to the politicization and the current confusion about what PEN is supposed to be for. One of these PEN America insiders told me that he thought 90 percent of the issues the organization had been campaigning for could be construed as progressive causes.The groupā€™s free-speech absolutism may have become muddied in the process. ā€œI would say that in the end, if we can get out of this situation,ā€ this same person told me, ā€œif we can find a way to come back to the preservation of the essential mission, which is to stand for free speech and free expression, and the proliferating nature of those demands and those challenges in a 21st century, and not be so exclusively wedded to our fights on behalf of the left, then I think we will have made a real step forward.ā€Note that ā€œif.ā€ At the moment, momentum is on the side of the protest, which will claim the cancellation of the festival as a victory. It now seems entirely possible that PEN America may not survive this episode. But I wonder whether these writers really appreciate exactly who will be most hurt if they achieve their goal. How many organizations exist that raise tens of thousands of dollars to support translators and emerging writers? How many festivals bring to the United States creative people from around the world to talk about their art, to debate and discuss the harsh conditions under which they work? How many organizations keep track of imprisoned authors? Does it really make sense to jettison such an entity without first thinking through what its absence would mean, what a world without PEN, without a defense of expression, whatever form it might take, would actually look like?Or maybe just listen to the voice of a writer like Aatish Taseer who turned to PEN America at a moment of need. The prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, offended by a critical article Taseer wrote in Time magazine, canceled Taseerā€™s overseas Indian citizenship (a special status accorded to Indians living abroad). This left Taseer ā€œcompletely bereft,ā€ he told me, unable to return to the country and see his family, including his grandmother before she died. He asked PEN America for help. ā€œThey pulled every possible lever they could on my behalf to try and bring attention to my case, and to try to bring about a change in my situation,ā€ he said. ā€œIā€™m sure that PEN has made missteps, but I would rather be able to influence the organization from within than trying to boycott it or shut it down,ā€ he said. Given how much PEN America has done for him, the disappearance of such an organization, in spite of its imperfections, would be a ā€œterrible loss.ā€
    theatlantic.com
  2. Sphere Is the Mind Killer What itā€™s like to groove on Earthā€™s only LED moon.
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  3. Bringing a Social Movement to Life The author Adam Hochschild recommends books that vividly illustrate moments of great change.
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  4. AIā€™s Unending Thirst This is Atlantic Intelligence, a limited-run series in which our writers help you wrap your mind around artificial intelligence and a new machine age. Sign up here.In last weekā€™s newsletter, I described artificial intelligence as data-hungry. But the technology is also quite thirsty, relying on data centers that require not just a tremendous amount of energy, but water to cool themselves with.Karen Hao, a contributing writer at The Atlantic, recently visited one such data center in Goodyear, Arizona. Microsoft owns the facility, which may eventually use an estimated 56 million gallons of drinking water each yearā€”ā€œequivalent to the amount used by 670 Goodyear families,ā€ Karen notes. No oneā€™s at risk of going thirsty, but as Karen writes, ā€œthe supply of water in the region is quite limited, and the more thatā€™s taken up by data centers, the less there is for, say, supplying tap water to new housing.ā€I followed up with Karen to ask about AIā€™s growing demands on our environment. Itā€™s still a matter of debate whether the technology is truly worth its immense costs, even as tech companies commit more and more resources to it. How should we be thinking about all of this? ā€œCompanies are laying down data centers faster than ever in the race to build generative AI, but there has been very little accounting of their impacts on the environment,ā€ Karen told me. ā€œThereā€™s a narrowing window in which the public should be asking: Is this what we want? Once the facilities have been built, it will be much more difficult to reverse the decision.ā€ā€” Damon Beres, senior editor Illustration by Erik Carter AI Is Taking Water From the DesertBy Karen Hao One scorching day this past September, I made the dangerous decision to try to circumnavigate some data centers. The ones I chose sit between a regional airport and some farm fields in Goodyear, Arizona, half an hourā€™s drive west of downtown Phoenix. When my Uber pulled up beside the unmarked buildings, the temperature was 97 degrees Fahrenheit. The air crackled with a latent energy, and some kind of pulsating sound was emanating from the electric wires above my head, or maybe from the buildings themselves. With no shelter from the blinding sunlight, I began to lose my sense of what was real. Microsoft announced its plans for this location, and two others not so far away, back in 2019ā€”a week after the company revealed its initial $1 billion investment in OpenAI, the buzzy start-up that would later release ChatGPT. From that time on, OpenAI began to train its models exclusively on Microsoftā€™s servers; any query for an OpenAI product would flow through Microsoftā€™s cloud-computing network, Azure. In part to meet that demand, Microsoft has been adding data centers at a stupendous rate, spending more than $10 billion on cloud-computing capacity in every quarter of late. One semiconductor analyst called this ā€œthe largest infrastructure buildout that humanity has ever seen.ā€ Iā€™d traveled out to Arizona to see it for myself. The Goodyear site stretched along the road farther than my eyes could see. A black fence and tufts of desert plants lined its perimeter. I began to walk its length, clutching my phone and two bottles of water. According to city documents, Microsoft bought 279 acres for this location. For now, the plot holds two finished buildings, thick and squat, with vents and pipes visible along their sides. A third building is under construction, and seven more are on the way. Each will be decked out with rows of servers and computers that must be kept below a certain temperature. The complex has been designated partly for OpenAIā€™s use, according to a person familiar with the plan. (Both Microsoft and OpenAI declined to comment on this assertion.) And Microsoft plans to absorb its excess heat with a steady flow of air and, as needed, evaporated drinking water. Use of the latter is projected to reach more than 50 million gallons every year. Read the full article.What to Read Next Would limitlessness make us better writers?: ā€œAI embodies hypotheticals I can only imagine for myself,ā€ Rachel Khong writes. ā€œBut I believe human impediments are what lead us to create meaningful art.ā€ Neal Stephensonā€™s most stunning prediction: ā€œThe sci-fi legend coined the term metaverse, but he was most prescient about our AI age,ā€ Matteo Wong writes. P.S.Earlier this week, President Joe Biden signed legislation that could result in a TikTok ban if the app isnā€™t divested from its Chinese parent company. As Charlie Warzel writes for The Atlantic, this will be a more complicated process than it seemsā€”particularly when it comes to the appā€™s powerful AI algorithm.ā€” Damon
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  5. Trumpā€™s Legal Argument Is a Path to Dictatorship The notion that Donald Trumpā€™s supporters believe that he should be able to overthrow the government and get away with it sounds like hyperbole, an absurd and uncharitable caricature of conservative thought. Except that is exactly what Trumpā€™s attorney D. John Sauer argued before the Supreme Court yesterday, taking the position that former presidents have ā€œabsolute immunityā€ for so-called official acts they take in office.ā€œHow about if a president orders the military to stage a coup?ā€ Justice Elena Kagan asked Sauer. ā€œI think it would depend on the circumstances whether it was an official act,ā€ Sauer said after a brief exchange. ā€œIf it were an official act ā€¦ he would have to be impeached and convicted.ā€ā€œThat sure sounds bad, doesnā€™t it?ā€ Kagan replied later.The Democratic appointees on the bench sought to illustrate the inherent absurdity of this argument with other scenarios as wellā€”Kagan got Sauer to admit that the president could share nuclear secrets, while Justice Sonia Sotomayor presented a scenario in which a president orders the military to assassinate a political rival. Sauer said that might qualify as an official act too. It was the only way to maintain the logic of his argument, which is that Trump is above the law.[David A. Graham: The cases against Trump: A guide]ā€œTrying to overthrow the Constitution and subvert the peaceful transfer of power is not an official act, even if you conspire with other government employees to do it and you make phone calls from the Oval Office,ā€ Michael Waldman, a legal expert at the Brennan Center for Justice, a liberal public-policy organization, told me. Trumpā€™s legal argument is a path to dictatorship. That is not an exaggeration: His legal theory is that presidents are entitled to absolute immunity for official acts. Under this theory, a sitting president could violate the law with impunity, whether that is serving unlimited terms or assassinating any potential political opponents, unless the Senate impeaches and convicts the president. Yet a legislature would be strongly disinclined to impeach, much less convict, a president who could murder all of them with total immunity because he did so as an official act. The same scenario applies to the Supreme Court, which would probably not rule against a chief executive who could assassinate them and get away with it.The conservative justices have, over the years, seen harbingers of tyranny in union organizing, environmental regulations, civil-rights laws, and universal-health-care plans. When confronted with a legal theory that establishes actual tyranny, they were simply intrigued. As long as Donald Trump is the standard-bearer for the Republicans, every institution they control will contort itself in his image in an effort to protect him.The Supreme Court, however, does not need to accept Trumpā€™s absurdly broad claim of immunity for him to prevail in his broader legal battle. Such a ruling might damage the image of the Court, which has already been battered by a parade of hard-right ideological rulings. But if Trump can prevail in November, delay is as good as immunity. The former presidentā€™s best chance at defeating the federal criminal charges against him is to win the election and then order the Justice Department to dump the cases. The Court could superficially rule against Trumpā€™s immunity claim, but stall things enough to give him that more fundamental victory.If they wanted, the justices could rule expeditiously as well as narrowly, focusing on the central claim in the case and rejecting the argument that former presidents have absolute immunity for acts committed as president, without getting into which acts might qualify as official or not. Sauer also acknowledged under questioning by Justice Amy Coney Barrett that some of the allegations against Trump do not involve official acts but private ones, and so theoretically the prosecution could move ahead with those charges and not others. But that wouldnā€™t necessarily delay the trial sufficiently for Trumpā€™s purposes.ā€œOn big cases, itā€™s entirely appropriate for the Supreme Court to really limit what they are doing to the facts of the case in front of it, rather than needing to take the time to write an epic poem on the limits of presidential immunity,ā€ Waldman said. ā€œIf they write a grant opinion, saying no president is above the law, but it comes out too late in the year, they will have effectively immunized Trump from prosecution before the election while pretending not to.ā€Trumpā€™s own attorneys argued in 2021, during his second impeachment trial, that the fact that he could be criminally prosecuted later was a reason not to impeach him. As The New York Times reported, Trumpā€™s attorney Bruce Castor told Congress that ā€œafter he is out of office,ā€ then ā€œyou go and arrest him.ā€ Trump was acquitted in the Senate for his attempted coup after only a few Republicans voted for conviction; some of those who voted to acquit did so reasoning that Trump was subject to criminal prosecution as a private citizen. The catch-22 here reveals that the actual position being taken is that the president is a king, or that he is entitled to make himself one. At least if his name is Donald Trump.[David A. Graham: The Supreme Courts goes through the looking glass of presidential immunity]Democracy relies on the rule of law and the consent of the governedā€”neither of which is possible in a system where the president can commit crimes or order them committed if he feels like it. ā€œWe canā€™t possibly have an executive branch that is cloaked in immunity and still expect them to act in the best interests of the people in a functioning democracy,ā€ Praveen Fernandes, the vice president of the Constitutional Accountability Center, a liberal legal organization, told me.The only part of Trumpā€™s case that contains anything resembling a reasonable argument is the idea that without some kind of immunity for official acts, presidents could be prosecuted on a flimsy basis by political rivals. But this argument is stretched beyond credibility when it comes to what Trump did, which was to try repeatedly and in multiple ways to unlawfully seize power after losing an election. Even if the prospect of presidents being prosecuted for official acts could undermine the peaceful transfer of power, actually trying to prevent the peaceful transfer of power is a much more direct threatā€”especially because it has already happened. But the Republican-appointed justices seemed much more concerned about the hypothetical than the reality.ā€œIf an incumbent who loses a very close, hotly contested election knows that a real possibility after leaving office is not that the president is going to be able to go off into a peaceful retirement but that the president may be criminally prosecuted by a bitter political opponent,ā€ Justice Samuel Alito asked, ā€œwill that not lead us into a cycle that destabilizes the functioning of our country as a democracy?ā€Trump has the conservative justices arguing that you cannot prosecute a former president for trying to overthrow the country, because then they might try to overthrow the country, something Trump already attempted and is demanding immunity for doing. The incentive for an incumbent to execute a coup is simply much greater if the Supreme Court decides that the incumbent cannot be held accountable if he fails. And not just a coup, but any kind of brazen criminal behavior. ā€œThe Framers did not put an immunity clause into the Constitution. They knew how to,ā€ Kagan pointed out during oral arguments. ā€œAnd, you know, not so surprising, they were reacting against a monarch who claimed to be above the law. Wasnā€™t the whole point that the president was not a monarch and the president was not supposed to be above the law?ā€At least a few of the right-wing justices seemed inclined to if not accept Trumpā€™s immunity claim, then delay the trial, which would likely improve his reelection prospects. As with the Colorado ballot-access case earlier this year, in which the justices prevented Trump from being thrown off the ballot in accordance with the Constitutionā€™s ban on insurrectionists holding office, the justicesā€™ positions rest on a denial of the singularity of Trumpā€™s actions.No previous president has sought to overthrow the Constitution by staying in power after losing an election. Trump is the only one, which is why these questions are being raised now. Pretending that these matters concern the powers of the presidency more broadly is merely the path the justices sympathetic to Trump have chosen to take in order to rationalize protecting the man they would prefer to be the next president. What the justicesā€”and other Republican loyalistsā€”are loath to acknowledge is that Trump is not being uniquely persecuted; he is uniquely criminal.This caseā€”even more than the Colorado ballot-eligibility caseā€”unites the right-wing justicesā€™ political and ideological interests with Trumpā€™s own. One way or another, they will have to choose between Trumpism and democracy. Theyā€™ve given the public little reason to believe that they will choose any differently than the majority of their colleagues in the Republican Party.
    theatlantic.com
  6. Weā€™re All Reading Wrong To access the full benefits of literature, you have to share it out loud.
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  7. Columbia Universityā€™s Impossible Position At Columbia University, administrators and pro-Palestinian students occupying the main quad on campus are in a standoff. President Minouche Shafik has satisfied neither those clamoring for order nor those who want untrammeled protests. Yet a different leader may not have performed any better. The tensions here between free-speech values and antidiscrimination law are unusually complex and difficult, if not impossible, to resolve.Shafik presides over a lavishly funded center of research, teaching, civic acculturation, and student activism. Such institutions cannot thrive without strong free-speech cultures. Neither can they thrive without limits on when and where protests are permittedā€”especially when protesters disrupt the institution as a tactic to get what they want. As Shafik told Congress in recent testimony, ā€œTrying to reconcile the free-speech rights of those who want to protest and the rights of Jewish students to be in an environment free of harassment or discrimination has been the central challenge on our campus, and many others, in recent months.ā€That is a formidable challenge. The best protest rules are viewpoint-neutral: They constrain equally, rather than coercively disadvantaging one side in a controversy. How strictly should they be enforced? Whatever the answer, it must apply equally to all students. Yet consistent support for viewpoint neutrality is rare inside and outside academia, especially on an issue as fraught as Israel-Palestine, which has divided Columbiaā€™s faculty and students for decades.All of that context informed a flash point that occurred at Columbia last week: As Palestine-aligned protesters occupied the quad, where many activists covered their face to obscure their identity, Shafik declared, ā€œI have determined that the encampment and related disruptions pose a clear and present danger to the substantial functioning of the University.ā€ After repeatedly warning students to leave and suspending them when they refused, she called the NYPD to remove them from campus, citing vague safety concerns.[George Packer: The campus-left occupation that broke higher education]Yet soon after, student activists reappeared on the quad. More activists gathered outside the schoolā€™s gates. Observers speculated about whether calling the cops unwittingly escalated the situation. Faculty critics who say Shafik went too far in contacting police held a walkout to show dissent. Some want to censure her for ā€œviolation of the fundamental requirements of academic freedom and shared governance, and her unprecedented assault on studentsā€™ rights.ā€ Equally vocal critics believe that by not calling police back to campus, she failed to protect Jewish students and let Palestine-aligned activists break sound rules that must apply to everyone in order to be fair. Amid ongoing tumult, Columbia went ā€œhybridā€ for the rest of the semester. ā€œOur preference,ā€ Shafik said, ā€œis that students who do not live on campus will not come to campus.ā€Columbiaā€™s options are severely constrained because, for better or worse, it cannot merely start applying the viewpoint-neutral ethos that free-speech advocates prefer to these protests. Administrators must weigh the possibility that failing to more tightly regulate these protests could cause the school to be deemed in violation of antidiscrimination law because of their duration, their intensity, and their tenor, as well as pressure from state and federal officials concerned about anti-Semitism.In a social-media post referencing Columbia, Governor Kathy Hochul put it this way: ā€œThe First Amendment protects the right to protest but students also have a right to learn in an environment free from harassment or violence.ā€ As if to underscore the challenge Columbia faces, Hochul misstates Columbiaā€™s legal obligations. As a private university, it is not bound by the First Amendment.It is subject to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which states that no person shall, on grounds of race or national origin, ā€œbe excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination underā€ a program receiving federal funds. To comply, Columbia neednā€™t be free of harassment. But it must address behavior of sufficient severity or persistence that members of a protected class are denied equal access to education because of their identity. Per current federal guidance, ā€œstudents who are or are perceived to be Jewishā€ are covered, and national origin groups are explicitly protected, so Israeli nationals are covered too.In most campus free-speech disputes that I encounter, the relevant facts are easily grasped in a couple of days, if not a couple of hours. For example, I am confident that the University of Southern California transgressed against viewpoint neutrality when it canceled the valedictorian speech of a Palestine-aligned student, Asna Tabassum. I thought, let her speak. (Protests followed her removal, and USC has now canceled its entire main commencement ceremony.) But at Columbia, I cannot say with confidence whether, in my own free-speech-friendly interpretation of Title VI, Shafik is doing enough or too little to adhere to it.An example helps clarify the uncertainty here.If every day protesters on Columbiaā€™s quad were blocking the path of all Jewish students as they tried to walk to class, or shouting ethnic slurs at any student they perceived to be Jewish, Columbia would clearly have a legal obligation to intervene in those protests. Whereas if one time, one protester acting alone blocked the path of one Jewish student, or shouted a slur at a Jewish student, Title VI would not compel Columbia to intervene in ongoing protests. So in between those poles, what is required? The answer is up for debate. Shafik is required to meet a murky legal standard amid protests that she can observe only in part, where a single violent act or viral clip of one charged moment could instantly alter public and official perception about six months of events.Even insiders charged with analyzing the matter are unsure about Columbiaā€™s legal obligations. In March, a task force convened to study anti-Semitism at the institution released the first in a series of reports, titled ā€œColumbia Universityā€™s Rules on Demonstrations.ā€ After studying what antidiscrimination law might require, the report stated, ā€œWe urge the University to provide more guidance on the meaning of ā€˜discriminatory harassment,ā€™ including antisemitic harassment.ā€ It speculated that ā€œat some point, courts and the Department of Education are likely to offer additional guidance.ā€ Until then, it urged that ā€œthe Universityā€™s legal team should provide more guidanceā€ā€”but Columbiaā€™s legal team doesnā€™t have the answer either. Bureaucrats at the Department of Education regularly take extreme liberties in interpreting what antidiscrimination law means, with some conclusions shifting dramatically under different presidents.In theory, Title VI could be construed in a matter that reinforces the need for viewpoint neutrality: Israel- and Palestine-aligned students would each get no more and no less latitude to protest than Columbia would extend to any other group, regardless of how urgent or pointless, enlightened or abhorrent their position. In practice, counterfactuals cannot guide administrators or regulators, and as the Duke professor Timur Kuran observed on social media, students on both sides of the issue plausibly feel discriminated against by their universities, because ā€œidentity politics has inevitably led to arbitrariness and inconsistencies in applying rules.ā€In fact, it may be the case that Columbia is both failing to provide its Jewish students with equal access to its educational experience and (as the Knight Foundation has argued) engaging in viewpoint discrimination against Palestine-aligned students.Those who believe Columbia is overpolicing the Israel-Hamas protests should rationally desire reforms to Title VI, so that more campus speech is deemed acceptable. In reality, most social-justice-oriented faculty and students are either highly selective about whose controversial viewpoints they want protected or loath to recognize the long-standing conflict between tolerance for free speech and antidiscrimination law. Vilifying Shafik without acknowledging the regulatory environment she confronts is much easier.On the ideological right, meanwhile, is sudden zeal for draconian Department of Education enforcement of antidiscrimination law. ā€œThis is whatā€™s known as a Title VI violation,ā€ Ilya Shapiro of the Manhattan Institute posted Monday on social media. ā€œSend in the National Guard and otherwise put Columbia and its morally bankrupt leadership into federal receivership.ā€[Adam Serwer: The Republicans who want American carnage]That is terrible advice, but stakeholders seem to disagree radically about the overall tenor of protests to date. Have they violated the Civil Rights Act as theyā€™ve actually unfolded? The American Association of University Professors doesnā€™t seem to think so. In a recent statement, it declared that ā€œShafikā€™s silencing of peaceful protesters and having them hauled off to jail does a grave disservice to Columbiaā€™s reputation and will be a permanent stain on her presidential legacy.ā€ In contrast, as protesters flooded back onto campus Sunday, Jake Tapper of CNN reported that an Orthodox rabbi at Columbia sent a WhatsApp message to almost 300 Jewish students urging them to leave campus and go home because the institution ā€œcannot guarantee Jewish studentsā€™ safety in the face of extreme antisemitism and anarchy.ā€Calls for Shafik to resign have come from people on both sides of the conflict. On Wednesday, House Speaker Mike Johnson piled on. But under a new president all of the same challenges and constraints on resolving them would remain. Debate about Columbia would improve if it focused on the thorniest, most contested conflicts between protest rights and antidiscrimination law rather than imagining that a better leader could reconcile the most expansive versions of both projects.
    theatlantic.com
  8. The Eternal Letdown of Sugar Substitutes A few months ago, my doctor uttered a phrase Iā€™d long dreaded: Your blood sugar is too high. With my family history of diabetes, and occasional powerful cravings for chocolate, I knew this was coming and what it would mean: To satisfy my sweet fix, Iā€™d have to turn to sugar substitutes. Ughhhh.Dupes such as aspartame, stevia, and sucralose (the main ingredient in Splenda) are sweet and have few or zero calories, so they typically donā€™t spike your blood sugar like the real thing. But while there are now more sugar alternatives than ever, many people find that they taste terrible. The aspartame in Diet Coke leaves the taste of pennies in my mouth. And in large amounts, substitutes are bad for you: Last year, the World Health Organization warned that artificial sweeteners could raise the risk of certain diseases, singling out aspartame as ā€œpossibly carcinogenic.ā€But last week, I sipped a can of Arnold Palmer with a brand-new sweetener that promised to be unlike all the rest. The drinkā€™s strong lemon flavor was mellowed by a light, unremarkable sweetness that came from brazzein, a sugar substitute green-lighted by the FDA last month. Oobli, a California-based company that sells the lemonade-iced tea and manufactures brazzein (which occurs naturally in West Africaā€™s oubli fruit), has billed it as a ā€œrevolution in sweetness.ā€ Yet like everything that came before it, brazzein is far from perfect: To help mask its off taste, the can had some real sugar in it too. For now, Eric Walters, a sweetener expert at Rosalind Franklin University, told me, brazzein is just ā€œan alternativeā€ to the many options that already exist. None has come even close to the real deal.The ideal sugar alternative is more than just sweet. It must also be safe, taste good, and replicate the distinct way sugarā€™s sweetness develops on the tongue. In addition to aspartame and other synthetic sugar alternatives that have existed for more than a century, the past two decades have brought ā€œnaturalā€ ones that are plant-derived: sweeteners made with stevia or monk fruit, which the FDA first approved in 2008 and 2010, respectively, can now be readily found in beverages such as Truly hard seltzer and Fairlife protein shakes. Stevia and monk fruit have been used ā€œfor hundreds of years by the people who live in the regions where they grow, so I donā€™t have huge worries about their safety,ā€ Walters told me.All of these sweeteners work in basically the same way. Chemically, molecules other than just sugar can bind to the tongueā€™s sweet receptors, signaling to the brain that something sweet has landed. But the brain can tell when that something is not sugar. So far, no sweetener has accomplished that trick; off flavors that sometimes linger always give away the ruse.The problem is that sugar alternatives are like celebrity impersonators: aesthetically similar, reasonably satisfying, but consistently disappointing. Take stevia and monk fruit: By weight, theyā€™re intensely sweet relative to table sugarā€”monk fruit by a factor of up to 250 and stevia by a factor of up to 400. Because only a tiny amount is needed to impart a sweet taste, those sweeteners must be bulked up with another substance so they more closely resemble sugar granules. Manufacturers used to add carbohydrates such as corn starchā€”which are eventually broken down into sugarsā€”but they now use erythritol, a calorie-free sugar alcohol, which ā€œdoesnā€™t count as sugar at all,ā€ Walters said.The end products look and feel similar to sugar, but not without downsides. Erythritol has been linked to an increased risk of heart attack and stroke. And stevia and monk-fruit sweeteners come with an aftertaste that has been described as ā€œbitter,ā€ ā€œunpleasant,ā€ and ā€œdisastrous.ā€ When Walters first helped produce stevia 35 years ago, ā€œthe taste quality was so awful that we thought no one would buy it,ā€ he said. ā€œBut we underestimated how much people would put up with it because it was ā€˜natural.ā€™ā€Brazzein is yet another natural option. Unlike other sugar substitutes, brazzein is a protein, but it is still intensely sweet and low in calories. It is so sweetā€”about 1,000 times sweeter than sugarā€”that some gorillas in the wild have learned not to waste their time eating it. That protein has become a health buzzword certainly wonā€™t hurt Oubliā€™s sales, but its products wonā€™t bolster any biceps: Its teas contain very littleā€”about 1 percentā€”because brazzeinā€™s sweetness is so potent.Last month, Oobli received a ā€œno questions askedā€ letter from the FDA, which means that the agency isnā€™t concerned about the productā€™s safety. Oobliā€™s iced teas and chocolates are the first brazzein-sweetened products to be sold in the U.S., although the sweet protein was identified three decades ago. Thaumatin, another member of the sweet-protein family, has been in use since the 1970s, though mostly as a flavor enhancer. One reason it took brazzein so long to be marketable is that it occurs at such low levels in the oubli fruit that mass-producing it was inefficient. Instead of harvesting brazzein from fruit, Oubli grows the protein in yeast cells, which is more scalable and affordable, Jason Ryder, Oobliā€™s co-founder and chief technology officer, told me.One distinction between brazzein and other sweeteners is its chemical size. Compared with sugar, stevia, and monk fruit, brazzein molecules are relatively large because they are proteins, which means they arenā€™t metabolized in the same way, Ryder said. The effects of existing sweeteners on the body are still being investigated; although they are generally thought to not hike blood sugar or insulin, recent research suggests that they may in fact do so. That may never be a concern with brazzein, Grant DuBois, a sweetener expert and the chief science officer at Almendra, a stevia manufacturer, told me. The most compelling upside of brazzein may be that it tastes pretty good. My palate, which is extra sensitive to artificial sweeteners, wasnā€™t offended by the taste. Would drink again, I thought. But the glaring caveat with Oobliā€™s teas is that they do contain some actual sugarā€”just less than youā€™d expect from a regular drink. The sugar helps mitigate a less-than-ideal feature of brazzeinā€™s sweetness, Ryder said.One of the enduring problems with brazzein and many other popular sugar alternatives is that their sweetness takes more time than usual to develop, then lingers longer than expected. Indeed, although I liked the Arnold Palmer as it went down, I felt a peculiar sensation afterward: a trace of sweetness at the back of my throat that intensified, and felt oddly cool, as I exhaled. It was not unpleasant, but it was also reminiscent of having accidentally swallowed minty gum. If Diet Coke were made with brazzein instead of aspartame, Walters explained, youā€™d taste caffeineā€™s bitterness and the tartness of phosphoric acid before any sweetness, and when all of those flavors dissipated, the sweetness would hang around. ā€œItā€™s just not what you want your beverage to be,ā€ he said.Balancing brazzein with a touch of sugar achieves the goal of reducing sugar intake. But most of the time, people who seek out products sweetened with sugar alternatives want ā€œzero sugar,ā€ DuBois said, ā€œso thatā€™s not really a great solution to the problem.ā€ The perfect sweetener would wholly replace all of the sugar in a food, but brazzein probably wonā€™t get there unless the peculiarities of its sweetness can be fully addressed. ā€œIf I knew how, I could probably make millions of dollars,ā€ Walters said.The future of sugar substitutes may soon offer improvements rather than alternatives. Last year, DuBois and his colleagues at Almendra published a peer-reviewed paper describing a method to speed up slow-moving sweetness by adding a pinch of mineral salts to sweeteners, which helps them quickly travel through the thick mucus of the tongue, resulting in a vastly improved experience of sweetness. ā€œIt works with stevia, but also aspartame, sucralose, monk fruitā€”it works very well with everything weā€™ve tried,ā€ Dubois said, noting that it would probably also work with brazzein. With the right technology, sweeteners, he said, can become ā€œremarkably sugarlike.ā€Yet searching for the perfect sugar alternative is a foolā€™s errand. No matter how good they get, a single substance is unlikely to satisfy all tastes and expectations about health. As my colleague Amanda Mull wrote when aspartame was deemed carcinogenic over the summer, thereā€™s always something. Much is left to be learned about the health effects of natural sweeteners, which may not be as natural as they seem; some stevia products, for example, are chemically modified to taste better, Walters told meMore than anything, sweeteners exist so that people can indulge in sweet treats without needing to worry about the consequences. They can address most of sugarā€™s problemsā€”but they canā€™t do everything. ā€œIf you pick one sweetener and put it in everything, and drink and eat it all day long, thatā€™s probably not a good thing for you,ā€ Walters said. A sugar-free, flawlessly sweet chocolate may someday come to exist, but Iā€™ll probably never be able to gorge on it without dreading my next blood test.
    theatlantic.com
  9. Bad Bunnyā€™s Songs of Exile Near the end of Bad Bunnyā€™s 2022 Worldā€™s Hottest Tour in Las Vegas, all the lights went out. The Puerto Rican singer and rapper filled the darkness before the song ā€œEl ApagĆ³nā€ with a six-minute speech in Spanish about what makes his home island bien cabrĆ³nā€”ā€œreally fucking awesome.ā€ He highlighted not only Puerto Ricoā€™s beauty but also its resilience in the face of immense challenges: corrupt governance, poor electricity and water access, a hurricane only five years after the devastation of Hurricane MarĆ­a. Although ā€œit is always becoming harder for Puerto Ricans to live on the island,ā€ he said, their strong sense of kinship saves them: ā€œThe leaders are the people, who always help one another.ā€His speech soon turned into a lament twinged with guilt. ā€œSometimes I see comments that are like, ā€˜Where is Bad Bunny?ā€™ā€ he told the stadium. ā€œIā€™m here, in Las Vegas. This is my job.ā€ The price of fame, he went on to suggest, was a type of exileā€”work that he cherished but that kept him from the island and people he loved.Community has long been central to Bad Bunnyā€™s work. The Latin-trap superstar, who has set Spotify streaming records and repeatedly topped the Billboard 200 chart, seldom introduces himself without mentioning where he comes from (accepting the 2022 Video Music Awards Artist of the Year trophy, he declared, ā€œIā€™m Benito Antonio MartĆ­nez, from Puerto Rico to the world!ā€). He famously resists singing or giving interviews in English. Many of his songs contribute to a long Caribbean musical tradition of rebellion against colonialism. Meanwhile, others form an archive of place; the mountains, rivers, and beaches of Puerto Rico seep into numerous perreo anthems. ā€œThis is my beach / This is my sun / This is my land / This is me,ā€ ends the house track ā€œEl ApagĆ³n,ā€ signaling an understanding of Caribbean people as inextricable from the islands themselves. Bad Bunnyā€™s latest tour and album, however, mark a spiritual departure for the artist, finding him retreating inward to wrestle with cynicism and isolation at the top of the world.[Read: SNL didnā€™t need subtitles]The ongoing Most Wanted Tour, which began in late February, is less of a communal celebration and more of a solo rodeo. I donā€™t mean this only metaphorically: Midway through the Barclays Center concert I attended this month in Brooklyn, Bad Bunny appeared onstage atop a real, live horse. In the lead-up to this entrance, the stadium darkened as a three-minute video played on-screen, revealing a desert landscape of desolate sepia tones. ā€œThey tell me Jesus was in the desert for 40 days and 40 nights,ā€ the singer growled in Spanish. ā€œIā€™ve lost count of the years Iā€™ve spent between sand and cactus.ā€ In the video, a masked Bad Bunny, encased in a buckskin jacket, rode a slow-trotting horse into an apocalyptic sunset. ā€œI remain like this,ā€ Bad Bunny said. ā€œAlone.ā€ (At this point, my friendā€™s 78-year-old Puerto Rican grandmother, whom I attended the concert with, cried out in concern: ā€œWeā€™re here for you, baby!ā€)This new lonely-cowboy persona is in line with the artistā€™s most recent album, Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar MaƱana, the 22-song trap opera behind this tour. In it, Bad Bunny explores what it means to be the caballo ganadĆ³r, or winning horseā€”at least thatā€™s what he calls himself in the opening track, ā€œNadie Sabe,ā€ an orchestral rap that samples trampling hooves. In 2022, he was, by several measures, the top artist in the world. Yet he doesnā€™t seem convinced that the hype is worth the stress. ā€œEveryone wants to be No. 1,ā€ he raps. ā€œIf you want it Iā€™ll give it to you, motherfucker.ā€ What fun is being No. 1 when no one can share it with you?From the get-go, the new tour has approached listeners from a more standoffish posture. ā€œIf youā€™re not a real fan, donā€™t come,ā€ read the official ads. Instead of energetic house warming up the audience as happened in 2022, this yearā€™s show opened with the longing strings of a classical orchestra. (My friendā€™s grandmother: ā€œTheyā€™re putting me to sleep!ā€) The ensembleā€™s rendition of Charles Aznavourā€™s French ballad ā€œHier Encoreā€ā€”which Bad Bunnyā€™s ā€œMonacoā€ samplesā€”set an early tone for the evening of nostalgia, as if happier days existed largely in the past.Visually, the Most Wanted Tour was also decidedly placeless, leaning into minimalism and abstraction. At the Worldā€™s Hottest Tour show I attended in Las Vegas, the vibe was ā€œbeach partyā€: Bad Bunny appeared in an array of joyful pastels. Dancers in bikinis and denim shorts freestyled under string lights. Visuals showed cartoon dolphins swimming toward island oases. I remember feeling shocked when I left the stadium and stepped into the Mojave Desertā€™s hot and twisting air. The concert had felt like a portal home to the Dominican Republic, ready to rival JetBlue. I could almost feel the cool shine of the sea melting over my feet.Yet this time around, tropical maximalism was replaced by nondescript, arid visuals and monochrome Yeezy-style fashions. The dancers, dressed in all-black hoodies or chaps, appeared sparingly. Most often, Bad Bunny was onstage by himself, hopping from one end to another while performing trap bops in burgundy cowboy gear.For much of the performance, he also sported a Spider-Man-style mask or a studded nunā€™s habit (Ć  la the Virgin Mary)ā€”a tongue-in-cheek choice for a singer frequently criticized for his lewd lyrics. His hidden face added a layer of distance between him and the audience, seemingly signaling how much access to him we should really get to have. Bad Bunny has rebuked the parasocial aspects of fame, including peopleā€™s entitlement to his personal space. Throughout the Nadie Sabe album, he makes several references to a much-reported instance in which, during a vacation in the Dominican Republic, he threw a fanā€™s phone into some bushes after she photographed him without his consent.Yet despite the lingering specter of celebrityā€™s dark side, the showā€™s final act still managed to conjure a wider sense of connection within the audience. Bad Bunny ended with a slew of his reggaeton hits, old and new, and segued into his song ā€œTitĆ­ Me PreguntĆ³ā€ with a roll call of placesā€”asking where, among other groups, his Ecuadorians, Mexicans, Dominicans, and Puerto Ricans were at. With each mention, the stadium erupted into ecstatic screams of recognition. Flags rippled; decibels flared. The rare roar of a crowd of Dominicans, all in one place in the U.S., immediately brought tears to my eyes. Once the song started, we screamed back his lyrics about bringing a roster of girlfriends to his VIP table. We in the audience were there, together. Meanwhile, Bad Bunny looped the stage, alone again.
    theatlantic.com
  10. When the End of Humanity Isnā€™t the End of the World During the early months of the coronavirus pandemic, when many countries were enacting variations of lockdown protocols, air pollution and greenhouse-gas emissions decreased drastically. A meme began to spread across social media proclaiming that, with so many people spending most of their time at home, nature was healing. Images of clear canals, clean skies, and wild animals roaming empty city streets were accompanied by the phrase ā€œWe are the virus.ā€ The memes quickly turned silly, and their core claims were roundly debunked as overly simplistic, plain wrong, and somewhat eugenicist. Beyond all this, the trend was deeply ironic: By diagnosing themselves as a pox upon the Earth, people were revealing their degree of self-obsessionā€”a belief that humanity is so powerful and important that the briefest pause in our normal activities would have meaningful consequences for the planet.Nearly two centuries ago, the English author Mary Shelley confronted human beingsā€™ instinctive anthropocentrism in her 1826 novel, The Last Man, which was published eight years after Frankenstein and has recently been reissued. Even then, Shelley might already have been thinking about humanityā€™s impact on Earth: As the scholar John Havard writes in his introduction to this new edition of the novel, at the time of her writing, ā€œEngland was already responsible for most of the worldā€™s carbon emissions. The wheels were in motion for the kind of Promethean unleashing of fire that created todayā€™s climate change.ā€The Last Man is narrated by an Englishman named Lionel Verney, and takes place from 2073 to 2100, during which time he witnesses the beginning, middle, and end of a pandemic so deadly it appears to kill every single human on Earth except for him. Shelleyā€™s wasnā€™t the first literary work to explore the notion of a lone survivor of an apocalypse; she was preceded even in her own century by Jean-Baptiste Cousin de Grainvilleā€™s novel, Le Dernier Homme, as well as by poems by Lord Byron and Thomas Campbell. But rather than viewing the end of mankind as the end of the world, Shelley examines the extinction of humanity on an Earth that keeps on living.[Read: Frankenstein reflects the hopes and fears of every scientific era]Shelleyā€™s novel is preoccupied with how unnecessary human beings are to the planetā€™s continued revolution around the sunā€”its changing seasons, the survival of its other inhabitants. As the plague wipes out large swathes of the population, Verney mourns the loss of human relationships and creativity, but also recognizes that nature is full of its own unique bonds, rhythms, and beauty. Ultimately, The Last Man seems to celebrate the notion of life itself as worthy, whatever form it takes. Of course, we should attempt to reverse the damage weā€™ve wrought on the planet. But it might also behoove us to practice humility in the face of natureā€™s awesome forces.Shelleyā€™s narrator has a unique relationship to the nonhuman world. His parents died when he was a child, and he was raised as a shepherd in service to a farmer in Cumberland. There, he grew up wild, ā€œrough as the elements, and unlearned as the animals [he] tended.ā€Verneyā€™s life changes suddenly as a teenager, when the English kingā€™s son, Adrian, visits Cumberland. Verneyā€™s late father had been friends with the king, and recognizing their shared history, Adrian lifts Verney up into the rarified world of the peerage. He invites the boy to live and travel alongside him, and under Adrianā€™s tutelage and with his resources, Verney studies poetry, philosophy, and science. Yet Shelley makes clear that Verney had never been ignorant: Having spent much of his youth laboring outdoors, he was deeply knowledgeable about ā€œthe panorama of nature, the change of seasons, and the various appearances of heaven and earth.ā€ Given the years Shelley spent among some of the foremost Romanticists, including her husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and their close friend Lord Byron, it isnā€™t surprising that her protagonist finds, in the natural world, plenty to enrich the mind and spark curiosity.Part one of the novel is primarily concerned with conveying the richness of Verneyā€™s social and political life, which is to say, the importance of his human relationships. But Verneyā€™s narration also makes heavy use of natural metaphors and lengthy descriptions of landscapes; in one scene, for instance, he describes the love of his life, Idris, as a ā€œstar, set in single splendour in the dim anadem of balmy evening.ā€ Shelley seems keen on demonstrating that despite the comfortable life of the mind Verney now lives, he never loses his reverence for nature.In the novelā€™s second part, the plagueā€”an airborne virus with no clear pattern of contagionā€”makes its first appearance amid a Greek war of independencefrom the Ottoman empire. Beginning in Asia and spreading globally, the plague ends up turning the tide of the war as the residents of a besieged Constantinople fall ill and die quickly. One of the novelā€™s major characters, Lord Raymond, who is married to Verneyā€™s sister, had traveled to the empireā€™s capital to join the war effort on the side of the Greeks; Verney and his cohort, including his sister, his wife, and Adrian, accompanied him there. Soon after, the plague strikes, and Verney and his circle retreat back to England, where they believe they will be safe from the disease. Before long, though, the plague arrives on Englandā€™s shores, ravaging the population.[Read: A pandemic novel thatā€™s oddly soothing]Verneyā€™s contingent survives the worst of the plague and soon leaves England in search of a climate less friendly to the disease. When they arrive in France, they find that their fellow survivors have broken into groups, including one whose extremist religious leader insists that humanityā€™s sinfulness is to blame for the plagueā€™s spread. This section includes some of the novelā€™s most rapturous meditations on the natural worldā€™s continued survival amid mass human death. Verney wanders among winter-stricken towns in whose buildings both wild and once-domesticated animals find shelter; watches as nature presents ā€œher most unrivalled beautiesā€ in lakes and mountains and enormous vistas; and, ā€œcarried away by wonder,ā€ forgets about ā€œthe death of man.ā€ As more and more humans disappear from the Earth, Verney and his companions are left to find solace in the planetā€™s ongoing cycles and the life that still inhabits it.By the end of the novel, Verneyā€™s entire family and his closest friends have perished. Somewhat bitterly, he watches the thriving flora and fauna around him. But instead of cursing natureā€™s survival even as his species is going extinct, he recognizes the similarity between himself and the nonhuman animals who keep living: ā€œI am not much unlike to you,ā€ he proclaims. ā€œNerves, pulse, brain, joint, and flesh, of such am I composed, and ye are organized by the same laws.ā€ Even the last man, as he believes himself to be, cannot begrudge the continued turning of the Earth and the flourishing of its creatures. The Last Man is only one radical guess at a potential future, but in it Shelley reminds her readers that humans need Earth far more than Earth needs us.
    theatlantic.com
  11. Is India an Autocracy? Last October, Indian authorities revived legal proceedings against the novelist and activist Arundhati Roy. In a case first registered against her in 2010, Roy stood accused of ā€œprovocative speechā€ that aroused ā€œenmity between different groupsā€ for having said that Kashmir was not an ā€œintegralā€ part of India. The charge carries a maximum sentence of seven years and kept her from traveling to Germany to deliver the opening address at the 2023 Munich Literature Festival.The assault on expression, and on virtually every other mainstay of democracy, has become commonplace under Prime Minister Narendra Modiā€™s government, and it is the backdrop against which Indians have begun voting to elect their next Parliament and prime minister. Of the nearly 1 billion eligible voters, perhaps more than 600 million will cast their votes over a six-week-long process. Modi, who heads the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is widely expected to win a third term as prime minister in his bitter contest against a motley alliance of opposition parties, the Indian National Development Inclusive Alliance (INDIA).[Read: What has happened to the rule of law in India?]The spectacle of hundreds of millions of Indiansā€”many suffering severe material deprivationā€”performing their civic duty arouses both hope and wonder, often winning India the title of ā€œworldā€™s largest democracy.ā€ But Indian democracy did not just begin to degrade under Modi: It has been eroding since the first years of independence. Modi has put that process on steroids and today presides over an autocracy in all but name.For decades, the Indian state has used coercive legal powers to suppress dissent and constitutional mechanisms to delegitimize votes. The judiciary has largely acquiesced, money has gushed into Indian politics, and Hindu nationalism has cast a dark shadow of division. What are treated now as anomalies have been the trajectory all along.Nonetheless, world leaders, including President Joe Biden, often describe India as a vibrant democracy. Even more nuanced analyses hold that Indian democracy will withstand the current crisis because Indians respect diversity and pluralism, the countryā€™s democratic institutions are strong, and recovery is inevitable.This romantic view of an inherently democratic India is a fairy tale. According to the Swedish think tank V-Dem, India was never a liberal democracy, and today it is sliding ever more decisively toward autocracy. Even under its first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, Indiaā€™s impressive electoral apparatus did not guarantee equality before the law or ensure essential liberties to citizens. Subsequent leaders, rather than plugging the cracks in Indiaā€™s constitutional foundation, expanded them, not least by using the stateā€™s coercive power to circumvent democratic processes for personal or partisan advantage. Fraying democratic norms rendered free speech, dissent, and judicial independence casualties from the start.The constitution that independent India adopted in 1950 defined the country as a democratic republic committed to justice, equality, and fraternity for its people. But the democratic conception of the state suffered its first blow when the constitution was just 18 months old. Nehru, frustrated that Indian courts were upholding the free-speech rights of his critics, amended the constitution in June 1951 to make seditious speech a punishable offense. Only one person was actually convicted of sedition before Nehruā€™s prime ministership ended with his death. But several suffered for extended periods after lower courts found them guilty and before higher ones reversed the verdicts. That long legal limbo had a chilling effect on speech.The Indian constitution had other undemocratic features that Nehru deployed. It evinced a preoccupation with integrity and security, and emphasized the union, rather than autonomy, of the states it federated. If Indiaā€™s central government deemed a stateā€™s politics to be dysfunctional, it could place the state under a kind of federal receivership called Presidentā€™s Rule, essentially disenfranchising the stateā€™s electorate. Nehru imposed Presidentā€™s Rule eight times during his tenure. The constitution had other significant gaps: It didnā€™t furnish social and economic equality to women, for example. Nehru tried to pass a bill that would override traditional Hindu patrimonial practices, but even in the postindependence glow of national unity, organized Hindu forces asserted their identity and political power. They stymied Nehruā€™s legislative efforts in 1951 and then the implementation of the laws that did pass later.Nehru, for all his faults, valued tolerance and fairness. The same could scarcely be said of his daughter, Indira Gandhi, who followed soon after as prime minister and initiated a steep decline from such democratic norms as existed under Nehru. In 1967, she responded to a peasant protest in Naxalbari, West Bengal, by passing the draconian Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, which allowed the police to arrest and hold people without trial, bail, or explanation. This legislation would become an instrument of repression for decades to come. She also placed West Bengal under Presidentā€™s Rule, and her chosen governor used the police and armed forces to wipe out a generation of idealistic students who supported the peasants. In fact, Gandhi imposed Presidentā€™s Rule nearly 30 times from 1966 to 1975, when she declared an internal emergency and assumed dictatorial powers. Gandhi called for elections in early 1977, hoping to legitimize her autocratic rule. But when a frustrated Indian populace threw her out, the University of Chicago political scientists Lloyd and Susanne Rudolphā€”echoing a commonly held viewā€”happily concluded, ā€œDemocracy has acquired a mass base in India.ā€[From the April 1940 issue: Indiaā€™s demand and Englandā€™s answer]That proved wishful thinking. Upon reelection as prime minister in 1980, Gandhi accelerated the erosion of democratic norms. She imposed Presidentā€™s Rule more than a dozen times in her second stint in power, from 1980 to 1984. She also began pandering to the sentiments of Hindus to win their votes, opening the door to the hard-line Hindu-nationalists who have since become an overpowering force in Indian politics.Perhaps Gandhiā€™s most pernicious legacy was the injection of ā€œblackā€ moneyā€”unaccounted-for funds, accumulated through tax evasion and illegal market operationsā€”into Indian politics. In 1969, she banned corporate donations to political parties. Soon after, her campaigns became extremely expensive, ushering in an era of ā€œbriefcase politics,ā€ in which campaign donations came in briefcases full of cash, mostly filling the coffers of her own Congress Party. Criminals became election financiers, and as big-money (and black-money) politics spread, ideology and public interest gave way to politics for private gain. Legislators in state assemblies frequently ā€œdefected,ā€ crossing party lines to bag ministerial positions that generated corrupt earnings.And yet, for all the damage done to it, many analysts and diplomats still cleaved to the romantic view of Indian democracy. Upon Gandhiā€™s assassination in 1984, a former U.S. foreign-service officer, writing in Foreign Affairs, described the monarchical-style handover of power to her son, the political neophyte Rajiv, as proof of the ā€œstrength of the republic and its democratic constitutional system.ā€Rajivā€™s stewardship could rightly be seen in an entirely different light. He was the prime minister who let the gale force of Hindu nationalism blast through the door his mother had opened. He commissioned for the state-owned television network, Doordarshan, the much-loved Ramayana epic, which spawned a Rambo-like iconography of Lord Ram as Hindutvaā€™s avenger. And he reignited a contest between Hindus and Muslims over the site of a 16th-century mosque called the Babri Masjid, which had been sealed since 1949 to contain communal passions. Hindu zealots claimed that the structure was built on Lord Ramā€™s birthplace, and Rajiv opened its gates. Then, in December 1992, Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Raoā€™s Congress Partyā€“led government dithered as frenzied Hindu mobs demolished Babri Masjid, triggering bloody riots and further advancing the Hindu-nationalist cause.The decade from 1989 to 1998 saw a series of coalition governments govern Indiaā€”a development that the historian Ramachandra Guha has described as ā€œa manifestation of the widening and deepening of democracyā€ because ā€œdifferent regions and different groups had acquired a greater stake in the system.ā€ Democratic norms were, in fact, degrading at a quickening pace during this period. Big-money politics had bred mercenary politicians, who at the unseemly edge were gangsters providing caste representation, protection, and other services that the state could not supply. Politicians paid little attention to the public goodā€”such as creating more jobs and improving education and health services, especially in the eastern states of Bihar and Uttar Pradeshā€”and learned that they could use plausible corruption charges against one another as a weapon.Hindu nationalism swelled. From 1998 to 2003, the BJP led a coalition government that began aligning school textbooks with a Hindu-nationalist agenda. A Congress-led government from 2004 to 2014 arrested this trend but presided over a steep descent into corruption: During that decade, the share of members of the lower house of Parliament charged with serious crimesā€”including murder, extortion, and kidnappingā€”reached 21 percent, up from 12 percent.[Read: Indiaā€™s democracy is the worldā€™s problem]Both the BJP and the Congress Party embraced a model of economic growth driven by the very rich, and both dismissed the injury to the economic interests of the weak and vulnerable, as well as to the environment, as necessary collateral damage. In Chhattisgarh, a Congress Party leader, with the support of the stateā€™s BJP government, sponsored a private vigilante army to protect business interests, which included the exploitation of minerals and the mowing down of pristine forests in the tribal areas. When the supreme court declared the private vigilante army unconstitutional, Indian authorities responded in the manner of Andrew Jackson, who famously waved off the United Statesā€™ chief justice with the statement, ā€œJohn Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.ā€The anti-terrorism and anti-sedition provisions that earlier governments had supplied came in handy when the Congress-led coalition sought to suppress protests and intimidate opponents. The government also introduced and steadily widened the ambit of a new law, ostensibly for the prevention of money laundering, and it used the investigative powers of the state to its own benefit in whitewashing corruption: In 2013, a justice of the supreme court described the Central Bureau of Investigation as a ā€œcaged parrotā€ singing in ā€œits masterā€™s voice.ā€India, on the eve of the election that brought Modi to power in May 2014, could thus hardly be described as a robust democracy. Rather, all the instruments for its demolition had already been assembled and politely passed along from one government to the next. In the hands of a populist demagogue such as Modi, the demolition instruments proved to be a wrecking ball.As a candidate, Modi promised to right Indiaā€™s feckless economic policy and countervail against the Congress Partyā€™s corruption. These claims were not credible. Worse, as chief minister of Gujarat in 2002, Modi had failed to stop a bloody massacre of Muslims, thereby establishing himself as an avatar of Hindu-nationalist extremism. He couldnā€™t even get a visa to enter the United States.Nonetheless, many of Indiaā€™s public intellectuals were sanguine. Antidemocratic forces could be no match for the pluralistic disposition of Indiaā€™s people and the liberal institutions of its state, some insisted. The political scientist Ashutosh Varshney noted that Modi had eschewed anti-Muslim rhetoric in his campaignā€”because, Varshney inferred, Indian politics abhorred ideological extremism. Another political scientist, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, asked the BJPā€™s political opponents to reflect on their own fascist tendencies. The Congress Party, Mehta wrote, ā€œhad done its bestā€ to instill fear in citizens and corrode the institutions that protected individual rights; Modi would pull India out of the economic stagnation that Congress had induced.Anti-Muslim violence spread quickly after Modi came to power. Prominent critics of Hindu nationalism were gunned down on their doorsteps: M. M. Kalburgi in Dharwad, Karnataka, in August 2015, and Gauri Lankesh in Bangalore in July 2017. And India was tumbling in global indicators of democracy. V-Dem has classified India as an electoral autocracy since 2018: The country conducts elections but suppresses individual rights, dissent, and the media so egregiously that it can no longer be considered a democracy in any sense of the word. Even the word ā€œelectoral,ā€ though, in V-Demā€™s designation, has become dubious since then.[Samanth Subramanian: Indian democracy is fighting back]Under Modiā€™s rule, India has taken a sharp turn toward autocracy, but to get there, the BJP had only to drive a truck through the fissures in the stateā€™s democratic foundations that earlier governments had already widened. The government has seized the coercive powers of the state to fearsome ends, arresting activists and human-rights defenders under various provisions of the law. Successive Washington Post investigations have concluded that at least some of these arrests were based on planted evidence. One of those arrested, a Jesuit priest and human-rights activist, died in prison for want of medical attention when suffering from complications of COVID-19. Income and wealth inequalities have grown, in tandem with extraordinary expenditures even in state election campaigns. Demands for the demolition of more mosques have mounted. Inevitably, to woo Hindu voters, even opposition parties, including the Congress Party, have adopted a softer version of Hindu-nationalist ideology.The BJP government regularly brings charges against its critics in the media for tax lapses or anti-nationalism, among other pretexts. Reporters Without Borders describes India as one of the most dangerous countries for journalists. In 2023, it ranked India 161 out of 180 countries in press freedom, citing the takeover of media outlets by oligarchs close to Modi and the ā€œhorrificā€ online harassment by Modiā€™s ā€œarmy of online supporters.ā€Can Indians really be said to vote freely under such circumstances? Even if the answer is yes, the government seems to have found the means to disenfranchise citizens after the fact. In August 2019, the government withdrew the constitutional provision that gave Kashmir special autonomy. It also downgraded Kashmir from a state to a territory, placing it under the direct control of the central government without consulting the people of Kashmir. Because the supreme court has refused to reverse this move, future central governments might similarly downgrade other states.The chief ministers of Uttarakhand and Delhi are both in jail, awaiting trial on money-laundering charges, and the government has frozen the bank accounts of the Congress Party on allegations of tax evasion. Many opposition-party members who face criminal charges join the BJP, effectively giving the ruling party greater political power in exchange for the dismissal of the charges against them. A recent supreme-court directive requiring transparency in a segment of campaign financing revealed signs of extensive corruption primarily benefitting BJP politicians but also opposition leaders in charge of state governments.Nevertheless, after Prime Minister Modiā€™s visit to the United States last June and his address to a joint session of the Congress, the White Houseā€™s joint U.S.-India statement read: ā€œThe United States and India reaffirm and embrace their shared values of freedom, democracy, human rights, inclusion, pluralism, and equal opportunities for all citizens.ā€ In January, Secretary of State Antony Blinken referred to India as the ā€œworldā€™s largest democracyā€ and a vital partner, a position that the State Department continues to hold.Such statements are at odds with the Indian reality. Over the seven decades since independence, Indian democracy has betrayed its people, leaving the majority without dignified jobs, foundational education, public health, or clean air and water. Alongside that betrayal, the death by a thousand cuts of democratic norms raises the troubling question: Is India now an autocracy?If Modi wins this election, his victory will surely strengthen autocratic tendencies in India. But in the unlikely event that he loses, the erosion of democracy will merely have paused. Democracy is a fragile construct. When deviation from democratic norms persists for as long as it has in Indian politics, deviance becomes the norm. Reversing it becomes a monumental task. Especially if a winning opposition coalition fails to improve the quality of Indian lives, an electorally resurgent Modi and his Hindutva supporters could potentially seal democracyā€™s fate.
    theatlantic.com
  12. The Happiness Trinity Why itā€™s so hard to answer the question What makes us happiest?
    theatlantic.com
  13. No One Has a Right to Protest in My Home The difference between a private yard and a public forum
    theatlantic.com
  14. Photos of the Week: Wheelbarrow Race, Count Binface, Orange Skies A volcanic eruption in Indonesia, a tilting tower in Taiwan, a growing refugee camp in Chad, the Tokyo Rainbow Pride Parade in Japan, humanitarian aid parachuted into Gaza, protests opposing Israelā€™s attacks on Gaza in the United States, a performance by Phish at the Sphere in Las Vegas, and much more
    theatlantic.com
  15. Trump Is Getting What He Wants The Supreme Court seems to be endorsing his views on presidential power.
    theatlantic.com
  16. How America Lost Sleep Many Americans are reporting that theyā€™d feel better if they slept more, but finding the right remedy isnā€™t always simple.
    theatlantic.com
  17. The Passover Plot The dark legacy and ongoing body count of an ancient anti-Semitic myth
    theatlantic.com
  18. The Supreme Court Is Frighteningly Warm to Trumpā€™s Immunity Argument At this morningā€™s oral argument, the justices debated the ins and outs of a dangerous idea.
    theatlantic.com
  19. The Rise of Big Vet In the pandemic winter of 2020, Katie, my familyā€™s 14-year-old miniature poodle, began coughing uncontrollably. After multiple vet visits, and more than $1,000 in bills, a veterinary cardiologist diagnosed her with heart failure. Our girl, a dog I loved so much that I wrote an essay about how I called her my ā€œdaughter,ā€ would likely die within nine months.Katie survived for almost two years. My younger son joked that Katie wasnā€™t going to let advanced heart failure get in the way of her life goal of never leaving my side, but the truth was that I was the one who wouldnā€™t let her go. Katieā€™s extended life didnā€™t come cheap. There were repeated scans, echocardiograms, and blood work, and several trips to veterinary emergency rooms. One drug alone cost $300 a month, and that was after I shopped aggressively for discounts online.People like me have fueled the growth of what you might call Big Vet. As household pets have risen in statusā€”from mere animals to bona fide family membersā€”so, too, has ownersā€™ willingness to spend money to ensure their well-being. Big-money investors have noticed. According to data provided to me by PitchBook, private equity poured $51.6 billion into the veterinary sector from 2017 to 2023, and another $9.3 billion in the first four months of this year, seemingly convinced that it had discovered a foolproof investment. Industry cheerleaders pointed to surveys showing that people would go into debt to keep their four-legged friends healthy. The field was viewed as ā€œlow-risk, high-reward,ā€ as a 2022 report issued by Capstone Partners put it, singling out the industry for its higher-than-average rate of return on investment.[From the December 2022 issue: How much would you pay to save your petā€™s life?]In the United States, corporations and private-equity funds have been rolling up smaller chains and previously independent practices. Mars Inc., of Skittles and Snickers fame, is, oddly, the largest owner of stand-alone veterinary clinics in the United States, operating more than 2,000 practices under the names Banfield, VCA, and BluePearl. JAB Holding Company, the owner of National Veterinary Associatesā€™ 1,000-plus hospitals (not to mention Panera and Espresso House), also holds multiple pet-insurance lines in its portfolio. Shore Capital Partners, which owns several human health-care companies, controls Mission Veterinary Partners and Southern Veterinary Partners.As a result, your local vet may well be directed by a multinational shop that views caring for your fur baby as a healthy component of a diversified revenue stream. Veterinary-industry insiders now estimate that 25 to 30 percent of practices in the United States are under large corporate umbrellas, up from 8 percent a little more than a decade ago. For specialty clinics, the number is closer to three out of four. And as this happened, veterinary prices began to riseā€”a lot. Americans spent an estimated $38 billion on health care and related services for companion animals in 2023, up from about $29 billion in 2019. Even as overall inflation got back under control last year, the cost of veterinary care did not. In March 2024, the Consumer Price Index for urban consumers was up 3.5 percent year over year. The veterinary-services category was up 9.6 percent. If you have ever wondered why keeping your pet healthy has gotten so out-of-control expensive, Big Vet just might be your answer.To get a sense of what might happen when the profit-seeking dial gets turned up too high in veterinary medicine, we need look no further than human health care. An extensive body of research shows that when private equity takes over a hospital or physician practice, prices and the number of expensive procedures tend to go up. A study found serious medical errors occur more frequently after private equity buys the hospital. Another study found that costs to patients rise, too, sometimes substantially. And thatā€™s in a tougher regulatory environment. In veterinary medicine, there is no giant entity like Medicare capable of pushing back on prices. There is no requirement, in fact, to provide care at all, no matter how dire the animalā€™s condition. Payment is due at the time of service or there is no service. Whenever I told people I was working on this article, I was inundated with Big Vet complaints. Catherine Liu, a professor at UC Irvine, took her elderly pit-bull mix, Buster, to a local VCA when he became lethargic and began drooling excessively. More than $8,000 in charges later, there was still no diagnosis. ā€œSonograms, endoscopyā€”what about just a hypothesis of what the symptoms could be? Nothing like that at all was forthcoming,ā€ Liu told me. Shortly before Buster died, a vet in private practice diagnosed him with cancer. The disease, Liu said, had not once been mentioned by the vets at VCA. (Mars Petcare, VCAā€™s parent company, declined to comment on the episode.)I donā€™t mean to single out VCA hereā€”in fact, I should note that a VCA vetā€™s medical protocol was almost certainly responsible for my dogā€™s longer-than-expected life. One reason Mars-owned chains attract outsized attention for their high costs and customer-service failures is that the company actually brands its acquisitions. Thatā€™s unusual. A study conducted by the Arizona consumer advocate Todd Nemet found that fewer than 15 percent of corporate-owned practices in the state slap their own brand identity on their vets; most keep the original practice name, leaving customers with the illusion of local ownership. (When I asked Thrive Pet Healthcare, a chain majority-owned by TSG Consumer Partners, about why the company doesnā€™t brand its clinics, a spokesperson replied, ā€œWe realize the value of local hospital brands and are committed to preserving and supporting them.ā€) Indeed, some pet owners told me that they realized that ownership of their vet had changed only after what they thought was a routine visit resulted in recommendations for mounds of tests, which turned out to have shot up in price. Paul Cerro, the CEO of Cedar Grove Capital, which invests in the pet industry, says this issue is frequent in online reviews. ā€œPeople will say, ā€˜Iā€™ve been coming here for four years, and all of a sudden Iā€™m getting charged for things Iā€™ve never been charged for,ā€™ and they give it one star.ā€[Read: The great veterinary shortage]Big Vet denies charging excessive prices. VCA Canada, for instance, recently told The Globe and Mail that prices can increase after an acquisition because ā€œthe quality of the care, the quality of everything we offer to them, goes up as well.ā€ A spokesperson for Mars told me, ā€œWe invest heavily in our associates, hospitals, state-of-the-art equipment, technology, and other resources.ā€ NVA, which is planning an initial public offering in 2025 or 2026, did not directly answer a question about why veterinary prices were rising so rapidly, instead sending me a statement saying, in part, ā€œOur vision is to build a community of hospitals that pet owners trust, are easy to access, and provide the best possible value for care.ā€ Do rising prices really just reflect higher-quality care? There may be some truth to this, but there is also evidence to the contrary. A study published last year in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, for example, found that vets working for large corporations reported more pressure to generate revenue, whereas veterinarians working for independent practices reported higher levels of satisfaction for such things as the ā€œability to acquire new large equipmentā€ and the ā€œability to get new/different drugs.ā€ Preliminary research by Emma Harris, the vice president of Vetster, a veterinary telehealth start-up, found significant differences in pricing between corporate and privately owned veterinary clinics in the same geographic region. Usually, she told me, the increases ā€œoccurred immediately after the sale to a private-equity-owned group.ā€All of this doesnā€™t sit well with many in the sector. Vets tend to be idealistic, which makes sense given that many of them rack up six figures in student-loan debt to pursue a profession that pays significantly less than human medicine. One vet, who worked for an emergency-services practice that, they said, raised prices by 20 percent in 2022, told me, ā€œI almost got to the point where I was ashamed to tell people what the estimate was for things because it was so insanely high.ā€ (The vet asked for anonymity because they feared legal repercussions.) Others described mounting pressure to upsell customers following acquisition by private equity. ā€œYou donā€™t always need to take X-rays on an animal thatā€™s vomited just one time,ā€ Kathy Lewis, a veterinarian who formerly worked at a Tennessee practice purchased in 2021 by Mission Veterinary Partners, told me. ā€œBut there was more of that going on.ā€ Prices increased rapidly as well, she said, leading to customer complaints. (Mission Veterinary Partners did not respond to requests for comment.)The combination of wheeling-and-dealing and price increases in the veterinary sector is beginning to attract the governmentā€™s attention. In the United States, the Federal Trade Commission required, in 2022 consent decree, that JAB seek prior approval before purchasing any emergency or specialty clinic within 25 miles of one it already owns in California and Texas for the next decade. In her written comments, FTC Chair Lina Khan said she feared these one-by-one purchases could lead to the development of a stealth monopoly. (JAB denied any wrongdoing.) And in the United Kingdom, where corporate ownership is higher than in the United States (even the practice originally owned by the author of the classic veterinary novel All Creatures Great and Small has been rolled up), government authorities are moving forward with an investigation into high prices and market concentration after an initial inquiry drew what regulators called an ā€œunprecedentedā€ response from the public.Pet owners used to have an easier time accepting the short lives of domestic animals. Few people were taking the barnyard cat or junkyard dog in for chemotherapy or ACL surgery, to say nothing of post-op aquatic physical therapy. ā€œWhen we started out over 20 years ago, you had to live near a veterinary teaching hospital to have access to something like an MRI,ā€ Karen Leslie, the executive director of the Pet Fund, a charity that aids people with vet bills, told me. ā€œNow itā€™s the standard of care. Itā€™s available basically everywhereā€”but that starts at $2,000.ā€Big Vet, in Leslieā€™s view, helped fuel an increase in expensive services. The same medical progress thatā€™s helped humans beat back once-fatal diseases is doing the same for cats and dogs, extending their life spans to record lengths. But only if you have the money to pay for it. Some petsā€”my late Katie, Liuā€™s late Busterā€”receive one expensive test or treatment after another, sometimes helpful, sometimes not. Other equally loved pets may go without basic care altogether, or even fall victim to what the industry calls ā€œeconomic euthanasia,ā€ where they are put down because their owners canā€™t afford their medical bills. (Pet insurance, widely promoted by the industry, is unlikely to help much. Uptake rates are in the low single digits, a result of relatively high costs and often-limited benefits.)[Watch: Volunteer veterinarians in Ukraine]The American Veterinary Medical Associationā€™s tracker shows that vet visits and purchases of heartworm and flea-and-tick medications are down compared with this month last year, even as practice revenues are up, suggesting that some owners are having trouble affording routine, preventative care. The market researcher Packaged Facts found that a full third of pet owners say that they would take their animal to the vet more often if it were less expensive. Shelter Animals Count, an animal-advocacy group, reports that the number of pets surrendered to shelters rose in the past two years. Carol Mithers, the author of the upcoming book Rethinking Rescue, told me that some people give up pets because they believe the shelter system will provide them with necessary medical treatmentā€”something that is, heartbreakingly, not true.The veterinary past is easy to romanticize. The truth is that pets have never received all the needed care, and that wealthy pet owners have always had access to more care. But the emergence of Big Vet and the injection of cutthroat incentives into a traditionally idealistic, local industry threatens to make these problems far worse. It portends a future in which some pet owners get shaken down, their love for their pets exploited financially, while others must forego even basic care for their pets. I donā€™t think Katie, who loved all animals, would approve. I certainly donā€™t.
    theatlantic.com
  20. How the Campus Left Broke Higher Education Fifty-six years ago this week, at the height of the Vietnam War, Columbia University students occupied half a dozen campus buildings and made two principal demands of the university: stop funding military research, and cancel plans to build a gym in a nearby Black neighborhood. After a week of futile negotiations, Columbia called in New York City police to clear the occupation.The physical details of that crisis were much rougher than anything happening today. The students barricaded doors and ransacked President Grayson Kirkā€™s office. ā€œUp against the wall, motherfucker, this is a stick-up,ā€ Mark Rudd, the student leader and future member of the terrorist Weather Underground, wrote in an open letter to Kirk, who resigned a few months later. The cops arrested more than 700 students and injured at least 100, while one of their own was permanently disabled by a student.In other ways, the current crisis brings a strong sense of dĆ©jĆ  vu: the chants, the teach-ins, the nonnegotiable demands, the self-conscious building of separate communities, the revolutionary costumes, the embrace of oppressed identities by elite students, the tactic of escalating to incite a reaction that mobilizes a critical mass of students. Itā€™s as if campus-protest politics has been stuck in an era of prolonged stagnation since the late 1960s. Why canā€™t students imagine doing it some other way?Perhaps because the structure of protest reflects the nature of universities. They make good targets because of their abiding vulnerability: They canā€™t deal with coercion, including nonviolent disobedience. Either they overreact, giving the protesters a new cause and more allies (this happened in 1968, and again last week at Columbia), or they yield, giving the protesters a victory and inviting the next round of disruption. This is why Columbiaā€™s president, Minouche Shafik, no matter what she does, finds herself hammered from the right by Republican politicians and from the left by her own faculty and students, unable to move without losing more ground. Her detractors know that they have her trapped by their willingness to make coercive demands: Do what we say or else weā€™ll destroy you and your university. They arenā€™t interested in a debate.[Michael Powell: The unreality of Columbiaā€™s ā€˜liberated zoneā€™]A university isnā€™t a stateā€”it canā€™t simply impose its rules with force. Itā€™s a special kind of community whose legitimacy depends on mutual recognition in a spirit of reason, openness, and tolerance. At the heart of this spirit is free speech, which means more than just chanting, but free speech canā€™t thrive in an atmosphere of constant harassment. When one faction or another violates this spirit, the whole university is weakened as if stricken with an illness. The sociologist Daniel Bell, who tried and failed to mediate a peaceful end to the Columbia occupation, wrote afterward: In a community one cannot regain authority simply by asserting it, or by using force to suppress dissidents. Authority in this case is like respect. One can only earn the authorityā€”the loyalty of oneā€™s studentsā€”by going in and arguing with them, by engaging in full debate and, when the merits of proposed change are recognized, taking the necessary steps quickly enough to be convincing. The crackdown at Columbia in 1968 was so harsh that a backlash on the part of faculty and the public obliged the university to accept the studentsā€™ demands: a loss, then a win. The war in Vietnam ground on for years before it ended and history vindicated the protesters: another loss, another win. But the really important consequence of the 1968 revolt took decades to emerge. Weā€™re seeing it now on Columbiaā€™s quad and the campuses of elite universities around the country. The most lasting victory of the ā€™68ers was an intellectual one. The idea underlying their protests wasnā€™t just to stop the war or end injustice in America. Its aim was the university itselfā€”the liberal university of the postwar years, which no longer exists.That university claimed a special role in democratic society. A few weeks after the 1968 takeover, the Columbia historian Richard Hofstadter gave the commencement address to a wounded institution. ā€œA university is a community, but it is a community of a special kind,ā€ Hofstadter saidā€”ā€œa community devoted to inquiry. It exists so that its members may inquire into truths of all sorts. Its presence marks our commitment to the idea that somewhere in society there must be an organization in which anything can be studied or questionedā€”not merely safe and established things but difficult and inflammatory things, the most troublesome questions of politics and war, of sex and morals, of property and national loyalty.ā€ This mission rendered the community fragile, dependent on the self-restraint of its members.The lofty claims of the liberal university exposed it to charges of all kinds of hypocrisy, not least its entanglement with the American war machine. The Marxist philosopher Herbert Marcuse, who became a guru to the New Left, coined the phrase repressive tolerance for the veil that hid liberal societyā€™s mechanisms of violence and injustice. In this scheme, no institution, including the university, remained neutral, and radical students embraced their status as an oppressed group.[Charles Sykes: The new rules of political journalism]At Stanford (where my father was an administrator in the late ā€™60s, and where students took over a campus building the week after the Columbia revolt), white students compared themselves to Black American slaves. To them, the university was not a community dedicated to independent inquiry but a nexus of competing interest groups where power, not ideas, ruled. They rejected the very possibility of a disinterested pursuit of truth. In an imaginary dialogue between a student and a professor, a member of the Stanford chapter of Students for a Democratic Society wrote: ā€œRights and privacy and these kinds of freedom are irrelevantā€”you old guys got to get it through your heads that to fight the whole corrupt System POWER is the only answer.ā€A long, intricate, but essentially unbroken line connects that rejection of the liberal university in 1968 to the orthodoxy on elite campuses today. The students of the ā€™68 revolt became professorsā€“the German activist Rudi Dutschke called this strategy the ā€œlong march through the institutionsā€ā€”bringing their revisionist thinking back to the universities theyā€™d tried to upend. One leader of the Columbia takeover returned to chair the School of the Arts film program. ā€œThe ideas of one generation become the instincts of the next,ā€ D. H. Lawrence wrote. Ideas born in the ā€™60s, subsequently refined and complicated by critical theory, postcolonial studies, and identity politics, are now so pervasive and unquestioned that theyā€™ve become the instincts of students who are occupying their campuses today. Group identity assigns your place in a hierarchy of oppression. Between oppressor and oppressed, no room exists for complexity or ambiguity. Universal values such as free speech and individual equality only privilege the powerful. Words are violence. Thereā€™s nothing to debate.The post-liberal university is defined by a combination of moneymaking and activism. Perhaps the biggest difference between 1968 and 2024 is that the ideas of a radical vanguard are now the instincts of entire universitiesā€”administrators, faculty, students. Theyā€™re enshrined in reading lists and codes of conduct and ubiquitous clichĆ©s. Last week an editorial in the Daily Spectator, the Columbia student newspaper, highlighted the irony of a university frantically trying to extricate itself from the implications of its own dogmas: ā€œWhy is the same university that capitalizes on the legacy of Edward Said and enshrines The Wretched of the Earth into its Core Curriculum so scared to speak about decolonization in practice?ā€A Columbia student, writing to one of his professors in a letter that the student shared with me, explained the dynamic so sharply that itā€™s worth quoting him at length: I think [the protests] do speak to a certain failing on Columbiaā€™s part, but itā€™s a failing thatā€™s much more widespread and further upstream. That is, I think universities have essentially stopped minding the store, stopped engaging in any kind of debate or even conversation with the ideologies which have slowly crept in to every bit of university life, without enough people of good conscience brave enough to question all the orthodoxies. So if you come to Columbia believing in ā€œdecolonizationā€ or what have you, itā€™s genuinely not clear to me that you will ever have to reflect on this belief. And after all this, one day the university wakes up to these protests, panics under scrutiny, and calls the cops on students who are practicing exactly what theyā€™ve been taught to do from the second they walked through those gates as freshmen. The muscle of independent thinking and open debate, the ability to earn authority that Daniel Bell described as essential to a universityā€™s survival, has long since atrophied. So when, after the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel, Jewish students found themselves subjected to the kind of hostile atmosphere that, if directed at any other minority group, would have brought down high-level rebukes, online cancellations, and maybe administrative punishments, they fell back on the obvious defense available under the new orthodoxy. They said that they felt ā€œunsafe.ā€ They accused pro-Palestinian students of anti-Semitismā€”sometimes fairly, sometimes not. They asked for protections that other groups already enjoyed. Who could blame them? They were doing what their leaders and teachers had instructed them was the right, the only, way to respond to a hurt.[Adam Serwer: The Republicans who want American carnage]And when the shrewd and unscrupulous Representative Elise Stefanik demanded of the presidents of Harvard and Penn whether calls for genocide violated their universitiesā€™ code of conduct, they had no good way to answer. If they said yes, they would have faced the obvious comeback: ā€œWhy has no one been punished?ā€ So they said that it depended on the ā€œcontext,ā€ which was technically correct but sounded so hopelessly legalistic that it led to the loss of their jobs. The response also made nonsense of their careers as censors of unpopular speech. Shafik, of Columbia, having watched her colleaguesā€™ debacle, told the congresswoman what she wanted to hear, then backed it up by calling the cops onto campusā€”only to find herself denounced on all sides, including by Senator Tom Cotton, who demanded that President Joe Biden deploy the United States military to Columbia, and by her own faculty senate, which threatened a vote of censure.The right always knows how to exploit the excesses of the left. It happened in 1968, when the campus takeovers and the street battles between anti-war activists and cops at the Democratic convention in Chicago helped elect Richard Nixon. Republican politicians are already exploiting the chaos on campuses. This summer, the Democrats will gather again in Chicago, and the activists are promising a big show. Donald Trump will be watching.Elite universities are caught in a trap of their own making, one that has been a long time coming. Theyā€™ve trained pro-Palestinian students to believe that, on the oppressor-oppressed axis, Jews are white and therefore dominant, not ā€œmarginalized,ā€ while Israel is a settler-colonialist state and therefore illegitimate. Theyā€™ve trained pro-Israel students to believe that unwelcome and even offensive speech makes them so unsafe that they should stay away from campus. What the universities havenā€™t done is train their students to talk with one another.
    theatlantic.com
  21. Writing Is a Blood-and-Guts Business The scrolls lay inside glass cases. On one, the writing was jagged; on others, swirling or steady. I was at the National Palace Museum in Taiwan, admiring centuries-old Chinese calligraphy that, the wall text told me, was meant to contain the life forceā€”qiā€”of the calligrapher expressed through each brushstroke. Though I couldnā€™t read the language, I was moved to see the work of writers who lived hundreds of years ago, whose marks still seemed to say something about the creators long after theyā€™d passed.Iā€™m using my fingers to type this now, but every letter is perfectly legible and well spaced. Today, the human body behind the written word is less apparent. When Iā€™m composing an email, Gmail makes suggestions I can deploy in one click: ā€œAwesome!ā€ ā€œSounds great!ā€ ā€œYes, I can do that.ā€ Artificial intelligence can produce instantaneous sentences. That a person is responsible for text is no longer a given.Last year, Alex Reisner reported in The Atlantic that more than 191,000 books had been absorbed into a data set called Books3, which was then used to train generative-AI large language models that may someday threaten to take the place of human writers. Among the books in question was my debut novel, Goodbye, Vitamin, which took me five years to complete. My new novel, Real Americans, took even longer: I began working on it in December 2016, and itā€™s being released at the end of April, seven years and four months later. Those numbers donā€™t even account for the years of reading, practice, and education (both formal and self-directed) that preceded the writing itself. Now ChatGPT and other LLMs, trained on a wide store of human-generated literature, stand on the cusp of writing novels in no time at all.[Read: What ChatGPT canā€™t teach my writing students]This seems, initially, discouraging. Here is an entity that can seemingly do what I do, but faster. At present, it ā€œhallucinatesā€ and gets basic facts wrong, but it may soon be able to generate text that can seamlessly imitate people. Unlike me, it wonā€™t need sleep, or bathroom breaks, or patience, or life experience; it wonā€™t get the flu. In fact, AI embodies hypotheticals I can just imagine for myself: If only I could write all day and night. If only I were smarter and more talented. If only I had endless knowledge. If only I could read whole libraries. What could I create if I had no needs? What might this development mean for writing?Considering limitlessness has led me to believe that the impediments of human writers are what lead us to create meaningful art. And they are various: limits of our body, limits of our perspectives, limits of our skills. But the constraints of an artistā€™s process are, in the language of software, a feature, not a bug.Writing is a blood-and-guts business, literally as well as figuratively. As I type with my hands, my lungs oxygenate the blood that my heart pumps; my brain sends and receives signals. Each of these functions results in the words on this page. In the Middle Ages, monks in the scriptoria wrote: ā€œTwo fingers hold the pen, but the whole body toils.ā€ Typing this now, my upper back hurts. I am governed by pesky physical needs: I have to drink water and eat; my mind canā€™t focus indefinitely. My hands are too cold, and because I havenā€™t moved it, one foot is going numb. On other occasions, illnesses or injuries have affected my ability to write.The sensitivities of our fragile human bodies require that our labor takes time. Nothing is more discouraging when I am trying to complete a draft. But this exchangeā€”my finite hours for this creative endeavorā€”imports meaning: It benefits the work, and makes it richer. Over weeks, months, and years, characters emerge and plots take surprising turns. A thought can be considered day after day and deepened.While revising my forthcoming book, one of my thighs erupted into a mysterious rash. Sparing gruesome details, letā€™s just say it disturbed and distracted me. But it also led me to a realization: Iā€™d been approaching the creation of my novel as though it could be perfectible. In reducing my entire self to my cognition alone, akin to a computer, Iā€™d forgotten the truth that I am inseparable from my imperfect body, with its afflictions and ailments. My books emerge from this body.In his book How to Write One Song, the musician Jeff Tweedy writes: ā€œI aspire to make trees instead of tables.ā€ He was talking about songs, but the concept was revelatory to me as a novelist. Unlike a table, the point of a novel isnā€™t to be useful or stable or uniform. Instead, it is as singular and particular as its creator, shaped by numerous forces and conditions. In spite of its limits and because of them, a tree is an exuberant organic expression. Though costumed in typeset words, a novel is an exuberant organic expression too.[Read: My books were used to train metaā€™s generative AI. Good.]AI is creating tables out of our trees. Its infinite iterations are pure veneer: bloodless and gutless, serviceable furniture made of the deforested expanse of human experience. A large language model doesnā€™t require experience, because it has consumed ours. It appears limitless in its perspective because it writes from an extensive data set of our own. Though writing comes out of these experiences and perspectives, it does not follow that unlimited quantities of each beget maximally substantial work. I believe that the opposite is true.Compared with AI, we might seem like pitiful creatures. Our lives will end; our memory is faulty; we canā€™t absorb 191,000 books; our frames of reference are circumscribed. One day, I will die. I foreclose on certain opportunities by pursuing others. Typing this now means I cannot fold my laundry or have lunch with a friend. Yet I believe writing is worth doing, and this sacrifice of time makes it consequential. When we write, we are picking and choosingā€”consciously or otherwiseā€”what is most substantial to us. Behind human writing is a human being calling for attention and saying, Here is what is important to me. Iā€™m able to move through only my one life, from my narrow point of view; this outlook creates and yet constrains my work. Good writing is born of mortality: the limits of our body and perspectivesā€”the limits of our very lives.I can imagine a future in which ChatGPT works more convincingly than it does now. Would I exchange the hours that I spent working on each of my two books for finished documents spat out by ChatGPT? That would have saved me years of attempts and failures. But all of that frustration, difficult as it was in the moment, changed me. It wasnā€™t a job I clocked in and out of, contained within a tidy sum of hours. I carried the story with me while I showered, droveā€”even dreamed. My mind was changed by the writing, and the writing changed by my mind.[Read: Prepare for the textpocalypse]Working on a novel, I strain against my limits as a bounded, single body by imagining characters outside of myself. I test the limits of my skill when I wonder, Can I pull this off? And though it feels grandiose to say, writing is an attempt to use my short supply of hours to create a work that outlasts me. These exertions in the face of my constraints strike me as moving, and worthy, and beautiful.Writing itself is a technology, and it will shift with the introduction of new tools, as it always has. Iā€™m not worried that AI novelists will replace human novelists. But I am afraid that weā€™ll lose sight of what makes human writing worthwhile: its efforts, its inquiries, its bids for connectionā€”all bounded and shaped by its imperfectionsā€”and its attempts to say, This is what itā€™s like for me. Is it like this for you? If we forget what makes our human work valuable, we might forget what makes our human lives valuable too. Novels are one of the best means we have for really seeing one another, because behind each effort is a mortal person, expressing and transmuting their realities to the best of their ability. Reading and writing are vital means by which we bridge our separate consciousnesses. In understanding these limits, we can understand one anotherā€™s lives. At least, we can try.
    theatlantic.com
  22. The Inflation Plateau Just a few months ago, America seemed to have licked the post-pandemic inflation surge for good. Then, in January, prices rose faster than expected. Probably just a blip. The same thing happened in February. Strange, but likely not a big deal. Then Marchā€™s inflation report came in hot as well. Okayā€”is it time to panic?The short answer is no. Core inflation (the metric that policy makers pay close attention to because it excludes volatile prices such as food and energy) is stuck at about 4 percent, double the Federal Reserveā€™s 2 percent target. But thatā€™s a long way from the crisis of 2022, when core inflation peaked at nearly 7 percent and the price of almost everything was going up dangerously fast. Instead, we seem to be facing a last-mile problem: Inflation has mostly normalized, but wringing out the final few percentage points in a handful of categories is proving harder than expected. There are two conflicting views of what exactly is going on, each with drastically different implications for how the Federal Reserve should respond. One camp worries that the Fed could lose control of inflation all over again; the other fears that the central bank willā€”whoopsā€” unnecessarily bring the U.S. economy to its knees.The ā€œvanishing inflationā€ view is that todayā€™s still-rising prices reflect a combination of statistical quirks and pandemic ripple effects that will almost surely resolve on their own. This camp points out that basically all of the current excess inflation stems from auto insurance and housing. The auto-insurance story is straightforward: Car prices spiked in 2021 and 2022, and when cars get more expensive, so does insuring them. Car inflation yesterday leads to car-insurance inflation today. Thatā€™s frustrating for drivers right now, but it carries a silver lining. Given that car inflation has fallen dramatically over the past year, it should be only a matter of time before insurance prices stabilize as well.[Annie Lowrey: Inflation is your fault]Housing, which made up a full two-thirds of excess inflation in March, is a bit more complicated. You might think that housing inflation would be calculated simply by looking at the prices of new homes or apartments. But for the majority of Americans who already own their home, it is calculated using a measure known as ā€œownersā€™ equivalent rent.ā€ Government statisticians try to determine how much money homeowners would reasonably charge for rent by looking at what people in similar homes are paying. This way of calculating housing prices has all kinds of flaws. One issue is that inflation data are calculated monthly, but most renters have one- or two-year leases, which means the official numbers usually lag the real housing market by a year or more. The housing market has cooled off considerably in the past year and a half, but the inflation data are still reflecting the much-hotter market of early 2023 or late 2022. Sooner or later, they too should fall. ā€œThe excess inflation we have left is in a few esoteric areas that reflect past price increases,ā€ Ernie Tedeschi, the director of economics at Yaleā€™s Budget Lab, told me. ā€œIā€™m not too worried about inflation taking off again.ā€The ā€œhot wagesā€ camp tells a very different story. Its members note that even as price increases appeared to be settling back down at the beginning of 2024, wages were still growing much faster than they did before the pandemic. When wages are rising quickly, many employers, especially those in labor-intensive service industries, raise prices to cover higher salary costs. That may show up in the data in different waysā€”maybe itā€™s groceries one month, maybe airfares or vehicle-repair costs another monthā€”but the point is that as long as wages are hot, prices will be as well. ā€œThe increase in inflation over the last three months is higher than anything we saw from 1992 to 2019,ā€ Jason Furman, the former director of Barack Obamaā€™s Council of Economic advisers, told me. ā€œItā€™s hard to say thatā€™s just some fluke in the data.ā€Adherents of the ā€œvanishing inflationā€ idea donā€™t deny the importance of wages in driving up prices; instead, they point to alternative measures that show wage growth closer to pre-pandemic levels. They also emphasize the fact that corporate profits are higher today than they were in 2019, implying that wages have more room to grow without necessarily pushing up prices.Although this dispute may sound technical, it will inform one of the most pivotal decisions the Federal Reserve has made in decades. Last year, the central bank raised interest rates to their highest levels since 2001, where they have remained even as inflation has fallen dramatically. Raising interest rates makes money more expensive for businesses and consumers to borrow and, thus, to spend, which is thought to reduce inflation but can also raise unemployment. This leaves the Fed with a tough choice to make: Should it keep rates high and risk suffocating the best labor market in decades, or begin cutting rates and risk inflation taking off again?If you believe that inflation is above all the product of strong wage growth, then cutting interest rates prematurely could cause prices to rise even more. This is the view the Fed appears to hold. ā€œRight now, given the strength of the labor market and progress on inflation so far, itā€™s appropriate to allow restrictive policy further time to work,ā€ Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a Q&A session following the release of Marchā€™s inflation data. Translation: The economy is still too hot, and we arenā€™t cutting interest rates any time soon.[Michael Powell: What the upper-middle class left doesnā€™t get about inflation]If, however, you believe that the last mile of inflation is a product of statistical lags, keeping interest rates high makes little sense. In fact, high interest rates may paradoxically be pushing inflation higher than it otherwise would be. Many homeowners, for instance, have responded to spiking interest rates by staying put to preserve the cheap mortgages they secured when rates were lower (why give up a 3 percent mortgage rate for a 7 percent one?). This ā€œlock-in effectā€ has restricted the supply of available homes, which drives up the prices.High rates may also be partly responsible for auto-insurance costs. Insurance companies often invest their customersā€™ premium payments in safe assets, such as government bonds. When interest rates rose, however, the value of government bonds fell dramatically, leaving insurers with huge losses on their balance sheets. As The New York Timesā€™s Talmon Joseph Smith reports, one reason auto-insurance companies have raised their premiums is to help cover those losses. In other words, in the two categories where inflation has been the most persistent, interest rates may be propping up the exact high prices that they are supposed to be lowering.The Fedā€™s ā€œwait and seeā€ approach comes with other risks as well. Already, high rates have jacked up the costs of major life purchases, made a dysfunctional housing market even more so, and triggered a banking crisis. They havenā€™t made a dent in Americaā€™s booming labor marketā€”yet. But the longer rates stay high, the greater the chance that the economy begins to buckle under the pressure. Granted, Powell has stated that if unemployment began to rise, the Fed would be willing to cut rates. But lower borrowing costs wonā€™t translate into higher spending overnight. It could take months, even years, for them to have their full effect. A lot of people could lose their jobs in the meantime.Given where inflation seemed to be headed at the beginning of this year, the fact that the Federal Reserve finds itself in this position at all is frustrating. But given where prices were 18 months ago, it is something of a miracle. Back then, the Fed believed it would be forced to choose between a 1970s-style inflation crisis or a painful recession; today it is deciding between slightly higher-than-typical inflation or a somewhat-less-stellar economy. That doesnā€™t make the central bankā€™s decision any easier, but it should perhaps make the rest of us a bit less stressed about it.
    theatlantic.com
  23. What Taylor Swift Sees in ā€œThe Albatrossā€ How do you get the albatross off your neck? You know, your albatross. Your own dank collar of bird carcass, bespoke feathery deadweight of shame/rage/neurosis/solipsism/the past/whatever, the price of being you as it feels on a bad day ā€¦ How do you let it drop?In Taylor Swiftā€™s ā€œThe Albatrossā€ā€”a bonus track on her new double album, The Tortured Poets Departmentā€”the albatross is a person. A woman, to be precise. ā€œSheā€™s the albatross / She is here to destroy you.ā€ Which could be a trope from some slab of 1970s misogynist boogie, Bad Company or Nazareth howling about a faithless woman and her evil ways, etc., etc., butā€”because this is Taylor Swiftā€”it isnā€™t.Let me quickly locate myself in the Taylorverse. Iā€™m a ā€œBad Bloodā€/ā€œWe Are Never Ever Getting Back Togetherā€ guy. I like the bangers, the big tunes. Midnights was not my cup of tea: overdetermined as to lyrics (too many words), underpowered as to melodies (not enough tunes). For me, it was as if sheā€™d taken the DNA of a maundering, heavy-breathing, medium-Swift song like Reputationā€™s ā€œDressā€ and unraveled it over a whole album, abetted by the soupy skills of Jack Antonoff. But what do I know? Midnights was one of the biggest albums of all time. And now, less than two years later: The Tortured Poets Department. And: ā€œThe Albatross.ā€[Read: Taylor Swift is having quality-control issues]Sonically, musically, weā€™re in Folklore territory with this song: the strings; the wending, woodwindy vocal line; the tender electronica; the muted mood; the pewter wash of tastefulness. Chamber music, if the chamber in question has been decorated by Bed Bath & Beyond. Is there a tune? I mean, kind of. Not one youā€™re going to be bellowing in a toneless rapture at the wheel of your car, but itā€™s there.Lyrically, however, things are more lively. Thereā€™s this woman, the albatross: a bad habit, a bad relationship, a self-ensnaring situation, a bundle of familiar negatives (ā€œDevils that you know / Raise worse hell than a strangerā€). People have warned you about this person. Sheā€™s bad news! And Swift, ever-alert to the opprobrium of the herd, cannot help identifying with her. The voice shifts to the first person: ā€œLocked me up in towers / But Iā€™d visit in your dreams.ā€ Reputation-style vibes of slander and persecution are felt: ā€œWise men once read fake news / And they believed it / Jackals raised their hackles ā€¦ā€ As always, the Swifties are speculating: Whoā€™s this song for? Who is it about? Joe Alwyn? Travis Kelceā€”and the warnings he got when he started dating Swift? Is she his own stubborn albatross?By the end of the song, the singer herself has assumed the form of the albatross, and is flapping in to perform a ā€œrescue.ā€ ā€œThe devil that you know / Looks now more like an angel.ā€ Embrace your shadow? Embrace your albatross? Embrace your partner with your own long-feathered and doom-laden albatross wings?This is not how it usually goes with albatrosses.[Read: Travis Kelce is another puzzle for Taylor Swift fans to crack]Samuel Taylor Coleridgeā€™s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the source, the fons et origo, of the albatross metaphor. In the Rime, a sailor shoots an albatross, and brings a curse upon his ship. Why does he shoot the albatross? No reason, or none given in the poem. Maybe itā€™s the old existentialist acte gratuit, more than a century early: Maybe he does it because the sun is in his eyes, like Meursault in Camusā€™s Lā€™Ć‰tranger. He shoots it, anyway, prangs it with his crossbow, and the wind drops, and the ship slides into a hell-sea, and the dead bird, as punishment and emblem of shame, is hung around his neck.Back, then, to our question: How do you get rid of the albatross?Coleridge, fortunately for us, was very clear on this: You bless the water snakes. Itā€™s all in Part IV of the Rime. The ship is becalmed, the sea is rancid, the crew are dead, and the Marinerā€”albatross slung Bjƶrk-ishly around his neckā€”is sitting on the deck in a state of nightmare. Meaning, purpose, a following wind: all gone. Perished with his shipmates. Now heā€™s in a scummy realm, a realm of mere biological outlasting. ā€œAnd a thousand thousand slimy things / Lived on; and so did I ā€¦ā€But. However. And yet. With nothing else to do, with no phone to look at, he watches the slimy things as they writhe and flare in the water, super-white in the moonlight, darker and more luxuriously hued when in the shadow cast by the ship itself. And something happens. His heart opens. Or perhaps it breaks. He is mutely, selflessly stirred and awakened. With his core, from his core, he spontaneously exalts what is before him: He blesses the water snakes.And with a complicated downy loosening, and maybe a glancing clang from its beak, the albatrossā€”fatal baggage of a birdā€”falls off into the sea.Taylor Swift is not the first musician to engage with albatrossness. Thereā€™s Fleetwood Macā€™s beautiful instrumental ā€œAlbatrossā€ from 1968ā€”slow celestial wingbeats, bluesy exhalations over a dazzling sea. Thereā€™s Public Image Ltdā€™s trudging, splintering ā€œAlbatrossā€ from 1979, interpersonal, more in the Swift vein: ā€œI know you very well / You are unbearable.ā€ Corrosion of Conformityā€™s ā€œAlbatrossā€ is a kind of sludge-rocking, negatively charged ā€œFree Birdā€: ā€œYou can call me lazy / You can call me wrong ā€¦ Albatross, fly on, fly on.ā€But for the full Coleridgean thing, the full voyage, nothing beats Iron Maidenā€™s ā€œRime of the Ancient Mariner.ā€ The live version, preferably. This is a straight-up workingmanā€™s adaptation of the poem, 14 minutes of galumphing rock opera, Coleridgeā€™s words doggedly paraphrased by Maiden bassistā€“vision guy Steve Harris, and it succeeds spectacularly. Especially at the water-snakes moment, which the band orchestrates to perfection: a flicked and rushing pattern on the hi-hat, a trebly-warbly melodic figure on the bass, palm-muted chug-a-chug of one, then two (then three?) guitars, the tension blissfully building until Bruce Dickinson, with soaring all-gobbling theatricality, sings it out. ā€œThen the spell starts to BREAK / The albatross falls from his NECK / Sinks down like LEAD / Into the SEA / Then down in falls comes theā€ [King Diamondā€“style infernal androgynous scream] ā€œRAAAAAAIIN!!ā€So what are the water snakes? Coleridgeā€™s Rime is not, for me, an allegory, so the water snakes are not representing or symbolizing something. They are something. A coiling and uncoiling beautiful-terrible, playful-awful force that breaks the surface in snaky loops and flashes. Wonderfully indifferent to us, horrifyingly indifferent to us. But mysteriously in relationship with us, because it is in our eyes that these water snakes, these incandescent reptiles, these limbless creatures of the deep, are made holy. We are the ones who can bless them.And you canā€™t decide to bless the water snakes, thatā€™s the point. Itā€™s not about gratitude. Itā€™s not about improving your mental health. No squint of effort, no knotting or unknotting of the frontal lobes will get you there. The blessing arises by itself, or it doesnā€™t arise at all. Total brain bypass: a love so simple and helpless it barely even knows what itā€™s loving.[Read: James Parker on the Rick Rubin guide to creativity]So it becomes a question of orienting oneself to the possibility of this love. How to do it? Iā€™m out of my depth hereā€”which is just as it should be, for here we are in the zone of the mystics and the mega-meditators. We are full fathom five, where your feet donā€™t touch anything, because thereā€™s nothing to touch. If youā€™re the Ancient Marinerā€”or perhaps if youā€™re addicted to opiates, as Coleridge wasā€”youā€™ll have to go through it, all of it. Youā€™ll have to be carried to the end of yourself. The blessing of the water snakes happens at the Marinerā€™s clinical bottoming-out: when heā€™s utterly isolated, on a suppurating sea, besieged by the forces of death.The rest of us, maybe we donā€™t have to goā€”or be takenā€”that far. Maybe there are other, less drastic, more everyday opportunities and invitations for us to be broken down and opened up. For our grip on the albatross to be unclenched. For the love to pour through us like Iron Maiden. For the albatross itself to wrap its angelic Taylor Swift wings around your inner Travis Kelce.One way or another, though, sooner or later, gently or with loud sunderings and burstings, itā€™s going to happen. Life, thank Godā€”itā€™ll get you and get you again.This article has been adapted from James Parkerā€™s upcoming book, Get Me Through the Next Five Minutes: Odes to Being Alive.
    theatlantic.com
  24. The Point of Having a Spiritual Quest Want to stay current with Arthurā€™s writing? Sign up to get an email every time a new column comes out.The United States has long had a great deal of religious diversity, and was built on the idea of religious tolerance. But one type of belief was always rare: none. Until recently, that is. According to the Pew Research Center, the percentage of Americans who profess no religion (as opposed even to having one that they rarely or never practice) has risen from 16 percent in 2007 to 29 percent in 2021. (Back in the early 1970s, only about 5 percent of Americans espoused this position.)This phenomenon of declining belief is of great concern to many religious leaders, as one can easily imagine. The Catholic theologian and bishop Robert Barron has built an enormous internet-based ministry in no small part by seeking to reach these so-called nones. Rather than simply railing against a secular culture, Barron turns the criticism around and calls the growth of this disavowal ā€œan unnerving commentary on the effectiveness of our evangelical strategies.ā€The growing phenomenon of the nones, however, is not evidence of a lack of interest in spiritual life. Many today who previously fell away from their faithā€”or never had one to begin withā€”are seeking something faith-like in their life. They are open to thinking about such commitments, but just donā€™t know what to look for. Maybe this describes you. If so, ironically, the research data on why people say they became nones in the first place might hold the answer of what to focus on to set you on your spiritual path.In tracking the rise of the nones in American religious life, Pew has also studied people who had faith in childhood but left it in adulthood. In 87 percent of the cases, this came down to one of three reasons: They stopped believing (49 percent), they felt too uncertain (18 percent), or they didnā€™t like the way the faith was practiced (20 percent). More concisely, most people leave their faith because of belief, feeling, or practice.[Derek Thompson: The true cost of the churchgoing bust]These are the reasons people quit religion, but we can also infer that these same three aspects of religious experience are central to maintaining faithā€”or to finding it anew and then keeping it. You might say that belief, feeling, and practice are the macronutrientsā€”the necessary elementsā€”of healthy faith. With only one of them, you will be spiritually malnourished: Belief alone is desiccated theory; by itself, feeling is unreliable sentimentality; practice in isolation is dogmatism. To build a new, sustaining spiritual diet, you need to focus on all three.Many great thinkers have made essentially this point. For example, the ardently religious Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy wrote in his book of daily pensĆ©es, A Calendar of Wisdom, that in times of trouble, ā€œyou have to embrace what the wisdom of humanity, your intellect, and your heart tell you: that the meaning of life is to serve the force that sent you into the world.ā€Feeling is fundamental to religious experience, as scholarship on emotion has shown. Some religions elevate trancelike states of ecstasy, such as samadhi in both Hinduism and Buddhism, which involves complete meditative absorption. Most faiths emphasize the role of the emotional adoration of the divine, as in the Prophet Muhammadā€™s teaching that believers should ā€œlove Allah with all of your hearts.ā€ One cannot rely on feeling alone, however, because it is so mutable. As the 16th-century founder of the Jesuit Order, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, noted, faith features feelings of not only consolation but also desolation, at moments when God feels absent from oneā€™s life.The second element of faith is belief, which are tenets you have accepted as truths, at least provisionally. These truths are not testable as scientific propositions are, so, in Thomas Aquinasā€™s definition, they are the ā€œmean between science and opinion.ā€ These are the propositions that you learn from reading and listening to other believers, and that you ultimately choose to accept; examples would be Godā€™s laws for the Jewish people or the Eightfold Path to enlightenment for Buddhists.Accepting such beliefs as truth does not mean theyā€™re impossible to revise. In fact, research has shown that spiritual people are generally open to reflection on existential questions and willing to modify their views. But these tenets of faith are based on considered arguments, rather than feelings, so they tend to be stable and enduring.[Peter Wehner: David Brooksā€™s journey toward faith]Finally, religious practice offers a set of actions and rituals that you commit to observing in order to demonstrate your adherence to the faith for yourself and others. This is the element of faith that takes it out of the realm of abstraction and makes it part of your real, physical life. You can say you believe in the ideas of Zen, but Zen itself will not become a meaningful part of your life until you practice Zen meditation. Similarly, you can say you believe in the divine inspiration of the Quran, but that doesnā€™t mean much if you donā€™t actually read it.You might assume that any practice requires both belief and feelingā€”entailing that, for example, you would feel impelled to go to a political demonstration only if you already believed in the cause. But you may have noticed the opposite occurring in your life: If you go to a demonstration uncommitted, you may find that the experience stimulates feelings and belief, which might then lead you to go to future demonstrations.This is a basic form of what academics call ā€œpath dependence,ā€ a phenomenon in which past decisions lead to similar actions in future. The concept is usually used by economists and political scientists to explain institutional inertia or resistance to organizational change, but the same principle can suggestively be applied to individual human behavior. Such path dependence can be affected by both positive and negative feedback, the sense either that peopleā€™s choices elicit increasing returns or that they are self-reinforcing or ā€œlocked in.ā€That feedback loop can be a problem if your religious practice makes you become rigid in your ideology; economists, for example, have modeled that voter path dependence might be one of the causes of our increasing polarization. As it pertains to faith, the trick, then, is to be wary of your path dependence if it results in negative feedback: If you feel or behave like a ā€œlocked-inā€ party-line voter, you might be too rigid in your belief. Yet if you use path dependence on your faith exclusively for positive feedbackā€”that is, your belief elicits increasing returns, perhaps boosting your altruism, community ties, or sense of meaning in lifeā€”then you will be using it as a force for good.Put simply, be completely honest with yourself about why youā€™re practicing your faith; if your belief spurs positive feedback, carry on.[Faith Hill: The messy line between faith and reason]A healthy faith thus requires all three sources of spiritual nourishment. The data suggest that when one or more of those elementsā€”of belief, feeling, and practiceā€”are missing, people fall away. So if youā€™re looking for faith in your life, you need to seek all three.Here is an optimal way to do so. In Tolstoyā€™s Calendar of Wisdom, he quotes an ancient Chinese proverb: ā€œThose who know the rules of true wisdom are baser than those who love them. Those who love them are baser than those who follow them.ā€ In other words, to develop a healthy faith, practice is more important than feeling, and feeling is more important than belief. This implies the reverse of what most people do to develop a spiritual life: They read and think to acquire knowledge and opinionsā€”that is, beliefsā€”then they see if they ā€œfeelā€ their faith, and only then will they move on to practicing it. But as the proverb implies, this order of priorities wonā€™t work very well.The right approach is to start practicing, notwithstanding your current state of belief and feeling. If the practice evokes sentiment in you, then study the faith to develop knowledge and opinions. This is an experimental, hands-on approach, much in the manner of how many inventions and innovations come about: An inventor tries something, sees whether it works, and then figures out precisely whatā€™s going on.In a faith context, this means that you might go to a service of worship a few times. Then you could interrogate your feelings as to whether the services stimulated something deep within (or, alternatively, whether they left you cold). Finally, if the former feels true, you could start investigating the belief system intellectually.[Arthur C. Brooks: Jungā€™s five pillars of a good life]The three elements of faith can be useful to apply to many parts of life, not just your spiritual quest. Consider marriage, for instance: Without the feelings of love and affection, a relationship is dead; without knowledge and opinions about your spouse, it has no depth; without practicing the rituals of love, your partnership will wither. This same algorithmic progression of faith can also map out your path to marriage. You start out with practice in the form of a date; you continue the relationship if you feel attraction and the beginnings of love; the pairing develops as you gain knowledge and form favorable opinions about your partner.Obviously, this connubial example is not a random one. To find faith is to find a form of loveā€”a love of the divine, or a rapturous spiritual connection with the universe. But like all good and worthwhile things in life, faith and love merit deep thought and serious effort.
    theatlantic.com
  25. In Search of America Aboard the Icon of the Seas In January, the writer Gary Shteyngart spent a week of his life on the inaugural voyage of the Icon of the Seas, the largest cruise ship ever. Like many a great novelist before him, he went in search of the ā€œrealā€ America. He left his Russian novels at home, bought some novelty T-shirts, and psychically prepared to be the life of the party. About halfway through, Shteyngart called his editor and begged to be allowed to disembark and fly home. His desperate plea was rejected, resulting in a semi-sarcastic daily log of his misery.In this episode of Radio Atlantic, Shteyngart discusses his ā€œseven agonizing nightsā€ on the cruise ship, where he roamed from mall to bar to infinity pool trying to make friends. He shares his theories about why cruise lovers nurture an almost spiritual devotion to an experience that, to him, inspires material for a ā€œlow-rent White Lotus.ā€ And he shares what happened when cruise lovers actually read what he wrote about their beloved ship.Listen to the conversation here:Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Google Podcasts | Pocket CastsThe following is a transcript of the episode:Gary Shteyngart: Hi.Hanna Rosin: Hi. Itā€™s Hanna.Shteyngart: Hi, Hanna. How are you?Rosin: Good.Rosin: Iā€™m Hanna Rosin. This is Radio Atlantic.Shteyngart: Itā€™s cloudy here.Rosin: It is? In a good way? In a way that makes your hair look full and rich?Shteyngart: Oh, yeah.(Laughs.) It does add fullness to my hair, which is always a good thing at this point. I think spring has finally sprung. And I teach in the spring semester, and Iā€™m like, God, I just want this to be over. I just want to go out and play.Rosin: You teach fiction?Shteyngart: Yeah. I canā€™t teach rocket science.Rosin: (Laughs.)Shteyngart: Cruising technology.Rosin: This is writer Gary Shteyngart.Rosin: Thereā€™s just a Russian stereotype.Shteyngart: (Laughs.)Rosin: Iā€™m like, You could teach astronomy or physics. I donā€™t know.Shteyngart: Chess.Rosin: Chess. Exactly.Rosin: Gary Shteyngart grew up in the Soviet Union and immigrated to the U.S. when he was 7. Heā€™s written several award-winning novels, and he was a ā€œliterary consultantā€ on Succession, the HBO show.Mostly, he is known for his satire, which can range from gentle to deadly. So who better to write an article about the inaugural voyage of the largest cruise ship ever built?Shteyngart: This whole thing came about because I was on Twitter, and I saw a tweet that just showed theā€”may I use salty language here?Rosin: Yes.Shteyngart: The ass of the ship is how I describe it. I donā€™t know any of these terms, but, you know, with all the water parks and crap on it. And so I reposted the tweet, and I said, If somebody wants to send me on this cruise, please specify the level of sarcasm desired.Rosin: Really? (Laughs.)Shteyngart: And thenā€”God bless The Atlanticā€”within seconds, I had an assignment.Rosin: That ass belongs to the Icon of the Seas, a ship that can hold more than 7,000 passengers and 2,000 crew. It has 20 decks with seven swimming pools and six waterslides. The ship itself is about five times bigger than the Titanic. And Iā€™m pretty sure the Titanic did not have a swim-up bar, much less the worldā€™s largest swim-up bar.In a recent piece for The Atlantic, Gary describes it this way: ā€œThe ship makes no sense, vertically or horizontally. It makes no sense on sea, or on land, or in outer space. It looks like a hodgepodge of domes and minarets, tubes and canopies, like Istanbul had it been designed by idiots ā€¦ This is the biggest cruise ship ever built, and I have been tasked with witnessing its inaugural voyage.ā€To prepare for that voyage, Gary wore a meatball T-shirt he found in a store in Little Italy. More specifically, the shirt read: ā€œDaddyā€™s Little Meatball.ā€Shteyngart: You know, I grew up in Queens and, being a spicy meat-a-ball, I thought it was funny. A lot of cruisers were angry. They thought I was being sexual or sexualizing. Itā€™s very interesting because I thought that T-shirt was the bond between a child and his daddy or her daddy.Rosin: (Laughs.) You thought itā€™d just be a conversation starter.Shteyngart: I thought itā€™d be a conversation starter. If they had a ā€œMommyā€™s Little Meatballā€ T-shirt, that wouldā€™ve been preferable. I feel much more a mommyā€™s little meatball. But they only have daddy.I actually thought, My expectations are low, but I bet Iā€™m going to run into awesome people. And I love to drink and chat, and this isā€”I guess thatā€™s what you do on a cruise ship. And I knew I was going to have a suite, so I was like, Maybe Iā€™ll throw a suite party.Rosin: (Laughs.)Shteyngart: Invite some people over. On land, I really am quite sociable. I remember I was just leaving a Columbiaā€”I teach at Columbiaā€”leaving a Columbia party, and somebody was saying, Well, there goes 75 percent of the party.Rosin: Oh, thatā€™s a compliment.Shteyngart: Itā€™s a compliment. Iā€™m kind of a party animal. So I was superā€”I thought, you know, Look, 5,000 people. Iā€™m going to find a soulmate or two.Rosin: Great writers before Gary have deluded themselves in this way before. Most notably: David Foster Wallace, who ended up spending much of his cruise adventure alone in his cabin. They venture out, looking to swim with some ā€œreal Americans.ā€ And instead, they are quickly confronted by the close-up details, like the nightly entertainmentā€”Shteyngart: There was a kind of packaged weirdness in the shows. Goddamnā€”the ice-skating tribute to the periodic table. What the hell was that?Rosin: The foodā€”Shteyngart: It did not have the consistency of steak. It was like some kind of pleathery, weirdā€”like this poor cow had been slapped around before it died.Rosin: And the physical touch of an actual ā€œreal American.ā€Shteyngart: Heā€™d throw his arms around them drunkenly, and theyā€™d be like, Ehh.First of all, I just want to say, Royal Caribbeanā€”the people that run it are geniuses. The CEOā€™s name isā€”Iā€™m not making this upā€”Jason Liberty.Rosin: (Laughs.)Shteyngart: His name is Liberty! I mean, I donā€™t know. What the hell? Like, exactly, if I was to write a novel character with, you know, Jason Liberty, people would be like, Oh, heā€™s being pretentious. But no. Thatā€™s his actual name.I think they know the tastes of their clientele so well and are able to mirror it back to them, but also to give them this feeling that theyā€™re awesome for doing something like this. One of my favorite slogansā€”you get all this literatureā€”This isnā€™t a vacation day spent. Itā€™s bragging rights earned.Rosin: Mmm. Itā€™s velvet ropey, like youā€™re in a club.Shteyngart: Itā€™s a velvet ropey situation. You are an adventurer. Youā€™ve earned this. You have bragging rights. But when you enter the ship, youā€™re in a mall. And the mall is large and multileveled, and you can buy a Rolex at three times what it would cost on land and all this other crap.And then thereā€™s all these neighborhoods, and you can do whatever the hell you want. You can get trashed or have sex, which, whateverā€”I mean with your spouse, although there were some swingers on board. But you could do whatever you want in a way that you canā€™t on land, in a way, I think, because so many of these people are just working their asses off.Rosin: Right.Shteyngart: That was a topic of conversation that came up. People were like, Yeah, I work 90 hours a week, and this is my chance to just, you know, be blotto.Rosin: Youā€™re hinting at this. Part of being on a ship is being inducted into the language and the levels of the ship, and can you walk us through that? You mentioned, for example: You walk in, youā€™re in a mall. But I bet, eventually, you start to see more. What are the neighborhoods? You said the word neighborhoods. What does that even mean? And what are the distinctions?Shteyngart: I think this ship and other Royal Caribbean ships of this sizeā€”although this is the biggestā€”try to create this idea of a city, like youā€™re in a city that happens to be at sea.One of the funniest neighborhoods is called Central Park, which is literally another mall but with a couple of shrubs growing out here and there. I thought that was really funnyā€”also, using a New York City landmark in one of the least New Yorkiest milieus in the world.Rosin: I guess it just has to be termsā€”a wordā€”people recognize. And people vaguely recognize it. They donā€™t need to know about Olmsted or live in Brooklyn.Shteyngart: (Laughs.) No, no.Rosin: They just vaguely recognize Central Park.Shteyngart: Itā€™d be funny if I askedā€”boy, would I get a lot of flak if I came up to a cruiser and be like, I donā€™t think this really matches Olmstedā€™s vision of Central Park. I donā€™t know. Meatball not happy. Maybe I should have used a Russian accent. Like, Hello. I am Meatball.Rosin: Meatball not happy.Shteyngart: Meatball not happy with Olmsted. So thereā€™s that. Thereā€™s Surfside, which is a very funny kind of Disneyland for kids withā€”Rosin: And are you walkingā€”like, I still donā€™t get it. So you go in, and how big is a neighborhood? And then how do you get to the next neighborhood?Shteyngart: Right, so everythingā€™s on decks, so you take these elevators. I think I spent half the cruise on elevators just going from one place to another.Rosin: Yeah.Shteyngart: But I thought I would be in the Suites neighborhood. Because this whole thingā€”and Royal Caribbean is also brilliant at this. These peopleā€”really, a Nobel Prize in Economics. Itā€™s a constant scramble. You constantly want a higher status, especially if youā€™ve been cruising forever. You want to reach Pinnacle status, which you have to do after 700 days (or nights, rather) on the ship, which is two years, right? Almost.Rosin: Wow. And so what does that get you?Shteyngart: So the Pinnacles have their ownā€”I mean, thereā€™s some priority things they get. Like, I was not allowed to go into one dining room at one point, and the guyā€”I didnā€™t know what Pinnacle was, so I thought the guy was saying, Itā€™s just pendejo dining. He had a thick accent. I was like, Iā€™m wearing a meatball T-shirt. I am the essence of pendejo. And he was like, No, no, pendejos only. But he was trying to say Pinnacles, I guess. So that kind of stuff.They have their own little lounge, which I wasnā€™t allowed into. And some of the other cruisers who are not Pinnacles but have somehow gotten into the lounge, theyā€™re very angry about being denied. And theyā€™re like, Thereā€™s nothing in there. Thereā€™s just a coffee machine in there.But the other thing is the suite status, which I had because by the time The Atlantic commissioned this piece, almost all the cabins were sold out. Everybody wanted to be on this ship, and all that was left was a $19,000ā€”Jesus Christā€”$19,000 suite that didnā€™t even look out on the sea.Rosin: Wow.Shteyngart: It looked out on the mall or whatever. But it looked like the Marriott, in a way, whichā€”I like Marriottsā€”Iā€™m just saying.Rosin: So itā€™s just a plainā€”itā€™s like a hotel room.Shteyngart: Itā€™s like a hotel room.Rosin: With a window.Shteyngart: And I had two bathrooms.Rosin: For yourself?Shteyngart: Just for myself, I know. Well, I think the idea of these suites is that more than one person goes on them, right?But thereā€™s thisā€”the Royal Bling. The Royal Bling is the jewelry store, such as it is, on board. And they introduced this thing called the something chalice. Itā€™s a $100,000 chalice, and it entitles you to drink for free on Royal Caribbean once youā€™ve bought it.So this thing is hilarious. Just the concept of it is insane. Everyoneā€™s trying to figure out: Should I buy this? Whatā€™s up with this? Should I get it for my 28-year-old kid? Will it earn out? How much does he drink? How much can I drink?So I talked to the wonderful Serbian sales lady. Everyoneā€™s country of origin, if youā€™re on the crew, is listed on their tag.Rosin: Really?Shteyngart: Yeah, yeah, yeah.Rosin: Thatā€™s weird.Shteyngart: So youā€™re like, Oh, itā€™s Amir from Pakistan, or whatever.Rosin: Thatā€™s so weird.Shteyngart: Yeah. And she was, I donā€™t know, something Olga from Serbia, and she was amazing. Theyā€™re all amazing. Every crew member is excellent.And she was like, Wellā€”she was trying to sell me the $100,000 chalice. I said, Itā€™s really gold? And sheā€™s like, No, itā€™s gold-plated. We couldnā€™t afford. She said, If it was really gold, it would be, like, a million dollars. Iā€™m like, Okay. And then it has diamonds, and sheā€™s like, Well, theyā€™re actually cubic zirconia, again, because it would cost, like, $10 million if they were diamonds. Iā€™m like, All right, this thing is sounding worse and worse.And then she said, But, you know, if you already have everything, this is one more thing you can have. And I thought that was almost like a Zen haiku, but about the American condition. If you already have everything, this is one more thing you can have.[Music]Rosin: So the ship has neighborhoods and levels and status in a very explicit way. And cruisers care about that. They care about it in a very deep, almost spiritual way that Gary didnā€™t quite appreciate until after heā€™d written the story.Shteyngart: One of the funniest thingsā€”somebody was telling me to look this up on, I guess, Reddit.Rosin: Mm-hmm.Shteyngart: Thereā€™s a huge cruising community. I think half a million people are on that thing and, boy, were they pissed!Rosin: Thatā€™s after the break.[Break]Rosin: During his time on the Icon of the Seas, Gary Shteyngart met a few memorable characters. There was the younger couple he called, ā€œMr. and Mrs. Ayn Rand,ā€ who he drank with a few times. And the coupleā€™s couple friends, he described as quote: ā€œbent psychos out of a Cormac McCarthy novel.ā€ And then, there was ā€œDuck Necklace.ā€Shteyngart: Heā€™s fascinating. He was drunk all the time, and he was being arrestedā€”there is a security forceā€”for photobombing.Rosin: I wonder if the laws are different on the ship. Like photobombing is a felony.Shteyngart: Iā€™d love to do Law & Order: Icon of the Seas. That would be amazing.Rosin: (Laughs.) Right.Shteyngart: But then he went on this long, drunken, very elegiac thing about, Well, Iā€™m 62, and if I fall off the ship, Iā€™m fine with that. I just donā€™t want a shark to eat me. And I believe in God, and the Mayans have a prophecy. He just went on and on. And then I looked him up and, when not drunk and getting arrested on a ship, heā€™s the pillar of his community in North Chicago. Thereā€™s so much more to this guy. So he was my favorite, I think.Rosin: So maybe the ship creates a space where, if youā€™re grinding and working every day and being a pillar of the community, the ship is your space to contemplate and be philosophical or be an idiot or whatever it is you canā€™t be elsewhere.Shteyngart: Yeah. And I think youā€™re right. And I think a couple of people, especially older peopleā€”I mean, 62 isnā€™t that oldā€”but a couple of the older people were trying to summarize their lives through their cruising experiences, including, for one woman, realizing that she wanted to divorce her husband. All these things happened on cruises.Itā€™s like the cruise is the time when theyā€™reā€”the way people say when youā€™re off land, itā€™s the rules of the sea. Youā€™re in international waters; you can do whatever you want. I think for some people, the cruise affords them some weird way to look back on their lives and to make large decisions or to celebrate either happy moments or sometimes almost-elegiac moments. There were all these people who looked like they were about to die.Rosin: Literally?Shteyngart: Literally about to die, clearly coming off of chemo or on an oxygen tank. Or they had T-shirts celebrating a good cancer remission. So definitely thereā€™sā€”and I hope this article, despite its very satirical tone, lends some of that poignancy. Because people are people, and this is the kind of stuff that they want to do, either to make an important moment in their lives or to think on the things that have happened to them.But I think thatā€™s one of the reasons people were so butt hurt on that Redditā€”to use a term of artā€”because I wasnā€™t just going after a hobby or something. I was going after something that is so key to their identity.Rosin: Thatā€™s interesting that people perceived it so badly. You both appreciated the earnestness of it and made fun of it at the same time. It was satirical but also present.Shteyngart: I donā€™t know. I think people really wanted a quote-unquote ā€œjournalistā€ to give an honest review of the ship. But look, I got this assignment by saying, What level of sarcasm do you want? But I didnā€™t deliver 11 on the sarcasm scale. I think it was, like, six or seven.I realized the humor part of thisā€”and this is what I talk about in my humor classā€”the human comedy is that no one understands quite who they are. So I may go around thinking Iā€™m a giraffe, and I keep talking about, Oh, Iā€™m so tall, and I eat leaves off of tall trees. But in reality, Iā€™m an aardvark. Iā€™m a small furry creature, burrowing in the bush.And that, to me, felt like a lot of what people were saying on the ship. People would say, I feel like Iā€™m on an adventure. And Iā€™m like, Yes, but weā€™re in a mall, as you say this, thatā€™s slowly steaming to all these islands. But many of the passengers wouldnā€™t even get off on these islands. They love the ship so much they wouldnā€™t leave.And Iā€™ll say this, also: One of the most important things that happened to meā€”I was in Charlotte Amalie, which I guess is the capital of the U.S. Virgin Islands or Saint Thomas, and Iā€™d wandered off the beaten path. And this elderly Rastafarian gentleman looked at me, and with the mostā€”Iā€™ve never been talked to like thisā€”but with a sneer beyond anything, he said, Redneck.And I guess I did have a red neck at this point, and I was wearing this vibrant cap with the Icon of the Seas Royal Caribbean logo. But I realized, also, that people hate these cruisers. They hate what they do to their islands, their environment, everything. Thereā€™s just so much more happening here than just a bunch of drunken Americans on a ship.And this also goes to the fact that, obviously, thereā€™s all these people, mostly from the global South, working below decks. They work nonstop. And itā€™s interesting because a lot of the passengers, they would say, Wow, these people work so hard, with a kind of like, Oh, I wish everybody back home would work so hard, or something like that. But at the same time, I was listening to a comedy act, and the comedian was making fun of quote-unquote ā€œshithole countries.ā€So thereā€™s definitely a kind ofā€”even though cruisers keep talking about how much they love the people on the ship, it doesnā€™t translate.Rosin: It doesnā€™t translate. It doesnā€™t translate into politics.Okay, Iā€™m turning it back on youā€”your story. You came into the boat with the story that Gary is a party guy, and Garyā€™s gonna have parties in Garyā€™s suite. So what did you realize along the way?Shteyngart: Yeah, it was like being an immigrant all over again. And, for me, assimilation into America was a very, very long process. So the meatball, or the lack of success of the meatball, really reminded me of that, tooā€”like Iā€™m always a step behind.And this did feel like, Oh, I was always a step behind. People would have casual conversations in the elevators, just shooting the shit, and I would try to banter with them. But I would always get it a little bit wrong, and I would realize it, too. Like, there was a lot of wind one day, and I was like, Oof, the frost is really on the pumpkin.Rosin: (Laughs.)Shteyngart: But I realized that thatā€™s probably said in the fall, right? Before Thanksgiving. Is that right? The pumpkin is, you knowā€”Rosin: So Immigrant Gary comes roaring back in those moments.Shteyngart: Oh, my god.Rosin: You want to be, like, Sophisticated Writer Gary.Shteyngart: Absolutely. So I was always sweating bullets. Like, I want to get into the conversation. And this was a big thing because there was a big contest, several contestsā€”the semifinals or something? Quarterfinals? I donā€™t knowā€”between the big teams. And I had no idea what the hell was going on, but everybody was talking about it. And everybody was wearing paraphernaliaā€”thatā€™s the other thing.Rosin: Paraphernalia. (Laughs.) Youā€™re referring to team T-shirts.Shteyngart: But also everything! I donā€™t know. Name it: hats, T-shirts, all kinds of crap. And I had nothing. I had meatball, you know.Rosin: Right.Shteyngart: Look, the preparation for this article should haveā€”I should have bought T-shirts with sports.Rosin: (Laughs.) T-shirts with sports.Shteyngart: And then I should have talked to people about all the rules of football. Maybe thereā€™s a documentary that I can watch, something like that. And then maybe that would have been it.Rosin: Okay, so Iā€™m reading this essay about this cruise ship, which has a little bit of politics, a little bit of cult, a little bit of status obsession. What am I understanding about America?Shteyngart: Well, I think we are, in some ways, a country that has been losing religion for a while. I know this is a strange approach to it, but people are looking for something to fill the void. Especially, among the hardworking middle class I think is where you feel it quite a bit. And I think because Americans are never satisfied, everyoneā€™s always looking for, Whatā€™s my ancestry? Where do I come from? Somehow just the term American is not enough to fulfill peopleā€™s expectations of what life is.Rosin: Of what they belong to. Like, what theyā€™re rooted in. Yeah.Shteyngart: And for me, this is an easier question because I actually just want to be an American. Iā€™m an immigrant who just wants to be an American, right?So, on this ship, what I was seeing was people desperately trying to belong to some kind of idea. And I feel like the cruising life, because these people are so obsessed with the cruises that they wear theseā€”half the people or more were wearing T-shirts somehow commemorating this voyage on the first day of the cruise. So I think I really offended a religion. I insulted not just a strange hobby that people engage in, but a way of life.And I think thatā€™s the future. Trying to understand America today is to try to understand people desperately grasping for something in the absence of more traditional ideas of what it means to an American, right? And this is one strange manifestation of that. But it was, for me, an ultimately unfulfilling one.[Music]You know, God bless David Foster Wallace for being brilliant enough to start the genre, although there were a couple pieces before him, but the modern incarnation of this. Letā€™s stop this. I did not solve the question of what America is. None of that got solved.Rosin: So what are we R.I.P.ing? Weā€™re not just R.I.P.ing the cruise ship piece? I just want to end the episode this way. R.I.P. what?Shteyngart: No, no, no, no. I donā€™t have that kind of cultural might.Rosin: (Laughs.)Rosin: This episode of Radio Atlantic was produced by Jinae West. It was edited by Claudine Ebeid, fact-checked by Isabel Cristo, and engineered by Rob Smierciak. Claudine Ebeid is the executive producer of Atlantic audio, and Andrea Valdez is our managing editor. Iā€™m Hanna Rosin. Thank you for listening.Rosin: But was there a monkey on the ship?Shteyngart: No, there wasnā€™t. The monkey was on Saint Kitts.Rosin: Oh, okay. I remembered that wrong.Shteyngart: No, no, no. The Royal Caribbean did not spring for a monkey. They had a golden retriever, and he wore, like, a cap or something? But see, so everybody was going gaga, and Iā€™m like, Youā€™ve never seen a golden freaking retriever? What kind of lives do you live on land?Rosin: Right, right. But itā€™s an Icon golden retriever, so itā€™s different.Shteyngart: Itā€™s an Icon golden retriever, and heā€™s, like, I guess, an emotional support dog for these people.
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  26. How Bird Flu Is Shaping Peopleā€™s Lives This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.For the past couple of years, scientists have watched with growing concern as a massive outbreak of avian flu, also known as H5N1 bird flu, has swept through bird populations. Recently in the U.S., a farm worker and some cattle herds have been infected. I spoke with my colleague Katherine J. Wu, who covered the virusā€™s spread in North America, about the risk of human infection and how, for animals, this has already been ā€œa pandemic many times over.ā€First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic: Welcome to the TikTok meltdown. The Republicans who want American carnage Columbia has resorted to pedagogy theater. Not a Five-Alarm FireLora Kelley: How does this bird-flu outbreak compare with previous ones?Katherine J. Wu: When weā€™re considering the toll on nonhuman animals, this is the largest, most deadly H5N1 outbreak that has been recorded in North America. It has been unfolding slowly for about two and a half years now, but itā€™s become a gargantuan wave at this point.Lora: Wowā€”how alarmed are you by that?Katherine: Iā€™m medium concernedā€”and I have been medium concerned for a couple of years now. Itā€™s difficult to gauge the amount of alarm to feel, because itā€™s so unprecedented. Still, most H5N1 outbreaks in the past have totally fizzled without much consequence, especially in this part of the world.I am worried because so many species have been getting sick. A huge number of wild birds have been infected, including species that havenā€™t been affected in the past. And weā€™ve seen these massive outbreaks in domesticated chickens, which are packed together in farms.Avian flu is known to be a bird problem. Beyond that, weā€™ve been seeing these outbreaks in mammals for a couple of years now, which is more concerning because, of course, we are also mammals. Humans seem to be potentially susceptible to infection, but at the same time, it would take quite a lot for this to become another big human-flu pandemic.Lora: Should we be concerned about getting sick?Katherine: People should be vigilant and paying attention to the news. But right now, as you and I are talking, there is still not a huge risk to people. You donā€™t get a pandemic unless you have a pathogen that spreads very, very easily among people, and thereā€™s no evidence so far that this virus has mutated to that point.There have been some human cases globally so far, but itā€™s a very small number. They seem to have been cases where someone was highly exposed to the virus in domesticated animals. People got sick, but they didnā€™t pass it to someone else.Iā€™m definitely not saying that person-to-person transmission canā€™t happen eventually, but thereā€™s a pretty big chasm between someone getting infected and someone being able to efficiently pass the virus on. It is concerning that we continue to see more mammal species affected by H5N1, including species that have a lot of close contact with humans. But this is not a five-alarm fire so far.Lora: How will peopleā€™s lives be affected?Katherine: The virus has already affected our lives. Egg prices went completely bonkers in 2022 and early 2023, and over the course of this outbreak, more than 90 million domestic poultry have died. Itā€™s not that all of those birds got sickā€”when this virus breaks out on chicken farms, itā€™s generally considered good practice to cull the chickens to halt the spread. Still, when you have that many chickens dying, egg prices are going to go up.Weā€™re probably not on track to see that with cows anytime soon. Even though this virus has now been detected in dairy cows, they arenā€™t getting wildly sick, and transmission doesnā€™t seem as efficient. I donā€™t think weā€™re going to be in a situation where weā€™re killing all of our dairy cows and no one can get milk.Lora: The FDA announced yesterday that genetic evidence of this bird-flu virus had been found in samples of pasteurized milk. Is it still safe to drink milk?Katherine: So far, the answer is: generally, yes, if itā€™s been pasteurized. Pasteurization is a process by which milk is treated with heat so that it will kill a whole bunch of pathogens, including bacteria and viruses, and H5N1 is thought to be vulnerable to this. Also, researchers have been working to test cows so they can figure out which ones are sick. Only milk from healthy cows is authorized to enter the general food supply, though the trick will be finding all the cows that are actually infected. For now, the main ways that this virus will affect us will be indirect.Lora: Is there anything that can be done to curb the spread among wild animals?Katherine: For the animal world, this has already been a ā€œpandemicā€ many times over. It has been truly devastating in that respect. So many wild birds, sea lions, seals, and other creatures have died, and itā€™s difficult to see how people can effectively intervene out in nature. There have been very few cases in which endangered animals have received vaccines because thereā€™s a real possibility that their populations could be 100 percent wiped out by this virus.For most other animals in the wild, thereā€™s not a lot that can be done, except for people to pay attention to where the virus is spreading. The hope is that most animal populations will be resilient enough to get through this and develop some form of immunity.Lora: Responses to COVID became very politicized. How might the aftermath of those mitigation measures shape how people respond to this virus, especially if it becomes a greater threat to humans?Katherine: Weā€™re so fresh off the worst days of COVID that if people were asked to buckle down or get a new vaccine, I suspect that a lot of them would be like, Not again. There is still a lot of mitigation fatigue, and many people are sick of thinking about respiratory viruses and taking measures to prevent outbreaks. And, certainly, people have lost a lot of trust in public health over the past four years.That said, H5N1 is still a flu, and people are familiar with that type of virus. We have a long history of using flu vaccines, and the government has experience making a pandemic vaccine, keeping that stockpile, and getting it out to the public. That gives me hope that at least some people will be amenable to taking the necessary preventative measures, so any potential bird-flu outbreak among humans would not turn into COVID 2.0.Related: Bird flu leaves the world with an existential choice. Bird flu has never done this before. Todayā€™s News President Joe Biden signed into law a bipartisan foreign-aid package that includes aid for Ukraine, Israel, and U.S. allies in the Indo-Pacific, and a measure that forces TikTokā€™s parent company to sell the social-media app or face an outright ban. The U.S. Supreme Court seems divided over whether a federal law can require hospitals to provide access to emergency abortions and override state-level abortion bans. George Santos, the embattled former New York representative facing multiple charges of fraud, ended his independent bid for a U.S. House seat on Long Island. Dispatches The Weekly Planet: Tesla is not the next Ford, Matteo Wong writes. Itā€™s the next Con Ed. Explore all of our newsletters here.Evening Read Illustration by Matteo Giuseppe Pani Why Did Cars Get So Expensive?By Annie Lowrey Inflation, finally, has cooled off. Prices have increased 2.5 percent over the past year, down from increases as high as 7 percent during the early pandemic. Rents are high but stabilizing. The cost of groceries is ticking up, not surging, and some goods, such as eggs, are actually getting cheaper. But American consumers are still stretching to afford one big-ticket item: their cars. The painful cost of vehicle ownership doesnā€™t just reflect strong demand driven by low unemployment, pandemic-related supply-chain weirdness, and high interest rates. It reflects how awful cars are for American households and American society as a whole. Read the full article.More From The Atlantic A Democratā€™s case for saving Mike Johnson How baseball explains the limits of AI Culture Break Illustration by Ben Kothe / The Atlantic. Source: Ashok Kumar / Getty. Listen. Taylor Swiftā€™s music often returns to the same motifs: pathetic fallacy, the passing of time, the mythology of love. Her latest album shows how these themes have calcified in her work, Sophie Gilbert writes.Look. Take a photo tour of several of Chileā€™s national parks, which protect many endangered species, wild landscapes, and natural wonders.Play our daily crossword.Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
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  27. Welcome to the TikTok Meltdown So: Youā€™ve decided to force a multibillion-dollar technology company with ties to China to divest from its powerful social-video app. Congratulations! Hereā€™s whatā€™s next: *awful gurgling noises*Yesterday evening, the Senate passed a billā€”appended to a $95 billion foreign-aid packageā€”that would compel ByteDance, TikTokā€™s parent company, to sell the app within about nine months or face a ban in the United States. President Joe Biden signed the bill this morning, initiating what is likely to be a rushed, chaotic, technologically and logistically complex legal process that is likely to please almost no one.The governmentā€™s case against TikTok is vague. Broadly speaking, the concern from lawmakers ā€”offered without definitive proof of any actual malfeasanceā€”is that the Chinese government can use TikTok, an extremely popular broadcast and consumption platform for millions of Americans, to quietly and algorithmically promote propaganda, potentially meddling in our nationā€™s politics. According to the U.S. State Department, the Chinese government is set on using its influence to ā€œreshape the global information environmentā€ and has long manipulated information, intimidated critics, and used state-run media to try to bolster the Communist Party of Chinaā€™s reputation abroad. Lawmakers have also cited privacy concerns, suggesting that TikTok could turn American user data over to the CPCā€”again without definitive proof that this has ever occurred.This week, Senator Mark Warner told reporters that, although many young Americans are skeptical of the case against the app, ā€œat the end of the day, theyā€™ve not seen what Congress has seen.ā€ But until the American public is let in on the supposed revelations included in these classified briefings, the case against TikTok will feel like it is based on little more than the vague idea that China shouldnā€™t own any information distribution tool that Americans use regularly. Some of the evidence may also be of dubious provenanceā€”as Wired reported recently, a TikTok whistleblower who claims to have spoken with numerous politicians about a potential ban may have overstated his role at the company and offered numerous improbable claims about its inner workings.TikTok, for its part, has argued that it has made good-faith efforts to comply with U.S. law. In 2022, it spent $1.5 billion on data-security initiatives, including partnering with Oracle to move American user data Stateside. Under the partnership, Oracle is in charge of auditing TikTok data for compliance. But, as Forbes reported last year, some user data from American TikTok creators and businesses, including Social Security numbers, appear to have been stored on Chinese servers. Such reports are legitimately alarming but with further context might also be moot; although the ability to do so has recently been limited, for a long time, China (or anyone else for that matter) could purchase such personal information from data brokers. (In fact, China has reportedly accessed such data in the pastā€”from American-owned companies such as Twitter and Facebook.)[Read: Itā€™s just an app]The nuances of the governmentā€™s concerns matter, because TikTok is probably going to challenge this law based on the notion that forcing a sale or banning the app is a violation of the companyā€™s First Amendment rights. The government will likely argue that, under Chinese ownership, the app presents a clear and present national-security threat, and hope that the phrase acts as a cheat code to compel the courts without further evidence.Nobody knows what is going to happen, and part of the reason is that the entire process has been rushed, passed under the cover of a separate and far more pressing bill that includes humanitarian aid to Gaza, weapons aid for Israel, and money to assist the Ukrainian war effort. This tactic is common among legislators, but in this case, the TikTok billā€™s hurried passage masks any attempts to game out the logistics of a TikTok ban or divestiture.Setting aside the possibility that the courts declare the law unconstitutional, here are just a few of the glaring logistical issues facing the legislation: First, recommendation algorithmsā€”in TikTokā€™s case, the code that determines what individual users see on the app and the boogeyman at the center of this particular congressional moral panicā€”are part of Chinaā€™s export-control list. The country must approve the sale of that technology, and, as one expert told NPR recently, the Chinese government has said unequivocally that it will not do so. TikTokā€™s potential buyer may, in essence, be purchasing a brand, a user base, and a user interface, without its most precious proprietary ingredient.This might make for a tough sell, which raises the second issue: Who is going to buy TikTok? At the heart of the governmentā€™s case against the app lies a contradiction. The logic is that TikTok is the beating heart of a social-media industrial complex that mines our data and uses them to manipulate our behavior, and, as such, it is very bad for an authoritarian country to have access to these tools. Left unsaid, though, is why, if the government believes this is true, should anyone have access to these tools? If weā€™re to grant the lawmakersā€™ claim that TikTok is a powerful enough tool to influence the outcomes of American elections, surely the process of choosing a buyer would have to be rigorous and complicated. One analysis of TikTokā€™s U.S. market values the app at $100 billionā€”a sum that rather quickly narrows down the field of buyers.Tech giants such as Meta and Microsoft come to mind, which, if approved, would amount to a massive consolidation in the social-media space, giving these companies greater control over how Americans distribute and consume information (a responsibility that Meta, at least, would rather not deal with, especially when it comes to political news; it has overtly deprioritized the sharing of news in Threads, its X competitor). Bids from Oracle and Walmart have been floated in the past, both of which would amount to selling a ton of user data to already powerful companies. That leaves private-equity funds and pooled purchases from interested American investors, such as Steve Mnuchin (who, as Treasury secretary during the Trump administration, was vocally in favor of a TikTok ban) and a handful of billionaires.[Read: The moneyball theory of presidential social media]But as weā€™ve seen from Elon Muskā€™s purchase of Twitter, putting the fate of a social-media platform into the hands of a few highly motivated individuals can quickly turn into a nightmare. A Muskian ideological purchase would mean a set of owners manipulating the app as part of an extended political project, perhaps even one that works against the interests of the United Statesā€”almost exactly what lawmakers fear China might be doing. There is, too, the ironic possibility that any outside investors with enough money to purchase the app might themselves have ties to China, as Musk himself does through Tesla. In this scenario, a sale might end up merely providing the CPC with a helpful veneer of plausible deniability.There is also the Trump factor. The law gives the sitting president broad authority to judge a worthy buyer, and it gives ByteDance 270 days to find a suitorā€”a period that the president can extend by 90 days. Close observers might note that there are 194 days until the next election and some 270 days until the next president is sworn into office. It stands to reason that Bidenā€™s qualified buyer might be different from one selected by Donald Trump, who has his own media conglomerate and social app, Truth Social, and is famous for self-dealing.Trump, for his part, has reversed his opinion on TikTokā€™s sale (he had previously been in favor but now opposes it), reportedly after pressure from one of his China-friendly mega donors. If elected, Trump could plausibly attempt a reversal of policy or simply turn around and approve the sale of TikTok to a group with close ties to China. Or, of course, the courts could strike all of this down. Regardless of who is president at the time, this is a lot of authority to grant to one partisan authority. You can play this 37-dimensional game of mergers-and-acquisitions chess all day long, but, ultimately, nobody knows whatā€™s going on. Itā€™s chaos!Process matters. If youā€™re of the mind that TikTok is a pressing national-security threat, youā€™d be well within your rights to be frustrated by the way this bill has been shoehorned into law. It happened so quickly that the government might not be able to adequately prove its national-security case and might miss this opportunity. And if you, like me, believe that TikTok is bad in the ways all algorithmic social media is bad, but not uniquely badā€”that is, if you believe that the harms presented by social media are complex and cannot be reduced to an Axis of Evil designationā€”you might very well be furious that the first major legislation against a Big Tech company is, at this point, little more than vibes-based fearmongering. The case for TikTok is debatable, but the path the government has taken to determine its fate is unquestionably sloppy and shortsighted.
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