How are things going in the economy these days? Well, that depends if you’re playing the market or if you can’t afford to shop in one. If you’re investing, especially in the AI/tech driven market, things are going really well. Bad news doesn’t seem to register and good news is driving a boom. The economy looks a lot less bullish if you’re one of the 42 million or so Americans who rely on SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, to feed your family. For these Americans, things are going from bad to worse. “Food banks across the United States were stretched thin even before the federal government shut down. Rising food prices had driven a growing number of people to their doors. Cuts to federal programs had left them with less to give. Now, that system — a last resort for tens of millions of hungry Americans — is anticipating an even greater surge in demand. With no end in sight to the nearly monthlong federal government shutdown, funding for the nation’s largest food assistance program, known as SNAP, will disappear at the start of November.” NYT (Gift Article): Food Banks Brace for Overwhelming Demand as SNAP Cutoff Looms. The government shutdown is driving this story at the moment. But, of course, there’s a broader question here. In supposedly economic good times, why are more than 40 million people in the world’s richest country unable to afford to eat? If there’s one story that underpins all other American stories, it’s the economic divide. It’s the divide that powers most of our other divides. And like those other divides, it’s only getting more divided. 2Blade in America“Ana paced on the sidewalk at 68th and Figueroa, her front teeth missing and an ostomy bag taped down under her hot pink lingerie. She surveyed the intersection in South Central Los Angeles, where preteens were hobbling in stilettos and G-strings. It was a Tuesday night this January, and Ana knew that most of the girls longed for a coat or gloves — anything to keep them warm — but covering up was not an option. Their eyes were cast down, but their hands waved mechanically at every car, angling for another customer to help meet their traffickers’ quotas.” Some excellent reporting by Emily Baumgaertner Nunn in the NYT Magazine (Gift Article): Can Anyone Rescue the Trafficked Girls of L.A.’s Figueroa Street? “Over the years, the Blade had become much busier than when Ana started: more girls, more customers, more traffickers idling in their Hellcats and Porsches on the side streets, watching to make sure their girls didn’t hide any money and didn’t snitch. Ana had seen the Blade expand from three main intersections of Figueroa to more than three miles. She had met girls brought in from the East Coast and the Deep South, and there sometimes seemed to be four times as many minors as before — easy to spot by their over-the-top makeup and unsteady gait. The police helicopters Ana used to notice hovering overhead with search lights seemed to become infrequent. Eventually, she said, they disappeared completely.” It makes you wonder. In a era when were spending so many resources fighting the hyped-up threat of an imaginary invasion, what if we put the same kind of effort into solving real, long term problems? 3Ven Diagram“The U.S. hasn’t sent this many ships to the Caribbean since the Cuban missile crisis. There are already roughly 6,500 Marines and sailors in the region, operating from eight Navy vessels, as well as 3,500 troops nearby. Once the Ford arrives, the U.S. will have roughly as many ships in the Caribbean as it used to defend Israel from Iranian missile strikes this summer. The carrier strike group also provides far more firepower than is necessary for the occasional attack on narco-trafficking targets. But the ships could be ideal for launching a steady stream of air strikes inside Venezuela.” Some experts don’t think these moves are all about targeting speed boats. The Atlantic (Gift Article): The U.S. Is Preparing for War in Venezuela. 4Children of the Corn Belt“Mackenzie Dryden’s happiest childhood memories are of running barefoot through the sunlit corn fields of her hometown. But when she was diagnosed with cancer 2½ years ago at 18 years old, a disturbing thought began to take hold. Could something in the land she loved have made her sick?” WaPo (Gift Article): The mysterious rise of cancer among young adults in the Corn Belt. 5Extra, ExtraMelissa: “We’re witnessing satellite history.” That’s not what anyone in Jamaica wants to hear about the incoming Hurricane Melissa. WaPo: Monster hurricane to hit Jamaica. And here’s the latest from The Guardian: Hurricane Melissa strengthens to category 5 as communities in Jamaica warned of ‘potentially unimaginable impact.’ 6Bottom of the News“Others might have celebrated with a victory lap, a glass of wine, or the afternoon off. Not Šobat. He changed, packed his gear, and met his wife and daughter in the parking lot. They didn’t mention the record once. And besides, it was his turn to clean the bathroom.” The Man Who Held His Breath for 24 Minutes. (I can only hold my breath for a few seconds, but I hold my nose the whole time I read the news...) |