Friday, December 31, 2021

10: After JFK's assassination in November 1963, the customized black Lincoln limousine he rode in was scoured for evidence by investigators. But that wasn't the end of the road for the fateful car, which was back in service in D.C. less than a year later: …


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December 31, 2021 at 08:08PM
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THREAD: Some look ahead to the New Year, but we at Boundary Stones prefer to spend our time in the past. Here are the top 10 most read articles on Boundary Stones in 2021: THREAD: Some look ahead to the New Year, but we at Boundary Stones prefer to spend our time in the past.…


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This incredible 1946 pictorial map of the United States by artist Paul Sample celebrates the country's agricultural traditions and varied landscapes. Take a closer look here: https://t.co/7MEVTVHoBZ https://t.co/oCIYqU2IUG This incredible 1946 pictorial map of the United Stat…


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December 31, 2021 at 04:33PM
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Feel free to use this time zone map to countdown to midnight and ring in the New Year across the globe! #HappyNewYear View map here: https://t.co/UQHHZpQVNc https://t.co/H5HzFo5B2b Feel free to use this time zone map to countdown to midnight and ring in the New Year across th…


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December 31, 2021 at 09:43AM
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Excerpts from a 1960s menu from the Peking Restaurant in Chevy Chase DC. Read more about the restaurant at: https://t.co/ZGtzePkq8W @chineseeateries https://t.co/ZUviyJB49H Excerpts from a 1960s menu from the Peking Restaurant in Chevy Chase DC. Read more about the restaurant…


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Today in History - December 31 https://t.co/ipafJSdror On December 31, 1837, Democrat Amasa J. Parker, congressman from New York, sat down in his quarters in Mrs. Pittman’s boarding house in Washington, D.C., to write a letter to his wife, miles away at their Catskills home …


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Thursday, December 30, 2021

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This eye-catching series of maps from 1976 shows geographic distributions of game birds in northeastern New Mexico. Take a closer look here: https://t.co/3NLo9Kds8x https://t.co/7mnMXHEukU This eye-catching series of maps from 1976 shows geographic distributions of game birds…


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December 30, 2021 at 03:58PM
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Images of 2021: International Space Station Transits the Sun via NASA https://t.co/raXSvf1ljB https://t.co/LwUltSaOm0


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December 30, 2021 at 10:53AM
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Stereoview of Pennsylvania Avenue from the grounds of the Treasury Building in the early 1890s. Lots and lots of activity in the street in those days. The bunting on the Willard Hotel (on the left) may be for the GAR encampment of 1892. https://t.co/E1wT4Np4xJ Stereoview of Pe…


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Today in History - December 30 https://t.co/qmwFlzmMlo U.S. Minister to Mexico James Gadsden, and three envoys of the President of Mexico General Antonio López de Santa Anna Pérez de Lebrón, signed the Gadsden Purchase, or Gadsden Treaty, in Mexico City on December 30, 1853.…


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Quote of the Day: "Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let every new year find you a better man." - Benjamin Franklin


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Wednesday, December 29, 2021

This stunning 1883 railroad map of the Union Pacific Railway, "the short, quick and safe line to all points west," includes vivid illustrations made expressly for the map. Take a closer look here: https://t.co/kHEJOy33D7 https://t.co/4QHsVDwJXs This stunning 1883 railroad map…


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December 29, 2021 at 04:58PM
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Made in 1960 for its centennial, this pictorial map shows the route of the short-lived Pony Express, a mail service using relays of horse-mounted riders between MO and OR that operated from April 3, 1860, to October 26, 1861. Zoom in on the details here: https://t.co/k81S4tD3V1…


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Stereoview photo of the December 28, 1899 burial ceremony at Arlington Cemetery for victims of the explosion of the battleship U.S.S. Maine in Havana Harbor, which precipitated the Spanish-American War. https://t.co/ekTkVBu54t Stereoview photo of the December 28, 1899 burial c…


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December 29, 2021 at 08:57AM
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Matchcover from the Women's National Bank--the first federally chartered full-service bank owned and operated by women primarily to serve women's needs--which opened in 1977 at 1627 K St NW. In 1986, the bank changed its name to the Adams National Bank (named for Abigail Ada…


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December 29, 2021 at 08:42AM
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Today in History - December 29 https://t.co/2QecMMHk4b Andrew Johnson, the seventeenth president of the United States, was born in Raleigh, North Carolina, on December 29, 1808. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in History for other historic moments.


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December 29, 2021 at 08:02AM
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Quote of the Day: "We pass through this world but once." - Stephen Jay Gould


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December 29, 2021 at 01:13AM
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Tuesday, December 28, 2021

New Census Data Finds D.C. Had Nation’s Largest Percentage Drop In Population https://t.co/zqzUPdXH5B New Census Data Finds D.C. Had Nation’s Largest Percentage Drop In Population https://t.co/zqzUPdXH5B — Streets of Washington (@StreetsOfDC) Dec 28, 2021


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December 28, 2021 at 06:02PM
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This carefully illustrated "isometrical view" offers a unique perspective of the White House and surrounding buildings in mid-nineteenth century Washington, D.C. Take a closer look here: https://t.co/Rel72nET1Y https://t.co/e5rP4KfHb3 This carefully illustrated "isometrical v…


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December 28, 2021 at 04:43PM
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We love this "aeroplane map of Sydney" created about 1909! Zoom in to see the buildings, wharves, parks, and ferry routes of this bustling Australian city. Zoom in closer here: https://t.co/HKKw5xa181 https://t.co/bhfR1xhnh9 We love this "aeroplane map of Sydney" created abou…


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Today in History - December 28 https://t.co/EIKEP7hnWF Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born on December 28, 1856, in Staunton, Virginia. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in History for other historic moments.


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Best of 2021: The Stories We Missed

Since we started the #longreads hashtag in 2009 to share great reads on Twitter, curation has been the beating heart of Longreads. We highlight our favorite stories in our weekly Longreads Top 5, and at year’s end — in what is now a decade-long tradition — we revisit and reflect on the pieces we loved most. Today, though, we’re celebrating some of the best stories we missed. It happens — there’s a lot out there to read, and only a few editors here combing through as much as we can. Thankfully, we’ve got our community of readers (that’s you!) and the authors honored in our Best of 2021 lists to fill in the gaps. 

Nuclear Cats, Vivian Blaxell, Meanjin Quarterly, September 2021

Exceptional essays often form around the connections a writer can make from their particular place in the world. In “Nuclear Cats, Vivian Blaxell connects life experience in legal and health systems with wild and domestic animals, the function of language, the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, the nature of consciousness…. And its funny. Blaxells voice is addictive!

—Author Briohny Doyle, honored in Best of 2021: Personal Essays

Call Me a Traitor, Kerry Howley, New York, July 20, 2021

Nobody writes more beautifully about the horrors of our world than my New York colleague Kerry Howley. Her story on drone war whistleblower Daniel Hale is the piece I’ll remember most from this year.

—Author Reeves Wiedeman, honored in Best of 2021: Investigative Reporting

High-Rise Syndrome, Sally Wen Mao, The Believer, May 29, 2021

From the piece: “When cats fall out the windows of tall buildings, the worst injuries result from falling out the first to the sixth stories. Cats that fall from higher stories (i.e. the tenth or twentieth floors) sustain less serious injuries. In other words, the closer you are to the ground, the more you reckon with your death, the less time you have to bend your body against the terminal velocity. This is called high-rise syndrome. It is science, not metaphor.“

—Recommended by author Vanessa Angelica Villarreal, honored in Best of 2021: Profiles

He Thought What He Was Doing Was Good for People,’ Chris Outcalt, The Atlantic, August 13, 2021

I generally defer to the expertise of physicians, especially when it comes to the medical decisions made by my elderly parents. Reading this story, I could imagine myself as the protagonist, Marian Simmons, going along, trusting, believing my life was at risk. This story changed my mind by showing me how vulnerable we all are to unnecessary medical procedures in the U.S. health-care system.

—Reader Mya Frazier

Teaching Poetry in the Palestinian Apocalypse, George Abraham, Guernica, September 27, 2021

From the piece: “Maybe it’s not a universal Capital-A-Apocalypse I want to excavate language for, but a lowercase-a-apocalypse that colonialism has imposed on Indigenous and dispossessed peoples since the beginning of the settler project. The tired apocalypse. The assumed apocalypse. An apocalypse that keeps (a notion of) their world alive, at the expense of (a notion of) our own.“

—Recommended by reader Vesna Jaksic Lowe

Explore our Best of 2021 collection



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December 28, 2021 at 01:14AM
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Monday, December 27, 2021

This 1768 map of the Acadia region of Canada features beautifully rendered landscape illustrations and coastal details that deserve a close look! Take a closer look here: https://t.co/j0aPGLbZCO https://t.co/6hfXPNLsCI This 1768 map of the Acadia region of Canada features bea…


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December 27, 2021 at 01:41PM
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Check out what I just listed on Mercari. Tap the link to sign up and get up to $30 off. https://t.co/T799As2l58


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December 27, 2021 at 11:14AM
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Matchbook covers from a restaurant that was once located at 910 8th Street SE, at the south end of Barracks Row: the Alvie Tavern in the 1930s, then the Fleets Inn, and later a Wagon Wheel restaurant. The 900 block was obliterated to make way for the I-295 freeway in the 196…


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December 27, 2021 at 08:27AM
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We had to laugh at this map monster trio found on a 1565 map of Brazil by Jacopo Gastaldi, each with a different expression! #mapmonstermonday See the full map here: https://t.co/jD4fSLxlEv https://t.co/UUEyCbmaiX We had to laugh at this map monster trio found on a 1565 map o…


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December 27, 2021 at 08:13AM
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Today in History - December 27 https://t.co/2OE6FmMyo6 Radio City Music Hall opened to the public on December 27, 1932. Continue reading. On December 27, 1900, Carry Nation brought her campaign against alcohol to Wichita, Kansas, when she smashed up the bar at the elegant C…


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Quote of the Day: "One faces the future with one's past." - Pearl S. Buck


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Sunday, December 26, 2021

https://t.co/AeQbyuSUzP https://t.co/AeQbyuSUzP — Streets of Washington (@StreetsOfDC) Dec 26, 2021


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December 26, 2021 at 11:47AM
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An Art Deco masterpiece on Capitol Hill--the Lutheran Church of the Reformation: https://t.co/kWJ02B0ZJb https://t.co/shGGSX818N An Art Deco masterpiece on Capitol Hill--the Lutheran Church of the Reformation: https://t.co/kWJ02B0ZJb https://t.co/shGGSX818N — Streets of Wa…


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Today in History - December 26 https://t.co/0Yl3ug5Pf5 Naval hero of the Spanish-American War, Admiral George Dewey, was born in Montpelier, Vermont, on December 26, 1837. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in History for other historic moments.


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December 26, 2021 at 08:07AM
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Quote of the Day: "Cherish your human connections: your relationships with friends and family." - Joseph Brodsky


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December 26, 2021 at 01:12AM
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Saturday, December 25, 2021

Happy Holidays to you and yours today from the DC History Center! 🎄 📸 : East Gate of the White House in Winter (Kiplinger Washington Collection, https://t.co/lwqDd9Pnsb., original watercolor painting by Paul Hoffmaster) https://t.co/5zCkgUpi5z Happy Holidays to you and your…


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December 25, 2021 at 04:04PM
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our final glimpses of the telescope craft as it marks a destination a million miles away from earth. outside my kitchen door, dozens of hawks circling, hundreds of geese flying in formations, as if they know what a momentous day this is for exploration. https://t.co/uvw9S1VDck


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December 25, 2021 at 12:11PM
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Today in History - December 25 https://t.co/cMfFb2xeK4 On December 25, Christians around the world celebrate the birth of Christ. Continue reading. On Christmas Day, December 25, 1830, the Best Friend of Charleston became the first regularly scheduled steam locomotive passe…


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Quote of the Day: "I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year." - Charles Dickens


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Friday, December 24, 2021

Four islands from around the world - Bermuda, Iceland, Jan Mayen, and Newfoundland - are depicted on this map by 17th-century cartographer Vincenzo Coronelli. Zoom in here: https://t.co/Z6eQeH1NZc https://t.co/hL6ixXjF8u Four islands from around the world - Bermuda, Iceland, J…


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December 24, 2021 at 02:28PM
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Holy Toledo! This panoramic map of Toledo, OH depicts the city as it was in 1876. Explore the map here: https://t.co/XnSpLKkdfh https://t.co/3UO7gDVBkj Holy Toledo! This panoramic map of Toledo, OH depicts the city as it was in 1876. Explore the map here: …


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December 24, 2021 at 10:33AM
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Holiday greetings from Streets of Washington. Circa 1913 postcard, from the days when it used to snow at Christmastime. https://t.co/aQ2xton2i7 Holiday greetings from Streets of Washington. Circa 1913 postcard, from the days when it used to snow at Christmastime. …


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Today in History - December 24 https://t.co/yVIjvKE4jU ‘Tis December 24, the day before Christmas, and all through the land, families send excited children to bed with a reading of Clement Moore’s classic poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas.” Continue reading. Click here to se…


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Quote of the Day: "Maybe Christmas, the Grinch thought, doesn't come from a store." - Dr. Seuss


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Thursday, December 23, 2021

Lots of interesting things happening in and around the Gulf of Thailand in this 1519 nautical chart! It's a folio from an atlas produced for King Manuel I of Portugal. Take a tour here: https://t.co/mI6WzWw2Kp https://t.co/CLJOzNH0Kk Lots of interesting things happening in and…


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December 23, 2021 at 03:18PM
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James Webb Telescope Rolls to the Pad Aboard an Ariane 5 Rocket via NASA https://t.co/zF24kI5Ish https://t.co/B81eTXkQQM


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December 23, 2021 at 02:08PM
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Check out this map from 1953 which depicts nations receiving support from the Point Four Program initiated by President Harry Truman. The program was intended to provide technical assistance to developing nations. Have a look: https://t.co/D5ax4b2ndj https://t.co/E3gfFJdlR2 C…


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December 23, 2021 at 09:48AM
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1636 Conn Ave NW, built in 1921, originally housed a Rolls Royce dealer and a hair stylist. By the 1970s, the popular counterculture Ben Bow bar and Ellen's Irish Pub had taken over. In 1978 patrons of the two bars protested plans to tear the building down and it was saved. …


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Today in History - December 23 https://t.co/cuU6DoVRXG George Washington resigned his commission as commander in chief of the Continental Army on December 23, 1783, in the Senate chamber of the Maryland State House in Annapolis, where the Continental Congress was meeting. Co…


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December 23, 2021 at 08:07AM
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Best of 2021: Readers’ Favorites

Since we started the #longreads hashtag in 2009 to share great reads on Twitter, curation has been the beating heart of Longreads. We highlight our favorite stories in our weekly Longreads Top 5, and at year’s end — in what is now a decade-long tradition — we revisit and reflect on the pieces we loved most.

This year we did things a little differently — our editors still considered their top stories, but we also reached out to our readers to see what the Longreads community enjoyed in 2021. So today, we’re delighted to showcase 10 stories from the year that our readers loved — and hear why these pieces stood out to them in their own words.

The Epic Family Feud Behind an Iconic American Weight-Loss Camp for Kids, David Gauvey Herbert, Bloomberg Businessweek, August 2021

Dave Herbert’s piece on Camp Shane is incredible work, and deeply meaningful as a survivor of that weight loss camp. As an amateur writer — I also have to say that the author weaved a number of different issues and concepts using a fantastic narrative form, coupled with a unifying thread that would resonate with any reader.

—Mark Rothenberg

When the Techies Took Over Tahoe, Rachel Levin, Outside, April 2021

I am an American expat living in Australia, and this story gave me the most insightful look at how COVID-19 in the U.S. is impacting work, place, real estate, local culture, and nature — and how the socio-economics pervade everything.

—Tara Johnston

To Protect Me From America, My Parents Changed My Name Without Telling Me, Leslie Nguyen-Okwu, Harper’s Bazaar, May 2021

I loved this essay’s description about “teetering on a tightrope between Asian America and Black America,” and her powerful explanations of coping with the realities of racism and discrimination from a young age.

—Vesna Jaksic Lowe

Kevin Durant and (Possibly) the Greatest Basketball Team of All Time, Sam Anderson, The New York Times Magazine, June 2021

The question of profile writing is: What fascinates me about this person, and what does it say about myself or the world? The other, especially in sports writing these days is: How can I get enough time and access to get to the core of a character? Anderson manages to obtain one of the deepest and — given the insane shield put around sports stars these days — most unlikely portraits of an NBA star. We see the moody, ingenious, unlikely Kevin Durant in a way he’s never been shown to us before. It’s the piece every sportswriter I know is jealous of.

—Joseph Bien-Kahn

Where There’s Muck There’s Brass: Making Money From Sewage in Kolkata, Amitangshu Acharya, and Sudipto Sanyal, The Economist, January 2021

It’s a story that traverses the very real ecological and sociological issues of our present world — a world at the brink of irreversible damage. Written with poetic articulation, it narrates a well-researched story of the unique wetlands of Kolkata. Despite the imminent urgency of the problems discussed, it still relates an uplifting instance of the human capacity for survival, resourcefulness, and optimism. Beautifully written and moving.

—Reshma Matthew

The Depths She’ll Reach, Xan Rice, Long Lead, November 2021

This profile about freediver Alenka Artnik blew me away. Not only is her story of overcoming grief and mental health challenges inspiring, but it is written in such an evocative way. I’ve never seen a story designed like that either. The video of Alenka diving under the story transfixed me.

—Jenni Blossom

Once Upon a Time in Central Florida, Katherine LaGrave, AFAR, February 2021

This is still a story I think about. After two years filled with so much loss and immeasurable lost time, this feature clung to my heart and made me appreciate how much more time I do have, post-pandemic.

—Sarah Anderson

To Catch a Turtle Thief: Blowing the Lid Off an International Smuggling Operation, Clare Fieseler, The Walrus, November 2021

It’s an age-old problem that isn’t spotlighted much, and wildlife trafficking interlopes with lots of other types of crimes (e.g., drug trade). This was a great article.

—Lindsey Reeves

The Epic Battle to Break the Mississippi River Canoe Record, Frank Bures, Outside, November 2021

I loved this story so much. It was a good old-fashioned rip-roaring adventure story, done the way it should be: the biggest, baddest river, a race, a record meant to be broken, petty interpersonal conflict, tension, and terror — all with a dose of redemption at the end. And it was reported from the boats, not after the fact. Great stuff.

—Jason Albert

There Has Been Blood, Diana Hubbell, Eater, August 2021

This piece on the Thailand palm oil industry, and the violence and harassment against local farmers, shows the strengths and courage of ordinary people — who, although vulnerable and underprivileged, refuse to give up on insisting their rights are respected.

—Sutharee Wanna



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Wednesday, December 22, 2021

In contrast to his earliest performances, Elvis's last performance in the D.C. area at the Capital Centre had a much calmer audience. According to the Post, "Though no one was was seen swooning, nobody objected to that gyrating either." https://t.co/WP6IJMj7eW #DCHistory In …


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December 22, 2021 at 05:38PM
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Check out the detailed illustrations on this 1888 panoramic map of Bridgton, Maine: Get a bird's eye view here: https://t.co/eBCRxG2xQz https://t.co/ORssDVq6MG Check out the detailed illustrations on this 1888 panoramic map of Bridgton, Maine: Get a bird's eye view here: https…


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December 22, 2021 at 02:13PM
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Have a look at this 1857 map of New York City. The orientation may throw you off at first as Manhattan is not often depicted horizontally! The map is oriented with north on the right side. Zoom in here: https://t.co/lTe6iLYLCl https://t.co/dNmgIb4Rh1 Have a look at this 1857 …


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December 22, 2021 at 11:18AM
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Small (But Mighty) Weather Instruments via NASA https://t.co/Zs1G23xdPG https://t.co/UD4cP3oreR


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December 22, 2021 at 09:53AM
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1922 photo of the Elias Caldwell House, built in 1810 at 206 Pa Ave SE. After the British burned Washington in 1814, Caldwell offered his home as a temporary site for the Supreme Court. The house was torn down in 1933 to make way for the Adams Building of the Library of Cong…


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December 22, 2021 at 08:53AM
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Since he had renounced his Catholic faith, F. Scott Fitzgerald couldn't be buried with the rest of his family at St. Mary's Cemetery in Rockville, MD, and his body ended up in Rockville Union Cemetery instead. https://t.co/XyF43P8Bgr #MDHistory Since he had renounced his Cat…


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Today in History - December 22 https://t.co/9z4IgFtQHn Cornelius Alexander McGillicuddy, known as Connie Mack, the "Tall Tactician" of major league baseball, was born on December 22, 1862, in East Brookfield, Massachusetts. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in Hi…


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Quote of the Day: "If you're alive, there's a purpose for your life." - Rick Warren


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Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Behold a Winter Solstice via NASA https://t.co/3A1CIiX0oy https://t.co/UPjFLrqssI


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This lovely hand-colored map depicts Maine as it was in 1840. Take a look: https://t.co/diob79qJDW https://t.co/u8i70TyqeQ This lovely hand-colored map depicts Maine as it was in 1840. Take a look: https://t.co/diob79qJDW https://t.co/u8i70TyqeQ — LOCMaps (@LOCMaps) Dec 21…


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Harry Lucien Ebert (1880-1946) of Frederick , Maryland, went into the grocery business in 1912 and gradually moved to producing and selling ice cream. This postcard is from the 1930s. https://t.co/6Rla8XgWPg Harry Lucien Ebert (1880-1946) of Frederick , Maryland, went into the…


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In a time when most of the public shunned AIDS patients, philanthropist Robert Alfandre invited 30 people infected with the illness to his home for a Christmas party. https://t.co/yO0LOxWfNm #DCHistory In a time when most of the public shunned AIDS patients, philanthropist R…


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Today in History - December 21 https://t.co/594AoCv8at On December 21, 1928, President Calvin Coolidge signed the Boulder Canyon Project Act, which sought to dam the Colorado River and distribute its water for use in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, a…


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Best of 2021: Profiles

Since we started the #longreads hashtag in 2009 to share great reads on Twitter, curation has been the beating heart of Longreads. All year long, we highlight our favorite stories in the weekly Longreads Top 5. At the end of the year, we love to reflect on and share the pieces that stayed with us, a tradition we’ve kept for 10 years! Now it is the turn of the profile — as we highlight the craft of writing about someone else. These five writers are masterful at providing insights into another’s world. 

The Girl in the Kent State Photo, Patricia McCormick, The Washington Post Magazine, April 19, 2021

On May 4, 1970, Kent State University students gathered on campus to peacefully rally against President Richard Nixon’s decision to invade Cambodia, which would expand U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Fourteen-year-old Mary Ann Vecchio, a free-spirited teen who hitchhiked around the country to escape a volatile family life in Florida, found herself on the school’s Ohio grounds, drawn to the protests. National Guard troops shot four students dead that day, including a man, Jeffrey Miller, whom Vecchio had been talking to. She dropped to the ground and knelt beside his body — her arms raised, her face full of anguish and horror. McCormick documents her pleas: “‘Doesn’t anyone see what just happened here?’ she remembers crying. ‘Why is no one helping him?’”

Student photographer John Filo snapped a picture of her at that very moment, capturing what would become an iconic image, one that “fundamentally changed the way we see ourselves and the world around us,” writes Patricia McCormick. Through a dozen phone interviews with Vecchio, who is now 65 and living a quiet retired life, McCormick recounts that fateful day and how the image “hijacked” Vecchio’s life, haunting her even 50 years on. (Her reaction to the video of George Floyd’s last moments shook her to her core.) Affected from “opposite ends of the lens,” Vecchio and Filo are intimately connected to one another through the photo — Vecchio a “human flashpoint” and a symbol of the national conscience, and Filo full of grief and guilt over what the image did to her, despite his winning a Pulitzer for his work. Compassionate and superbly reported, McCormick’s profile hits a nerve, and especially resonates in our time of virality and smartphone-recorded moments of injustice. —Cheri Lucas Rowlands

La Cancion de la Nena, Vanessa Angélica Villarreal, Oxford American, June 1, 2021

In this beautiful piece, Vanessa Angélica Villarreal offers a haunting portrait of her father, Gilberto Villarreal, a virtuoso guitarist and musician, a man who was a “prodigy at the foot of this country, in a place no one ever expects to find someone extraordinary.“ Villarreal recalls the struggles her father endured as a Mexican immigrant trying to be discovered in a music business dominated by white interests and pernicious racism: “What I experienced as poetry came first through the song my father wrote for me when I was two years old, a song whose melody is a turning helix in my blood, another way of speaking my name. It is the rarest gift I have ever received.“ This is a piece steeped in love and admiration for a man and an artist who, despite his many musical skills and achievements, did not consider himself a success. “You might think from my tone that this is a sad story,“ Villarreal writes. “And maybe it is, but it is also a tribute to an unseen life, a long overdue recognition of ordinary genius worn down by circumstance.“ —Krista Stevens

Author Vanessa Angélica Villarreal on the story from 2021 that impacted her most:

Carina del Valle Schorske’s “Dancing Through New York in a Summer of Joy and Grief“ in The New York Times Magazine was an incredibly rich, historical snapshot of embodiment, grief, vitality, and rebellion in the shared ritual of social dance, specific to Black, Latin, queer, and immigrant communities. From Harlem to Brooklyn and everywhere in between, del Valle Schorske writes a history of social dance as a site of healing after mass tragedy that is part personal essay, part performance theory, part history lesson — an erotics of survival and joy at the end of the world.

What Mike Fanone Can’t Forget, Molly Ball, Time, August 5, 2021

Given the state of the celebrity-industrial complex, the vast majority of profiles you read in any given year are about people you already know. The truly special ones, though, tend to buck convention. And that’s exactly the case with Molly Ball’s riveting portrait of Mike Fanone, the Washington D.C. narcotics officer who drove to the Capitol on January 6 to help defend it against insurrectionists. Sure, you may have seen Fanone on cable news in the aftermath of the riots, may have thought he was a hero or a martyr or a turncoat or anything else — but you didn’t know what he’d gone through that day, let alone who he was. Ball’s scene work and deft reconstruction help bring together the splintered shards of a complicated, imperfect man, one who somehow both validates and punctures whatever assumptions you had. “He’s not asking to be called a hero — he just wants us to remember what his sacrifice was for,” she writes. “Fanone believes we can’t keep trying to outrun this thing; we’ve got to turn around and face it, defeat it once and for all. That if all we do is turn away and hope it fades, it will just keep getting stronger until it comes back to kill us all.” Once upon a time, that may have sounded overwrought. Today, it’s all too real. —Peter Rubin 

Stop Hustling Black Death, Imani Perry, New York, May 24, 2021

What happens when the worst day of your life animates a social movement over which you have no control? This question is the engine of Imani Perry’s profile of Samaria Rice, mother of Tamir Rice, killed by police in 2014. Samaria was anguished, and she wanted justice. But she didn’t want to be told how to act, or to see “leaders” she didn’t know speaking for her — much less making money off her son’s death. In Perry’s hands, Samaria’s story is a window into the growing pains of Black Lives Matter. If readers are uncomfortable with what they see, that’s the point: We can’t look away from the truth, Perry says, just because it’s messy. “We have lost a great deal of history by relying upon a neat consensus narrative,” she writes. “If we’re not careful, we run the risk of letting that become the story of today as well.” —Seyward Darby

The opening lines of another profile by Imani Perry, which author Becca Andrews chose as her favorite lede of the year:

“I knew from the beginning that I would not meet Gayl Jones.

Or see a recent photograph of her. Or ask her any questions. What does it feel like, 46 years after the first, to have a new novel coming out? Why did you step out of view? Did it make you a more honest writer? Did it serve your soul? I would not get answers. I would not be able to charm her into laughter. I know she is brilliant, obscure, irascible. I imagine her smile is still wry. But does she still wear her head wrapped in 2021? Is she still adept at putting a nosy questioner in her place?“

“She Changed Black Literature Forever. Then She Disappeared,“ The New York Times Magazine

Benji Is One Down Dog, Madeleine Aggeler, Texas Monthly, June 2, 2021

This piece brought a smile to my face and delight to my heart. For even in the age of the Instagram-famous pet, it’s not often we get a proper pooch profile. Benji the dog is a George Clooney lookalike who “prefers to greet the world au naturel whenever possible,” writes Madeleine Aggeler. He is “confident that wherever he goes, everyone will be thrilled to meet him,” and he is right — they are: Benji is “one of the most famous dogs in America right now.” A worthy profile subject, indeed. His is an interesting story: His owner, the YouTube yoga instructor Adriene Mishler, was the champion of COVID lockdowns, with her online exercise classes becoming incredibly popular. Benji was a part of this, making cameos on camera that brought joy to Adriene’s viewers. Written with great creativity and humor, Aggeler’s article shows us why Benji is such a scene-stealer. — Carolyn Wells



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Monday, December 20, 2021

This 1862 map of Colorado highlights the region of the Pike's Peak Gold Rush, which began in earnest in 1859. Explore the map here (and let us know if you find gold!): https://t.co/kCLtuCu2f4 https://t.co/A4l3oNRoux This 1862 map of Colorado highlights the region of the Pike's…


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Blueprints of the James Webb Space Telescope via NASA https://t.co/5qg2KOed8a https://t.co/HZwRexIFsC


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Overlooked No More: Frances B. Johnston, Photographer Who Defied Genteel Norms https://t.co/zsHimwlXjF Overlooked No More: Frances B. Johnston, Photographer Who Defied Genteel Norms https://t.co/zsHimwlXjF — Streets of Washington (@StreetsOfDC) Dec 20, 2021


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For today’s #MapMonsterMonday we’re sharing creatures from this 1565 world map. The monsters may not be the strangest feature of the map, however. Look closely and you’ll notice Antarctica is depicted as being inhabited my rhinos and more! Check it out: https://t.co/05xe8co7Yt …


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December 20, 2021 at 09:58AM
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The name Virginia originally referred to all of North America that wasn't controlled by the Spanish or the French. https://t.co/nUIrOUhVja #VAHistory The name Virginia originally referred to all of North America that wasn't controlled by the Spanish or the French. …


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December 20, 2021 at 09:18AM
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19th century stereoview of the old General Post Office (now Hotel Monaco) across F St from the Patent Office (now Portrait Gallery). Taken from the Patent Office's grand staircase on F St, which was removed in 1936 to improve automobile traffic. Restore it, Smithsonian! …


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Today in History - December 20 https://t.co/roEEPcJ0dx On December 20, 1790, a mill, with water-powered machinery for spinning, roving, and carding cotton, began operating on the banks of the Blackstone River in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Continue reading. Click here to searc…


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Quote of the Day: "No one has a greater asset for his business than a man's pride in his work." - Hosea Ballou


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Sunday, December 19, 2021

Jazz musician Shirley Horn didn't let labor pains stop her from carrying on with her show at the Howard Theatre in October 1958. https://t.co/khW9fmEuOU #DCHistory Jazz musician Shirley Horn didn't let labor pains stop her from carrying on with her show at the Howard Theatre…


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Postcard view of the old Laurel High School, on Montgomery Street in Laurel, Maryland, which was constructed in 1899 as the first public high school in Prince George's County. https://t.co/U47atbfxZY Postcard view of the old Laurel High School, on Montgomery Street in Laurel, …


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Perspective | An old building near Dupont Circle will get a nice, new turret https://t.co/dIwH4QClMg Perspective | An old building near Dupont Circle will get a nice, new turret https://t.co/dIwH4QClMg — Streets of Washington (@StreetsOfDC) Dec 19, 2021


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The Million Man March of 1995 on the National Mall is remembered by many as "the day that masses of black men came together and walked away as brothers." https://t.co/xXkpmJT9WW #DCHistory The Million Man March of 1995 on the National Mall is remembered by many as "the day t…


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Today in History - December 19 https://t.co/VBk0Sydv2W In the final hours of December 18, 1813, some 500 British soldiers as well as some 500 militia and Indians—crossed the Niagara River from Canada determined to seize Old Fort Niagara on the opposite shore in New York. By …


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Quote of the Day: "We grow small trying to be great." - E. Stanley Jones


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Saturday, December 18, 2021

Now a D.C. landmark, the Chinatown Friendship Archway caused some controversy among neighborhood residents when it was built in the 1980s. https://t.co/zZQBfiTSPz #DCHistory Now a D.C. landmark, the Chinatown Friendship Archway caused some controversy among neighborhood resi…


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Preparing for your wedding is stressful, but it was especially tough for Irene des Planques, a friend of Russian socialite Countess Marguerite Cassini. https://t.co/E6tX76WGyA #DCHistory Preparing for your wedding is stressful, but it was especially tough for Irene des Planq…


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Miss Karin Peterson opened the Swedish Inn at 2641 Connecticut Ave NW in Woodley Park in January 1938. The eatery joined the SmörgÃ¥sbord Restaurant, at 17th and K Streets NW, in offering Swedish cuisine to DC diners. https://t.co/wQqOaw6gZ2 Miss Karin Peterson opened the Swedi…


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Even though the congregation moved out in the early 1900s, the Adas Israel Synagogue in #WashingtonDC held so much historical significance that the physical structure was moved to a new location instead of being demolished in the 1960s to clear space for a new Metro line. Eve…


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Today in History - December 18 https://t.co/QjhpIxbPh6 The New Jersey ratifying caucus approved the Constitution on December 18, 1787. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in History for other historic moments.


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Quote of the Day: "Few men have virtue to withstand the highest bidder." - George Washington


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Friday, December 17, 2021

Football fans at Griffith Stadium on Dec. 7, 1941 weren't aware that a national tragedy had just occurred until an announcer began paging newspaper reporters and later military personnel. https://t.co/KIrxz2tMgz #DCHistory Football fans at Griffith Stadium on Dec. 7, 1941 we…


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After the Wright Brothers' famous first flight in North Carolina, the pair signed a contract with the U.S. government to design and test the first army airplane at Fort Myer. https://t.co/iqivGUrfG4 #VAHistory After the Wright Brothers' famous first flight in North Carolina,…


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The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

Here are five stories that moved us this week, and the reasons why.

Sign up to receive this list free every Friday in your inbox.

1. Love as the Practice of Freedom

bell hooks | Catalyst Project | 1994 | 2,900 words

Acclaimed author and feminist bell hooks passed away this week at the age of 69. Tributes to her life and work have been published far and wide. To remember her, we look back at this moving essay from her book, Outlaw Culture, published in 1994. In “Love as the Practice of Freedom,” hooks maintains that the only way for humans to make progress toward equality — toward achieving the “beloved community” that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. envisioned — is by embracing love. Loving others, but almost more importantly, loving one’s self. This self love and acceptance means examining and acknowledging our own blind spots to racism, sexism, and classism so that we can begin to eradicate all forms of domination and oppression. “The moment we choose to love we begin to move against domination, against oppression. The moment we choose to love we begin to move towards freedom, to act in ways that liberate ourselves and others. That action is the testimony of love as the practice of freedom.” —KS

2. Thoughts and Prayers in Cabot Square

Christopher Curtis | The Rover | November 30, 2021 | 3,399

In this heart-wrenching essay, reporter Christopher Curtis attends the Montreal street funeral of Elisapee, a homeless Inuit woman. As her friends gather on the street outside the unfinished condo block where her body was found, work on the building continues. Montreal does not spend long dwelling on such tragedies. Curtis’ haunting imagery highlights the city’s divisions: Above the spot where Elisapee was found, a poster for the new condo project features a glamorous woman and the slogan The exclusivity of life at the summit — a life, Curtis writes, “built on a haunted foundation.” This piece raises some important questions that I will keep thinking about: “Why do Indigenous people account for less than 1 percent of Montreal’s population but 10 percent of those living on the street? Why do women like Elisapee keep dying in unspeakable poverty? What has to happen for things to change?” —CW

3. Burying Leni Riefenstahl

Kate Connolly | The Guardian | December 9, 2021, | 6,500 words

It’s an ugly fact of history many Nazis were never punished for their complicity in Hitler’s regime. This was especially true for women who draped themselves in the myth that they had been oblivious bystanders. Leni Riefenstahl, a filmmaker and close friend of the Fuhrer, was one such woman. “Riefenstahl sought to distance herself from the regime she had served,” Kate Connolly writes, “portraying herself as an apolitical naif whose only motivation was making the most beautiful art possible.” Riefenstahl also mounted legal challenges “against those who had written or said anything about her that she disliked.” Many were successful, including her lawsuit against Nina Gladitz, a filmmaker who documented the forced labor of Romani extras in one of Riefenstahl’s projects — about 100 of whom are known or believed to have subsequently been killed at Auschwitz. The legal defeat transformed Gladitz’s life in remarkable, complicated ways. Connolly’s piece is a fascinating look at Gladitz’s four-decade, all-consuming obsession with Riefenstahl. “For most people, ‘pursuing the truth’ or ‘confronting the past’ are just platitudes or abstractions,” Connolly writes. “For Gladitz, nothing was more important.” —SD

4. Can’t You See That I’m Lonely?

David Ramsey | Oxford American | December 7, 2021 | 6,800 words

When you love a song, do you want to discover as much as you can about the person who brought you that bit of magic? David Ramsey does just this in his beautiful portrait of Fontella Bass, the woman behind the ’60s R&B hit, “Rescue Me.” More than simply a profile of a talented artist, Ramsey revels in the joy that comes from being together and hearing the music we love — a theme that persists for him. This essay reminds me of his thoughtful profile of Shovels & Rope from 2019, one where in loving detail, he describes the power music has to move the soul.

“Because when a song gets its hooks in you, it unfolds into stories, it latches onto memories, it colors in the margins of your life. And so our instinct is to seek to know the story of the singer, too. Her name was Fontella Bass…Some time soon you will hear it, you will hear her voice. It’s inevitable. You have heard it a thousand times, but then, you could say the same thing about thunder. I hope it’s at a party. I hope you see someone there who hasn’t been to a party in a very long time. I hope you start dancing. That, in any event, is my plan: I’ll be somewhere, dancing, too.” —KS

4. The American Addiction to Speeding

Henry Grabar | Slate | December 15, 2021 | 4,627 words

Having a lead foot myself, I may have been predisposed to enjoy a deep dive into the speed limit, but it’s hard not to think everyone would. As Grabar points out, speed-limit laws manage to invert the pyramid of risk, needlessly throttling speed on the nation’s relatively low-accident interstates while doing far too little to control fatally fast driving on smaller streets in densely populated areas. Meanwhile, the police use minimal speed-limit violations as a pretext for at-will traffic stops that disproportionately target Black drivers. Yet, in unspooling the history of the speed limit and discussing the options facing us, Grabar manages to resist a dry legislative review, instead finding the cultural resonances that put the issue in a more urgent (and relatable) context. Enforcement is both inadequate and punitive, he writes. The cost is enormous. And the lack of political will to do something about it tracks with George Carlin’s famous observation that everybody going faster than you is a maniac and everybody going slower than you is an idiot. The consensus is: Enforce the speed limit. But not on me, please. Because while it would be nice to save 10,000 lives a year, it sure is fun to drive fast. Read it as soon as you can — just not while you’re stuck in traffic. —PR



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While Union troops in #WashingtonDC were being housed in the Capitol, keeping them fed was an issue until Lieutenant Thomas Cate decided to have two bread ovens built onsite. https://t.co/arkUMsToQu While Union troops in #WashingtonDC were being housed in the Capitol, keepin…


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Today in History - December 17 https://t.co/cNW6pz5wkJ On the morning of December 17, 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright took turns piloting and monitoring their flying machine in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. Continue reading. On December 17, 1979, President Jimmy Carter …


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Thursday, December 16, 2021

100 years ago, the first Miss America pageant was as messy as today’s https://t.co/aM0uWtiKQQ 100 years ago, the first Miss America pageant was as messy as today’s https://t.co/aM0uWtiKQQ — Streets of Washington (@StreetsOfDC) Dec 16, 2021


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December 16, 2021 at 11:02AM
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Early 20th century view of Topham's trunk store at 1219 F St NW. James S. Topham (1832-1912) first opened his trunk and leather goods business on 7th St NW in 1855. He moved several times, eventually buying this store in 1901. #dchistory @dchistory https://t.co/fb0xx2dqrz Earl…


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December 16, 2021 at 10:57AM
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Reflections of Starlight via NASA https://t.co/1k4rbVkFK4 https://t.co/tptxhhek8J


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December 16, 2021 at 10:18AM
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In the years leading up to the closure of the Washington Star, journalists for the D.C. paper had won two Pulitzers, but unfortunately, that didn't save it from going under in August 1981. https://t.co/GK9sQXMErQ #DCHistory In the years leading up to the closure of the Washi…


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Today in History - December 16 https://t.co/kb7Bvo0Kxw On the afternoon of December 16, 1864, Union troops led by General George H. Thomas devastated Confederate forces at Nashville, Tennessee. Continue reading. Click here to search Today in History for other historic momen…


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