In last week’s New Yorker…

April 11, 2011

…which was the first issue I read in its digital version (on my iPad) while vacationing in Vieques… the pieces that grabbed me were:

  1. Ken Auletta’s profile of Wall Street Journal editor Robert Thomson, a close friend of Rupert Murdoch’s
  2. Laura Miller’s story on fantasy writer George R. R. Martin (most famous for A Game of Thrones) and the ruckus he’s created among his fan base by not finishing the latest book in his series
  3. Tad Friend’s piece about Anna Faris, an actress I’ve never seen but who sounds pretty funny
  4. Keith Ridgway’s short story, “Goo Book”

    Unfortunately, you have to be a subscriber to read this online.
    But I can share with you my favorite cartoon:


Quote of the day: ANGER

April 8, 2011

ANGER

Q: Aren’t you angry on behalf of the millions of people around the world who have been killed in our name? Aren’t you angry about the villages that have been napalmed, the jungles defoliated, the cities incinerated, the innocents massacred?

I am indeed outraged by these things, but I think outrage is different from anger. What do Buddha, Jesus, Sun Tzu, Seneca, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Albert Schweitzer, martial-arts philosophy, and West Point have in common? They all taught me that anger is dangerous. Outrage is my conscience saying, This is wrong! When outrage is not supported by a foundation of patience and empathy for all sides, it quickly descends into yelling, resentment, and a shutting down of reason, which doesn’t effectively advance the cause of peace. We can spark people’s outrage without inciting their anger. So, yes, let’s all be outraged by these things but let’s channel our outrage into productive action.

The way you get rid of anger is through understanding. As Gene Knudsen Hoffman, founder of Compassionate Listening, said, “An enemy is someone whose story you haven’t heard.” The reason I’m not angry at conservatives is because I’ve lived my whole life around them and don’t see them as bad people. They are not the enemy. My opponents are ignorance, greed, and hatred, which seem to have taken these people hostage.

— Paul Chappell, author of Will War Ever End? A Soldier’s Vision of Peace for the 21st Century, interviewed in The Sun


Photo diary: a few shots of Vieques

April 8, 2011


Quote of the day: SOCIALISM

April 7, 2011

SOCIALISM

The military gives you three meals a day, pays for your healthcare and your college, and even pays for your housing. On an army field exercise, the highest-ranking soldiers eat last, and the lowest-ranking soldiers eat first. leaders are supposed to sacrifice for their subordinates. in civilian society we’re told that the only thing that makes people work hard is the profit motive. The army’s philosophy is that you can get people to work hard based on the ideals of selflessness, sacrifice, and service. it demonstrates that people will even sacrifice their lives for the sake of others. The military also has a motto: “Never leave a fallen comrade.”

If I said to most Americans that we should have a society that gives everyone three meals a day, shelter, healthcare, and a college education, and that it should be based on selflessness, sacrifice, and service rather than greed, they’d say, “That’s socialism.” But that’s the U.S. military. A lot of conservative Republicans who think socialism is the ultimate evil admire the military.

— Iraqi veteran and West Point graduate Paul Chappell


In this week’s New Yorker

April 1, 2011

My favorite things:

1. David Grann’s long, riveting, bewildering reporting piece about assassination, conspiracy, corruption, and self-destruction in Guatemala.

2. Colin Jost’s hilarious Shouts & Murmurs piece “Explaining Your Time Warner Bill.”

3. Two astonishing poems: a beautiful tender one by Tennessee Williams, never before published, and one by Sophie Cabot Black, a poet new to me.

4. The delightful cover by Edward Koren (below).