
Young people are struggling with mental health and relationships, but there are small shifts in beliefs and behaviors that could help.

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Young people are struggling with mental health and relationships, but there are small shifts in beliefs and behaviors that could help.
Young people are struggling with mental health and relationships, but there are small shifts in beliefs and behaviors that could help.
The long read: On a summer morning in 1990, the body of a young woman appeared in a small town close to the frontier. For those who saw her, finding her identity became an obsession that would last 30 years
The long read: For the first time, the man the KGB codenamed ‘the Inheritor’ tells his story
Secrets & Wives
A single working mom begins a whirlwind romance with a man named Martin Lewis, then discovers that Martin Lewis doesn’t exist. This true story picks up right where Scorsese’s ‘GoodFellas’ left off.
The Fugitive Mind: My best friend had a psychotic break—our crisscrossing journeys through facts and fictions in thirteen chapters.
My best friend had a psychotic break—our crisscrossing journeys through facts and fictions in thirteen chapters.
51 min read
https://archive.ph/iWtPK Bubble Trouble An AI bubble threatens Silicon Valley, and all of us.
by Bryan McMahon March 25, 2025
Too many children with long COVID are suffering in silence. Their greatest challenge? The myth that the virus is 'harmless' for kids
They're losing their formative years to this debilitating disease. But for too many children with long COVID, finding help is a frustrating and traumatic process that leaves them feeling isolated and invisible.
the millions of children who have it worldwide are practically invisible, their suffering — and the formative years they're losing to this disease — obscured by the myths that COVID is "harmless" for kids and the pandemic is "over".
the lack of awareness is biting in shocking ways. Too many children with long COVID are being dismissed by doctors who say there's nothing they can do to help — or worse, that their pain and fatigue is "all in their head". They're being pushed out of school by teachers who don't understand why they can't come to class or run around with their peers. Their parents have been gaslighted and blamed, too, not just by medical professionals but their closest friends and family. And experts are concerned that all this ignorance and apathy — and the unwillingness of governments to do more to curb COVID transmission — is exposing a generation of children to the same chronic illness and disability, with potentially devastating consequences.
Millions are turning to an unregulated herbal extract to curb their opioid addiction. But do the risks outweigh the benefits?
https://ghostarchive.org/archive/lroTY The kratom question Millions are turning to an unregulated herbal extract to curb their opioid addiction. But do the risks outweigh the benefits?
The Rich Are Hoarding Wealth — Because They Know What’s Coming
The Takeaway — Collapse Isn’t a Flaw, It’s the Plan
The rich are not scrambling to prevent collapse. They welcome it — because they know they’ll be the only ones left standing. While the rest of us are told to “sacrifice” and “tighten our belts,” billionaires are building bunkers, buying private islands, and hoarding resources for the dystopia they see coming.
Exploring ancient people’s shifting beliefs about rearing and eating pigs
https://archive.ph/06OXT Pork accounts for more than a third of the world’s meat, making pigs among the planet’s most widely consumed animals. They are also widely reviled: For about two billion people, eating pork is explicitly prohibited. The Hebrew Bible and the Islamic Koran both forbid adherents from eating pig flesh, and this ban is one of humanity’s most deeply entrenched dietary restrictions. For centuries, scholars have struggled to find a satisfying explanation for this widespread taboo. “There are an amazing number of misconceptions people continue to have about pigs,” says archaeologist Max Price of Durham University, who is among a small group of scholars scouring both modern excavation reports and ancient tablets for clues about the rise and fall of pork consumption in the ancient Near East. “That makes this research both frustrating and fascinating.”
James Murdoch on mind games, sibling rivalry, and the war for the family media empire
https://archive.ph/QroYA Dear Reader,
When I first approached James Murdoch in early 2024 to pitch him on a series of in-depth interviews, I figured it was a long shot. Rupert Murdoch’s youngest son, the onetime heir apparent to the Murdoch media empire, almost never spoke to reporters. Still, I could only imagine the stories he had to tell.
In his 20 years working for the family business, he’d been inside rooms where decisions were made at the most powerful conservative-media empire in the world. He’d seen up close how his father’s British newspapers came to champion Brexit and how Fox News had helped deliver Donald Trump to the White House. There were signs that James had grown disillusioned with these aspects of how his family fortune had been made: In 2020, he’d abruptly resigned from News Corp’s board of directors with a cryptic letter citing “disagreements over certain editorial content.” Might he finally be willing to elaborate? Sometimes, as a reporter, all you can do is ask.
Durable passport books that can easily fit in a pocket are a relatively recent invention. Prior to the 20th century, travel papers were just that: letters or single-page documents from a monarch or…
The article has some interesting information about European passports, too.
The rise of tourism in North America and Europe in the mid- to late 19th century caused difficulties for the existing passport and visa systems in Europe and in 1861, France abolished passports and visas, with the rest of Europe following suit.
By the outbreak of World War I in 1914, passport requirements were nonexistent nearly everywhere in Europe and the United States. The First World War brought new concerns for international security, prompting the requirement of passports and visas to travel abroad.
...
the U.S. passport requirement was only a war measure that officially ended when President Wilson left office in 1921. The U.S. was not a member of League of Nations – despite it being the brainchild of its aforementioned president – and did not require passports for international travel again until Nov. 29, 1941, mere days before the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
The message is that we are a threat to the nation. The subtext is that we are not of this nation.
Archive link: https://archive.ph/zm5LU
The Great Hunger was a modern event, shaped by the belief that the poor are the authors of their own misery and that the market must be obeyed at all costs.
An exploration of the causes of the Irish Potato Famine, and how the British blindspots in the attitudes of their aristocracy failed to recognize, then failed to solve, a deadly famine and depopulation in their own geographical yard.
It is easy to draw parallels to today's US Washington elite attitudes towards homelessness, rural struggles, and environmental stress can unravel things before anyone at the top realizes what's happening.
New Yorker article, archived version