Iserotope Extras - Issue #52

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Happy Thursday, Extras subscribers! I hope you’re doing well. This week, check out articles about the dangers of white microvalidations, the health benefits of silence, the problems of the trucking industry, and the importance of hospice nurses. Enjoy your last days of July!

White People: Stop Microvalidating Each Other

I like this short post, which adds more terms that all white people should know and explore. In addition to “white privilege,” consider “white fragility,” “white fog,” and “appropriate whiteness.” Most important, the author points out, is that white people should attack each other’s “microvalidations.” In other words, if you’re white, and another white person says something stupid, make sure to say something back.

This Is Your Brain on Silence

In my last years of teaching, I wore enormous ear muffs (like these, like the ones airport workers wear) in between classes to focus my attention away from the sounds of school. It turns out that the word “noise” comes from a Latin root meaning “pain” and that silence (more than music?) makes our bodies feel better.

10 Kindles for Oakland students. The KCP is up to 825 Kindles in all.

Surviving the Long Haul

Being a truck driver is hard: long days, tough working conditions, health problems—and if you’re a woman, unchecked sexual harassment. This well-researched article uncovers the dark underbelly of the male-dominated trucking industry.

The Threshold

Hospice nurse Heather Meyerend takes care of people who are on the brink of death. In this profile, we get to know Heather and her patients, and we are reminded of the importance of human connection at the end of our lives.

Have a wonderful week! Email me with your thoughts about this issue, and I’ll see you back again next Thursday at 9:10 am.

Iserotope Extras - Issue #51

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This week, you won’t find anything about Melania Trump, though I do like following plagiarists. Instead, enjoy articles on the ills of gentrification, the history of the N.R.A., the joys of decluttering, and the power of public libraries. Hope you make it through both national conventions!

Sleeping with a Gentrifier

White people never think they’re responsible for gentrification. A woman who lived in The Mission in her 20s decides to move back with her techie boyfriend 10 years later. This leads to tons of introspection, rationalization, and defensiveness. One thing is for sure, though: She is infatuated with her boyfriend. (This makes everything else all right.)

The Civil War that Could Doom the N.R.A.

This is a great (though slightly biased) article that clearly explains the history of the National Rifle Association (that is to say, it wasn’t always as crazy as it is now). The piece also suggests that the N.R.A. is not as strong as we may think — that there are internal divisions that jeopardize its clout. Also interesting: There are gun-rights organizations that say that the current N.R.A. doesn’t go far enough. Wow.

The cool waters of Clear Creek in Golden, Colorado. Thanks for the visit, Fifi!

Marie Kondo and the Ruthless War on Stuff

Americans amass way too much stuff. To the rescue is Marie Kondo, author of The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up. Ms. Kondo is everywhere right now, and her method — holding items we own in our hands, asking each whether it sparks joy, and tossing it if the answer is no — is revered by some and spurned by others. This profile explores the xenophobia of white American professional organizers who say that Ms. Kondo’s system doesn’t work for this country.

The Power of Public Libraries

The public is being attacked. Our public schools are deemed inferior. Our police departments are deemed corrupt. Our public transportation is deemed broken. There is some good news, though: Public libraries are experiencing a renaissance. Please enjoy these 11 2-minute feel-good videos of award-worthy libraries in New York City. My favorites: Arverne Library and Glen Oaks Library.

You have made it all the way through Issue #51. Good work, you! As always, please let me know your thoughts. I’ll see you back here next Thursday at 9:10 am. Have a great week!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #50

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This week’s edition is dedicated to Anton Sterling, Philando Castile, and the five police officers killed in Dallas. So far, what I’ve read from major publications has seemed scattered, incomplete, inauthentic. Then there is what I’ve read on FB and other social media — deep personal reflections plus silly (and hurtful) “All Lives Matter” ridiculousness. I hope you find these four pieces true and helpful — not just to begin to heal, but also to improve, to do something, to challenge.

Black Lives Matter: A Fairy Tale

“I am tired of writing about dead Black bodies,” Joel Leon writes. “I am tired of talking about talking; tired of marching, tired of yelling, voice hoarse. I am tired of being ‘conscious’, ‘woke’, awake, alive…I want to shoot shit, burn shit to ground floor levels. I am tired of the need for survival, I am tired of asking ‘what do we do now?’, ‘where do we go from here?’, ‘how do we cope?’.”

I Need Justice, I Need Peace

Autostraddle promotes the voices of queer and trans women of color. This piece offers six accounts, reflections, and opinions on the shootings of Anton Sterling and Philando Castile. Layla says, “I would feel more supported if I felt like white allies were trying harder. Don’t tell POC how sad you are or only post about your sadness on social media. Go put yourself in those uncomfortable places you don’t want to be in and do real work if you are really sad. White supremacy must be wiped out of our country.”

Iesha L. Evins, arrested in Baton Rouge. Photo by Jonathan Bachman, Reuters.

Something more is required of us now. What?

Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow, argues that our country cannot be “fixed.” It is not up to President Obama to make speeches or police departments to make reforms. After all, she writes, “This nation was founded on the idea that some lives don’t matter. Freedom and justice for some, not all. That’s the foundation. Yes, progress has been made in some respects, but it hasn’t come easy. There’s an unfinished revolution waiting to be won.”

Librarian Creates #BlackLivesMatter Booklist for Teens

Listening helps us understand; reading does, too. Minnesota librarian Chelsea Couillard-Smith has built a booklist to build background knowledge about the Black Lives Matter movement. It’s not perfect, but I’ve read most of the titles and can vouch for them. Just don’t get too lost in reading (as I sometimes do), rendering yourself immobile.

Thank you for reading Extras #50. I welcome your thoughts on this issue, and I encourage you to take what you’ve read and turn it into a positive action. See you next Thursday at 9:10 am!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #49

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This week in Extras, begin with Jia Toletino’s smart and sassy reflection on affirmative action, white privilege, and Fisher v. University of Texas. Then move to filmmaker Dawn Porter (my new hero), who highlights the courageous women and men fighting to protect reproductive rights in the South. After a photography break, get nerdy on journalism with an excellent profile of the Washington Post. Then finish this issue off by learning how ordinary citizens and wealthy individuals have sometimes teamed up to shape our most important Supreme Court decisions on civil rights.

All the Greedy Young Abigail Fishers and Me

Abigail Fisher lost her anti-affirmative action case last month at the Supreme Court. This essay is by a woman who regrets helping white high school students like Ms. Fisher on their personal essays so that they can get admitted into the University of Texas at the expense of similarly qualified students of color. I’m particularly frustrated that our conversation on affirmative action has not moved one bit for 20+ years. Conservatives, like Chief Justice John Roberts, continue to believe in a “color-blind Constitution” and incorrectly invoke the 14th Amendment as basis for their claim. I tend to agree with Justice Warren Burger when he wrote in 1971: “In order to get beyond racism, we must first take account of race. There is no other way.” (Just because there can’t be an Extras without Nikole Hannah-Jones, here’s her analysis of the case back in 2013.)

Abortion providers in places like Texas are heroically courageous

The Supreme Court last month invalidated state laws that made abortions harder to get, upholding the “undue burden” test that Planned Parenthood v. Casey established in 1992. After you read this article, consider watching Dawn Porter’s documentary, Trapped, reading Dr. Willie Parker’s op-ed about why he performs abortions, and listening to the Death, Sex, and Money podcast’s episode on a Planned Parenthood clinic in Brooklyn. It has become clear to me, whether you’re pro-life or pro-choice, that the movement against abortion is largely one waged by white men telling Black women what’s good for them.

An orchid from the summer.

The Good News at Trump’s Least-Favorite Paper

I like journalism; I like the news. A few years ago, newspapers and news magazines were dead. Then, they became “media companies,” and a few, like The Atlantic, have prospered. This article is about the Washington Post, and how, under the editorship of Marty Baron (see Spotlight) and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, it’s flourishing without becoming a Gawker.

The Imperfect Plaintiffs

I was lukewarm at first on More Perfect, Radiolab’s new podcast about the Supreme Court, until this episode, which focuses on plaintiffs in civil rights “test cases,” who may want nothing to do with becoming famous. I was fascinated by the backstories of Lawrence v. Texas (2003), which banned sodomy laws, and Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which legitimized segregation. Sometimes, civil rights gains are heavily orchestrated.

You did it! Thanks for checking out this week’s Extras. Email me with your thoughts, and share this issue with your friends! Also, I’m encouraging you one more time to join the Forum (and introduce yourself!) so we can build this community and talk about one article per week. See you next Thursday at 9:10 am!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #48

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Blockbuster of an issue this week for Extras #48: Thank you, loyal subscribers, for taking on the challenge! The first two articles — one about how our private prisons foster heinous conditions, the other about how our cities overlook rape by the thousands — are incredible and deserve your close attention. Then there’s a rainbow to break up the seriousness, after which things get (at least a little bit) lighter, with an interview of Ta-Nehisi Coates (actually, nope, still serious) and a primer on the latest trends in dating. Please enjoy these articles, and please check out the note on the bottom!

My Four Months as a Private Prison Guard

You’ve surely read articles about bad conditions at prisons, but you haven’t read this. In this 30,000-word exposé (yes, please reserve an hour or two), Shane Bauer goes undercover as a guard at a private prison in Louisiana. For four months, Mr. Bauer witnesses firsthand and reports on the grim reality that prisoners and guards face. When profit is the primary motive, the goal is to reduce costs, which means $9/hour for guards and few opportunities for prisoners. As a result, violence and barbarity follow.

11,431 Rape Kits Collected and Forgotten in Detroit

Thousands and thousands and thousands of rapes — particularly in cities, particularly when the survivors are poor women of color — go unprosecuted, totally forgotten, because rape kits, which include DNA evidence, are left untested. This is the heroic story of Ardelia Ali, a woman who was raped when she was 18, who was not afraid to come forward, and Wayne County prosecutor Kym Worthy, who was also raped as a young woman, who fought to ensure that every single one of the 11,431 rape kits that were lying around Detroit got tested. Their work led to the conviction, 20 years later, of Ms. Ali’s attacker. Their courage unfortunately could not erase the hundreds of rapes and murders, often by men committing multiple crimes each, caused by decades of negligence.

Morning rainbow over my hut in Kongolikoro, Mali.

The Playboy Interview with Ta-Nehisi Coates

Everyone knows about Ta-Nehisi Coates, author of Between the World and Me and “The Case for Reparations.” (If you haven’t read his book and his article, I highly recommend both.) Here’s his latest interview, where Mr. Coates talks about writing, James Baldwin, Cornel West, the presidential election, his French, and white people, as always. He concludes with a hope that in the future, he’ll do less talking and let his work speak for itself. (Mr. Coates does a lot of interviews.)

‘Benching’ Is the New Ghosting

You know about ghosting, right, when the person you’re interested in all of a sudden stops responding, even though you thought he or she was into you (or was even dating you)? Well, that’s passé. More advanced than ghosting is “benching.” It’s very real. Has it happened to you?

Before you go: Iserotope Extras subscribers are a pretty great group. Don’t you think so? I think so. Therefore: Let’s make a space to build this community, to share ideas, and to talk about these articles. Are you in? If so, please introduce yourself (1 short paragraph will suffice) at the Iserotope Extras Forum! (Don’t worry, it’s not FB this time.) Let’s get to know each other!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #47

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Welcome to Iserotope Extras! This week, I’m featuring articles and podcasts that help deepen topics that have emerged in previous issues. If you’ve been following the debate on the teaching of grit as a character skill, you’ll love the first piece. If you’re still reeling, as I am, from the horror of the attack in Orlando, you’ll find some solace in the second piece. If you care about race and education, and if you’re interested in the role that journalism can play to challenge inequity, you’ll appreciate the third piece. And finally, if your life is totally great right now, but you might be yearning for a change, you’ll be grateful for the last piece. Please enjoy!

The Limits of “Grit”

Grit is hot. In Issue #43, I highlighted Paul Tough’s article, “How Kids Learn Resilience,” which challenged Angela Duckworth’s research on grit and its consequences in schools. Now David Denby, author of Lit Up, goes further, excoriating Prof. Duckworth’s “bootstraps” philosophy as “corporate” and lacking in ethics and morality. (Meanwhile, we also learn that Denby, an old-time public schools kind of guy, does not like KIPP.)

A White Horse, The Memory Palace Podcast

Last week, Extras subscriber Kester sent me this excellent episode of The Memory Palace, which focuses on the history of the White Horse Bar in Berkeley. Established in 1933, the White Horse is the oldest gay bar in the United States. Poetically, this nine-minute ode reminds us how far the LGBT community has come, and how far we still need to go.

Friends & family updated 208+ Kindles this weekend! Thank you! (Also, Extras subscriber Abby suggested this "Update-o-Meter."

An Interview with Nikole Hannah-Jones

Part of the mission of Extras is making sure that you know about my favorite people. Nikole Hannah-Jones, whose latest article on school resegregation, “Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated School,” appeared in last week’s Extras, is my favorite education reporter. To learn more about her, please listen to this interview on the Longform Podcast. A journalist through and through, Ms. Hannah-Jones talks about reporting, race, her award-winning story on This American Life, and how to ask the right questions.

Screw Mastery

Accomplished writer and reporter Hanna Rosin, who wrote “The Silicon Valley Suicides” last December, ​writes this piece to explain her decision, in her 40s, to switch from print to podcast. Now a co-host on Invisibilia, Ms. Rosin explains why she left the Malcolm Gladwell definition of mastery to try something totally outside her comfort zone. Spoiler: It’s to feel “goofily, absurdly proud for figuring something out.”

That’s it for this issue! Your homework this week is to take an article or podcast you’ve seen in Extras and work it naturally into conversation with a friend or family member, at which point you let that person know about Iserotope Extras, and then you encourage them to subscribe. Great!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #46

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Sunday morning’s attack on gay people in Orlando has left me stuck. Most people don’t seem to want to talk about it. Maybe this is because we’re grieving, or we’re numb, or we don’t know what to say. Very little good writing has emerged so far. This week’s first piece, “The Courage of Being Queer,” is a good start. Also highlighted this week is Nikole Hannah-Jones’s latest piece on school re-segregation. It’s excellent. After a photo of a soccer field, consider how our identity is changing as we outsource our memories to electronic devices, then try to take in, if you can stomach it, yet another story of police brutality and gun violence.

The Courage of Being Queer

My boyfriend Peter found this quiet and thoughtful piece about being gay, about being out, about living our lives fully as we are. The 49 people who were killed in Orlando on Sunday morning were mostly young and mostly Latino. Pulse was a safe space to be themselves. Unlike the victims, my race, my age, and where I live offer me tons of safety. This is not the case, however, for many people in many places across our country.

Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City

Sixty years after Brown v. Board, our country has abandoned the fight to integrate our schools. We no longer have the will to do what is morally and legally right. Nikole Hannah-Jones has reportedly extensively (here, here, and here) on re-segregation, and in this latest piece, she turns her attention to New York City and to the question she needs to answer: Where should I send my daughter to school?

A soccer field in Kongolikoro, Mali.

Head in the cloud

“For thousands of years,” Sophie McBain writes, “human beings have relied on stone tablets, scrolls, books or Post-it notes to remember things that their minds cannot retain, but there is something profoundly different about the way we remember and forget in the internet age. It is not only our memory of facts that is changing. Our episodic memory, the mind’s ability to relive past experiences – the surprising sting of an old humiliation revisited, the thrill and discomfort of a first kiss, those seemingly endless childhood summers – is affected, too.”

Tased in the Chest for 23 Seconds, Dead for 8 Minutes, Now Facing a Lifetime of Recovery

A police officer tased a young man in the chest for 23 seconds, causing cardiac arrest, leading to severe brain damage and a coma. This article is about police brutality, poor training, and the negligence of Taser International. (This story is also about how white people still get a better shot at justice than people of color.)

Thank you, loyal subscribers, for reading this 46th edition of Iserotope Extras. Please feel free to send it along to a friend or to email me with your thoughts. See you next Thursday at 9:10 am!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #45

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Hi again! This week, I’m juxtaposing what’s happening in Chicago (horrific) with what’s happening in Juárez (wonderful). Why can one city solve its gun violence problem, while the other one remains intractably stuck? Then, after a beautiful photo of Hawaii, please enjoy articles about journalistic fraud (one of my favorite topics) and musical merriment. Have a great Thursday!

A Weekend in Chicago: Where Gunfire Is a Terrifying Norm

Over Memorial Day weekend, 64 people were shot in Chicago. Six people died. All but one victim was African American or Latino. There is so much gun violence in Chicago that one mother is happy her son is in jail. Otherwise, she says, “he was bound to be shot this summer.” This NYT special report dares you to read it in full, shooting after shooting after shooting. If you make it all the way through, you’ll be inspired to do something about it.

Once the World’s Most Dangerous City, Juárez Returns to Life

Meanwhile, 1,500 miles away, an entirely different story is happening in Juárez, Mexico. Just six years ago, Juárez had 3,766 murders, nearly 10 a day. That number has plummeted to 256. This article tells the story of how Juárez, through investing in criminal justice and local government, became safe again. One resident said, “People think someone’s going to come from outside and cure the problem. People think a messiah will come. No. The key to success is to strengthen what’s local.”

Kauai is beautiful!

The fabulist who changed journalism

Washington Post reporter Janet Cooke won a Pulitzer Prize in 1981 for a story about an 8-year-old heroin addict. Except she made the whole thing up. This article recounts how Ms. Cooke’s article had a lasting negative impact on the perception of journalists as trustworthy. My friend Michele and I like following plagiarists and fabulists like Stephen Glass, Jayson Blair, and Jonah Lehrer. (Shattered Glass, where Hayden Christensen plays Mr. Glass, is a great movie.)

Hamilton

Joe Posnanski, a dad, takes his 14-year-old daughter to see Hamilton. Good things happen.

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And that’s it for this issue! Hope you enjoyed. This week, if you have the time, check out this link and email me your thoughts. (It’s Extras, all in one place.) See you next Thursday!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #44

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Thank you, loyal subscribers, for your kind words about last week’s issue (my favorite so far). Iserotope Extras is beginning to hit its stride! This week promises more great articles. The first one, about today’s college students, will put you through the wringer. (So many emotions.) If you manage to come out the other side, you’ll be rewarded with pieces on the life of a hyperconnected teenager, the inexorable truth that free will is a fraud, and the impending doom of the national spelling bee. Please enjoy!

The Big Uneasy

This is a masterful article on our current generation of college students. Nathan Heller writes about trigger warnings, allyship, intersectionality, and student unrest at Oberlin College and elsewhere. This piece brilliantly continues the conversation that The Atlantic Monthly started in “The Coddling of the American Mind” (previously in Extras). It’s a piece that will grab you, bother you, and make you want to talk to someone. (Continue the conversation on the Iserotope FB page!)

This is what it’s like to grow up in the age of likes, lols and longing

Katherine is 13. This is the story of a teenager who has an iPhone, an au pair, and hundreds of followers on Instagram and Snapchat. Instead of rolling her eyes when her dad suggests breakfast or a jacket to stay warm, Katherine just keeps looking at her phone. But tbh, if you read closely, there’s more here than a typical spoiled white teenage girl.

Two graduating seniors at Envision Academy in Oakland got Kindles to keep last week.

There's No Such Thing as Free Will

More and more scientists believe that humans do not have free will, that our brains begin performing an action before we have decided to do it. But what will happen to our society if “determinism” takes hold? Very bad things, it turns out. That’s why it’s better to believe in free will, or if you don’t, in “illusionism,” or the belief in free will, even when free will isn’t true. (If you read this article, be prepared to have an existential crisis.)

American kids are getting too smart for the Spelling Bee

I’m an above-average speller, to go along with my real skill in life (typing). (I have a friend and former colleague who was a spelling bee champion.) This year, the Scripps National Spelling Bee had its youngest contestant ever: 6-year-old Akash Vukoti. Check out the video that accompanies this article for a primer on how to pronounce “bondon” correctly.

Iserotope Extras #44 is done! Email me with your thoughts about this issue, or forward this digest to a friend to encourage them to become a subscriber. Have a great week!

Iserotope Extras - Issue #43

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Welcome, new subscribers Michael, Clem, and Eileen! (And thank you for your word-of-mouth, Laura, Angelina, and Clare!) This week’s Iserotope Extras packs a punch. If you care about urban education, the first article is a must read. The second piece offers a human face to our country’s addiction to painkillers. The third article — if you choose to read it and can get through it — will stay with you for a long time. And the last piece is about two of my favorites, reading + dogs. Enjoy!

How Kids Learn Resilience

Grit is education’s latest four-letter word. Five years ago, I read about grit and its relationship to resilience in young people. It sounded pretty good. Then Paul Tough wrote a book about it, and then teachers got excited about it, and then schools started measuring it, and then critics bashed it, calling it racist, and then Angela Duckworth, the original researcher, warned schools not to measure it, then she wrote a book about it, and here we are — back to Paul Tough writing another book about it. Here’s an excerpt from Helping Children Succeed. (Mr. Tough knows how to write.) (See optional homework below!)

Hooked: One Family’s Ordeal With Fentanyl

This is a story of fentanyl, a relatively new opioid, 50 times more powerful than heroin, and how it’s destroying a 25-year-old man and his family. What’s not new, though, is how this story plays out: A middle-class dad loses his job, his son drops out of community college, a cycle of stealing and lying develops, and pretty soon, it’s too late. (Not in this article: how white people, when they’re on drugs, seem to get more second chances.)

It's cherry season, the second-best time of year. (Peach season is coming up.) Thanks Mom!

The Waco Horror

In 1916, 10,000 people watched the lynching of 17-year-old farmhand Jesse Washington. One hundred years later, his namesake travels to Waco, Texas, to find out that most white residents don’t know about the Waco Horror, while most Black residents do. He sits with relatives of Mr. Washington, and then relatives of the woman he confessed to killing. Is there anything that can be done to learn from this, to heal? Warning: There are disturbing photographs of Mr. Washington’s lynching, in addition to graphic descriptions of the event.

Therapy Dogs Work Wonders for Struggling Readers

If we really want young people to read, the answer isn’t more access to books, or an adult who really cares, or even Kindles. The answer is dogs! A middle school in Virginia partners dogs with eighth graders in a 1:1 reading program. (The eighth graders do the reading.) One student said, “Remy was neat. It was like he was really listening to me read. I will try to read to my dog at home.”

Thank you for reading Extras! Here’s the optional homework this week: As an experiment, in a few minutes, I’m going to post “How Kids Learn Resilience” on the FB Iserotope Page. If you like, after reading the article, add your thoughts there! (There is a lot to talk about.) For bonus points, share that post with your friends on FB, thereby causing a flurry of interest in Iserotope Extras. Have a great week, and see you next Thursday!