- Barack Obama, Forever a Third-Culture Kid, New Republic
- New York Secures the Most Affordable Housing Units in 27 Years, NY Times
- Guiding Vision and Definition of Principles, The Women's March
- The Women’s March on Washington Has Released an Unapologetically Progressive Platform, Slate
- Women’s March on Washington Opens Contentious Dialogues About Race, NY Times
- The Irrationally Divided Critics of Donald Trump, The Atlantic
- Kale Is About To Have An Identity Crisis, NPR
- How I made sure all 12 of my kids could pay for college themselves, Quartz
- Carson, Trump's Pick For Housing Agency, Won't Rule Out Grants To Trump Properties, NPR
- Why Shepard Fairey’s inauguration protest posters won’t have Trump on them, PBS
- Mental health first aid, American Psychological Association
- Mental health first aid, Wikipedia
- How I met my daughter before she was born, Adventure Club
- Trump Is Exactly the Monster We Feared, and Republicans Are Enabling Him, New Republic
- Generation X had the luxury of being rebel slackers, but Millennials have to be total squares, Timeline
- The promise and limits of ‘mental health first aid’, Boston Globe
- Housing Crisis, n+1
- Why misogyny won, Vox
- History was not kind to drug-addicted mothers, but that started to change in the 1980s, Timeline
- 3,000 Polaroids and Four Years Later, an Instant Photographer Looks Back, The Creators Project
- Why Rural America Voted for Trump, NY Times
- Three transformative ways to think about the future, Ideas.Ted.com
- How a Blind Doctor's 'Moon Code' Helped Thousands Read Again, Atlas Obscura
- For 15 Years, New Orleans Was Divided Into Three Separate Cities, Atlas Obscura
- ‘Republicans are for black Americans’, Washington Post
- Mesmerizing Depictions of Magic and Witchcraft Throughout History, Atlas Obscura
- Sessions Is No Racist: Take Black Democrats’ Word for It, National Review
- The Search for the Real America, The National Review
- Roe v. Wade Is Popular, with Asterisks, The National Review
- The future of blockchain in 8 charts, Raconteur
- When 'Petting Parties' Scandalized The Nation, NPR
- Found: An Ancient Groundcherry That Proves Nightshades Are Older Than We Think, Atlas Obscura
I love ground cherries - A Missouri Home With A Storied Past, Design Sponge
- Feminism Lost. Now What?, NY Times
- How Flap Illustrations Helped Reveal the Body's Inner Secrets, Atlas Obscura
- SNAP to Health launches new website, resources, Food Politics
- Mason to Go Launching on Kickstarter Tomorrow!, Food in Jars
while interesting, not sure why people can't just bring along two jars as the weight difference wouldn't be that much - The children they gave away, Salon
- High Times in the 18th Century by Debra Daley, The History Girls
- Need Help Understanding Malagasy Names; Race in Madagascar , Reddit
- I Guess We’re Just Not Going to Make a Fuss About That., National Review
- Natural childbirth is much, much more than a Brooklyn fad, The Week
- With No Warning, House Republicans Vote to Gut Independent Ethics Office, New York Times
Jeeze louise. - Your brain tells you healthy has to be expensive, New Food Economy
- New York Botanical Garden Breaks Ground for an Edible Academy, Edible Manhattan
- Where to Eat in Columbus, Ohio, Edible Manhattan
- New York state is suffering from its worst drought in decades, New Food Economy
- The Tula Plant Truck Hits the Road, Design Sponge
- January 2017 Editor’s Letter + #DSinspire, Design Sponge
- Move Over, Marie Kondo: Make Room for the Hygge Hordes, NY Times
- Why Can’t the U.S. Decolonize Its Design Education?, Eye on Design
- John Berger, art critic and author, dies aged 90, The Guardian
- How to Keep a Commonplace Book With Evernote, Motivated Mastery
- House Republicans Back Down on Bid to Gut Ethics Office, NY Times
- Cuomo Proposes Free Tuition at New York State Colleges for Eligible Students, NY Times
- Where Is America’s Heartland? Pick Your Map, NY Times
- Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon 2017, NYBG Blog
- Becoming Ugly, Jezebel
- Cinema’s First Sex Symbol was also America’s First Goth, Messy nessy chic
- What you can find Mudlarking on the Thames Foreshore in London, Messy Nessy chic
- Trump and Trudeau: An Odd Couple That Scares the Hell Out of Environmentalists, The New Republic
- Elmer’s Bottle Tree Ranch on Route 66, California Through My Lens
- Whole Foods’ ‘Cultural Appropriation’ of the Chopped-Cheese Sandwich, The National Review
- Ignoring the Flaws with Abortion-Turnaway Study, The national Review
- An Interactive Film About Co-Living Drawing from 70s Feminist Communes + Dutch Graphic Design, Eye on Design
- Finally, Sophisticated Tampon Packaging Design for Women Sick of Feminine Clichés, eye on design
- The Married Woman Who Kept Her Lover in the Attic, Atlas Obscura
- The Macaroni in 'Yankee Doodle' is Not What You Think, Atlas Obscura
- The First Female Doctor in Britain Spent 56 Years Disguised as a Man, Atlas Obscura
- Teachers in Wealthy Districts Get Bulk of Indiana's Performance Payouts, Education Week
- The Triumph of the 1%, Dissent
- How Trump’s Tax Proposals Will Affect Single Working Mothers, Harvard Business Review
- AN ANALYSIS OF DONALD TRUMP’S REVISED TAX PLAN, Tax policy center
- How Pleather Saved the DuPont Company—And Some Cows, Too, Atlas Obscura
- How the Battle for Sunlight Shaped New York City, City Lab
- Work in Progress: Brooklyn Lace Guild, Textile Arts center
- Scraps: Fashion, Textiles, and Creative Reuse, Textile Arts center
- Gingrich: Congress should change ethics laws for Trump, politico
“Speaker Gingrich’s statement that wealth trumps the rule of law, basically that’s what he was saying, is jaw-dropping,” added American University government professor James Thurber. “I can’t believe it. He’s a historian. He should also know that we did not want to have a king. A king in this case is somebody with a lot of money who cannot abide by the rule of law." - Here’s an ancient philosophy so simple even a 5-year-old could understand it, Boing Boing
- What drugs were the Nazis on, anyway?, CNN
- A Wonderful Life: How Postwar Christmas Embraced Spaceships, Nukes, Cellophane, Collectors Weekly
- When Do You Outgrow IKEA?, Pricenomics
- A New Era for Abortion Law, The National Review
- For Teddy Roosevelt's Son, Rebelling Meant Sneaking Christmas Trees Into the White House, Atlas Obscura
- Fred and Myrtle’s Shell House, Messy nessy Chic
- Feminist Anthropology, The New Inquiry
- Tied in Knots, New Republic
- The ‘Wickedest Woman in New York’ who made abortion affordable for women in the 1800s, Timeline
- Abortion in American History, The Atlantic
- Secret CIA assessment says Russia was trying to help Trump win White House, The Washington Post
- Trump team's 'intrusive' memo alarms federal climate scientists, The Christian Science Monitor
- The Eighties Called; They Got Their Foreign Policy Back, The National Review
- Is Precision Agriculture the Way to Peak Cropland?, The Breakthrough Insitute
Series recommended by Joe Wood. While I understand the premise that feeding the world is an incredibly daunting task and we ought to use more tech to get higher yields, I'm not sure what putting the entire world on corn, soybeans, rice, and wheat will do to our diet. It's promoting industrial processing rather than a balanced diet. The article also doesn't seem sensitive to cultural differences. Rice is a staple crop in many countries, but is corn? It also puts the power of food in a few companies hands rather than local economies. Also to note is the price implications for small farmers to purchase technologically advanced machinery. No longer are farmers able to fix the machines themselves as it's proprietary and must get fixed by license repair men, but tech becomes outdated fast! There's also a lack of biodiversity in industrial ag and local ecological knowledge. I'm interested in opposing ideas and reading the series but have my questions. - ‘Pesticide powerhouses’ and the future of farming, Sustainable food Trust
- No Wonder the Standing Rock Sioux Opposed the Pipeline, The national Review
- What Women Really Think of Men, NY Times
- Recipes for Comfort & Joy: The Healing Powers of Conifers, Gather Victoria
- The American Dream, Quantified at Last , NY Times
- Onward, Christian Health Care?, NY Times
- A How-to Guide for Rolling Back Obama’s Regulatory State, The National Review
- How Marriage and Single Parenthood Affected the 2016 Election, The National Review
- Kew Gardens in race to collect and preserve Madagascar's seeds, The Guardian
- The Privately Owned Public Space Inside Trump Tower is Already Less Accessible, Untapped Cities
- This 1920s Bauhaus Ballet is a Serious Trip, Messy Nessy Chic
- When Mother Teresa Met With New York's Mayor to Lobby for a Parking Permit, Atlas Obscura
- Media Spreads Fake Story That Trump Protesters Will Be Barred from Public Lands, The national Review
- Digital Services for the State of California
- Has a Start-Up Found the Secret to Farming the Elusive Truffle?, NY Times
- They Lost Their Jungles to Plantations, But These Indigenous Women Grew Them Back, Yes Magazine
- The Future of Food: Towards a Sustainable Food System for a Planet with 9 Billion People, The Breakthrough