Hope everyone had a lovely weekend and got a chance to see the muralists at work last week.
Here’s this week’s reading list.
The Washington Post: Postal Service considers rural mail slowdown after election
The Economist: Israel and Hizbullah play with fire
The New Yorker: Among America’s “low-information voters”
The Atlantic: Cape Cod offers a harbinger of America’s economic future
Associated Press: Colonial-era garden discovered in Virginia
The Economist: Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve
NPR: It’s somehow pumpkin spice season already. Why fall vibes are here earlier than ever
The Hechinger Report: ‘Not waiting for people to save us’: 9 school districts combine forces to help students
Route Fifty: A prescription for housing?
The Washington Post: A decade after D.C.’s Vision Zero promise, traffic fatalities have doubled
The Atlantic: Are you sure your house is worth that much?
The New York Times: Could that garage be apartments? New York hunts for places to build.
The Economist: How to reduce the risk of developing dementia
Associated Press: Biden promised to clean up heavily polluted communities. Here is how advocates say he did
Route Fifty: Climate change is messing with city sewers — and the solutions are even messier
The Economist: Kamala Harris can beat Donald Trump. But how would she govern?
Gothamist: Reading scores in NYC schools drop after curriculum overhaul
The New York Times: How Costco hacked the American shopping psyche
NPR: ‘A real shift in the vibe’: The tattoo industry is changing
The Economist: The mysterious middlemen helping Russia’s war machine
The Atlantic: Five books that changed readers’ minds
Route Fifty: Decrepit pipes put Jackson, Mississippi, on the edge of catastrophe. State regulators didn’t act.


