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HOT BUTTON ISSUES

Le Monde diplomatique has published an excellent, forensic analysis of how badly privatisation was carried out in Greece, while The Economist tackles how best to make immigration work in Western countries. In the US, rising sea levels are beginning to have an impact on coastal property prices — but it’s complicated. And David Graeber’s “bullshit jobs” theory keeps getting more and more traction: here’s why garbos should earn more than bankers.

THIS IS LONDON CALLING

A new book, Auntie’s War, explores how the BBC didn’t report World War II. Historian Ian Jack considers it at length; while right now, war reporting is becoming prohibitively expensive. And here’s a guide to (and debunking of) some new and olds myths about journalism — and some truths.

BRING UP THE BODIES

After last week’s leadership chaos, it’s worth harking back to Katharine Murphy’s splendid essay from last year on the toll modern politics inflicts on both politicians and staff in what is demonstrably a toxic environment. Personally I found the whole thing draining and dispiriting in a way quite unlike any previous leadership fight. For comfort I found myself re-watching Wolf Hall, the greatest political drama series of recent years, once I’d slumped onto my couch each night.

Hilary Mantel’s Cromwell owes more to the idea of a solitary genius manipulating the world Michael Corleone-style from some icy outpost of pain than to actual history, but the books and series are still great fun; academic Colin Burrow’s insightful reviews of the books are here and here.

I’LL GIVE YOU A BLOODY PARADIGM

Documentary maker Errol Morris says when he was a student, philosopher Thomas Kuhn — apparently enraged at Morris’ arguing back at him — hurled an ashtray at the future director of The Thin Blue Line and The Fog of War. At the LA Review of Books, Philip Kitcher calls bullshit — on Morris’ arguments, if not the flying ashtray — and explains how Kuhn and his arguments about incommensurable paradigms have been misrepresented and abused.

Full disclosure: Denise Russell, Moira Gatens and Paul Crittenden never threw anything at me in my years doing Philosophy at Sydney University, though arguably they should have. Meantime, if it’s shifting paradigms you’re a-hankerin’ for, here’s a fascinating list of areas where innovation is proceeding slowly but with enormous impact.

STAT OF THE WEEK

Food for thought: we’ve nearly doubled our spending on food since the late 1980s, in real terms. This is according to new data from ABARES, with growth from $49 billion in 1989 to $92 billion in 2017 in adjusted dollars.

Where’s it all going? This is an older set of data but gives us the answer anyway. You only need to know what one line is here: the top one is “meals out and fast food”.

YOUR BRAIN VS THE INTERNET

My message on claims about the neurological impact of the internet (I looked at it in The Mess We’re In) is be wary — the evidence is more complex than we’re often told. With that caveat, the impact of screens on how we read may be harmful to our comprehension but then again (clunky metaphor alert), apparently we’re not actually paying much attention to what we’re doing for much of the time. And while we’re on matters medical, that whole thing about sperm racing for the egg? Yeah, nah. Sorry fellas, it’s sexist nonsense.

THIS ARTISTIC LIFE

Jane Jervis-Read explores the revelations by Dorothy Hewett’s daughters Kate and Rozanna Lilley of the sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of her mother’s “friends”, your guide to the paintings in Proust; and on a lighter note, Blade Runner — the early, funny one — and why ambiguity about Deckard is crucial to the film’s meaning (but who was the sixth replicant????!!!!!!!).