Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Christmas is a week from tomorrow!. Thanks to your generosity, we’ve raised more than $33K to help LSSI buy Christmas presents for children in foster care. That’s an incredible start—but we’re not done yet! Your gift makes all the difference. Let’s make this Christmas unforgettable for children in need! Click here to donate. * Bloomberg…
* ABC Chicago…
Click here for the press release. * Alexi Giannoulias | Competent governance is a good political strategy: If Democrats are looking for a new political priority, we should consider administrative competence and innovation. It’s not very sexy, but in a world of increasing uncertainty, more reliable delivery of basic services just might be something people want right now. For example, for as long as most of us can remember, state departments of motor vehicles (DMVs) have been a shorthand joke about inefficient government at its finest. Getting a driver’s license or updating your vehicle registration has been likened to getting a root canal. When I became secretary of state in 2023, we were under no illusions that Illinois’ DMV could one day be a “fun” experience, but we hoped it might be something less than a frustrating, time-consuming inconvenience. We hoped it might actually be efficient. * Crain’s | Ascension, Prime hospital deal gets green light from state: As part of the deal, Prime will shut down one of the hospitals — Ascension St. Elizabeth, which serves the Humboldt Park and Wicker Park communities — because of low patient volume. It will be repurposed as something more valuable to the community. The health facilities board is slated to review that particular decision in March. Aside from Ascension St. Elizabeth, Ascension plans to offload Ascension Resurrection and Ascension Saint Mary hospitals in Chicago; Ascension Holy Family in Des Plaines; Ascension Mercy in Aurora; Ascension Saint Francis in Evanston; Ascension Saint Joseph in Joliet and Elgin; and Ascension Saint Mary in Kankakee. * SJ-R | Hundreds of new laws coming to Illinois in 2025. Here are 10 you need to know about: Employers with 15 or more employees will be required to disclose pay scale and benefit information in job postings. The change is result of an amendment to the Equal Pay Act of 2003 that was contained in HB 3129, passed by the General Assembly and signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker in 2023. * Block Club | Pricier Checkout Bags, Rideshares, Streaming: Here Are The Fee And Tax Hikes In Chicago’s 2025 Budget: During a post-Council press conference on Monday evening, Johnson defended the bag tax hike and other increases as necessary to continue funding city services, as well as expanding programs like his signature summer youth hiring initiative. “There’s no cuts to services, there’s no layoffs, there’s no furloughs,” Johnson said. “Services for garbage, for snow removal, for lights, those services are still being made available, even though that there are some individuals that wanted to cut those services. We didn’t do that. We protect working people in this city.” * Block Club | Chicago Promised Better Mental Health Care. Shooting Survivors Say They Haven’t Seen It: During The Trace’s second Chicago Survivor Storytelling Workshop, all seven participants said that survivors of gun violence should have easy access to mental health care and support groups — but despite officials’ rhetoric, resources are still falling short. In 2023, when Mayor Brandon Johnson took office, he promised to reopen the six mental health clinics that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel had shut down across the city. […] Getting a foot in the counseling door is not easy Before people can start counseling, they often have to overcome several obstacles, including cultural stigmas. In the Latino community, Rendon said, seeing a therapist can mark someone as “crazy.” Men, he added, often are expected “to be tough” and “let it go.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Joshua Long has led Chicago Public Schools’ disability office for a year. What has changed?: Before Long took on this role, the district’s disabilities office faced significant challenges. During the early days of the pandemic, schools struggled to provide new Individualized Education Programs to students and to update existing plans. The district has also struggled to transport students with disabilities to schools, and advocates have filed several complaints with the Illinois State Board of Education for lack of busing and long transportation times. In 2023, the state found that the district’s restraint and time-out practices were putting students at risk. Speaking to Chalkbeat Chicago, Long reflected on the past year, shared what he’s working on, and opened up about his ideas for the future even as Chicago Public Schools even with tight budgets. * Sun-Times | Mac Properties diverts housing voucher holders from Hyde Park’s desirable apartments, class action suit says: In some instances described in the suit, plaintiffs said they were denied apartment applications or tours of certain Mac buildings once leasing agents learned of their housing voucher. Other voucher holders said agents falsely told them that their desired property did not have any available units, only for non-voucher holders to inquire about the same units with success. * Daily Herald | Why you won’t be able to use Kennedy Expressway reversibles until mid-January: Pavement reconstruction on the reversible lanes went smoothly but the electrical and software aspects of the REVLAC work was challenging, Illinois Department of Transportation District 1 Bureau Chief of Construction Jon Schumacher said. The project included “removing and replacing 90,000 feet of power cable, installing nearly 150 feet of fiber optic cables, six restraining barriers, 120 swing gates and 54 cameras,” he explained. Final testing of the system should start Jan. 2. * WTTW | Demolition of Damen Silos Clears Key Hurdle, as Army Corps Lends Its Approval: Chicago’s Department of Buildings, in consultation with the Department of Public Health, still needs to weigh in on the demolition permit application, but the Corps’ approval was necessary due to the site’s location on the South Branch of the Chicago River. The massive silos — popular with urban explorers and famously featured in “Transformers: Age of Extinction” — date back more than a century but haven’t been used as grain elevators since the 1970s. * WTTW | Community Organizations Work to Combat Chicago’s Food Insecurity Crisis, Grocery Deserts: This year, the state of Illinois began offering grants to small grocers who open stores in food deserts through the Illinois Grocery Initiative. Chicago is also looking into opening a city-owned supermarket, but has not yet released a plan. Until then, nonprofit organizations said they will continue to fill the gap as much as possible. * Sun-Times | Advocate plans $1 billion investment in South Side health care, will replace Trinity Hospital: The new, 52-bed hospital will replace Advocate Trinity Hospital, a 263-bed hospital that’s been on the South Side since 1895. The hospital system hopes the investment closes Chicago’s 30-year life expectancy gap between residents on the South and North sides, Advocate Trinity Hospital President Michelle Blakely told the Chicago Sun-Times. * WTTW | Caught on Camera! River Otter Snapped for First Time in 15 Years of Monitoring by Lincoln Park Zoo’s Wildlife Cams: After more than a few false IDs and several tantalizing random hints of an otter-like shoulder or tail, one of the zoo’s cameras finally clicked at the right moment and, for the first time in nearly 15 years, caught an otter in full view. Twice. Staff spotted the photos of the elusive otter during a quick initial scroll through image files collected during the institute’s fall monitoring “season” — one of four conducted annually in January, April, July and October. […] Still, Chicago is 150 miles from the nearest place where otters were reintroduced in Illinois. The fact that they’ve ventured so far into urban territory is a testament to the health of the region’s rivers. * Courier-News | Elgin council to vote on plan to move tent city residents to hotels, tear down encampment: Elgin City Council members will discuss a proposal Wednesday under which the city would secure a block of 50 rooms at a rate of $65 per day for single occupancy over a four-month period. A scaled rate would be available for couples and those with pets. The estimated cost would be $390,000, which would come from the $614,400 the city has earmarked in the budget to help the homeless. Additionally, Elgin has $400,000 in Safe Spaces, Healthy Minds Affordable Housing grant money awarded through the Kane County Health Department, city officials said. * Daily Herald | Power station being built for Mount Prospect data center, legislative hurdles linger: Meanwhile, the village board at Tuesday’s meeting is expected to approve a maximum $60,000 contract for lobbying services with Mac Strategies Group. Former state Sen. Matt Murphy will be working in Springfield on behalf of the village. One of the issues the village is seeking help with is the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, otherwise known as BIPA. This legislation would affect data center operations like CloudHQ. * Sun-Times | Amazon workers in Skokie authorize potential strike: Amid the busy holiday shopping season, hundreds of workers at an Amazon delivery station in Skokie have voted to authorize a potential strike as they continue demands for a union contract with the online retail behemoth. Workers are not currently on strike, but a work stoppage could happen any time, said a spokesperson for the Teamsters labor union, which represents hundreds of delivery drivers at the Skokie facility. * Daily Herald | $13 million project to eliminate Buffalo Grove bottleneck complete: Construction included building an additional travel lane in each direction and a road median with left turn lanes. A multiuse path was built on the north side of Aptakisic and a sidewalk on the south. Other elements include new underground storm sewer to improve drainage, concrete curbs, guardrails and a wider shoulder to better accommodate on-road bicyclists, according to the division of transportation. * Daily Herald | ‘Such a force for good’: Renowned environmental lawyer Collins who fought for pollution victims dies: Collins, devoted family man and nationally honored litigator who fought corporate polluters and won millions for victims, died Sunday at age 67. The Naperville resident fought a “valiant battle” following a heart attack last month, relatives said. “He was a big personality, a big presence, and he just wanted to do something to make the world a better place,” Collins’ wife, Meg, said Monday. * Daily Herald | Why Glendale Heights village president could be thrown off ballot: A Monday hearing on a petition challenge was continued for a week so the Glendale Heights Municipal Officers Electoral Board could get a report from the DuPage County clerk about the validity of some contested signatures on Khokhar’s nominating petition. The same is true for a challenge to the petition of Ed Pope, who is also running for village president. * AFSCME | Workers at another Illinois library organize with AFSCME: They voted unanimously to form their union, which was certified by the Illinois Labor Relations Board on Nov. 6. The UFL has been Urbana-Champaign’s public library since 1874. Library employees were motivated to organize by a pattern of unfair and unequal treatment from management. “We were all frustrated, trying to understand why the people who actually make this library run were being treated like dirt,” said Callie Ferencak, a library assistant and a member of the organizing committee. * 25News Now | 800 Central Illinois kids will have a very Merry Christmas: The Baby Fold has served Central Illinois children and families since 1902, offering various services from intervention to post-adoption. Each year, the organization gets to fulfill Christmas wish lists for the children in their program, and this year, they are creating Christmas magic for 800 kids. * BND | Illinois State Police agent accused of hitting Swansea teen’s car and leaving scene: Shiloh Police Department records show that Sgt. Chris Flynn cited Feix on charges of disregarding a traffic signal and leaving the scene. In a police interview shortly after the accident, Feix reportedly told Flynn his grandmother was sick, and he was headed to see her in west Belleville when he “tapped somebody” at the intersection of Hartman Lane and Thouvenot Lane, which becomes Frank Scott Parkway. * ESPN | MLB study identifies factors for rise in pitching injuries: The study identified problems occurring at both the professional and amateur levels after interviewing over 200 people within the industry, including “former professional pitchers, orthopedic surgeons, athletic trainers, club officials, biomechanists, player agents, amateur baseball stakeholders, and other experts in pitcher development.” The study made broad recommendations — including potential rule changes — to address the increase in pitching injuries. MLB, however, said the study was just the first step in a process which needs even more examination.
* ProPublica | A Coast Guard Commander Miscarried. She Nearly Died After Being Denied Care: There’s also no exception for catastrophic or fatal fetal anomalies. In such cases, service members either have to pay out of pocket for abortions or carry to term fetuses that won’t survive outside the womb. Tricare does allow abortions in cases like Nakagawa’s, in which the fetus has no heartbeat. But even then, some doctors who treat military service members say that Tricare requires more documentation and takes longer to approve these procedures than other insurers, putting women at risk.
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Pritzker dragged into Trump’s latest media lawsuit
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Daily Beast…
The alleged creation of an alleged “false narrative of inevitability for Harris” allegedly involved Gov. JB Pritzker. * From the lawsuit…
* The “stray tweet” referenced above… * Back to the lawsuit…
I’ve asked the Pritzker campaign for comment and I’ll update with any response.
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best In-House Lobbyist goes to a relative newbie: Frances Orenic at the IL AFL-CIO…
* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Contract Lobbyist is a tie between two commenter favorites: Liz Brown-Reeves…
* And Litesa Wallace…
Congratulations! * On to today’s categories…
Best Legislative Liaison Remember to try and nominate in both categories and remember to explain your nominations or they won’t count. Thanks. * I breathed a sigh of relief when we reached $30,000 yesterday to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Unlike last year, we haven’t had a wealthy person issue a matching donation challenge. But, we’re up to $33,320 as I write this. Christmas is fast approaching. And our annual winter break is even closer than that. So, please, click here and do what you can to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy presents for those kids. Thanks!
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Preckwinkle: ‘We have a system, unfortunately, that benefits [property] tax appeal lawyers’
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Cook County has a little over 40 percent of the state’s population, so it’s economic health is very important. Property taxes, particularly commercial property taxes, can play a big role in that health, or lack thereof. The county commissioned a study to take a look at its property tax system. The commercial system was looked at first. The full study is here. More info is here. From a press release…
* Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle was on WBEZ recently and summed up another part of the problem…
More on that particular aspect…
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Roundup: Ex-state Rep. Acevedo takes the stand in Madigan corruption trial (Updated)
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Sun-Times federal courts reporter Jon Seidel…
* Tribune…
…Adding… The prosecution plans to rest their case later today…
* More…
* Sun-Times | ‘Did you bring your glasses today sir?’ Testimony of ex-state Rep. Edward Acevedo gets testy: By reminding Acevedo of his failure to bring his glasses to court on Monday — which drew the ire of the judge — Bhachu set the tone for what would be a rapid-fire series of questions about Acevedo’s memory and how his testimony in Madigan’s trial differed from what he told a federal grand jury under oath two years ago. Acevedo, meanwhile, has been diagnosed with dementia and a brain tumor, and his testimony is sure to be framed by the defense as unreliable.
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* HB5841’s synopsis…
* Tribune…
Thoughts?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Open thread
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois… Don’t forget! We’ve made great progress, raising $32,520 so far—but there’s still more to do to support the incredible work of LSSI this holiday season. Your generosity helps bring hope, care, and joy to families who need it most. Click here to donate.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller We’ve raised $32,520 so far—enough for 1,300 gifts! But with 2,530 kids counting on us, we still need your help to close the gap. Click here to donate. * ICYMI: After weeks of wrangling, Johnson wins narrow passage of his $17.1B budget. Crain’s…
- A separate vote on city spending, revised downward from $17.3 billion, was approved 27-to-23. -Johnson also looked ahead, pledging to find the progressive revenue that has thus far escaped his grasp. He repeatedly mentioned working with state leaders to take a second run at imposing a graduated income tax at the state level. * Related stories… ∙ Block Club: City Council Passes 2025 Budget That Avoids Property Tax Hike ∙ Tribune: Aldermen finally pass Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 Chicago budget ∙ Sun-Times: City Council finally passes Johnson’s $17.3B budget — with no property tax hike * BND | Metro-east mobile home parks bought by outside investment firm leave tenants ‘suffering’: Residents of multiple local mobile home parks purchased by Homes of America have been living with leaking roofs, mold and pests and going without heating or cooling because they say the company is deferring needed maintenance and leaving tenants feeling ignored, while also raising the costs to live in what were once affordable homes. Their complaints and living conditions were detailed in interviews, as well as a number of lawsuits and government inspection reports. * Streetsblog | Illinois could help beat the transit fiscal cliff by shifting federal funding from highways to public transportation: “Every governor in the U.S. has the opportunity to move money towards public transportation that they have already received from the Bipartisan Infrastructure law,” Levin explained. He noted that in November, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro moved $153 million in BIL money from highway funding towards SEPTA, Philadelphia’s transit authority. “We think Illinois has an opportunity to do the same.” * KHQA | Illinois law requires employers to disclose pay scale and benefits in job postings by 2025: The Pay Transparency Law takes effect January 1, 2025, in Illinois. This law requires pay scale and benefit information in job postings. The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) is reminding job seekers and employers that, effective January 1, 2025, all job postings made by employers with 15 or more employees will need to include pay scale and benefit information. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ presidential electors to meet Tuesday to cast votes for Harris: After Tuesday’s ceremony at the Statehouse, the electors’ ballots will be sent to the president of the U.S. Senate, where they will be opened and counted during a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6. Since the vice president serves as president of the Senate, that means Harris will have the responsibility to open the ballots and declare her opponent, Trump, the winner. * Press Release | Eliot Clay Selected as New AISWCD Executive Director: The Association of Illinois Soil & Water Conservation Districts (AISWCD) is pleased to announce the selection of Eliot Clay as its new Executive Director. Clay, a seasoned policy leader with deep expertise in agriculture, conservation and environmental issues, brings a wealth of experience to the organization. Clay comes to the AISWCD from the Illinois Environmental Council (IEC), where he led their policy agenda on agriculture, conservation and on how natural and working lands are utilized in Illinois. * Chicago Business Journal | Intersect Illinois’ new CEO Christy George unveils her 2025 goals: Among the things Intersect Illinois, a statewide economic development organization, seeks to do next year is recruit more businesses to the state and help local businesses expand their footprint. Those are some of the goals Christy George, Intersect’s president and CEO, said she hopes to achieve after being hired in November to head up the nonprofit. * Pantagraph | Illinois Farm Bureau launches beer collaboration with Destihl: Illinois Farm Bureau, originally known as the Illinois Agricultural Association, calls Roots Lager a toast to the hard-working family farmers across Illinois “who feed our communities and protect our environment, the organization said in a news release. “We are always looking for fun, innovative ways to tell people about the value of an Illinois Farm Bureau membership,” said IFB President Brian Duncan in a statement. “Illinois Farm Bureau gives its members an advantage through impactful advocacy, trusted information and meaningful development to support their careers and Illinois farm families.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Mayor Johnson announces 10 of 11 appointees for new Chicago Board of Education: Mayor Brandon Johnson picked 10 of 11 people Monday to round out the city’s new half-elected, half-appointed school board — including some who ran unsuccessfully in Chicago’s first school board elections this November. The new board will be sworn in Jan. 15, 2025, and will include 10 people who won in November. State law required the mayor choose the other 11 people, including a board president, by Monday. * Sun-Times | Mayor appoints new members to fill CPS school board: Johnson’s 11 appointees are led by new school board president Sean Harden, a consulting executive who worked as an executive assistant to former Mayor Richard M. Daley in the mid 2000s, then for CPS as deputy CEO for community affairs from 2009 to 2011 under then-schools chief Ron Huberman. Since then, he has been involved in real estate development, community revitalization and workforce development organizations. * Block Club | CPS Shares Plan To Keep Open 5 Of 7 Acero Charter Schools Due To Close: The district’s recommendation came after nearly two-and-a-half hours of public comment at Thursday’s Board of Education meeting, as teachers and families pleaded with the district to help save the seven campuses. * Crain’s | Columbia College launches layoffs, course restructuring as deficit looms: Columbia College Chicago’s board of trustees today approved a plan to restructure the school’s course offerings, which will include elimination of up to 25 full-time faculty positions and some programs and offerings, as the school tries to close a $34 million deficit it recorded in fiscal year 2024. * Crain’s | Harris Poll: Chicagoans don’t want to pay more taxes or have services cut: Taxes and fees topped Cook County residents’ list of policy concerns in our poll, with 66% citing the issue — that even beat public safety, which only 55% named. The two issues were virtually tied among city dwellers specifically (with 66% citing public safety, and 65% citing taxes and fees), but that only underscores the extent to which it is at the front of public consciousness. * Tribune | Chicago Stars and Sky make the case for equality and ‘drive toward change’ in a stadium public funding bill hearing: Chicago Stars President Karen Leetzow wants to further the conversation and education about equity in women’s sports. As the Stars navigate building a training center and venue, Leetzow and other key figures within the Chicago women’s soccer and basketball scene finally had an opportunity to address equality in public funding to Illinois state representatives. * Sun-Times | Bears keep heading south in NFC North as Vikings blast them 30-12: The Bears dropped their eighth consecutive game Monday night — this time predictably getting trucked 30-12 by the Vikings in a nationally televised game — to tie the second-longest losing streak in franchise history. When they fell behind 27-6 with 10 minutes left, Williams had completed 14 of 23 passes for 157 yards with no touchdowns for an 81.3 passer rating. The Bears (4-10) have a ton of problems, but they’re not going anywhere with him playing like that. * WTTW | Start Sharpening Your Puns, Chicago. Annual ‘Name a Snowplow’ Contest Is Now Underway: Submissions — limited to 50 characters or less — are due by Jan. 4 or whenever entries hit 20,000, whichever comes first. (Click here * Block Club | Christkindlmarket Is The Most Overcrowded Holiday Market In The US, Survey Says: Last year, 1.3 million visitors passed through the Daley Plaza Christkindlmarket, while 480,000 people visited the Wrigley Field Christkindlmarket, according to market organizers. The market had a record-breaking year for attendance in 2023 across its three markets in the Loop, Lakeview and Aurora. * Daily Herald | ‘Matlock’ moment sinks candidate’s Elk Grove Village board bid: Elk Grove Village’s spring village board election will be uncontested after trustee candidate Jacob Glimco was tossed from the ballot Monday for not having enough valid signatures on his nominating petitions. The village electoral board — a rarely-constituted panel composed of Mayor Craig Johnson, Village Clerk Lorrie Murphy and Trustee Chris Prochno — formally invalidated three signatures and sustained one, during a hearing Monday afternoon on fellow first-time candidate Keith Lasken’s objection to Glimco’s nomination. * Sun-Times | Suburban pizzeria owner gets 4 years for largest sales tax evasion in state history, prosecutors say: Cirrincione, 60, pleaded guilty on Nov. 12 to a felony count of continuing a financial criminal enterprise. Prosecutors accused him of failing to report over $104 million in income from a chain of family-owned pizza restaurants and businesses in Chicago and the suburbs. * SJ-R | Crouch: Merit commission part of new hiring process for sheriff’s department: Among the most pertinent hiring changes under Crouch are a sheriff’s merit commission and a mandate that investigators review records in person if an applicant worked at another law enforcement agency. Those changes come as the U.S. Department of Justice last month launched an investigation into the sheriff’s department and other county offices. The offices had to comply in turning over records by Dec. 14. * Herald Whig | Airline reliability key for new EAS provider: Southern Airways Express, the city’s current provider, promised it would expand Quincy’s air traffic from the 10-12,000 passengers it got annually under Cape Air and SkyWest Airlines up to 20,000 annually. Instead, complaints of unreliability that was first attributed to pilot shortages, then weather and mechanical failures and finally fleet shortages reduced traffic to 4,000. * PJ Star | Comedy icon Chevy Chase dines at longtime Peoria steakhouse during visit: Comedy icon Chevy Chase – who starred as Clark Griswold – hopefully enjoyed a meal with fewer mishaps when he and his family visited Jim’s Steakhouse in Downtown Peoria this past weekend. * The Atlantic | The Technology That Actually Runs Our World: In 2024, culture is boring and stale due to the algorithms calling the shots on what gets produced and praised—or so the critics say. The New Yorker staff writer Kyle Chayka wrote an entire book about how Big Tech has successfully “flattened culture” into a series of facsimile coffee shops and mid-century-modern furniture. The critic Jason Farago argued in The New York Times Magazine that “the plunge through our screens” and “our submission to algorithmic recommendation engines” have created a lack of momentum. Pinning the blame on new inventions isn’t a fresh argument either: In a 1923 essay, Aldous Huxley pointed to the ease of cultural production, driven by a growing middle-class desire for entertainment, as a major culprit for why mass-market books, movies, and music were so unsatisfying.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $32,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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