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*a link; see a note on notes and links; see also a disclaimer / … and maybe browse or search the post archive*
Brexit is and was always a disaster. https://t.co/lB1qQkDVUY pic.twitter.com/8fhn694cGp
— Luddite 🇬🇧🇪🇺 Ex NHS 💙 FBPPR (@h1llbillies) March 19, 2021
Britain is the only country in the world, possibly in history, dumb enough to impose sanctions on itself. That is what Brexit economically amounts to. Trade with Europe falling by half means, in practical terms, that the British economy is shrinking as if it’s had a heart attack. Europe is obviously Britain’s largest trading partner. And now Brits are simply going without goods and services in huge quantities — things they’re accustomed to buying from Europe, being on the shelves, being able to obtain without thinking about it. Brexit is Britain being horrifically stupid enough to sanction itself, and just like any case of sanctions, it’s the average person who’s going to be hit hardest.*
What if I were to tell you this never-ending housing boom also happened to be in one of the vanishingly few habitable zones on Earth by century's end? Is it a bubble then? https://t.co/iv7Dlrpf0U
— Greg Lindsay (@Greg_Lindsay) March 17, 2021
This is a moving piece by @Harkaway, on his parents' unique, creative partnership. It was a privilege for me to see a little of this myself. Her role in these amazing books deserves to be celebrated.https://t.co/9N4R54AEln
— Richard Ovenden (@richove) March 14, 2021
College admissions is one of the few situations in which it’s rich people scrambling for a scarce resource. The result: our insane system of private schools https://t.co/x3Le5Vm87h
— Arts & Letters Daily (@aldaily) March 14, 2021
… as doers and actors we seek to promote many values of social justice in addition to fairness in the distribution of goods: learning and using satisfying and expansive skills in socially recognized settings; participating in forming and running institutions, and receiving recognition for such participation; playing and communicating with others, and expressing our experience, feelings, and perspective on social life in contexts where others can listen.*
More than twenty years after its original publication in 1990, Iris Young’s Justice and the Politics of Difference can be seen to have been prescient …*