NEW: The New York Times editorial board endorses @JoeBiden for president: ”His campaign is rooted in steadiness, experience, compassion and decency" nyti.ms/3nnpmI0
“In the midst of unrelenting chaos, Mr. Biden is offering an anxious, exhausted nation something beyond policy or ideology” nyti.ms/3nnpmI0
As president, Joe Biden “would stand with America’s allies and against adversaries that seek to undermine our democracy. He would work to address systemic injustices.” nyti.ms/3nnpmI0
“The next president will face the task of repairing the enormous damage inflicted on America’s global reputation. Mr. Biden has the necessary chops, having spent much of his career focused on global concerns.” nyti.ms/3nnpmI0
Mr. Biden has vowed to “restore the soul of America,” assuring the public that he recognizes the magnitude of what the next president is being called upon to do. Thankfully, he is well suited to the challenge. nyti.ms/3nnpmI0

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More from @nytopinion

6 Oct
"Mother Nature has been synthesizing weird and wonderful medicinal chemicals for over three billion years, many of which chemists could not predict or devise in their wildest dreams. 

They should go to the Amazon," writes @DocMarkPlotkin. nyti.ms/3d3mVpj
"Today the Amazon's magnificent forests are being destroyed and its Indigenous cultures disrupted and extinguished ever more rapidly." nyti.ms/3d3mVpj
"Our ignorance about Amazonian flora and fauna remains staggering." nyti.ms/3d3mVpj
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5 Sep
“We’re going to work with all of our students who are drowning in debt to take the pressure off these young people.” — Donald Trump in a speech on July 21, 2016 nyti.ms/3h21oh2
“I will be the greatest jobs president that God ever created.” — Donald Trump in a speech on June 16, 2015 nyti.ms/3h21oh2
“It is time to drain the swamp in Washington, D.C. This is why I’m proposing a package of ethics reforms to make our government honest once again.” — Donald Trump, Oct. 17, 2016 nyti.ms/3h21oh2
Read 6 tweets
25 Aug
"The economics of this moment are not complicated: A self-sustaining recovery cannot occur unless the virus is controlled," write Janet Yellen, former chair of the Federal Reserve, and @econjared. nyti.ms/3gsxTVv
Data is showing consumer spending slowing overall and deteriorating conditions for low-income households, who have become more anxious about how they will pay for their rent and their food. nyti.ms/3gsxTVv
"These numbers reflect the confluence of at least 3 forces: acceleration of the spread of the virus; expiration of the supplemental federal unemployment benefits; and the ending of various eviction moratoriums," write Yellen and Bernstein. nyti.ms/3gsxTVv
Read 5 tweets
30 Jul
“I want you to know that in the last days and hours of my life you inspired me,” wrote Representative John Lewis, who penned this essay shortly before his death on July 17. We are publishing it today, on the day of his funeral. nyti.ms/2DnprJ2
“You filled me with hope about the next chapter of the great American story,” wrote civil rights icon John Lewis. “Around the country and the world you set aside race, class, age, language and nationality to demand respect for human dignity.” nyti.ms/2DnprJ2
“Emmett Till was my George Floyd. He was my Rayshard Brooks, Sandra Bland and Breonna Taylor. He was 14 when he was killed, and I was only 15 years old at the time,” wrote John Lewis. nyti.ms/2DnprJ2
Read 6 tweets
9 Jul
Why do American cities waste so much space on cars? @fmanjoo considers what the future could look like without them. nyti.ms/3fadd4G
The absence of cars would allow pedestrians, buses and bikes to race across New York at unheard-of speeds. nyti.ms/3fadd4G
With space reclaimed from cars, there would be room for curbside vendors, gathering spaces and civic and social services. nyti.ms/3fadd4G
Read 6 tweets
5 Jul
The nation has ample resources to ensure that every worker is paid enough to afford housing, food and other necessities of daily life.

Anything less is intolerable. nyti.ms/2CcivOn
America’s business leaders once bragged about how well they looked after their employees, and how much they contributed to society in taxes. But in recent decades—as the U.S. economy expanded and C.E.O. salaries skyrocketed—workers have been left behind. nyti.ms/2CcivOn
In recent months, the government has responded to the coronavirus pandemic by pumping into the economy trillions of dollars aimed mostly at preserving wealth rather than jobs. nyti.ms/2CcivOn
Read 8 tweets

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