Eh. Given who isn’t quoted in this story, it doesn’t sound like Bernie world is necessarily seething that much about Tanden. Briahna Joy Gray is mad, as usual.
Calling something “a slap in the face” on background is kind of amazing.
The next on-the-record quote is from Kurt Ehrenberg. Who? He’s a former New Hampshire-specific adviser who got squeezed out of the campaign in September 2019 after butting heads with other staffers, per WMUR. wmur.com/article/top-ad…
(Also, ‘Chelsea Clinton’? What?)
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It must be so weird to have Orly Taitz as your dentist. I just imagine she just talks and talks about conspiracy nonsense and you can't respond because she has tools in your mouth.
There's something funny about how being a dentist is impressive and being a lawyer is sort of impressive, but being a lawyer and a dentist simultaneously is suspicious.
These international comparisons are virtually always incorrect, and always in the direction of overstating the generosity of foreign systems. To take one example: The Italian subsidy is 80% of wages *up to a cap* around €1,200 per month.
In fact, the US fiscal response has to date been larger than is typical in other wealthy countries, relative to our GDP. The smaller headline numbers for total spending in the European packages shows they're not as big or as universal as you think. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
"Indeed, the U.S. provided fiscal support equivalent to roughly 12 percent of its GDP, data from Moody’s Analytics show, one-third more than Germany and twice as much as the U.K. Other than Australia, no large, wealthy country did more to support its economy."
The brain-fog that comes from the highly unusual demographics and environment of journalists is actually worse than @DKThomp describes here. Because there is an added layer: we work in an industry that's been in recession for more than a decade. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
@DKThomp Journalists' perspective on the economy is shaped by that environment: Everything perpetually lean and getting worse, with a plausible story about the Big Tech companies being to blame. It leads to coverage that is cynical, pessimistic, and out of touch with the broad public.
@DKThomp The political facts on the ground about the economy through 2019 -- tight labor markets, good wage growth, and the best public satisfaction with the economy in 20 years -- were simply not perceptible to so many writers, in part because things sucked so much in our industry.
One silver lining of this year’s smaller Thanksgivings is the opportunity to try out recipes you might not if you were feeding twelve people. Here are my herb-rubbed racks of veal, going in the fridge to rest before roasting this afternoon.
That’s this recipe, though I think I’m going to roast slowly on 250 and then crank up the heat at the end to brown instead of browning first. foodandwine.com/recipes/roaste…
Veal rib roast with pan gravy, green beans with garlic and thyme, Ina Garten’s savory bread pudding with apple and herbs, and cranberry pepper relish.