Silicon Valley has remained one of the most unequal regions in the U.S. -- and for many midlevel engineers, food truck workers and longtime residents, it has become increasingly inhospitable. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Between them, Ravi and Gouthami have multiple degrees. Although the couple has worked hard and they make good money — their starting salaries were about $90,000 each — they feel that a future in Silicon Valley eludes them. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Diane and her late husband moved to the Bay Area over 30 years ago. Since then, she has watched the area change: “It’s overcrowded now. It used to be lovely, you know — you had space, you had no traffic. Here it was absolutely a gorgeous place." nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Victor had to leave his apartment when the rent got too high. Now, he lives in Mountain View in a trailer, which doesn’t have electricity or running water, but the custodians in his old apartment often sneak him in to bathe and wash his clothes. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Konstance won a place in a lottery run by Facebook that offered apartments to teachers in the school district adjacent to the company’s headquarters. Suddenly, she and her daughters were surrounded by something they'd been missing: time. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Elizabeth works as a security guard for a major tech firm. She is also homeless. “Please remember that many of the homeless — and there are many more of us than is captured in the census — work in the same companies that you do," she said at a panel. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Read more: nyti.ms/33ugQ1f

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More from @nytimes

8 May
Since Ma’Khia Bryant, 16, was fatally shot by a police officer in Columbus, Ohio while holding a knife, her siblings have spoken out about her life in the foster care system, which ignored efforts by their grandmother to reunite the family. nyti.ms/3f7MQ0z
Ohio places children in foster care at a rate 10% percent higher than the national average. The share of Black children removed from homes is more than double their share of the population. nyti.ms/3bdrZI2
A review of Ma’Khia’s time in foster care shows it failed her in critical ways. Research shows that children fare better when remaining with family. Each successive placement causes more trauma, further setting back a child in crisis. Ma’Khia had five. nyti.ms/3bdrZI2
Read 7 tweets
7 May
Students and faculty at the University of Texas at Austin want the alma mater, “The Eyes of Texas,” performed by white students in blackface at minstrel shows until the mid-1960s, to go. Wealthy alumni have threatened to cut off donations if that happens. nytimes.com/2021/05/07/us/…
The anthem, sung by tens of thousands of fans at Texas football games, was in part inspired by the words of Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general. Last June, student-athletes called for the song to be replaced by one “without racists undertones.” nytimes.com/2020/06/13/us/…
The university agreed to other changes — rename a building, erect a statue of the school’s first Black football player — but refused to change the song.
nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/…
Read 4 tweets
7 May
U.S. job growth slowed significantly in April, confounding rosy forecasts for the recovery and sharpening debates over how best to revive a labor market that was severely weakened by the pandemic. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB
The U.S. added 266,000 jobs last month, the government reported Friday, a third of the gains than in March. The jobless rate rose slightly to 6.1%, as more people rejoined the labor force. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB
As the economy fitfully recovers, there are divergent accounts of what’s going on in the labor market. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB
Read 9 tweets
6 May
The question of independence from Britain will not be on the ballot when Scottish voters go to the polls on Thursday.

But as pressure for a second referendum on breaking away from the U.K. grows, Scotland is grappling with an uncertain future.
nyti.ms/3b99DIe Image
The end of the 314-year-old union with England is no foregone conclusion.

Scotland is torn both over its future and the prospect of another polarizing vote that divides families and friends as much as it does politicians.
nytimes.com/2021/05/06/wor… Image
The thorny question was supposed to have been settled for a generation in 2014, when 55% of Scots who voted in a referendum chose to preserve their union with Britain.

But in 2016 the calculus was changed by a different divisive vote: Brexit.
nytimes.com/2021/05/06/wor… Image
Read 8 tweets
1 May
Every 10 years, a state’s population determines how many seats it gets in Congress. Sometimes, a small number of people can make a big difference. Here’s a look at how many people it can take to change — or almost change — representation in Washington. nyti.ms/2Rb3YtX
The ✨reapportionment process✨ doles out the 435 congressional seats to each of the 50 states. Each state gets a minimum of one seat, but the remaining 385 seats are decided by the Method of Equal Proportions, which weighs the populations of each state. nyti.ms/3ec8UIe
New York lost a seat this year because it was short 89 people, about the number of riders in a subway car.

That’s an extremely small margin for a state that counted more than 20 million people last year. nyti.ms/3ec8UIe Image
Read 7 tweets
1 May
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Covid-19 task force didn’t meet for months. His health minister assured the public in March that India had reached the pandemic’s “endgame.”

Now, a second wave has made India the worst-hit country in the world. nyti.ms/3xDNH1p
New infections have reached about 400,000 a day. Oxygen is scarce. Hospitals are swamped.

India’s stark reversal, from declaring victory to suffering its worst emergency in decades, has forced a national reckoning, with Modi at its center. nyti.ms/2QPAkdP Image
While Modi's supporters attribute the current crisis to a yet-to-be-understood second wave, independent health experts and political analysts say his overconfidence and domineering leadership style played a huge role. nyti.ms/2QPAkdP Image
Read 6 tweets

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