The pilot on my flight from NYC to Denver β for a connection to Bozeman, Montana β has just informed us that because of tornadoes in Denver, we're diverting to Omaha. π
We're still on the tarmac in Omaha, and the universe has decided that what this plane really needed was a shrieking baby
Missed connection by 15 min, sprinted Terminal B to C to try to get a flight on another airline because mine said they didn't have any more tonight, missed that by 2 min, found out my airline DID have another, sprinted back to Term B, made it, panting so hard people are staring
I am, incidentally, now on a flight to Bozeman that was scheduled to leave before the one I missed
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Beyond the absurdity of punishing journalists for how readers might falsely judge them, sexual assault is all too common. Newsrooms are full of survivors because everywhere is full of survivors. You know survivors. You read survivors' work every day.
Policies like the one being weaponized against Felicia do nothing but punish survivors who make the brave and extremely difficult choice to come forward β thus adding to the litany of reasons people don't.
And yes, as many people have said more eloquently than me, we need to abandon once and for all the ridiculous idea that the only people who can cover an issue fairly are those who have never been affected by it.
More than 535,000 Americans have died from covid, and millions are experiencing long-haul symptoms.
Some of them, and loved ones of those who died, are channeling their loss into political activism. My latest: nytimes.com/2021/03/17/us/β¦
Martin Addison, 44, died last April. His wife, Pamela Addison, was left to care for their 2yo daughter and infant son. She was furious when Trump told people not to worry about covid, so she wrote an op-ed, then started a Facebook group for young widows. nytimes.com/2021/03/17/us/β¦
Marjorie Roberts, 60, got sick last March while managing a hospital gift shop in Atlanta and now has lung scarring. She and other survivors from GA met virtually with @SenOssoff's office this month. She said it was the first time all year she'd felt heard. nytimes.com/2021/03/17/us/β¦
- The 4 main founders of TLP had private financial agreements that other leaders didn't know about for some time.
- Nearly 1/3 of TLP's fundraising went to a firm run by one of the founders, from which the 4 were paid (unclear how much) nytimes.com/2021/03/08/us/β¦
- Some TLP officials were informed of Weaver's harassment as early as last January. Leaders received multiple warnings last year but kept Weaver on board, even as a board member tried to persuade them to push him out. nytimes.com/2021/03/08/us/β¦
21 men told me John Weaver, a Lincoln Project cofounder, sent them inappropriate messages, including explicit offers of professional help in exchange for sex. 11 of them spoke on the record β far more than I could detail in one article. w/ @dannyhakimnytimes.com/2021/01/31/us/β¦
Allegations became public this month in @amconmag and an open letter from @GarrettHerrin, one of the men Weaver messaged. My and @dannyhakim's reporting shows how widespread the harassment was β 21 men came forward within days β and how aggressive it got. nytimes.com/2021/01/31/us/β¦
One of the most extraordinary things was how much of an open secret this was among the men Weaver commonly targeted β young, gay men interested in politics. Three men told me they'd described the harassment to a friend and the friend guessed it was Weaver. nytimes.com/2021/01/31/us/β¦
Fascinating piece about covid anosmia, touching on so many of the bizarre details I and other survivors (@TimHerrera!) have talked about among ourselves nytimes.com/2021/01/28/magβ¦
This paragraph especially. The suddenness β I could smell normally on the morning of day 6 of my symptoms, and then that afternoon, nothing. The quote at the end β I first noticed the loss when I took a sip of gatorade and it tasted like sugar water. Sweet with no flavor.
When I registered what I was tasting (or rather, what I wasn't), I grabbed a jar of cinnamon and tried to smell it. Nothing. My nose wasn't stuffy. I could inhale deeply, but I smelled absolutely nothing. I'd been able to smell normally that morning. This was day 6 of symptoms!
This week marks six months since my husband and I got sick with covid. We are still very much dealing with the aftereffects. Hereβs the view from half a year out. (thread, 1/x)
My husband is still coughing. Itβs nothing like the apocalyptic coughs we had during the acute illness, but itβs still there. He has been coughing every day for six months. It's been very, very slowly improving with the help of two inhalers. 2/x
Both of us, still, get out of breath very easily. Just the other day, I carried some groceries upstairs to our apartment, and at the top of the stairs I had to drop the bags on the floor and lean against the wall to catch my breath. 3/x