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a- A wave of modern, strategy-heavy board games have earned acclaim and popularity while asking players to reenact human history’s grimmest episodes. Now, a reckoning is coming, Luke Winkie warns. https://t.co/ZgtkQL9VEX The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) July 22, 2021 The Racial Reckoning is coming for … board games. The problem, evidently, is that in historically accurate strategy board games, the white people usually win in the end, which is intolerable. We need historically accurate board games in which sub-Saharans conquer England. But … that hasn’t happened (yet). Not just the colonialism in Risk. Apparently Atlantic has been on the case for a while. The Monopoly game street values are based on racism and yep, probably redlining: https://t.co/Lwdiml7cvl Renaissance Man (@savanarola5) July 22, 2021 ....
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That friend lives in Florida now. For the last 4½ months, so did my family. There’s a divide between people who stayed in New York City through the COVID-19 pandemic and those who left. Our family doesn’t really fit on either side of it. A semi-satirical piece by Luke Winkie in the New York Times in March argued that returning New Yorkers should be made to pay a “resettlement tax” and noted, “I’ve never identified more with this place than I did in 2020. All the values I was taught about New York, from elementary school onward, came true last year: the solidarity, the saltiness, the stubborn resilience whenever outside voices declare the city dead and buried.” ....
America Offline email We’ve just lived through the most online period in history. What comes next? My most intimate relationship of 2020 was with the internet. I did my job online, and talked to my friends online, and streamed hundreds of hours of TV that I’d already seen online, just to fill my empty apartment with human sounds. I used the internet to put scary Instagram filters on my face, and join a mutual-aid Slack group, and reflexively refresh the coronavirus case count in my zip code, and attend my cousin’s wedding, and blog about a parasocial relationship with an online Pilates instructor. ....
The Atlantic Adam Maida / The Atlantic / Getty My most intimate relationship of 2020 was with the internet. I did my job online, and talked to my friends online, and streamed hundreds of hours of TV that I’d already seen online, just to fill my empty apartment with human sounds. I used the internet to put scary Instagram filters on my face, and join a mutual-aid Slack group, and reflexively refresh the coronavirus case count in my zip code, and attend my cousin’s wedding, and blog about a parasocial relationship with an online Pilates instructor. I know I’m not alone in feeling that the internet has become even more vital than it was before the pandemic began, when it was already pretty vital. Adults talked, last year, about discovering TikTok for the first time, and using it to soothe the anxieties instigated by everything else. They also Zoomed and Zoomed and Zoomed, and then discussed “Zoom fatigue,” or “video vertigo,” defined as “a downward spiral ....