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Kitchen Chat and more…
Kitchen Chat and more…
Last January, feeling nostalgic for the kind of in-depth reading I did as a kid before the Internet intervened to make me a scanner, I decided to set of a goal of reading 100 books in 2012. I just finished—and thought I would mention the books that I either enjoyed the most or got the most satisfaction from this year. Other than The Winter of Our Discontent, I deliberately left out books that I re-read this, because Discontent was a very different read now than when was 19.
Fiction
Honorable Mentions: The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides and Demian by Herman Hesse.
Non-Fiction
If you’ve ever felt that government policy is excessively focused on the needs of older Americans, you’re not alone. Despite spending which is incredibly focused on the elderly, most Americans–including older Americans–believe more of the budget should be focused on the young, as Derek Thompson notes:
At a time when education is absorbing huge cuts and Medicare and Social Security spending continue to grow faster than the size of government, it’s a question worth asking: Is Washington biased toward old people?
The easiest way to answer the question is: Of course it is. Older Americans show up disproportionately at the ballot box, in Congress (the average age of a senator is 63), and in our budget. Fifty percent of federal benefits flow to the 13 percent of the population over the age of 65, David Leonhardt reported in the New York Times last weekend.
But Americans of every age group think that the federal budget should focus more on young people than old people, according to the American Values Poll, from The Atlantic and the Aspen Institute, which was released today. Asked if Washington should aim its spending toward the young, 73% of twentysomethings and a plurality of senior citizens said yes.
Of course, younger Americans could help themselves by actually turning out to vote.
Writing in The Atlantic, Jen Doll has created a list of the worst words of 2012.
A few of her selections are listed below:
Epic. Adjective. Unless you’re describing The Iliad or The Odyssey (and in a high school or college English class), choose anew, friends. Don’t make me say this again in 2013.
YOLO. Soul-searching, soul-sucking acronym. YOLO is probably the most disliked word among the groups I surveyed for this post. Merriam-Webster’s Kory Stamper says it best, prefacing her opinion with this disclaimer: “As a lexicographer, I must withhold judgment on any word, either established or in-the-making. Words are raw materials and each has its place and purpose; some people find eggs to be slimy and gross, yet they will happily eat them when they’re incorporated into a cake. Even moist, which seems to get the brunt of the word-hate, has its place.”
Read the whole list here.