Events
The San Antonio Symphony dissolved itself yesterday, to howls of anger from its musicians: The board of the Symphony Society of San Antonio cited stalled negotiations with the Musicians’ Union and the lack of a labour contract. In a statement on the San Antonio Symphony’s website, the board said: “The last bargaining session between the Symphony Society and the Musicians’ Union took place on March 8, 2022 after which the Union declined to return to the bargaining table, despite efforts of federal...
I guess it was inevitable: So far, I have what feels like a mild cold: sniffy, stuffy, and tired. But my temperature was 36.3°C a few minutes ago, which is perfectly normal for me, and I don't appear to have anything more than an occasional cough. I am so glad this didn't happen a week ago. Actually, this is about the best time it could have happened. It's still irritating on many levels though.
Writer Eula Biss essays on the disappearance of common grazing lands through enclosure laws as part of a larger pattern of class struggle (and no, she's not a Marxist): In the time before enclosure, shared pastures where landless villagers could graze their animals were common. Laxton [England] had two, the Town Moor Common and the much larger Westwood Common, which together supported a hundred and four rights to common use, with each of these rights attached to a cottage or a toft of land in the...
High temperature record and other hot takes
ChicagoClimate changeEconomicsElection 2020EntertainmentGeneralInternetMusicPoliticsSummerTechnologyTransport policyUS PoliticsWeather
Chicago's official temperature at O'Hare hit 35°C about two hours ago, tying the record high temperature set in 1994. Currently it's pushing 36°C with another hour of warming likely before it finally cools down overnight. After another 32°C day tomorrow, the forecast Friday looks perfect. While we bake by the lake today, a lot has gone down elsewhere: The Federal Reserve raised its target interest rate range 75 basis points to 1.50–1.75%, the largest single-day increase since 1994 and the highest rate...
Santa Cruz votes to keep abandoned rail line
CaliforniaEnvironmentGeneralGeographyPoliticsRailroadsTransport policyTravelUrban planningUS Politics
In what one Daily Parker reader describes as "a Twitter fight come to life," the city of Santa Cruz, Calif., voted to keep an abandoned, unusable railway through its downtown because of the possibility that, in some possible future, trains might once again take passengers to Watsonville: On June 7, about 70% of Santa Cruz County voters chose to reject a measure called the Greenway Initiative, which would have supported ripping out a portion of the tracks and replacing them with a bike path and...
It's quarter to 7 and the temperature here has finally started going down again: It peaked at 37.3°C, which for many people is a perfectly normal body temperature but for me would be a mild fever. Midway hit 38°C about three hours ago, the first time that happened since July 2012. So, yeah, summer just didn't wait for us to catch up this year. Welcome to the two-showers days of June.
Last night we delayed the start of Terra Nostra fifteen minutes because a supercell thunderstorm decided to pass through: The severe supercell thunderstorm that tore through Chicagoland Monday night toppled planes, ripped the roof off at least one apartment building, dropped hail as large as 1.5 inches in diameter and left tens of thousands without power in its wake. In Cook County, 84 mph winds gusted at O’Hare International Airport. That was strong enough to turn over numerous planes at Schaumburg...
I haven't even finished my coffee this morning, and here comes a forecast for 36°C temperatures tomorrow and Wednesday. Can't wait...
It's not too late to get one of the remaining tickets to Terra Nostra:
The decline and fall of San Francisco
CaliforniaDemocratic PartyGeneralPersonalPoliticsSan FranciscoUS Politics
Journalist and author Nellie Bowles, a San Francisco native, looks at the defenestration of Chesa Boudin as part of a larger pattern of progressive San Franciscans coming to their senses: San Francisco voters decided to turn their district attorney, Chesa Boudin, out of office. They did it because he didn’t seem to care that he was making the citizens of our city miserable in service of an ideology that made sense everywhere but in reality. It’s not just about Boudin, though. There is a sense that, on...
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