A few quick things to caffeinate your Monday imagination.
Let's kick off with one that should jump-start any lazy minds:
1. "Why Kim Jong Un wouldn’t be irrational to use a nuclear bomb first."
The strategy turns on Kim’s main calculation that the United States will say it’s not worth losing a major American city to get rid of him.
2. Notes on riding out Irma in Naples with a bunch of vodka and board games.
We learned through social media to put valuables, documents, and such in the dishwasher, which is watertight. I stuck my tax information, diplomas, birth certificates, and stuff in there. Plus, some pictures of friends and family.
3. How to analyze restaurants for an optimal experience. You'll already know the bigger tips, but there's lots of good stuff in the gristle.
You want the thing. Restaurants tell you what they are. Believe them. The trick is to know how to read them.
4. Slavery in Detroit's history is an enormous secret, but probably not for much longer.
What has been called the “national sin” is also Detroit’s sin. It is the origin of our racial crisis, our peculiar institution, our “necessary evil.” Slavery belongs to Detroit just like slavery belongs to Charleston, Monticello and New Orleans.
5. Reviews for Moby-Dick from 1851, the year it was published.
Mr. Melville has to thank himself only if his horrors and his heroics are flung aside by the general reader, as so much trash belonging to the worst school of Bedlam literature.
6. How the great American airport came to embody our national psychosis.
The vision of the airport as an austere, Taylorized space, where even the architecture is mathematically deduced (150 square feet per design-hour passenger is a common metric), has fallen away to reveal a deeply human frontier, in all the worst ways.
And what do you say we all find a way, some small way in our small lives, to be inspired today by better elevator design?
This elevator has a call button 30 feet away so that the elevator is there when you arrive https://t.co/ROcPxEavmZ pic.twitter.com/c3W9nWbAjT
— Chris Blattman (@cblatts) September 9, 2017