Monday headlines: Doing things to do things
In trade journals, agriculture experts worry Trump's combination of RFK Jr. and tariffs could chill their $1.5 trillion industry. / NPR
See also: Under Trump, the future of Medicare drug price negotiations—one of Biden's key domestic policy achievements—is now uncertain. / Roll Call
Polls indicate Americans favor deporting undocumented immigrants—but only when the question doesn't mention people who've lived here a long time, work, and have no criminal record. / CNN
"Apparently some people think it makes us look like Nazis." Trump allies have been told to stop referring to their planned immigration detention facilities as "camps." / Rolling Stone
There must be merits to boredom; after all, examples abound for all the ways capitalism treats it as a threat to society. / The Flaw
See also: From an OSS handbook, how ordinary citizens can disrupt enemy operations—or, the art of doing dumb shit. / ZINE
"There are just too many people walking too slow, filming themselves, or waiting on long lines that I have to push past because they want to try some mid bagel place." Missing a lonely New York. / The Melt
It's estimated that around four percent of the world's population hear the Hum—a persistent, rumbling noise that remains a mystery to scientists. / The Independent
A new solar-powered desalination system provides drinking water at lower costs by adjusting to changes in sunlight, requiring no extra batteries. / MIT
Genetic analysis of the quaking aspen tree Pando, one of the world's largest and oldest plants, shows it's between 16,000 and 80,000 years old. / Nature
Fifty years after scientists transmitted the Arecibo Message to prove a radio message could traverse the galaxy, it's still on its way to the star cluster Messier 13. / JSTOR Daily
In a single day, more music is released now than it was in all of 1989, and music software companies are cashing in through recurring subscriptions. / MusicRadar
See also: Re-listen to the Hood Internet's mashup of 50 songs from 1989 into a single three-minute track. / YouTube
Clips from TV pilots that didn't make it past the first episode, even with some really big names attached. / Ironic Sans
Screenshots of personal epiphanies in the Notes app. / Dirt