Thursday headlines: Anti-hawk brakes
The Department of Homeland Security says China, Russia, Iran, and Israel are spying on Americans through their phones. / 404 Media
Cybersecurity officials are worried about Trump's transition team relying on private emails that can be hacked. / Politico
An eye-opening look at how and why right-wing trolls are trying to blame school shootings on trans people. / Shatter Zone
Nicholas O. Stephanopoulos: One of the unnoticed themes of the recent election was our depolarization. / The Washington Post [+]
Ever since Covid, "crunchy" has gone more individualistic and right-wing, and some old-school crunchy folks are bowing out. / The New York Times [+]
See also: How many Republicans know that RFK is an environmental lawyer? (Poll source.) / Bluesky, Quinnipiac
California declares a state of emergency over bird flu. / CBS News
Today's bankers are less inclined to cocaine, more to Adderall and other ADHD drugs. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
Are today's inventions less interesting than those made during the Industrial Revolution? No, "but the focus of innovation has shifted." / New Cartographies
An argument that "timeless style" is nonsense. / Blackbird Spyplane
A tool searches works of literature for words that never appear in their texts. / Bewitched
Unrelated: A short novella by Fyodor Dostoevsky becomes a social media craze. / The Guardian
Among the year's worst food and dining trends: croissants that look like they were designed "by AI rather than human hands." / Eater
Photographs by Kelly Burgess explore the influences of Puritanical folklore on contemporary New England. / Booooooom
Home foundations in New England are found to be crumbling due to a mineral called pyrrhotite. / Undark Magazine
See also: A personal essay about a sunken neighborhood in LA. / Zocalo Public Square
A roundup of license plate numbers rejected in Indiana this year—including, yes, HWK TUAH. / Fox59