"I rode with a stuntman who estimated he’d sustained 50 concussions. A few years later, in Utah, a young man said God told him to pick me up; the next morning, a mother coming off a night shift told me she regretted her disinterest in the Church. In Wyoming, an oil-field geologist steamed about his divorce after months alone in a trailer. 'You’re the first person I’ve talked to,' he said. The next year, around Tennessee, a bounty hunter argued to me that the Earth was flat, and a Mexican American man told me why he kept a 'Make America great again' hat on his dashboard: In his town, he said, not showing support for Donald Trump could lead to your mailbox getting smashed. Near Pennsylvania, a young salt-factory worker showed off hands so callused, he couldn’t use gloves without developing blisters. He dreamed of driving a truck to Kansas. The freedom of the road beckoned to us both." Those are Andrew Fedorov's hitchhiking recollections, not mine. The road generally only beckons me to drive away from social interactions; especially rapidly when those interactions are with people I don't know. I'm fine with device-aided textual communications, but, these days, when it comes to the traditional in-person stuff, I'm all thumb-drives. But Fedorov's reflections on how the waning popularity of hitchhiking has also mirrored a loss of something else in American culture is nothing to thumb your nose at. The Atlantic(Gift Article): Does Anyone Still Hitchhike? "'Few transport experiences involve being repeatedly catapulted into other people’s lives with such intensity,' Jonathan Purkis wrote in his 2022 book, Driving With Strangers. Studies have shown that conversations with new people make us happier. In a time when social connections with strangers are so often algorithmically regulated, the unexpected, serendipitous meetings from hitchhiking can be all the more powerful because they’re so much rarer." (Whether through hitchhiking or some other means, hopefully those social interactions in our rearview mirrors are closer than they appear.) 2Are We Having Fund YetTrump continues to deploy federal money as a weapon, even in cases where it's unclear that he has the power to do so. Trump says he's ending federal funding for NPR and PBS. They say he can't. And in his latest salvo in an ongoing battle, Trump again threatened Harvard's tax-exempt status, saying, 'It's what they deserve!'" (Full disclosure: I went to Harvard for grad school, but I identify as a Cal Bear.) 3Serpentine Fire"The video is just under two and a half minutes long. A slim man with close-cropped hair walks into a room, pulls a long black mamba — whose venom can kill within an hour — from a crate and allows it to bite his left arm. Immediately after, he lets a taipan from Papua New Guinea bite his right arm. 'Thanks for watching,' he calmly tells the camera, his left arm bleeding, and then exits." But maybe we should be thanking him. This nearly two-decade hobby of his helped create a blood mix that contains antibodies that can neutralize the venom of many snakes. "More than 600 species of venomous snakes roam the earth, biting as many as 2.7 million people, killing about 120,000 people and maiming 400,000 others — numbers thought to be vast underestimates." NYT (Gift Article): Universal Antivenom May Grow Out of Man Who Let Snakes Bite Him 200 Times. (Universal Antivenom is also a pretty great name for a band.) 4Weekend WhatsWhat to Doc: When I was in high school, my room was a Led Zeppelin shrine. Sadly, there's no documentation of that. So we'll have to settle for the documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin, which is finally available to rent and stream. 5Extra, ExtraRoll Tide: "Trump’s policies and the way he’s orienting his government combine as an assault on the Great Society legislation Johnson pushed through in the 1960s, including the Voting Rights Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965." Trump turns civil rights upside down in ‘biggest rollback’ since Reconstruction. He's doing this in between rolling back health care and environmental safeguards. WaPo: Senate overturns EPA rule on seven highly toxic air pollutants. 6Feel Good Friday"If you choose to commute by bike, there is a lot you might encounter on your morning ride – nice things like spring flowers … or not so nice things, like angry motorists. But on the last Friday of each month, in Portland, Oregon, you'll also come across fresh-brewed coffee, doughnuts and other early morning treats." 'Breakfast on the Bridges': a monthly Portland commuter tradition. |