2021年8月27日 星期五

The Daily: How We Covered the Kabul Bombings

Starting a new show from scratch.

It was another big week of international news on The Daily — this one focused on the ongoing evacuation of American forces, citizens and allies from Kabul; American gun exports to Mexico; and the humanitarian crisis at the southern border.

We want to know: Was there a show that stood out to you? One that helped you think differently about an idea or the news? Our team reads all your feedback, so let us know here. We would love to hear from you.

A dark coda to a two-decade war

The bombings in Kabul hint at a potential new round of violence for a people and a country that have suffered more than 40 years of warfare.Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Yesterday afternoon, ominous, unverified tweets started to appear across The Times's Slack channels: Reports of an explosion and gunfire outside of a gate to Kabul's airport. Reporters, translators, and photo, video and graphics editors immediately shifted their attention, working to confirm the news with our sources on the ground in Afghanistan. In real time, questions were asked and answered: What is the exact distance between the Baron Hotel and the Kabul airport? What does this tweet in Dari say? Has anyone heard from the Pentagon?

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Soon, Slack channels across the company lit up, making it clear this story was big — the Washington, International and Live news teams were all talking about it. On The Daily, we were just about to tape our previously planned show for today — on a subject that had nothing to do with Afghanistan. But there are certain moments, like this one, when our team stops to reassess. When the news is urgent enough to shelve a show and start from scratch.

"Hey guys, with the situation in Kabul right now, I'm going to make some calls to see if we should do an episode for tomorrow on what's going on," Lisa Chow, editor for The Daily, sent to the team. In the meantime, producers and editors continued to share intel they were hearing from colleagues and seeing online.

More news started to come in — there was a second blast, multiple American service members were dead and ISIS was claiming the attack. We had sources saying President Biden was in the Situation Room and was planning to address the nation later. Soon, it was clear we should pursue a new show.

In a matter of minutes, our team managed to connect with Matthieu Aikins, a journalist based in Kabul; monitor and record President Biden's address; and start gathering tape of recently aired newscasts breaking the update.

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In the background, our team quietly wondered: Were our sources and our colleagues, photographers and reporters on the ground, safe?

In our interview, Matthieu voiced the same concerns about his sources — sharing that he had been refreshing his phone for news from those who had been near the airport.

Suddenly, the news was proximate, intensifying this dark coda to two decades of war.

You can hear more about Matthieu's experience in our show from today. Follow @mattaikins on Twitter and @jimhuylebroek and @victorblue on Instagram for the latest updates from their coverage of Kabul.

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Culture recommendations for your weekend

Compiled by Desiree Ibekwe

The Daily has been working on some pretty heavy stories as of late. But in another corner of our team, we have been steeped in something lighter: the sprawling, beautiful and, often, odd world of The Times's culture desk.

For the past few weeks, some of our colleagues have been hard at work creating special episodes analyzing the nostalgia-filled return of the noughties power couple Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck, reassessing Jay-Z's seminal "The Black Album" and looking at how Lil Nas X is an entirely new kind of pop star.

In this process, they've been digging through a lot of material. So we asked them to share what to watch, read or listen to if you have some extra time. The newsletter will be off next Friday, so let these tide you over heading into Labor Day weekend.

"There was this pressure put on me, and that I put on myself, to make something new," Mvula said.Rosie Matheson for The New York Times

Listening

"Laura Mvula, an English singer and songwriter, has an amazing new album out called 'Pink Noise'. Also, the podcast 'Fun City' has been taking up most of my listening time these days — including a wonderfully sound-designed and compelling actual-play show about a group of space scavengers 20 million years in the future." — Hans Buetow, senior producer.

"I am in a real nostalgic mood this summer so I've been revisiting songs that feel like high school. My high school playlist has Phoenix and Alabama Shakes in heavy rotation, plus The Dodos (I played 'Fools' every morning on the way to school - take from that what you will), Little Dragon, early Adele (listen to 'Take It All' if you want to weep), Beirut, Rubblebucket, Sleigh Bells (I played 'Rill Rill' on the way home), and, of course, Taylor Swift. Listening to these songs makes me feel like I have homework to do, and weirdly, I love that." — Anna Martin, producer.

Following

"The Twitter account '80s News Screens' is so fun, weird and illuminating. It posts out-of-context vintage screenshots from local news broadcasts, including hilarious descriptions of witnesses and still images of anchors with phrases like 'Pasta Subsidies' and 'New York Garbage.' All together, the images offer an amusing glimpse into what was being broadcast into living rooms 40 years ago — and one by one they are just bizarre nanoseconds from the past." — Dodai Stewart, deputy editor, Special Projects.

"During the pandemic we've watched more TV together as a family and our son, age 11, asked if we could watch stuff he was finding online. Meme Planet releases a weekly compilation of video memes on YouTube and we look forward to it every Monday." — Phyllis Fletcher, senior editor.

Watching

"'Reservation Dogs' kicks off with a group of teens stealing a delivery truck full of off-brand Flamin' Hot Cheetos in rural Oklahoma. I'm sold. It's a cutting and whip smart show that follows a fledgling teen crime ring; it's also the first television series staffed entirely by Indigenous writers." — Tracy Mumford, producer.

"I'm a little late to the game on 'Pen15,' but it's essential viewing in the canon of Teenager TV. Seeing Maya and Anna scheme on how to get their first kiss, desperate and hormonal, then turn around and have whiny tantrums at their parents… brings it all back. It's awkward, painful, and so damn funny." — Tally Abecassis, producer.

On The Daily this week

Monday: With the help of Emily Anthes, we answer audience questions from parents about the coronavirus and its impact on children.

Tuesday: We ask why the Mexican government is suing 10 U.S. gun makers.

Wednesday: An examination of the dangerous and complex race to evacuate American citizens and Afghan allies out of Kabul.

Thursday: How increased border crossings from Central America could force the Biden administration to reassess its migration policy.

Friday: Our conversation with Matthieu Aikins, who was on the ground in the aftermath of the bombings outside the Kabul airport.

Plus: A Q. and A. with Dr. Anthony Fauci

For those of you who had questions for us about your kids returning to school, join our online Q. and A. with Dr. Anthony Fauci; Lisa Damour, a Times contributing writer and psychologist; and Apoorva Mandavilli, a science reporter and frequent guest on The Daily. Times subscribers can R.S.V.P. for this event Sept. 9 at 1 p.m. Eastern.

That's it for The Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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The gentrification of blue America

The troubling interaction between NIMBYs and the knowledge economy.

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Paul Krugman

August 27, 2021

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By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

In my latest column, motivated by the California recall, I pointed out that the Golden State's left turn on policy hasn't produced the economic collapse that conservatives predicted. On the contrary, the state's economy has boomed, even as it keeps getting trash-talked by the business press: Between the election of Jerry Brown and the Covid-19 pandemic, both output and employment grew about as fast in California as they did in Texas.

It has, however, been a peculiar kind of boom, one in which more Americans have moved out of California than have moved in.

Economists trying to understand the rise and fall of regions within a country often rely on some form of economic base analysis. The idea is that a region's overall growth is determined by the performance of its export industries — that is, industries that sell mainly to customers outside the region, such as the technology firms of Silicon Valley and the Los Angeles entertainment complex (or, here in New York, the financial industry). Growth in these industries, however, generates a lot of growth in other sectors, from health care to retail trade, driven by the local spending of the base industries' companies and employees.

But base analysis suggests that when a state has a booming export sector, as California does, it should be seeing growth in more or less everything. Instead, what we see in California is that while highly educated workers are moving in to serve the tech boom, less educated workers are moving out:

A giant Brooklyn Heights?Public Policy Institute of California

There's no great mystery about why this is happening: It's because of housing. California is very much a NIMBY state, maybe even a banana (build absolutely nothing anywhere near anyone) state. The failure to add housing, no matter how high the demand, has collided with the tech boom, causing soaring home prices, even adjusted for inflation:

The Golden State becomes the Unaffordable State.FRED

And these soaring prices are driving less affluent families out of the state.

One way to think about this is to say that California as a whole is suffering from gentrification. That is, it's like a newly fashionable neighborhood where affluent newcomers are moving in and driving working-class families out. In a way, California is Brooklyn Heights writ large.

Yet it didn't have to be this way. I sometimes run into Californians asserting that there's no room for more housing — they point out that San Francisco is on a peninsula, Los Angeles ringed by mountains. But there's plenty of scope for building up.

If we look at population-weighted density — the population density of the neighborhood in which the average person lives — we find that greater New York is two and a half times as dense as the San Francisco and Los Angeles metro areas, with more than 30,000 people per square mile in New York and only around 12,000 in both California metros. This doesn't mean that every New Yorker lives in a high-rise (the metro area includes plenty of leafy green suburbs), it only means that those who choose to live in multistory apartment buildings can do so. If California were willing to offer that choice, it wouldn't have its housing crisis.

Personal aside: My New York apartment is in a neighborhood that, according to census data, has 60,000 residents per square mile, with many 10-plus-story buildings. It's not a teeming sea of humanity; it's surprisingly quiet and genteel!

The thing is, California's housing problem, while especially extreme, isn't unique.

Since the 1980s America has experienced growing regional divergence. We have become a knowledge economy driven by industries that rely on a highly educated work force, and firms in those industries, it turns out, want to be located in places where there are a lot of highly educated workers already — places like the Bay Area.

Unfortunately, most of these rising knowledge-industry hubs also severely limit housing construction; this is true even of greater New York, which is much denser than any other U.S. metropolitan area but could and should be even denser. As a result, housing prices in these metros have soared, and working-class families, instead of sharing in regional success, are being driven out.

The result is that there are now, in effect, two Americas: the America of high-tech, high-income enclaves that are unaffordable for the less affluent, and the rest of the country.

And this economic divergence goes along with political divergence, mainly because education has become a prime driver of political affiliation.

It may seem hard to believe now, but as recently as the early 2000s college graduates leaned Republican. Since then, however, highly educated voters — who have presumably been turned off by the G.O.P.'s embrace of culture wars and its growing anti-intellectualism — have become overwhelmingly Democratic, while non-college-educated whites have gone the other way.

As a result, the two Americas created by the collision of the knowledge economy and NIMBYism correspond fairly closely to the blue-red division: Democratic-voting districts have seen a big rise in incomes, while G.O.P. districts have been left behind:

One nation, increasingly divided.Brookings Institution

Again, this didn't have to happen, at least not to this extent. True, the growing concentration of knowledge industries in a few metropolitan areas reflects deep economic forces that are hard to fight. But not building enough housing to accommodate this concentration and share its benefits is a policy choice, one that is deepening our national divisions.

There are hints of movement toward less restrictive housing policy; California's legislature has just passed a bill that would, in essence, force suburbs to accept some two-unit buildings alongside single-family homes. Even this modest measure would make it possible to add around 700,000 housing units — roughly the same number added in the whole state between 2010 and 2019.

We need much more of this. Restrictive housing policy doesn't get nearly as much attention in national debates as it deserves. It is, in fact, a major force pulling our nation apart.

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