Por: Time Entertainment September 24, 2022
A psychiatric nurse practitioner repeatedly disrupts school board meetings because she believes are facilitating child sex trafficking. A formerly stable husband and father stumbles down the rabbit hole, claims to experience mysterious visions, and ultimately grows so obsessed that his wife sees no choice but to leave him. A disabled veteran becomes convinced that Americans are being systematically “replaced” by immigrants and announces that... + full article
The Boston Globe USA Life September 28, 2022
It tells the story of Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist and Nazi party member who saved the lives of more than 1,000 Jews. The film was epic in scale. Nearly 30,000 people worked on it. Much of it was shot amid the remnants of the Jewish ghetto in Krakow, Poland, and part... + más
How Not to Talk About the Holocaust | The Atlantic
Why Democracies Are So Slow to Respond to Evil | The Atlantic
The Atlantic USA Entertainment September 24, 2022
Ken Burns’s docuseries The U.S. and the Holocaust confronts a topic that many Americans of every political stripe prefer to avoid: responsibility.Getty; National Archives and Records Administration; Joanne Imperio / The AtlanticSeptember 16, 2022Many works of history are much... + más
‘Should I walk?’ Orange Line riders grumble that ‘slow zones’ are slower and more extensive than expected. | The Boston Globe
Dale Brown: Are we brave and committed enough to take on evil? | The Advocate
Newsweek USA Life September 24, 2022
Avatar director James Cameron has worked for 13 years on the sequel to the first film, and ahead of its premiere, he wanted to make sure he understood why the movie was as successful as it was.Avatar, which came out in 2009, is the highest-grossing film of all time, having... + más
Q&A: James Cameron on the return of 'Avatar' | ABC News
It seems people still really, really love Avatar | The Verge
The Atlantic USA Life September 24, 2022
The possibility of a more just future is at stake when young people are denied access to knowledge of the past.Roger Ressmeyer / Corbis / VCG / GettyFebruary 2, 2022The instinct to ban books in schools seems to come from a desire to protect children from things that the adults... + más
School book bans and challenges, at record highs, are rising again | The Boston Globe
Moderna-backed mouse study offers first head-to-head BA.5, BA.1 booster data | Ars Technica
Time USA Life September 24, 2022
There is a neon sign in the Walpole, New Hampshire editing room where filmmaker Ken Burns spends so many of his days. The sign is in cursive, all lower-case, and it simply says: “it’s complicated.” Those words capture the sentiment of so many of Burns’s films—the Civil... + más
The Atlantic USA Opinion September 24, 2022
A simple guide to discussing Jewish genocideGetty; The AtlanticSeptember 21, 2022About the author: is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and the author of its newsletter . It’s rarely a good sign when the Holocaust trends on social media, and this week was no exception. On... + más
Ken Burns on His Film 'The U.S. and the Holocaust' | Time
The Boston Globe USA Nation September 23, 2022
After Boston resident Andi Pollinger’s mother died of breast cancer, she inherited a triangular pendant engraved with her mother’s birth date, a green Jewish star, the name of her home city, Frankfurt, and the word ‘Shaddai,’ which means God in Hebrew. For Pollinger, the... + más
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