Global Comment

Where the world thinks out loud

The web’s top three #108

Every Monday on Global Comment, we share the slow, thoughtful, considerate words that our brains – and souls – need but that it’s easy to miss in our busy world. We distil the best of the web and recommend just three links every week that you absolutely must see.

No fluff, no fuss, just three exceptional reads.

Here are this week’s recommendations:

These Women Came to Antarctica for Science. Then the Predators Emerged (David Kushner / Wired)

But it’s what happened in the glacier’s shadow that led Willenbring to take on Marchant and become the first to expose the horrors faced by women at the bottom of the world. A report released in August 2022 by the National Science Foundation, the main agency funding Antarctic research, found that 59 percent of women at McMurdo and other field stations run by the US Antarctic Program said they’d experienced sexual harassment or assault. A central employer, Leidos, holds a $2.3 billion government contract to manage the workplaces on the ice. One woman alleged that a supervisor had slammed her head into a metal cabinet and then attacked her sexually. Britt Barquist, a former fuel foreman at McMurdo, says she had been forced to work alongside a supervisor who had sexually harassed her. “What was really traumatic was telling people, ‘I’m afraid of this person,’” she says, “and nobody cared.”

Read more.

The Dumbphone boom is real (Kyle Chayka / The New Yorker)

The growing dumbphone fervor may be motivated, in part, by the discourse around child safety online. Parents are increasingly confronted with evidence that sites like Instagram and TikTok intentionally try to hook their children. Using those sites can increase teens’ anxiety and lower their self-esteem, according to some studies, and smartphones make it so that kids are logged on constantly. Why should this situation be any healthier for adults? After almost two decades with iPhones, the public seems to be experiencing a collective ennui with digital life. So many hours of each day are lived through our portable, glowing screens, but the Internet isn’t even fun anymore. We lack the self-control to wean ourselves off, so we crave devices that actively prevent us from getting sucked into them. That means opting out of the prevailing technology and into what Cal Newport, a contributing writer for The New Yorker, has called a more considered “digital minimalism.”

Read more.

Alf Dubs’ Experience as a Child Refugee Helps Him Empathise with Refugee Children (Pod Save the UK)

@podsavetheuk Alf Dubs’ Experience as a Child Refugee Helps Him Empathise with Refugee Children Listen to the new Pod Save the UK now, available wherever you get podcasts. #PodSaveTheUK #Politics #UKPolitics #News #CurrentAffairs #UK #FYP #Trending #NishKumar #Labour ♬ original sound – Pod Save the UK

 

If you have any suggestions for future words to feature, contact us on our socials or at editor@globalcomment.com

Image: Johannes Plenio