Global Comment

Where the world thinks out loud

The web’s top three #91

Purple city

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:

What home schooling hides: A boy tortured and starved by his stepmom (Peter Jamison / Washington Post)

Most schools have teachers, principals, guidance counselors — professionals trained to recognize the unexplained bruises or erratic behaviors that may point to an abusive parent. Home education was an easy way to avoid the scrutiny of such people. That was the case for Piper, whose children were learning less from her about math and history than they were about violence, cruelty and neglect.

Left to their own devices while she lay in bed watching TV crime procedurals, and her husband, Jordan, worked long hours as a utility lineman, their days and nights passed in a penumbral blur of video games, microwave dinners and fistfights. Almost nothing resembling education took place, her sons said. But there was a shared project in which she diligently led her children: the torture of their stepbrother, Roman.

Read more.

‘How do you reduce a national dish to a powder?’: the weird, secretive world of crisp flavours (Amelia Tait / The Guardian)

Reuben and Peggy’s jobs are not top secret in the way top secret jobs usually are. They don’t have guns, for example – and the grey conference table they sit at is much the same as you’d find in any office in the UK. They even have LinkedIn profiles that tell you their job titles. But this is where things get odd: search the name of the company they work for – a name I have agreed not to print – and you’ll find little information about the work Reuben and Peggy do. You could click through every page on their company’s website and leave with no idea that it creates the most beloved crisp flavours in the world.

Read more.

“I care what is objectively true in the world, as a scientist” (Neil DeGrasse Tyson)

@qubbytocks #fypシ゚viral #neildegrassetyson ♬ New Home (Slowed) – Austin Farwell

 

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Image: Dmitry Zvolskiy