| ◼ Jeff Bezos, the owner of the Washington Post, announced that henceforth its editorial pages would promote “personal liberties and free markets.” The prevailing reaction among progressives was to hyperventilate about his truckling to Trump. But Bezos’s new chosen metric would support both praise and criticism of Trump. And how to secure liberty and ensure that markets work well for the people they serve is subject to debate. That should leave plenty to discuss in a lively publication—or so we have found for nearly 70 years.
◼ Germany’s general election went largely as expected. The center-right CDU/CSU won an unimpressive plurality. The AfD, a populist-right party with significant elements that deserve the much-abused label of “far right,” doubled its share of the vote to come in second. (The main surprise was a late surge by Die Linke, a direct political descendant of East Germany’s former ruling communist party.) Partnering with the AfD is taboo. As a result, Germany’s next government is likely to be an ideologically incoherent coalition between the CDU/CSU (with its leader, Friedrich Merz, as chancellor) and the third-place center-left SPD of outgoing chancellor Olaf Scholz. Merz, no Merkel, is willing to rein in immigration and net zero, two worthwhile moves that might reverse the AfD’s rise, but will the SPD agree to them? Especially with Trump in the White House, the new German government must spend more on defense. But if that means easing the country’s constitutionally embedded debt brake (and it may), the AfD and Die Linke (both of which are Putin-friendly), acting together, could block it; Merz, however well intentioned, may not be able to overcome them. Germany is sliding toward a political and economic crisis—which is not a sentence that should make anyone rest easy.
◼ When a Chilean telescope spotted Asteroid 2024 YR4 passing near Earth in December, scientists quickly realized that there was a small chance, about 3 percent, that the hurtling football-field-sized rock could strike our planet on a future orbit around the Sun. They even had a date for Armageddon: December 22, 2032. But now, scientists at NASA say that new calculations show that the chance of a direct strike has dropped to 0.0017 percent. Okay, but you’re still telling us there’s a chance?
◼ Self-described misogynists and dual U.S.-U.K. citizens Andrew and Tristan Tate, who had been under house arrest in Romania, traveled to Florida this week after the Romanian government lifted a travel ban against them. The ban went into place in 2022 after the brothers were charged with human trafficking and forming an organized crime group. The Tates deny all charges. Andrew, who has amassed a huge following among young men, believes that men must find purpose through materialism, sexual promiscuity, and power. Men, he thinks, are “enslaved” by the “Matrix,” a conspiratorial cabal of government bureaucrats, media outlets, and bankers, designed to make men weak. A former kickboxer, he thinks that women should not be eligible to vote. He has said that women who put themselves “in a position to be raped” must “bear some responsibility” and that, if a woman accused him of cheating, he would “bang out the machete, boom in her face and grip her by the neck.” Speculation that Trump administration officials asked Romania to lift the brothers’ restrictions (the Tates are Trump supporters, and there is a current of sympathy in MAGA world toward the Tates) is growing though unconfirmed. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who was not aware this was happening until it happened, sent a strong message: “Florida is not a place where you’re welcome with that type of conduct,” he said. No place in America should be, except prison.
◼ “I once sang ‘Love for Sale,’” about prostitution, and did so with such depth that “a Lutheran minister asked me to sing it at his church the next Sunday,” Roberta Flack said in an interview in 1991. “And I did.” A musical prodigy, a classical pianist who played for the church choir and graduated from Howard University at age 19, she taught school until in her mid-thirties she began performing full-time for clubs in metropolitan Washington, D.C. In 1969, she recorded “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face”; in 1972, Clint Eastwood used it in a film he directed, and the song took off, selling more than a million copies and catapulting her to overnight stardom. Her hits “Killing Me Softly with His Song” (1973) and “Feel Like Makin’ Love” (1974) followed fast, animated by her strong, gentle voice, expressive of great yearning but at the same time disciplined, understated, and clear—“blissful,” as admirers of her work are wont to describe it. She won five Grammy Awards. Grace and kindness marked her presence onstage and off. Dead at 88. R.I.P. |