
Memorable Stuff I Read This Week
If there is anything Spaniards and Mexicans have always agreed upon is that nobody is less qualified to govern than the government itself.
— Álvaro Enrigue / You Dreamed of Empires
I steal faces
and keep them in the branches.
I assemble this body
from walnuts
that someone’s parents
leave on the path.
— Luciana Jazmín Coronado / “Childhood”
Super-polluting plumes were also seen in the US, the largest detected in 2025 occurring in Texas and leaking 5.5 tonnes of methane per hour, equivalent to running about a million fuel-guzzling SUVs. Venezuela (five) and Iran (three) also had multiple mega-leaks from state-owned facilities.
— Damian Carrington / “Revealed: the world’s worst mega-leaks of methane driving global heating” / The Guardian
Fish speak fear in an emotional fever;
they’d move to warmer water
to have their temperature raised because they burn
up in stress. Like me,
they can suffer—
— Belle Ling / “Contemplating the Cod”
Young people are not driving. Gen Z is not driving. We should be building a city for the future not for the past.
— Sharon Durkan, Boston City Councilor / Boston City Council Meeting, March 18, 2026
Stewed meat.
My mother’s prayers:
“Oh, Crucified God!”
Blood in the east,
Napalm and bombs.
Children massacred,
parents massacred;
blood oranges.
The sky cold as a dead man’s chest.
— Marigloria Palma / “Daily Verses 1”
AI is basically sucking up all human knowledge and throwing it back at us, and charging a price.
— David Byrne / BBC interview

What I’m Listening To:
It has a crooked past, this crooked street.
Where cars patrol this crooked beat
Badges flash and sirens wail
They’ll be taking one and all to jail
— The Clash / “The Crooked Beat”

























