Tip-Top Fifty-Fifty
The end of my life is a sequence of nonsensical sensations. The cold and the numb. Falling and ascending. Inside of me there are shadows of hopelessness and pride, but they are twisted around so that I don’t know which one I should be thankful for.
Fiction »
And I’ll be All Alone
Supposedly, it’s 2:00 AM. Alex glares sideways at every clock he sees, letting his head spin in that direction until it loops back into him. Having spent years doing everything he could possibly do in his apartment, he centers himself to the task of pushing his window open. The headlights of a car briefly blind him as the light scatters through the glass, setting off a glowing set of fractals.
He’s on the porch roof now, and the lights swirl into a starry night sky. The stars connect into constellations and shift over time. Not the petty parallel movement of hours or seasons, but the unrecognizable change from eons of the sun circling the galaxy. He leans back against the house’s plastic siding and curls into something much smaller than himself and waits for the stars to notice his reticence and reach out for him themselves.
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The Economy »
New series coming this week: Death and Taxes by FFYO
Economics is an opaque and oft-troubled study. Most popular econ focuses on personal finance or solely offers perspectives within the context of the neoclassical mainstream.
FFYO’s experience in tax policy, public finance, and international economics guides this series that focuses on historical and institutional analysis. Suitable for both complete econ-newcomers and those already-versed but looking for new thoughts to chew on.
Poetry »
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Philadelphia’s Famous Festivities
In the spring of 1778, Philadelphia was an occupied city. After defeats at Brandywine Creek and Germantown in the autumn of 1777, George Washington’s army had retreated to Valley Forge. The Liberty Bell was smuggled out of the city and hidden in a basement in Allentown for fear that it would be melted down to make bullets for the occupation.