The New Yorkerās news columns shed light on the state of the nation, but its advertisements speak to the state of our culture
Last night as I paged through the new issue of the New Yorker, dated 26 November, I felt like I was reading a dispatch from the one-percenters who run the American economy, take far more than their fair share of American income, and lately have ruined American politics.
Let me state first that I love the magazine. I have been reading it for more than 55 years, since I learned to read partly by looking at its cartoons with my grandmother in her garden. My beginning as a writer was reading the articles of John McPhee when I was teenager. Iāve subscribed to the magazine for decades, and once tried to get a lifetime subscription. My heart still lifts when I find each weekās edition in my mailbox.
Related: New York magazine to adopt paywall by end of November
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Thomas E Ricks is the author of six books, most recently Churchill and Orwell. He writes The Long March column for Task & Purpose, whose advertisements are aimed at veterans
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