The California methane leak, explained; Ramadi retaken; and seriously, what kind of parents throw their son a going-away party before he goes on the run?
Vox Sentences is written by Dylan Matthews and Dara Lind.
TOP NEWS
California's ongoing environmental disaster
David McNew/AFP/Getty Images
Affluenza comes out of remission
Handout/Getty Images
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The term was deservedly mocked. But the lawyer might have had a point. This feature from this spring, in Dallas' D Magazine, uses court documents to show how nightmarishly indulgent Couch's parents really were.
[D Magazine / Michael J. Mooney]
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The New York Times talks to the families of Couch's victims, and finds a justifiable anger at the double standard: relatives of nonwhite victims feeling that, if their child had killed 4 people, they would not be treated with such leniency.
[New York Times / Julie Turkewitz and Katie Rogers]
What's next in the fight against ISIS?
Ahmad al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images
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But it's worth remembering that the more territory ISIS loses, the more incentive it will have to shift its tactics to inspiring terrorist attacks abroad — in, say, Paris or San Bernardino.
[Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
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So while the strategy for defeating ISIS on the ground is pretty well set, the long-term strategy of how to diminish ISIS as an organization is going to require non-military solutions, like online persuasion.
[Foreign Policy / James Stavridis]
MISCELLANEOUS
VERBATIM
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"Posner had realized that Nussbaum, like many other moral philosophers, essentially thinks that 'people should be made happy, and that is what is important in life,' she remembers. 'He, like Nietzsche, thought that life was all about struggle and suffering, in which not the greatest happiness of the greatest number, but heroic and creative achievement are the most important things.'"
[Lingua Franca / James Ryerson]
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"Our moral intuitions and indeed our laws today are that you shouldn’t discriminate against someone because of their race, because of their gender, their sexual preference or other issues. But for odd reasons, it’s perfectly OK to discriminate against someone because they were born somewhere else. You can, in fact, put up walls and machine guns and prevent someone from moving simply for the reason that they were born somewhere else."
[Alex Tabarook to Freakonomics / Stephen Dubner]
WATCH THIS
Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images
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