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Is There a Future in the Doomsday Economy?
  + stars: | 2024-07-13 | by ( Alexander Nazaryan | Emily Najera | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
When it comes to surviving the apocalypse, you could do a lot worse than the West Virginia branch of Fortitude Ranch, a constellation of five survivalist compounds across the United States and one of a growing number of businesses aiming to seize on Americans’ deepening anxieties about the future. Set on a rise above the lush valley cradling the Lost River in eastern West Virginia, about two hours from Washington, D.C., the 50-acre property backs up against the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests. A handsome guesthouse, built of dark timber slats, anchors the property. Two large, boxy dormitories, also timber but more rustic, as well as a bare-bones bunker, are designed to house more than 100 members. On a tabletop sits a 50-caliber rifle, which could be used to take out the engine block of an approaching vehicle.
Persons: George Washington Organizations: Washington , D.C, Jefferson National Forests, Guard Locations: West Virginia, Fortitude, United States, Washington ,
How to Make 3,000-Year-Old Beer
  + stars: | 2024-06-20 | by ( Alexander Nazaryan | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Mr. McDonnell, an amateur brewer who lives outside Salt Lake City, saw Seamus Blackley, a video game designer, boasting on social media about baking bread with 4,500-year-old Egyptian yeast. I wonder if I could do that with beer, Mr. McDonnell recalled thinking. The answer recently arrived in the form of an amber brew that Mr. McDonnell believes is the closest approximation yet to what Rameses the Great may have been drinking between battles with the Hittites. Recent years have seen attempts to recreate the beer of the Vikings, the Late Shang and Western Zhou dynasties of China, and the Sumerians, who are believed to have invented beer. “These beers can be all over the map,” said Neil Witte, a beer expert at Craft Quality Solutions in Kansas City, Mo.
Persons: Dylan McDonnell, McDonnell, Seamus Blackley, Zhou, , Neil Witte Organizations: Vikings, Quality Solutions Locations: Salt Lake City, China, Kansas City, Mo
Kostas Fostieris grew wistful as he remembered the workday crowds that once flocked to Greek Deli & Catering, a small restaurant a few blocks from the White House that he has operated for 35 years. At lunch, the line would stretch down the block, Mr. Fostieris said. But then the coronavirus pandemic swept the nation, and the lunch crowds vanished. “It’s like the day and night,” Mr. Fostieris lamented as he sat against a wall adorned with signed photographs of the current and former presidents as well as a plethora of framed reviews — some faded, all glowing — from newspapers, magazines and guidebooks. When asked if business on certain weekdays was especially slow, Mr. Fostieris answered quickly: “Every day.”
Persons: Kostas Fostieris, Fostieris, , ” Mr, Organizations: Deli, Catering
The researchers said the new method, described in a recent paper in the Nature Plants journal, could significantly curb the sale of Russian timber, which is prohibited in the European Union because of the war in Ukraine. But birch, oak, pine and other types of lumber from Russia are still finding European buyers amid surging demand. Last month, the novel approach was used to identify large shipments of illegal Russian lumber in Belgium. The new study looked at the chemical composition of 900 wood samples collected from 11 countries in Eastern Europe. The data was fed into a model powered by machine learning, which found patterns that could predict the geographic origin of the samples.
Locations: Sweden, Europe, Union, Ukraine, Russia, Belgium, Eastern Europe
A couple of days after Aishat Bolomope’s wedding on Dec. 31, the newlywed realized that she might be spending her honeymoon on the choppy seas of internet outrage. A dispute between a wedding party and a coffee shop in Indianapolis had turned into a referendum on wedding etiquette and cultural norms, all of it warped by the distorting lens of social media. “The more I read, the more it broke my heart,” said Ms. Bolomope, a 28-year-old engineer. At the center of the maelstrom are the mother-daughter duo that runs the coffee shop, Mansion Society, and a young Nigerian couple (Ms. Bolomope and her husband, Opeyemi Akanni, 27) who wanted to marry there. On Dec. 5, Ms. Bolomope went there to speak with the building’s manager, Isaac Barrow, about holding a small wedding ceremony in the coffee shop.
Persons: Aishat, , Bolomope, Opeyemi Akanni, Isaac Barrow Organizations: Mansion Society Locations: Nigeria, Indianapolis, Nigerian
Opinion | The Blind Ambition of Chris Christie
  + stars: | 2023-10-23 | by ( Alexander Nazaryan | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
“Trump made us smaller,” Mr. Christie tells his audience as he prowls the stage, explaining that he wants to go after Mr. Trump for two reasons: “One, he deserves it. Almost any pollster will tell you that Mr. Trump’s support is soft once you look beyond the MAGA base. Mr. Christie is the only candidate speaking directly, specifically, to this fear. But in national surveys, Mr. Christie is still polling in the low single digits. But there is something deeper at work here, and it holds clues about what it would take to attack Mr. Trump successfully.
Persons: Chris Christie’s, Donald Trump, “ Trump, Mr, Christie, Trump, , MAGA, — pugnacious Organizations: Saint Anselm College, New, Mr, CNN, Republican, Trump Locations: New Hampshire, New Jersey
Opinion | Let’s Plant Wildflowers in the National Mall
  + stars: | 2023-08-22 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
To the Editor:Re “Fill the National Mall With Wildflowers,” by Alexander Nazaryan (Opinion guest essay, Aug. 11):What a timely and terrific idea Mr. Nazaryan proposes. Let’s replace the clipped, monotonous lawns of our National Mall with gardens of wildflowers, he writes. Create meadows! What an opportunity to show visitors our national heritage of wildflowers. We can model our future on the National Mall.
Persons: Alexander Nazaryan, Nazaryan, Let’s
Walking across the National Mall, I tore open a packet of wildflower seeds — sky lupine, mountain phlox, coreopsis — and scattered its contents across the grass. As I later learned, to little surprise, the seeds did not survive the regular visits of a John Deere lawn mower and applications of herbicide. My purpose was pure protest, a symbolic objection to the bland, Kermit-colored expanse that dominates the epicenter of our nation’s capital. Across the country, the millions of small, suburban versions of the Mall directly contribute to that corrosion. Conceived by Washington’s master planner, Pierre Charles L’Enfant, in 1791, the National Mall was supposed to be “​​a grand, tree-lined avenue, flanked by embassies and gardens,” as The Washington Post put it in its superb history of the Mall.
Persons: coreopsis, John Deere, Pierre Charles L’Enfant, Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Washington Post Locations: United States, Washington ,, Washington
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