The title of this post is the subject line of an email I just received from The Guardian, a newspaper we like and often link to. They go on to say:
There’s a very good reason not to support the Guardian’s independent journalism: not everyone can afford to pay for news. That is why our website is open to everyone. We don’t think that access to trustworthy, reliable news coverage should be a luxury. If you aren’t able to pay at the moment, please continue to turn to our work for free.
Well, go ahead and support them please! But we at 3QD feel the same way about our work and we need your support even more as we are operating on a shoestring budget. 3QD remains and will always be a human-curated website with six human editors and no AI involved in our selection of articles. So please help by supporting us (click here) right now if possible. NEW POSTS BELOW.





When did you first notice that you cell phone was finishing your sentences? Sure, spellcheck had been around for a while, however annoying it might be, but coming up with whole sentences that seemed to read your mind—“can I call you later?” “Can we meet tomorrow?” “Do you need groceries? These suggestions seem to come out of nowhere but can surprisingly express exactly what you want to say.
In Zhou Dedong’s short story “Have You Heard of ‘Ancient Glory’?” (Hereafter “Ancient Glory”),





International order in the twentieth century was set by empires, then blocs engaged in ideological struggle, and finally by alliances based on common ideological and financial interests. Now even those alliances are dissolving. The Iran episode is the unmistakable break, and the United States is the agent of that break.
Sughra Raza. Fungal Abstractions. March 2022, Vermont.
