In times of crisis, protecting human rights often involves a delicate balancing act. In a pandemic, it can mean exchanging some of our privacy for freedom of movement.
Today鈥檚 issue looks at questions of freedom and privacy as governments leverage technology to fight the coronavirus, lessons on how to handle job insecurity and shortages from Russia鈥檚 recent history, the view from New York鈥檚 essential small businesses, the American dream in Guatemala, and the creative range of actress Saoirse Ronan.
Before the pandemic, so much of our lives had moved online that we turned the phrase 鈥渋n real life鈥 into the abbreviation IRL to highlight nonvirtual experiences. Now, people are turning to social media even more to feel connected. They鈥檙e posting in gratitude for essential workers, sharing phrases of unity and strength, and finding humor in this shared predicament.聽
But some are bringing those interactions back into real life, using windows and yards like a Facebook newsfeed 鈥 or bulletin board, for those who remember when every interaction was IRL.聽
There are signs thanking essential workers and messages of hope etched in sidewalk chalk. But some people aim to provide a chuckle for passersby.聽
One man in Maryland writes daily 鈥渄ad jokes鈥 on a whiteboard. An example: 鈥淚 ordered a chicken and an egg from Amazon. I鈥檒l let you know.鈥
A woman in Texas set up in her front yard using Halloween decorations, poking fun at things like the toilet paper shortage.
In my neighborhood, someone has taken memes out of the virtual world by printing them out and posting them on a fence.聽
At a time when many of us are screen-weary, finding a speck of delight off-screen provides respite.聽
As Tom Schruben, the dad joker, . 鈥淓veryone is very stressed with the virus and the quarantining. 鈥 I thought it would be a good idea to give people a break from that, shake them up momentarily to take their mind off their troubles for just a minute.鈥