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Sitdown Sunday: Uncovering the buried secrets of Pompeii

Settle back in a comfy chair and sit back with some of the week’s best longreads.

IT’S A DAY of rest, and you may be in the mood for a quiet corner and a comfy chair.

We’ve hand-picked the week’s best reads for you to savour.

1. Pompeii’s buried secrets

Rebecca Mead writes about the first major excavations of the ancient city in decades, and what they reveal about the daily lives of those that once lived there.

(The New Yorker, approx 38 mins reading time)

The thermopolium, which opened to visitors in August, is a delight. A masonry counter is decorated with expertly rendered and still vivid images: a fanciful depiction of a sea nymph perched on the back of a seahorse; a trompe-l’oeil painting of two strangled ducks on a countertop, ready for the butcher’s knife; a fierce-looking dog on a leash. The unfaded colors—coral red for the webbed feet of the pitiful ducks, shades of copper and russet for the feathers of a buoyant cockerel that has yet to meet the ducks’ fate—are as eye-catching now as they would have been for passersby two millennia ago. (Today, they are protected from the elements and the sunlight by glass.) Another panel, bordered in black, is among Pompeii’s most self-referential art works: a representation of a snack bar, with the earthenware vessels known as amphorae stacked against a counter laden with pots of food. A figure—perhaps the snack bar’s proprietor—bustles in the background. The effect is similar to that of a diner owner who displays a blown-up selfie on the wall behind his cash register.

2. Sea swimming in Australia

Damien Cave writes about how becoming a volunteer lifesafer with his children led to him falling in love with swimming.

(The New York Times, approx 8 mins reading time)

Ocean swimming was a prerequisite — and an entry point for something more profound. Proficiency in the water, for me, has become a source of liberation from the cults of outrage and optimization on land. In up-and-down seas, I can be imperfect, playful, apolitical and happy as long as I’m moving. As a father and citizen, I often wonder: What might the world look like if we all found a place of risk and reward that demanded humility, where we couldn’t talk or tweet, where we had to just get better at doing?

3. Long Covid 

Healthcare workers suffering with long Covid detail how they were dismissed by their fellow professionals when they sought treatment.  

(The Atlantic, approx 9 mins reading time)

I’ve interviewed more than a dozen similar people—health professionals from the United States and the United Kingdom who have long COVID. Most told me that they were shocked at how quickly they had been dismissed by their peers. When Karen Scott, a Black ob-gyn of 19 years, went to the emergency room with chest pain and a heart rate of 140, her physicians checked whether she was pregnant and tested her for drugs; one asked her if her symptoms were in her head while drawing circles at his temple with an index finger. “When I said I was a physician, they said, ‘Where?’” Scott said. “Their response was She must be lying.” Even if she had been believed, it might not have mattered. “The moment I became sick, I was just a patient in a bed, no longer credible in the eyes of most physicians,” Alexis Misko, an occupational therapist, told me. She and others hadn’t expected special treatment, but “health-care professionals are so used to being believed,” Daria Oller, a physiotherapist, told me, that they also hadn’t expected their sickness to so completely shroud their expertise.

4. Climate change

An article on how a Dutch foundation are hoping to create forests across the Netherlands by replanting a million unwanted tree saplings. 

(The Guardian, approx 6 mins reading time)

“The Netherlands wants to plant 37,000 hectares [91,400 acres], which is about 100m trees,” says Hanneke van Ormondt, the campaign manager of Meer Bomen Nu and a member of the Urgenda climate activism organisation. “I don’t know how short we are in getting nurseries in place, but we don’t need them: we just need more circular forest management. Everywhere along the path, left and right, is always cleared of shrubs and trees. Replant it! My dream is that every council will open a tree hub where foresters can bring their stuff, and people who want a free tree can come.”

5. Jeffrey Epstein

A look at the disgraced financier’s final days as told by over 2,000 pages of Federal Bureau of Prisons records. 

(The New York Times, approx 11 mins reading time)

The detailed notes and reports compiled by those who interacted with Mr. Epstein during his 36 days of detention show how he repeatedly assured them he had much to live for, while also hinting that he was increasingly despondent. The clues prompted too little action by jail and bureau officials, who made mistake after mistake leading up to Mr. Epstein’s death, the records reveal.

6. House of Gucci

An interview with, respectively, the director and the star of the highly-anticipated film, Ridley Scott and Lady Gaga. 

(The Irish Times, approx 8 mins reading time)

“I was in a really complicated place in my life when this script came to me,” Gaga says of her first starring role since A Star Is Born in 2018. She was struggling with depression as she recorded her 2020 album, Chromatica, and the woman born Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta even wrestled with whether she really wanted to be Lady Gaga any more. When House of Gucci offered her someone else to become, she jumped at the chance.

…AND A CLASSIC FROM THE ARCHIVES…

In the week of the anniversary of the death of President John F. Kennedy, this article examines the 2,891 documents surrounding his assassination that were released in 2017.

(The New York Times, approx 7 mins reading time)

Every government authority that has examined the investigation of his death, from the Warren Commission to congressional investigators, concluded that Kennedy was killed by Oswald, who fired three shots with a mail-order rifle from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository when the presidential motorcade passed by on Nov. 22, 1963. But that has never satisfied the doubters, and polls have consistently shown that most Americans still believe that someone other than Oswald must have been involved.

More: The best reads from every previous Sitdown Sunday

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    Mute 087 bed
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:45 PM

    Makes no difference who you vote for, You still get the WEF government

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    Mute Vincent Alexander
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:12 PM

    @087 bed: WEF? – World Economic Forum?

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    Mute 9QRixo8H
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:16 PM

    @087 bed: see https://conspiracychart.com for all things NWO, chemtrails, chipping, and replacement theories.

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    Mute 087 bed
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:36 PM

    @9QRixo8H: Are you a qualified tool or still an apprentice, All you do here is push disinformation in the comments.

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    Mute Dominic Leleu
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:24 PM

    I wonder if the same secret service would protect Netanyahou…. That could solve a lot of problems

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    Mute Alan
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:31 PM

    @Dominic Leleu: and potential assassins should be vetted by the NRA to ensure a more positive outcome. Might be an idea to invite putin, xi, orban and others

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    Mute Dominic Leleu
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:31 PM

    @Alan: agreed

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    Mute Andrew Kiely
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:22 PM

    When thinking about Simon Coveney , this a verbatim quote
    Owning your own home is not a bad aspiration, but if there was more certainty in the rental market in Ireland, you would see more people choosing to rent and to invest in rental property,” said Coveney.

    “The attitude towards long-term rental is changing in Ireland and we need to respond to that with market conditions that reinforce and encourage that change of mindset.”

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    Mute Kevin Kerr
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:52 PM

    @Andrew Kiely: what’s your point?

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    Mute SV3tN8M4
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:20 PM

    @SYaxJ2Ts: His point is, that Coveney’s prophecy, hope & implementation of same came through in Govt policy & is part of the problem today. It wouldn’t affect you Kevin as a Govt lackey on a big salary, but it affects thousands of young working Irish people who are paying extortionate rent & who can’t buy or afford a home in Ireland today.

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    Mute Kevin Kerr
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:26 PM

    @SV3tN8M4: context is key here, and I don’t know when this quote is from, but surely certainty in the rental market is a good thing, albeit aspirational rather than real? You know, some security of tenure, rent certainty, that kind of thing. Anything to add here? Or are you just going to sling insults

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    Mute Kevin Kerr
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:33 PM

    @SV3tN8M4: and any chance of backing up your claim from yesterday that SF will introduce sleight of hand legislation to increase granting of asylum applications? I’ve asked twice already. Surely you’ve managed to find the relevant evidence by now

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    Mute Peter Byrne
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:37 PM

    @SV3tN8M4: I suppose all those people the Gardai have charged were all working very hard to buy a house and provide for their families. Most of them staying in the city centre at the taxpayers cost

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    Mute SV3tN8M4
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    Jul 24th 2024, 6:52 PM

    @Peter Byrne: Wouldn’t know Peter, don’t have anything to do with them, too busy working trying to make ends meet & pay my mortgage. You must be a happy man today that you & your buddies got a top up of 750,000, you might get your bumper Exit package & NDA now. Harris likes to reward Deceit & Incompetence, some of those in your organization are no better than those you judged above.

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    Mute Antony Stack
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    Jul 24th 2024, 9:04 PM

    @Andrew Kiely:
    I’ve just spent a week in Metz France.
    As in other European cities all accommodation within the city is in apartments. Apartments cannot be used for property speculation. If an apartment is unoccupied for an extended period it has to be sold back to the freehold company (owners association).

    If you want to live in a house – to go to a village 10 -20 km out.

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    Mute mickey mac
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    Jul 24th 2024, 2:24 PM

    Buttimer has repeatedly been rejected by the cork electorate, and now finally by his own party. Maybe this time the penny will drop

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    Mute Uí Braonáin
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    Jul 24th 2024, 3:11 PM

    @mickey mac: Once Fine Gael learned that Buttimer was attending pro-Palestinian events that was end for him.

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    Mute SV3tN8M4
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    Jul 24th 2024, 6:54 PM

    @mickey mac: He is left there for Tokenistic reasons by Fine Gael.

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    Mute Antony Stack
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    Jul 24th 2024, 1:58 PM

    Simon Coveney looked well, which is important in politics. But after that he lacked leadership. He fronted up the ‘ same-s marriage’ referendum by parroting the party line and adding in his own daughters. One of them might be that way.

    Fair point but not compelling. let them have all the rights of marriage, but call it something else. Marriage always meant man and woman.

    Neologisms are used every day to overturn the established order.
    For example – gender was a grammatical term to distinguish three different forms of a noun. Male and female got into it because they were two obvious categories. But there was never a case of an obvious male having a female noun form or visa versa.
    Generally a neuter gender noun is a noun that denotes a lifeless thing. A thing which is neither male nor female.

    But as anyone who learned French knows a pen and a pencil have different genders even though they both are technically neuter.
    La plume de ma tante
    Le crayon de ma tante

    In fact there is no neuter gender in French. An omission which the French chattering class are struggling to cope with.

    Anyhow this is a long way from Simon Coveney – other than to point out that weak leaders are easily pushed into fronting up anything which a mob (nowadays a Twitter mob) wants.

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    Mute Diarmuid
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    Jul 24th 2024, 12:58 PM

    There is certainly a FG seat in Cork SC, especially as it’s now a 5 seater. Going to a battle royal between Úna McCarthy and Shane O Callaghan to whose ahead after the first count. That’s vital. As it’s extremely unlikely both will get elected

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