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Beastly Matters

May 06, 2024

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The New Yorker

Where the logic behind the concern for animal welfare begins and ends.

- By Kelefa Sanneh

Beastly Matters

One morning, in February of this year, Zahid Badroodien, who oversees the Committee on Water and Sanitation in Cape Town, South Africa, posted on X that he had been alerted to “a sewage smell blanketing parts of the city.” He assured residents that inspectors had been dispatched to wastewater-treatment facilities, but half an hour later he announced that a different culprit had been identified: a ship in the harbor that was transporting cattle—nineteen thousand in all—from Brazil to Iraq, with a brief layover in town to replenish their feed. On board, conditions were “awful,” according to a veterinary consultant who conducted an inspection. A single cow discovered in such a state might have become a cause célèbre, but it was harder to rally around nineteen thousand of them. Within a day, the cows were back at sea, where virtually no one could know, or smell, their plight.

المزيد من القصص من The New Yorker

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Revisiting the New York shooting that defined an era

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Patrick Radden Keefe on Truman Capote's “In Cold Blood”

In 1972, on “The Tonight Show,” Johnny Carson asked Truman Capote about capital punishment. Capote had written, in unsettling detail, about the hanging of two killers, Dale Hickock and Perry Smith. Carson said, of the death penalty, “As long as the people don't have to see it, they seem to be all for it”; if executions occurred “in the public square,” Americans might stop doing them. Capote wasn't so sure. His hands laced together professorially, he murmured, in his baby-talk drawl, “Human nature is so peculiar that, really, millions of people would watch it and get some sort of vicarious sensation.”

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There aren't many moments in Donald Trump's political career that could be called highlights.

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When calamity strikes in America's busiest national park, who comes to the rescue?

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UNDER THREAT

The Danes were America's most loyal ally. Now they feel targeted—and terrified.

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CONTAGION

A Broadway revival of Tracy Letts's “Bug.”

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ANNALS OF TECHNOLOGY: HEY THERE!

How WhatsApp took over the global conversation.

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M.I.P. IN CHAINS

Whatever else you think about invading a country and capturing its President, there's no getting around the inconvenience of imprisoning Nicolás Maduro in New York City.

time to read

7 mins

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