The public lands system of the West is in trouble. Though technically land held in common by all American citizens and managed by the federal government, they are also used by the cattle industry. On this week’s podcast, Christopher Ketcham says that this “multiple use is really multiple abuse. And you have widespread degradation of the environment and in many places a catastrophic assault on ecological health across the public lands.”
Ketcham is an environmental reporter who’s spent a good deal of his adulthood roaming the mountains and deserts of the West. In劫his Land”e laments what he sees as the exploitative ranching practices destroying the public lands.
“Do we want to cede hundreds of millions of acres of our public land to a single industry that profits from the dissemination of an invasive species at the cost of native wildlife?” Ketcham asks. “That’s the question.”
Gretchen McCulloch visits the podcast this week to discuss her new book,伯ecause Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language,” which explores the way that the Internet has created its own new forms of language. Talking about emojis, McCulloch says, “The first emoji that really caught my attention and imagination was the heart eyes emoji ... it conveys something that I want to be able to convey: admiration, enjoyment, and oh I’m in love with this thing.”
Also on this week’s episode, Tina Jordan, Lauren Christensen and Emily Eakin talk about what they’re reading. Pamela Paul is the host.
Here are the books discussed in this week’s “What We’re Reading”:
“Stoner” by John Williams
“The Yellow House” by Sarah M. Broom
“Courting Mr. Lincoln” by Louis Bayard
“Severance” by Ling Ma