Like most adversarial governments, Chinese propagandists have learned a very valuable lesson:— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) April 27, 2020
Why create your own third-rate propaganda when you can just amplify anti-government Americans who are pushing insane talking points that help you out for free?https://t.co/WXjyPYDe5W
Awful news from Iran https://t.co/lPByMOEXPk— Tom Gara (@tomgara) April 27, 2020
Staff photographer Chris McGrath spent some time making portraits of pharmacists in Istanbul, Turkey. The first recorded #coronavirus death in Turkey was a pharmacist named Ihsan Giray and since then more than 600 medical workers have been infected. 📷: @cmcgrath_photo pic.twitter.com/I4oQx51g7b— Getty Images News (@GettyImagesNews) April 9, 2020
In 1720 Marseille allowed a ship from plague-ridden Cyprus into port, under pressure from merchants who wanted the goods and didn’t want to wait for the usual quarantine. More than half the population of Marseille died in the next two years. https://t.co/IDapJhFhzM pic.twitter.com/vovtuQ1s7o— Tim Stearns (@StearnsLab) April 25, 2020
Four months ago this map could resonably have been interpreted as a near-future dystopian world-building schema for a series of young adult books. pic.twitter.com/79ZCvw27Yz— Ankit Panda (@nktpnd) April 28, 2020
Genius idea: An app that does a terrifying human scream if it detects another phone close enough to break the social distancing rules— Ferns (@Ferns__) April 26, 2020
I'm imagining an entire supermarket full of randomly screaming phones, and I don't know about you, but that shit is hilarious
Late last Saturday, I set up an ephemeral tarot place with a neon sign in the window.— Danielle Baskin (@djbaskin) April 26, 2020
It's called Distance Tarot. 🌙🔮
A few lone night walkers stumbled into it. You call a number and get a reading on the phone while I hold up cards to the glass. pic.twitter.com/j5IuPoYenZ
The bodega down the street has photographed all their shelves and posted an enormous collage outside so you can browse without going in pic.twitter.com/1tPWEtWZxG— Emily Guendelsberger (@emilygee) April 26, 2020