It’s a peculiar kind of argument – one billionaire telling another billionaire that they really should be paying more in taxes. Not in a sotto voce, between-courses, isn’t-that-interesting way. But publicly, loudly, in op-eds and ballot campaigns and congressional testimony, with the kind of conviction that tends to make other billionaires visibly uncomfortable at dinner....
Author: Raven Fon
Browse all articles by this author
Most of us spend a lot of time learning to spot the warning signs. The controlling texts. The hot-and-cold behavior. The way someone manages to make every disagreement about your reaction rather than their action. We’ve become fluent in red flags, and honestly, that fluency has served us well. But there’s a quieter literacy that...
Cats don’t tend to announce when something is wrong. You go to fill the bowl and realize you haven’t seen them since yesterday morning. You check the usual spots, the sunny patch on the sofa, the top of the wardrobe, behind the washing machine. Nothing. Most of the time they do come back. But some...
Some people love like they’re keeping score. They track what they gave, measure what came back, and recalibrate accordingly. And then there are the ones who don’t seem wired that way at all. The ones who show up without being asked, who remember the small things you mentioned once and never thought about again, who...
Every year, millions of people stream past the gilded gates of Buckingham Palace, crane their necks at the famous balcony, and take roughly the same photograph. They see the same polished stone façade, the same guards in bearskin hats, the same crowds pressing against the railings. Almost none of them walk away knowing that the...
You know that feeling of sitting at a dinner party, half-listening to the conversation about someone’s kitchen renovation, while part of your mind is elsewhere, circling something larger? The renovation is fine. The people are fine. But you’ve spent most of your adult life with that slight sensation of being adjacent to things rather than...
Being kind is supposed to be the social superpower. You listen well, you remember the small things, you show up when it matters. And yet somehow, the Saturday nights stay quiet, the text threads go one-way, and the acquaintances never quite become friends. It’s a strange and quietly painful place to find yourself, and it...
Most of us grow up absorbing the beliefs of our faith communities without ever questioning where those ideas came from. They’re in the air at Sunday school, woven into sermons, sung in hymns. If enough people repeat them with enough conviction, they start to feel ancient and authoritative, and eventually, they feel biblical. The trouble...
Most of us can spot loneliness when it looks a certain way: the person eating alone every day at work, the friend who stopped picking up the phone, the neighbor whose lights never seem to go on. But the emotional fallout from going a long time without real love and support is rarely that obvious....
Most people who describe themselves as people of faith can rattle off the major commandments without much trouble. Don’t kill. Don’t steal. Honor your parents. Keep those ten rules and you’re doing alright, right? Not quite. The Bible, particularly the Old Testament, contains hundreds of laws, and a surprising number of them cover things that...
Cuba’s energy situation is, by almost any metric, one of the worst crises the country has faced in decades. Yet right at the center of that same disaster, something unexpected is happening: the island is moving faster than almost any country on earth toward a solar-powered future. That those two facts are simultaneously true is...
Some of the most anticipated television of the year was announced not with a trailer, not with a press release, but with a birthday. On May 8, 2026, as the world gathered to celebrate Sir David Attenborough turning 100, the BBC slipped in a piece of news that felt entirely fitting for the occasion: he...