I have a New Years tradition. On January 1st, I make an effort to read one book cover-to-cover. It’s rarely a serious book. (Yesterday, I read Brigands & Breadknives.) But I imagine that reading any book in its entirety sets the right tone for the new year. Nowadays, we are confronted with far too many conflicting versions of reality. It’s hard to know what’s true and what’s false. It’s easy to dismiss sources that don’t conform to your preconceived reality. It’s even easier to stop believing in anything. But apathy is never the answer. Instead, I agree with Ada Palmer’s assessment. The only solution is to read more books!
If I had to recommend just one book from last year’s reading list, it would be hers. Inventing the Renaissance may seem like an odd choice, but I found Ada Palmer’s 650-page “history of histories” immediately relevant. Palmer is not interested in advancing any particular history of the Renaissance. Instead, Inventing the Renaissance tells a “history of histories.” Palmer examines how people approach the Renaissance with a limited “palette of questions.” The questions we think to ask are often more influential on our worldview than any objective truth. Throughout Inventing the Renaissance, Palmer develops a framework for understanding how two versions of history can actually be true at the same time. For me, this has made understanding the present moment much easier.

Management only issued Christmas Eve Code 03s to the second shift. This was because the second shift was in the unique position of having to work until Christmas Day. It does not sound like senior management intended for so many people to take advantage of the offer. But once it got out that any second shifter who asked could have a Code 03, word spread fast.
I am glad the second shift benefitted, but this approach was unfair to everyone. Besides being cruel to our members, there are other reasons we should have a formal shutdown. For one, a formal shutdown structures time off around the holidays. It is much easier for managers to plan around Code 14s than last-minute Code 03s. Code 03s also dilute worker power. Code 03s allow managers to excuse time on a case-by-case basis. The union never intended for Code 03s to replace other absence codes. Replacing Codes 14, 7W, and so forth with 03s upsets the balance of power between the union and management.
In Maine NEws
Bangor Daily News: How Maine farmers are fighting a drought that will stretch into 2026
Bangor Daily News: New Maine laws going into effect in 2026
Bangor Daily News: Troy Jackson understands fishermen [letter]
Central Maine: A new Maine tax will have you paying more for Netflix after Jan. 1
Maine Public: Maine expands PFAS products ban in 2026
Mother Jones: First, the heat killed Maine’s kelp. Then an invasive algae sealed its fate
Portland Press Herald: Mainer Jessica Meir will lead mission to the International Space Station
Portland Press Herald: Portland waterfront fire ravages 4 businesses
In National News
Economy
- AP: Trump overturned decades of US trade policy in 2025. See the impact of his tariffs, in four charts
- AP: What happens to a small Nebraska town when 3,200 workers lose their jobs
- BBC: Bourbon maker Jim Beam halts production at main distillery for a year
- Canary Media: Can the war on coal still be won?
- The Guardian: Why haven’t Trump’s tariffs crashed the US economy?
- Slate: How Starbucks came undone
Foreign Policy [other than Venezuela]
- AP: How Russia could attack Elon Musk’s conquering of space
- NPR: President Trump announces strike on ISIS targets in Nigeria
- People’s World: Trump’s not a ‘peace president,’ no matter how many fake honors he receives [opinion]
- Reuters: Pentagon announces $8.6 billion Boeing contract for F-15 jets for Israel
Healthcare
Immigration
Labor
- Axios: Trump declares Christmas Eve, Dec. 26 as federal holidays this year
- The Guardian: US labor unions gear up to fight against Trump’s ‘Billionaire First’ agenda
- Labor Notes: The big contract fights coming in 2026
- Reuters: UAW president’s chief of staff to leave the union following federal monitor report
Politics
Trump Vetoes
Venezuela
- Al Jazeera: Venezuela passes law enacting harsh penalties for supporters of US blockade
- AP: US forces stop oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela as Trump follows up on promise to seize tankers
- The Guardian: Russia and China pledge support for Venezuela as Trump ratchets up pressure on Maduro
- The Intercept: U.S. military killed boat strike survivors for not surrendering correctly
- The Nation: Brace yourselves for Trump’s new Monroe Doctrine
- People’s World: Strangulation, not invasion: Trump’s plan for Venezuela [opinion]
The Guardian: US justice department halts funding for human-trafficking survivors
ProPublica: Our reporters reached out for comment. They were accused of stalking and intimidation
Slate: The U.S. has a great warning system for deadly weather. Trump wants to destroy it
From History
Contingent Magazine: Why do historians still have to go to archives?
The Onion: Historians quibbling over exact definition of concentration camp sign of healthy society
Did I miss something? Share what you’re reading with me, and I’ll try to include it next Friday!