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Yankees are in for an offseason battle royale with their biggest rivals

Boston and Toronto already struck early blows, and things are expected to ramp up from here. The Red Sox went first, landing excellent starter Sonny Gray, who’s been terrific everywhere but The Bronx. And Boston is far from done.
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The Post family has never stopped giving me reasons to be thankful

If you’re also lucky enough, you have reason to give thanks for the rest of your life, too, which means work, which means the job, which means the colleagues you work with and the bosses you work for. And sometimes, your life’s accounting of great good fortune applies to and includes that nonofficial family.
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Flooding death toll in southern Thailand rises to more than 80 as water levels fall

Flooding death toll in southern Thailand rises to more than 80 as water levels fall [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
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Winter Storm Warning as 24 Inches of Snow To Strike: ‘Blizzard Conditions’

Drivers in some states have been advised to delay any unnecessary travel as the country celebrates Thanksgiving.
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Worth the TikTok hype — Ballerina Farm has its only sale of the year

Anything but your traditional Black Friday sale.
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Getting to Know Your Neighbors Can Save Democracy

Neighbors in windows, good neighborhood, people looking out window. Friendly apartment neighbours talking to each other vector illustration

Americans have forgotten how to be good neighbors. Political polarization has reached the point where people see those with opposing viewpoints not just as misguided, but as existential threats. We have cut off family members over voting choices and refuse to date across party lines. We increasingly inhabit separate online and media-dictated realities with different facts and different histories, making collective problem-solving nearly impossible. 

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But the fractures run even deeper than our politics. Half of Americans report “seldom” or “never” talking to someone in their community they do not know well. Fewer than half speak with a neighbor they do not know well even a few times per year. We are spending more time at home and less time in communal activities than any previous generation. As a result, in 2023, the U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness a national health epidemic with consequences comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day.

While this reflects our modern reality, most Americans yearn for something different. Recent polling shows that while 28% of Americans find political differences stressful in relationships, majorities on both sides of the aisle want to move past this. In fact, 67% of Democrats and 83% of Republicans say personal relationships should come before politics.

The problem is not that we are unable to come together—or that we don’t want to. It is that we have forgotten how to do so. Critically, this includes showing up to the places where we might discover our shared humanity.     

Engaging with our neighbors in these shared spaces—community centers, cultural institutions, libraries and other “civic commons” that once dotted every corner of America—needs to become a priority again. Something remarkable happens when we bump into each other in these settings. They create opportunities for people from vastly different backgrounds to encounter each other in ways that would be impossible online. In a ceramics studio, people who might never otherwise meet sit shoulder-to-shoulder, hands in the same clay, sharing conversation. In a salsa class, the rhythm belongs to everyone. And, for an hour, the only thing that matters is whether your partner can keep time; not whether they voted as you did. It is infinitely easier to hate a Facebook avatar than it is to hate your dance partner. 

These encounters may sound utopian, but I see them happen every day at my own institution, New York’s 92nd Street Y, as I know they do in similar institutions all across America. In this way, I know them not only to be possible, but to occur with striking frequency. And when they do, when we encounter one another in these neutral spaces, we rediscover each other as human beings rather than ideologies. 

This is why shared spaces are not just amenities. They are critical to addressing the existential threat posed by polarization. Without these spaces, we effectively cede relationships, with friends and strangers alike, to social media algorithms designed to amplify division rather than bridge it. As such, these shared spaces are more than just places for leisure—they are the overlooked infrastructure of civic resilience.

There is, though, another way.   

With an eye towards building a better future and a far more perfect union, now is the time for Americans to commit to the work of civic repair. Now is the time for us to put down our screens. Now is the time for us to leave our homes. Now is the time for us to return once again to our civic commons—our community centers; our cultural institutions; our libraries; in short, the third spaces in which Americans can gather without labels that foster and strengthen our civic connective tissue.  

And the best part about this prescription? It is all sugar and no medicine. It requires no more from each of us than picking a class that sounds interesting. Or attending a lecture on something about which we are curious. Or nurturing our bodies in a spin class or a yoga session. Or gathering with others for spiritual renewal.    

Through these simple acts, we will build relationships—real relationships—with our neighbors. And, in the process, we will be doing our part to fix what ails our society: one encounter, one ceramics class, and one new salsa partner at a time.

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Urban Meyer Predicts Winner of Ohio State-Michigan

Ex-Ohio State coach Urban Meyer revealed who he thinks will win this year’s matchup between the Buckeys and Michigan Wolverines.
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Marquay Collins: Influencer Dies at 24, Hours After Posting Final Skit

His mother announced his death by writing: “I needed him longer than God allowed me to have him.”
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Russia convicts and hands life sentences to 8 people over attack on a key bridge to Crimea

Russia convicts and hands life sentences to 8 people over attack on a key bridge to Crimea [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
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Courtauld to embark on £82m campus project at Somerset House in London

‘Once-in-a-generation transformation’ of Grade-I building will bring teaching spaces under same roof as gallery

The Courtauld has unveiled an £82m campus redevelopment it is calling a “once-in-a-generation transformation” of its Grade-I listed building at Somerset House in London.

The Stirling prize-winning architects Witherford Watson Mann will take charge of the project at the teaching and research centre and public gallery, which follows their 2021 revamp of the Courtauld Gallery space, and is expected to take four years to complete. The Courtauld Institute of Art is an independent college of the University of London, founded in the 1930s, focusing on the teaching and research of art history.

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