Writer, fangirl, uncool mom. My latest - Good Town, a historical novel of my mother's memoirs of Nazi Germany, is now out! marylouisewells.com/

Joined January 2012
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17 Apr 2023
Release Day for Good Town is here! Thanks to everyone who helped me bring this to fruition. @KirkusReviews says it's "An evocative, engrossing depiction of the devastating choices and consequences of the World War II era." #HistoricalFiction #Kindle amazon.com/dp/B0BYDZDQS3/
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LOOK WHAT IT MEANS TO CAPE VERDE! 🇨🇻 40-year-old Vozinha and his teammates were emotional after stunning European giants Spain in a goalless draw
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The White House is crashing out because The Weather Channel reported the weather 🤣
This event is about celebrating America’s unmatched greatness after 250 years — which apparently doesn’t sit well with the friendless loser who wrote this bullshit clickbait headline. Rain or shine, we’re celebrating our great country no matter what. GOD BLESS AMERICA! 🇺🇸
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Replying to @FreddyLA7
Rubio after learning hes being traded for Freddy.
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The World Cup absolutely mogs every other sporting event. It’s what the Olympics wishes it was X100. You’ve got Europeans road-tripping across America and having their minds blown by Buc-ee’s and Bass Pro Shops. You’ve got a small Kansas town falling in love with an Algerian club that chose Kansas City as their homebase. You’ve got South Korea training in Utah to prepare for the altitude in Guadalajara. For one month, the whole world forgets we’re supposed to hate each other over differences that barely matter. It’s the closest thing we have to world peace.
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Jun 12
No stronger luggage game than the DR Congo national team 🧳🔥
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🇩🇪 The correct pronunciation of Germany's World Cup player names
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🚨🇩🇪 𝐎𝐅𝐅𝐈𝐂𝐈𝐀𝐋 | The Germany squad will pay for 600 FANS to travel by bus to their final World Cup group match! 💰✅ With such high costs for supporters at this summer, this is a truly fantastic gesture. 👏
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This flouf is one of 15 healthy California condor chicks to hatch at our conservation center this season. A new record!
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RT @babadookspinoza: People are letting AI write their wedding vows, love letters, parents’ obituaries, kids’ birthday cards… Such a powerf…
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Excellent as ever from Jesus Some overlap w/ the thesis set out in my piece — that smartphones and social media are in large part accelerants, amplifiers and ‘internationalisers’ of social/cultural shifts that have been slowly unfolding for decades if not longer.
Smartphones are not the explanation for the recent decline in fertility. Instead, they are an accelerator of deeper forces already at work. Let’s start with the facts. Fertility is falling almost everywhere: in rich, middle-income, and poor countries; in secular and religious countries; and in countries with high and low levels of gender equality. The decline accelerated around 2014. So, no country-specific explanation will work unless you are willing to believe that 200 distinct country-specific explanations arrived at roughly the same time. Smartphones look like the obvious candidate: the first iPhone was released in 2007, and global adoption has been astonishingly fast. Economists understand the first major decline in fertility in advanced economies, from 6 or 7 children per woman throughout most of human history to about 1.8, that occurred between the early 1800s and roughly 1970, well before smartphones. The main drivers were a sharp fall in child mortality (effective fertility was rarely above 3 and often close to 2) and the shift from a low-skill, rural agrarian economy to a high-skill, urban industrial one. We have quantitative models that fit these facts well. Country-specific factors mattered too, of course. Proximity to low-fertility neighbors accelerated Hungary’s decline, while fragmented landowning structures accelerated France’s. But these were second-order mechanisms. This is also why most economists long considered Paul Ehrlich’s doom scenarios implausible. We forecast that fertility in middle- and low-income economies would follow the same path as in the rich, probably faster, because reductions in child mortality reached India or Africa at lower income levels (medical technology is nearly universal, and most gains come from handwashing and cheap antibiotics, not Mayo Clinic-level care). Much of what we see in Africa or parts of Latin America today is still that old story. But in the 1980s, a new pattern appeared. Japan and Italy fell below 1.8, the level we had thought was the new floor. By 1990, Japan was at 1.54 and Italy at 1.36. This second fertility decline began in Japan and Italy earlier than elsewhere, driven by country-specific factors, but the underlying dynamics were widespread: secularization, an education arms race, expensive housing, the dissolution of old social networks, and the shift to a service economy in which women’s bargaining power within the household is higher. The U.S. lagged because secularization came later, suburban housing remained relatively cheap, and African American fertility was still high. U.S. demographic patterns are exceptional and skew how academics (most of whom are in the U.S.) and the New York Times see the world. My best guess is that, without smartphones, Italy’s 2025 fertility rate would be about 1.24 rather than 1.14. I doubt anyone will document an effect larger than 0.1-0.2. Italy was at 1.19 in 1995, not far from today’s 1.14. The TFR is cyclical due to tempo effects, so I do not read too much into the rise between 1995 and 2007 or the decline from 1.27 in 2019 to 1.14 today. The direct effect of smartphones is not zero, but it is not, by itself, that large. Where social media, in general, and smartphones, in particular, matter is in the diffusion of social norms. What would have taken 25 years now happens in 10. Social media are not the cause of fertility decline; modernity is. But they are a very fast accelerator. That is why social media are a major part of the story behind Guatemala (yes, Guatemala) going from 3.8 children per woman in 2005 to 1.9 in 2025. Without them, Guatemala would also have reached 1.9, just 20 years later. Modernity, in its current form, is incompatible with replacement-level fertility. By modernity, I do not mean capitalism: fertility fell earlier and faster in socialist economies than in market economies. Socialist Hungary fell below replacement in 1960, and socialist Czechoslovakia in 1966 (both experienced small, short-lived baby booms in the mid-1970s). By modernity, I mean a society organized around rational, large-scale systems and formalized knowledge. Countries will not converge to the same fertility rate. East Asia is likely stuck near 1, possibly below, given its unbalanced gender norms and toxic education systems. Latin America faces the same gender problem plus weak growth prospects, so I expect something around 1.2. Northern Europe has more egalitarian family structures and might hold near 1.5. The very religious societies are probably the only ones that will sustain 1.8. All of this could change with AI or changes in population composition. We will see. But on the current evidence, deep sub-replacement fertility is the “new new normal.” Unless we reorganize our societies, better learn to handle it as best we can.
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julie brown finally got her pulitzer
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Cat version of Trump and Pope. 🤭
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Sometimes TMZ clocks in and decides to go after the government rather than Britney Spears and in those moments we know peace
Mar 27
Senator Marsha Blackburn slinks out of D.C. before the Senate vote. 👀 Credit: X/DCCelebrity
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I think God should sue Pete Hegseth for defamation.
Pete Hegseth, at today's Christian Prayer & Worship Service at the Pentagon, prays for Almighty God to "pour out your wrath" and "break the teeth of the ungodly." He begs the Almighty to sanction "overwhelming violence" against "those who deserve no mercy"
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the judi dench cameo fucking sent me 🤣😭

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- A Roman official inspecting an eastern town in the late 2nd century
I keep seeing these on cars and I have no clue what it means. I’m assuming they like to fish or
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After watching LBJ on TV telling Congress after Selma that he would send voting rights bill, saying "We Shall Overcome," Martin Luther King wept--tonight 1965:
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Kinda crazy that historians will look back on both the Iran and Iraq wars and consider Iraq to have been the more thought through one
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Personally, I’ve only been to one quinceañera, but my understanding is that each one usually has over a hundred people. So Pulido just got himself a legendary opportunity to perform and campaign DIRECTLY to tens of thousands of people in an INCREDIBLY favorable setting.
GOP Rep De La Cruz described Pulido - a Dem Tejano music superstar - as a has been. The attack seems to have backfired. I’m told from a campaign spox he has received nearly 1k invitations to quinceañeras since posting this, which creates a unique campaigning opportunity in TX15
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Yes! ✨
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