I published the page before this one, and then went to the New York Times's website to read Mr. Krugman's again, to be sure that I hadn't missed any information. I did miss information; there are links from his article to pages that have statistics. Is that a change of the 21st century, that professional writers for major newspapers let underlined sentence fragments take the place of mentioning in or at the end of their articles where they got their statistics? Websites can get removed or changed; that's one of the reasons that my blog being disabled from publishing pictures is a problem.
The first link from Mr. Krugman's article goes to a Tweet at Mr. Krugman's Twitter. It could be that my phone doesn't show the entire Tweet, but all I can see is a graph that has some numbers that have no explanation and no words anywhere except the word "POLITICS."
It took a few minutes for me to find Mr. Krugman's article when I looked for it again after publishing the last page, because it had gotten moved to near the end of the first page of the New York Times's website. Its former place was taken by an article that I hadn't seen before, published four hours ago at the time that I'm writing this page, which its author called "The Tampon Of The Future."
While I'm writing this page, someone at the New York Times seems to be plastering the first page of the New York Times's website with crime-promoting articles.
Copyright L. Kochman, April 1, 2016 @ 11:35 a.m.