1. People are sending me screenshots of their favorite "happy moments." Delightful.
2. Play with the filters. I think it's the most fun part.
3. There's a fun easter egg in the piece. I don't think anyone has found it.
Posts by Arielle Levin Becker
This is 18-mo-old Amalia waving to me when she was detained.
She was hospitalized with a respiratory infection while at ICE’s Dilley facility for immigrant families.
She’s one of dozens of detainees who I spoke to via video and phone calls, letters and an in-person visit. 🧵1/
A newborn in Minneapolis hadn’t eaten for a day and a half.
ICE agents took her mother when she went to work, trying to make money for diapers.
Her 16-year-old and Bri, a local mother of two, saved that baby's life. @chabeli.bsky.social tells their story
From my colleague Leo Cuello: #Medicaid Data Sharing Crisis: Will HHS Break the Law to Help ICE? ccf.georgetown.edu/2026/01/29/m...
Some of the 500 seniors at Sinai Residences in Boca Raton, Florida, including many Holocaust survivors, asked if they could hide the building’s Haitian staff in their apartments.
“That reminds me of Anne Frank,” Rachel Blumberg, president and CEO of the center, sad.
www.jta.org/2026/01/30/u...
“Across Connecticut, residents who fear they or a loved one may be deported are self-isolating and facing mounting mental and physical health consequences as a result.”
ctmirror.org/2026/01/27/i...
“In a region that had legislated its commitment to life, she would spend her final days struggling to find anyone to save hers.”
~40% of Hepatitis B infections are caught in childhood. It is contagious enough that it can be spread just from sharing common household objects.
The chance of chronic infection (ie does not clear, and is associated with high rates of liver failure and cancer) ranges from 50%-90% in this age group.
really important advice for folks planning on ACA insurance
One woman chewed through her umbilical cord after giving birth in jail — another delivered into a cell toilet
'Why won't you help me?' Pregnant women and their babies endure inhumane conditions in jails
www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news...
I'm on the #EconJobMarket! I study how policies and childhood environments shape outcomes of low-income & vulnerable kids.
In my JMP, I study the effects of allowing youth who would have aged out of foster care at 18 to stay until 21—offering support their peers not in foster care get from parents.
This is a picture of the cover of a report. It has text that says "Maternal Health Equity: A Blueprint for Connecticut" and the logo of the Connecticut Health Foundation. It has several photos on it that show women and babies and children of various ages.
We are excited to present Maternal Health Equity: A Blueprint for Connecticut.
The blueprint aims to reduce life-threatening complications of pregnancy in Black women, and outlines steps our state can take now to make progress.
www.cthealth.org/publication/...
Important finding: 18% of immigrant parents report they’re avoiding signing up for government health care and other programs
This is the “chilling effect” in action which will lead to more uninsured kids
1/4 kids in U.S. have an immigrant parent; most kids are citizens
www.kff.org/immigrant-he...
"Deportation has taken away the father I once knew and given me back a person I no longer recognize." Vanessa Lopez, audience engagement specialist at the Chicago Sun-Times writes:
In addition to everything else, this is a very weird choice of a hill to die on.
Trump Administration Live Updates: Officials Demand States ‘Undo’ Work to Send Full Food Stamps www.nytimes.com/live/2025/11...
CT Insider reporters handed dozens of people experiencing homelessness notecards and asked them to share, in their own words, what they wish others knew about being unhoused, what worries them most each day, and what would help them the most.
www.ctinsider.com/projects/new...
Homelessness is rising in CT, and fast.
To capture the scope of this crisis, CT Insider dispatched nearly two-dozen reporters and photographers into communities for two days, shadowing people experiencing homelessness and those tasked with trying to help.
www.ctinsider.com/projects/new...
“Since the start of the year, at least 134 unhoused people have died. Only two lived long enough to reach the state’s average life expectancy.
Two died before birth. One was a newborn. Another was 15 years old.”
www.ctinsider.com/projects/new...
It's expensive to be disabled. Those costs can keep people working past the point where it's in their best interest, including for aging adults. www.businessinsider.com/older-americ...
Just so we’re clear…
SNAP isn’t saved yet. A judge gave the USDA until Monday to decide how or if benefits go out. They could be delayed, reduced, or partial. Nothing’s guaranteed.
Even if payments restart, states still have to reload cards and update systems, so delays are certain.
Marc Lobliner post on X: "Why the hell are we giving food stamps to 40 million people? Does anyone work anymore?"
SNAP isn't about "people who don't work." It's about people who don't get paid enough to live.
Of the 40 or so million people who rely on food stamps:
* Two-thirds are children, seniors, or disabled
* Most working-age adults who receive SNAP are employed—but in jobs that pay poverty wages
Medicare payments to doctors paused as government shutdown drags on www.statnews.com/2025/10/15/c... via @statnews.com
Department of Labor says immigration enforcement threatens to raise food prices, seeks to lower farmworker wages.
wapo.st/48Iuil5
There is no reason for CT residents go to without health care or go hungry while our state coffers are full.
With coverage at risk, CT has a chance to lead.
www.ctinsider.com/opinion/arti...
Low-income Americans slash spending, a worrying sign for the economy
www.washingtonpost.com/business/202...
Great article about Disney theme parks being emblematic of the loss of America's middle class (featuring my buddy @lentesta.bsky.social). Things like going to a ball game or a theme park used to be the same for everyone. Now the rich have totally different experiences
www.nytimes.com/2025/08/28/o...
I'm not an authority on the subject (as the parent of a teen, rather than one myself), but it seems like this whole situation might be a pretty accurate encapsulation of what it's like to be a teen right now.
Marquis Jackson spent 19 years incarcerated for a crime he didn’t commit.
After receiving a $5.3 million payout from the state, he’s looking forward. But what does his case say about wrongful conviction in CT?
www.ctinsider.com/connecticut/...
This policy will discourage lawfully present immigrants who are eligible for Medicaid from signing up, or signing their kids up, leaving them without health insurance. That, of course, is a feature, not a bug.