📰 The Fleydo Times — Issue 08: Money, Happiness & What We Really Need
The Fleydo Times Issue 08 explores ‘Money, Happiness & What We Really Need’ — a philosophical theme that connects economics to personal values and daily choices. Article 1 (‘Can Money Buy Happiness?’) presents the famous Kahneman-Deaton $75K ceiling, Killingsworth’s 2023 challenge using 33,000 participants, and the crucial finding that money matters most for the unhappiest people while making almost no difference for the happiest 20%. Article 2 (‘The Real Cost of Fast Fashion’) exposes Shein’s 6,000 daily new items, the 10% global carbon emissions figure, 10,000 litres of water per jeans pair, the Rana Plaza disaster (1,134 deaths), and $2/day factory wages. Article 3 (‘Why Scandinavians Are the Happiest People’) analyses Finland’s seven consecutive #1 rankings, introduces hygge/lagom/sisu cultural concepts, and features a new visual element: a three-row myth-vs-fact comparison panel debunking common misconceptions. Article 4 (‘The Buy-Nothing Movement’) traces the movement from a small Facebook group to 7 million members in 44 countries, explains the hedonic treadmill, cites Cornell research on experiences vs objects, and presents 300,000 items per American home. All articles use B1 grammar. Full-width layout. Features 20 highlighted vocabulary items, four polls, and five creative discussion prompts including a sentence-completion exercise.
Lesson Plan
- Professional broadsheet masthead with date, issue number, and edition tagline
- Full-width layout (100%)
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Present Perfect for research findings: 'Finland has been ranked #1 for seven years'
- Passive Voice in reporting: 'Over 1,134 workers were killed in the Rana Plaza collapse'
- Comparatives in analysis: 'Spending on experiences produces longer-lasting happiness than material goods'
- First Conditional: 'If everyone stopped buying, businesses would close'
- Reported Speech: 'Psychologists call this the hedonic treadmill'
- Quantifiers with data: 'over 300,000 items', 'as little as $2 a day', '10% of global emissions'
- Defining relative clauses: 'People who are already unhappy benefit most from extra income'
- Purpose and result: so that, in order to, which means, as a result
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