-
7 votes
-
China holding 800k Muslim minorities in internment camps
15 votes -
A Gale of Revolution in the Air
This is a speech that was delivered to the French National Assembly by Alexis de Tocqueville in January, 1848 - just a month before the outbreak of the 1848 "February Revolution." I find it to be...
This is a speech that was delivered to the French National Assembly by Alexis de Tocqueville in January, 1848 - just a month before the outbreak of the 1848 "February Revolution."
I find it to be remarkably prescient - even to this day - yet vastly underappreciated (at least from an American/English-speaking perspective).
I am told that there is no danger because there are no riots; I am told that, because there is no visible disorder on the surface of society, there is no revolution at hand.
Gentlemen, permit me to say that I believe you are mistaken. True, there is no actual disorder; but it has entered deeply into men's minds. See what is preparing itself amongst the working classes, who, I grant, are at present quiet. No doubt they are not disturbed by political passions, properly so called, to the same extent that they have been; but can you not see that their passions, instead of political, have become social? Do you not see that they are gradually forming opinions and ideas that are destined not only to upset this or that law, ministry, or even form of government, but society itself, until it totters upon the foundations on which it rests today? Do you not listen to what they say to themselves each day? Do you not hear them repeating unceasingly that all that is above them is incapable and unworthy of governing them; that the distribution of goods prevalent until now throughout the world is unjust; that property rests on a foundation that is not an equitable one? And do you not realize that when such opinions take root, when they spread in an almost universal manner, when they sink deeply into the masses, they are bound to bring with them sooner or later, I know not when or how, a most formidable revolution?
This, gentlemen, is my profound conviction: I believe that we are at this moment sleeping on a volcano. I am profoundly convinced of it.
I was saying just now that this evil would sooner or later, I know not how or whence it will come, bring with it a most serious revolution: be assured that that is so.-
When I come to investigate what, at different times, in different periods, among different peoples, has been the effective cause that has brought about the downfall of the governing classes, I perceive this or that event, man, or accidental or superficial cause; but, believe me, the real reason, the effective reason that causes men to lose political power is that they have become unworthy to retain it.
Think, gentlemen, of the old monarchy: it was stronger than you are, stronger in its origin; it was able to lean more than you do upon ancient customs, ancient habits, ancient beliefs; it was stronger than you are, and yet it has fallen to dust. And why did it fall? Do you think it was by the particular mischance? Do you think it was by the act some man, by the deficit, the oath in the tennis court, Lafayette, Mirabeau? No, gentlemen; there was another reason: the class that was then the governing class had become, through its indifference, its selfishness, and its vices, incapable and unworthy of governing the country.
That was the true reason.
Well, gentlemen, if it is right to have this patriotic prejudice at all times, how much more is it not right to have it in our own? Do you not feel, by some intuitive instinct that is not capable of analysis, but that is undeniable, that the earth is quaking once again in Europe? Do you not feel -- what shall I say? -- as it were a gale of revolution in the air? This gale, no one knows whence it springs, whence it blows, nor, believe me, whom it will carry with it; and it is in such times as these that you remain calm before the degradation of public morality -- for the expression is not too strong.
I speak here without bitterness; I am even addressing you without any party spirit; I am attacking men against whom I feel no vindictiveness. But I am obliged to communicate to my country my firm and profound conviction. Well, then, my firm and profound conviction is this: that public morality is being degraded, and that the degradation of public morality will shortly, very shortly perhaps, bring down upon you new revolutions. Is the life of kings held by stronger threads? And these more difficult to snap than those of other men? Can you say today that you are certain of tomorrow? Do you know what may happen in France a year hence, or even a month or a day hence? You do not know; but what you must know is that the tempest is looming on the horizon, that it is coming toward us. Will you allow it to take you by surprise?
Gentlemen, I implore you not to do so. I do not ask you, I implore you. I would gladly throw myself on my knees before you, so strongly do I believe in the reality and the seriousness of he danger, so convinced am I that my warnings are no empty rhetoric. Yes, the danger is great. Allay it while there is yet time; correct the evil by efficacious remedies, by attacking it not in its symptoms, but in itself.
Legislative changes have been spoken of. I am greatly disposed to think that these changes are not only very useful, but necessary; thus, I believe in the need of electoral reform, in the urgency of parliamentary reform; but I am not, gentlemen, so mad as not to know that no laws can affect the destinies of nations. No, it is not the mechanism of laws that produced great events, gentlemen, but the inner spirit of the government. Keep the laws as they are, if you wish. I think you would be very wrong to do so; but keep them. Keep the men, too, if it gives you any pleasure. I raise no objection so far as I am concerned. But, in God's name, change the spirit of the government; for, I repeat, that spirit will lead you to the abyss.
16 votes -
The Outer Worlds | Official announcement trailer
9 votes -
Major for-profit college chain abruptly announces closure of dozens of schools
12 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others'...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something!
Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
http://www.tapmusic.net/lastfm/
Remember that linking directly to your image will update with your future listening, make sure to reupload to somewhere like imgur if you'd like it to remain what you have at the time of posting.
12 votes -
What have you been watching/reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of. If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're...
Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its Anilist, MAL, or any other anime/manga database you use!
8 votes -
The 'great dying': Rapid warming caused largest extinction event ever, report says
13 votes -
An Indonesian city has launched a new campaign to "cleanse" LGBT people of their "social sickness" through religious exorcisms
7 votes -
Four days trapped at sea with crypto’s nouveau riche
16 votes -
Quake Champions' December update will remove lootboxes and switch to a new progression system, including a paid "Battle Pass"
8 votes -
Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide
8 votes -
The story behind Ansel Adams’ iconic ‘Moonrise, Hernandez’
4 votes -
Drunk man shouts 'Heil Hitler, Heil Trump,' does Nazi salute during intermission of Baltimore performance of 'Fiddler on the Roof'
23 votes -
The HU - Yuve Yuve Yu (How Strange) (2018)
3 votes -
How the lowly sneaker conquered the world
5 votes -
Killing in the Name of A Thousand Miles - RatM + Vanessa Carlton mashup (2018)
10 votes -
Wall Street rule for the #metoo era: Avoid women at all cost
25 votes -
Banda Magda, "Tam Tam" | NPR Music (Night Owl S2 • E4)
2 votes -
Bear Ghost - Necromancin Dancin (2016)
4 votes -
New study shows Medicare-For-All savings likely 2.5x previous estimates
15 votes -
Scientists at the University of Oxford unifying dark matter and dark energy into a single phenomenon: a fluid which possesses 'negative mass"
27 votes -
As US coal use drops to 1979 levels, Environmental Protection Agency may ease rules on new coal plants
7 votes -
Canada arrests Huawei CFO. She faces US extradition for allegedly violating Iran sanctions
14 votes -
The Roman triumph
12 votes -
Hulu and Funimation agree to multi-year partnership
9 votes -
Californication on FLOPPOTRON (Red Hot Chili Peppers cover) (2018)
5 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg's biggest problem: Internal tensions at Facebook are boiling over
12 votes -
Advent of Code 2018 - a Christmas Themed HackerRank-like mini project
14 votes -
~music Weekly Music Share Thread #2 - Guilty Pleasures
This week let's share some of those favorite tracks that you don't usually advertise to other people - the guilty pleasures. The ones that tend to make music critics and other music lovers cringe,...
This week let's share some of those favorite tracks that you don't usually advertise to other people - the guilty pleasures. The ones that tend to make music critics and other music lovers cringe, and garner raised eyebrows from your friends and family. We've all got them hiding in our playlists.
Thanks @ainar-g for the topic suggestion. Feel free to suggest topics for upcoming threads in the comments, and happy listening. :)
8 votes -
Launch of the Progressive International, November 30, 2018, Vermont
2 votes -
SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage booster spins out of control on descent back to Cape Canaveral LZ-1
12 votes -
Bowel movement: The push to change the way you poo
10 votes -
Weewarrasauras: Lightning Ridge discovery the first dinosaur to be named in NSW in almost a century
2 votes -
ban ban ton ton: Stubb's Psychedelic Afro Mix
3 votes -
The International Gymnastics Federation wants to recognise parkour as a new discipline, with a view to Olympic inclusion in 2024. But the parkour community is opposing the FIG’s efforts.
10 votes -
Debunking the bitcoin death spiral theory
10 votes -
The Confederacy was built on slavery. How can so many southern whites still believe otherwise?
20 votes -
Top thirteen conferences for CIOs in 2019
3 votes -
Lost lands? The American wilderness at risk in the Donald Trump era.
11 votes -
How millennials are breathing fresh life into the ancient Irish language
9 votes -
Do we need to hide who we are to speak freely in the era of identity politics?
20 votes -
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Shallow Be Thy Game (1995)
4 votes -
Australian army captain sentenced to three months in jail over beer bottle rape 'prank'
4 votes -
Magnitude-7.5 earthquake sparks tsunami warning for New Caledonia, Vanuatu, but no major damage reported
5 votes -
What Makes BeOS and Haiku Unique
20 votes -
Samsung used a DSLR photo to fake their phone's portrait mode functionality
16 votes -
Fallout 76 is actually brilliant
7 votes -
What is the biggest change you've ever made to your diet?
In mid-2012 I decided to become a vegetarian, both for health and ethical reasons. Before then I had mostly been on autopilot when it came to food - I just ate what what was the norm in my family....
In mid-2012 I decided to become a vegetarian, both for health and ethical reasons. Before then I had mostly been on autopilot when it came to food - I just ate what what was the norm in my family. My choice forced me to get out of my comfort zone, to try out new foods I had never considered before. For this reason, the change has been incredibly positive to me; I'm much more conscious of what I eat now. And by setting a precedent it later helped me make more changes, like cutting down sugar. I'm currently testing to see if the bloating and stomach aches I suffer daily are because I am lactose intolerant; if it is indeed the case, that will require another drastic change, although this particular one will be by necessity rather than choice.
What is the biggest change you've ever made to your diet? Was it by choice, or did you feel obligated to do so, for example because of health issues? What did you get out of it? How much thought do you put in your daily diet, in general?
22 votes -
General Fuzz - Liquid Jazz
2 votes