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26 votes
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Op-eds from the future: It’s 2059, and the rich kids are still winning
9 votes -
Disney's new 'Aladdin,' starring Will Smith, is a mostly pale imitation of the original
10 votes -
I oversaw the US nuclear power industry. Now I think it should be banned.
12 votes -
Why Ditching Processed Foods Won't Be Easy — The Barriers To Cooking From Scratch
8 votes -
I tried to sexually harass Siri, but all she did was give me a polite brush-off
5 votes -
Truly progressive policies to support stable, affordable rental housing for all are a golden political opportunity
11 votes -
Don’t visit your doctor in the afternoon - everyone suffers decision fatigue, even physicians
9 votes -
Will Republican climate change proposals work?
8 votes -
Math teachers should be more like football coaches
7 votes -
Which cities have concrete strategies for environmental justice?
3 votes -
An abhorrent post, but proverbial Folau death penalty a step too far
4 votes -
It's Time to Break Up Facebook
14 votes -
Don’t let industry write the rules for AI
4 votes -
Ligatures in programming fonts: hell no
9 votes -
Rust is not a good C replacement
27 votes -
Do you have certain genres/bands for certain moods? If so, what are they and why them in particular?
I, personally, have a lot of music I listen to, but I can't just throw anything on when I want to jam. I have certain bands and certain genres whenever I'm feeling strongly one way or the other....
I, personally, have a lot of music I listen to, but I can't just throw anything on when I want to jam. I have certain bands and certain genres whenever I'm feeling strongly one way or the other. Sad usually gets (to name a few) The Smiths, Blue October, or Motion City Soundtrack. Angry gets Periphery, some early Coheed and Cambria, or some early Incubus. Happy might get Weezer, Fleetwood Mac, or Polyphia. To name a few examples.
Or sometimes, I'm just feeling a certain band/sound and nothing else for days at a time. At the moment, it's been Thank You Scientist. If you can't put bands to emotions, what have you stuck on repeat lately?
14 votes -
The empty promise of suicide prevention: Many of the problems that lead people to kill themselves cannot be fixed with a little extra serotonin
19 votes -
The telegraph was America's first singularity
7 votes -
The only way to rein in Big Tech is to treat them as a public service
18 votes -
After the rain: The lasting effects of storms in the Caribbean
3 votes -
Cry for Notre-Dame, sure, but why not for treasures beyond the West?
20 votes -
The tyranny of convenience
12 votes -
The data all guilt-ridden parents need: What science tells us about breast-feeding, sleep training and all the agonizing decisions of parenthood
15 votes -
Carole Cadwalladr: Facebook's role in Brexit -- and the threat to UK democracy
10 votes -
Why you can no longer get lost in the crowd
12 votes -
Does empathy have a dark side?
10 votes -
"Making video games is not a dream job": "The workers behind hits like Fortnite and Call of Duty need unions to protect them from exploitation"
10 votes -
Psych and Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Alright. Psych is my absolute favourite series for many, many reasons. It was there in my good days, in my bad days. Comfort food absolute. I recently and finally started Brooklyn Nine-Nine and I...
Alright. Psych is my absolute favourite series for many, many reasons. It was there in my good days, in my bad days. Comfort food absolute.
I recently and finally started Brooklyn Nine-Nine and I absolutely love it as well. But I think part of it is how much of Shawn Spencer I see in Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg).
Anyone else see it? It's really striking to me. If you like either of these series I really highly recommend checking out the other one.
16 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg says he wants to fix the internet. Don't take him seriously.
7 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg: The internet needs new rules. Let’s start in these four areas
13 votes -
Jeff Bezos investigation finds the Saudis obtained his private data
10 votes -
Text, don't call: The new phone etiquette
14 votes -
What would happen if we just gave people money?
37 votes -
What rural America has to teach us
11 votes -
'Arrested Development' finishes with a whimper, not a bang
12 votes -
Go home to your ‘dying’ hometown
11 votes -
This is why we don't leave justice in the hands of victims
7 votes -
Jesus warned against men like Cardinal Pell. His message could save the Church.
4 votes -
Vaping is Big Tobacco’s bait and switch
6 votes -
Stop talking about testosterone – there’s no such thing as a ‘true sex’
6 votes -
The new ‘dream home’ should be a condo
20 votes -
The life of a comment moderator for a right-wing website
27 votes -
How to avoid a war in Venezuela
4 votes -
Yes, the Green New Deal is audacious. But we have no choice but to think big.
12 votes -
Time to panic - The planet is getting warmer in catastrophic ways. And fear may be the only thing that saves us.
20 votes -
When the cure is worse than the disease
13 votes -
They really don’t make music like they used to - A look at the "loudness war" and how it's affected the mastering of popular songs and this year's Grammy nominees
11 votes -
Let children get bored again
23 votes -
In a music world where rap/hip-hop are more prevalent than ever before, what rock bands are trying their best to innovate or keep it real?
It's neat that Rap/Hip-Hop is having a renaissance of sorts. However, I don't really like any of it. In an industry that claims rock is dying (or at least has been for several years), what rock...
It's neat that Rap/Hip-Hop is having a renaissance of sorts. However, I don't really like any of it. In an industry that claims rock is dying (or at least has been for several years), what rock bands have been killing it, spinning it in a new direction, or paying inspired and original homages to their rock forefathers?
14 votes