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3 votes
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Denmark’s 300-year-old homes of the future – thatched with a seaweed that has the potential to be a contemporary building material
6 votes -
The ways that a cheese can go extinct, and the cheesemakers who are working to save them
10 votes -
Bisexuality exists: Bisexual attraction study upends decades of flawed research
27 votes -
Time killers: The strange history of wrist gaming
3 votes -
The best Black movies of the last thirty years
14 votes -
The rise, fall, and rise of the status pineapple
9 votes -
With Obama saying "the filibuster is a 'Jim Crow relic' ”, it’s looking more and more like Democrats will abolish the filibuster if they win back the Senate
21 votes -
Fleischer Studios taught Superman to quit leaping and fly
5 votes -
Reconstructing ballroom history: Older generations vs. today
5 votes -
The Caverns of Freitag: An obscure Apple II game that inspired the Japanese game Dragon Slayer, and helped birth the Action RPG genre
4 votes -
May we all be so brave as 19th century female husbands
11 votes -
Socialism’s DIY computer
12 votes -
The Numidian Cavalry | Units of History
4 votes -
The war between alt.tasteless and rec.pets.cats
20 votes -
How Southern socialites rewrote civil war history
3 votes -
Bread, how did they make it? Part I: Farmers!
4 votes -
Hiroshima (1946)
5 votes -
Annunciation Triptych - Thank God for the details
2 votes -
Arabic in the Sky
6 votes -
Steven Bradbury, Australia’s last man standing
4 votes -
The greatest Olympic cheat - The curious case of the electrified épée
11 votes -
The village that the Luftwaffe bombed by mistake
9 votes -
Do you have any quotes or articles that you now find prescient to share?
I have these 2 quotes here. This quote is apparently from this book, cited in this article: If the two parties do not develop alternative programs that can be executed, the voter’s frustration and...
I have these 2 quotes here. This quote is apparently from this book, cited in this article:
If the two parties do not develop alternative programs that can be executed, the voter’s frustration and the mounting ambiguities of national policy might also set in motion more extreme tendencies to the political left and the political right. This, again, would represent a condition to which neither our political institutions nor our civic habits are adapted. Once a deep political cleavage develops between opposing groups, each group naturally works to keep it deep. Such groups may gravitate beyond the confines of the American system of government and its democratic institutions.
Assuming a survival of the two-party system in form though not in spirit, even if only one of the diametrically opposite parties comes to flirt with unconstitutional means and ends, the consequences would be serious. For then the constitution-minded electorate would be virtually reduced to a one-party system with no practical alternative to holding to the “safe” party at all cost.
Wow.
There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution. -John Adams
There is also this text from the Pew Political Typology of the US in 1999 which I found somewhat funny:
The polling shows more compassion toward the poor and less hostility toward immigrants. A greater percentage in this survey than in the recent past think the government should do more to help needy people, and fewer express strong support for tightening our borders to further restrict immigration. Both of these trends may reflect the increased economic satisfaction and diminished financial pressure registered in this year’s survey. Gains in economic contentment have been greatest among upper income groups, while people in the lowest income category report less financial pressure but no more financial satisfaction than in the mid-1990s. Unexpectedly, despite these trends, Americans report no greater satisfaction with their wages than in the recent past. In fact, middle-income people are less satisfied than they were in 1994.
DAMAGED AND SCUFFED, MY HANDS HAVE BEEN CUFFED, BUT I DON'T PLAN TO GET HUFF, FRANTIC AND PUFF OR PLAN TO GIVE U-
That has aged pretty uniquely if you see it as the immediate effects of neoliberalism.
Anyway, do you have anything to share?
12 votes -
How Hypnospace Outlaw captured the 90s internet aesthetic through creative self-sabotage
2 votes -
A website that tells you the age of the actors in any movie
5 votes -
What do you think of alternate history?
I tend to watch AlternateHistoryHub, WhatIfAlthist and occasionally Monsieur Z (but less so since the guy somehow got a far-right audience) so I've always been interested in the idea of alternate...
I tend to watch AlternateHistoryHub, WhatIfAlthist and occasionally Monsieur Z (but less so since the guy somehow got a far-right audience) so I've always been interested in the idea of alternate history.
However, there's more than that. There are books and writers (I.E Harry turtledove), 3 subreddits (r/historywhatif, r/historicalwhatif and r/alternatehistory), many games (HOI I, II, III and IV, civ 1-6, Vicky 1-3, etc), a forum and according to Wikipedia, people have been speculating about history since before the year 0.
So what do you think of it?
7 votes -
Eight surprising literary Easter eggs
2 votes -
The rise and fall of Adobe Flash
10 votes -
The oldest restaurant in (almost) every country
8 votes -
'Gone With the Wind' and the difference between censorship and context
6 votes -
How Neapolitan cuisine took over the world
7 votes -
Xerox PARC is fifty
10 votes -
So you think you know the banjo?
6 votes -
The time Bernie Sanders almost ran against Barack Obama, explained
5 votes -
The five most over-hyped tech devices
6 votes -
The Walkman, forty years on
6 votes -
Our country is in chaos. But it's a great time to be an American
12 votes -
Hannibal, Rome's greatest enemy (parts 1 - 5) | Second Punic War
7 votes -
How Vim became so popular
22 votes -
16th century bookwheels, the e-readers of the Renaissance, get brought to life by 21st century designers
3 votes -
The Republican choice: How the GOP chose to spend five decades making itself the white voter's party
21 votes -
Finland's air force quietly drops swastika symbol – the air force has been using a swastika ever since it was founded in 1918, shortly after the country became independent
13 votes -
The hidden history of Paris Is Burning
3 votes -
Trainwreckords: "Two the Hard Way" by Cher and Gregg Allman
4 votes -
What an underground nuclear test actually looks like
8 votes -
Tom Scott vs Irving Finkel: The Royal Game of Ur
11 votes -
How 'Star Trek' made history twenty-two years ago with a same-sex kiss (2018)
10 votes -
Brian Laudrup looks back on how the Danes defied the odds to become the unlikely champions of Euro '92
4 votes -
Party and protest: The radical history of gay liberation, Stonewall and Pride
7 votes