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2 votes
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The 2,000 year-old city of mosaics
2 votes -
Jack Conroy, proletarian author and editor, supported important 20th century US poets
4 votes -
Data show that the amount of sexual content in top films has sharply declined since 2000
33 votes -
The methodical plan to erase Chicago
4 votes -
‘He craved an Oscar’: James Baldwin’s long campaign to crack Hollywood
8 votes -
Japan’s “Wasan” mathematical tradition: Surprising discoveries in an age of seclusion
8 votes -
The state as blunt force - impressions of the Columbia campus clearance
10 votes -
How many clicks does it take to get to the center of Diablo? [A franchise retrospective]
8 votes -
Meet Chicago's Rat Queen (w/ Rob Scallon) | Rats pt. 1
4 votes -
Viral lost song ‘Ulterior Motives’ found in obscure ‘80s porn flick
59 votes -
The world's oldest hat shop that fitted James Bond
4 votes -
Cocoa price swings are the craziest since the 1970s
14 votes -
What the first astronauts (and cosmonauts) ate - Food in space
3 votes -
Game Boy games that did the impossible
10 votes -
Utopian Scholastic
12 votes -
The beautiful dissociation of the Japanese language
31 votes -
Remembering the time Throbbing Gristle played at a private school
14 votes -
Does light itself truly have an infinite lifetime?
10 votes -
Eleanor Johnson on how medieval christian writers accepted ecological collapse in contrast to evangelicals today
11 votes -
B-17 Flying Fortress | Units of History
6 votes -
Fellow Canadians, what's on your mind this week?
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things. The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with...
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things.
The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with the expectation that cities build higher density dwellings is... Something they should have done mid mandate?
Is there even time to implement this stuff? Are we getting close to the point where we've spent too much?
Second is a quote from a compilation of personal accounts from travellers into this country's north in the 1800s. Farley Mowat assembled the stories and wrote the forward for "Tundra" in the 1960s and says the following
"Until 50 or 60 years ago, the Arctic was a living reality to North Americans of every walk of life. It had become real because men of their own kind were daring it's remote fastness in search of pure adventure", unprotected by the vast mechanical shields that we now demand whenever we step out of our air conditioned sanctuaries".
He goes on to talk about how -- most of all -- easily heated dwellings and running water had a softening effect on people, and that (basically) we fear and avoid Canada's climate far more than our forebearers did.
Wondering what people's thoughts on this are.
From what you learned from grandparents or earlier generations about spending time outside, would you agree that the comforts of home are just too damned seductive?
13 votes -
Oysters: The luxury delicacy that was once a fast-food fad
14 votes -
Fifty years later, this Apollo-era antenna still talks to Voyager 2
14 votes -
Why Frank Lloyd Wright was so good
4 votes -
The facts and fantasies of dissociation
5 votes -
Zilog discontinues production of original Z80 processor after 48 years
28 votes -
Making the Macintosh: Technology and culture in Silicon Valley
11 votes -
Turning old maps into 3D digital models of lost neighborhoods
9 votes -
Remembering the man who helped save Star Trek the original series
13 votes -
Free Companies: The age of mercenary companies
7 votes -
How the 18th-century gay bar survived and thrived in a deadly environment
13 votes -
Why the short-lived Calvin and Hobbes is still one of the most beloved and influential comic strips
35 votes -
The forgotten war on beepers
20 votes -
‘It’s plain elitist’: anger at Greek plan for €5,000 private tours of Acropolis
21 votes -
There used to be a people’s bank at the US Post Office
37 votes -
Everybody's obsessed with the retro corporate aesthetic
6 votes -
The hazy evolution of cannabis
3 votes -
The Lonely Island beginnings | The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast - Episode 1
14 votes -
Volvo is celebrating its 97th birthday with the opening of what it calls "World of Volvo" in the company's hometown of Gothenburg, Sweden
7 votes -
The Museum of Science and Industry abruptly closed for a day last week to allow it to move “military artifacts from archival storage”
26 votes -
Six badass librarians who changed history
13 votes -
We made and distilled the 1886 Pemberton Coca Cola recipe from 'Glen And Friends' then taste tested the results with Glen
7 votes -
How to make a time capsule
5 votes -
In the years after World War II, neutral, peace-loving Sweden embarked on an ambitious plan – build its own atomic bomb
16 votes -
The story of The Oregon Trail
18 votes -
The making of Pentiment
7 votes -
Airline food during the golden age of air travel
13 votes -
Explore Edvard Munch's masterpiece “The Scream,” and find out why this artwork became one of the world's most famous paintings | Noah Charney
3 votes -
Insular India - A video on the archaeological legacies of the Indian subcontinent
5 votes