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4 votes
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Trials of Mana | Gameplay trailer
3 votes -
Finnish director Jukka-Pekka Valkeapää ensured that his new film was torture for his actors, literally – but he insists his immersive methods are just like gardening
5 votes -
What are some great songs from your homeland?
Inspired by the @culturedleftfoot post. Try providing links, and, if you feel that your country is too big for this exercise to make sense, feel free to limit your choices to your region, state,...
Inspired by the @culturedleftfoot post.
Try providing links, and, if you feel that your country is too big for this exercise to make sense, feel free to limit your choices to your region, state, city or even neighborhood!
Definition of Homeland (adapted from Wikipedia):
A homeland is the concept of the place where a cultural, national, or racial identity had formed. It can also mean the country of nationality, the place in which somebody grew up or lived for a long enough period that shaped his or her cultural identity, the place in which one's ancestors live for generations, or the place that one regard it as home.
21 votes -
Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg says EU legislation to tackle climate change is a surrender
9 votes -
On Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire and other works
I recently finished reading Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire, and prior to that I read his novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. I was left feeling quite differently than what I was expecting to feel. I'm...
I recently finished reading Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire, and prior to that I read his novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. I was left feeling quite differently than what I was expecting to feel. I'm an outdoorsman, a conservationist and an activist. I spent a good portion of my time last year on The Colorado Plateau, much of it in the places Edward Abbey has been and discusses frequently in his work. There is a distinct emotional connection I feel to this land, so my mental conflictions are especially notable. I recently wrote a friend a letter, much of it including my thoughts on Abbey thus far, and I felt posting the relevant excerpt here would be a good conversation starter. Let me know what you think!
"I just finished Abbey's Desert Solitaire, while I enjoyed many aspects of the work, it also left me feeling conflicted. I wholeheartedly concur with many (but not all) of his views on conservation. He challenged my views in some positive aspects as well, his disdain for the automobile in national parks, for example. Other views of his I cannot ignore or absolve him of. His views on traditional family values (read: misogyny) are quite apparent in The Monkey Wrench Gang and seep into this work as well. Furthermore, his views on indigenous peoples are outdated, even for his time. His incessant diatribe on the blights that impact Native Americans and other indigenous populations, blaming their own attitudes (victim blaming, if you will), while simultaneously railing against the federal government and The Bureau of Indian Affairs is at best hypocritical (while also patently racist).
Edward Abbey's actions also do not reflect his writing. The man continually rants about the ongoing destruction of this Earth, he blames everybody (The National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, Forest Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, the modern consumer, tourists, oil and gas corporations, mining companies, logging businesses and wannabe outdoorsmen) but himself. He went so far as to work for the NPS, while admitting their culpability in their own decimation. During his time there he constantly capitulated to the tourists, the modern consumers in their iron contraptions. Some federal employees I've met have set out to change their respective agencies from within, but what did Abbey do? He left. He saw a problem, railed against it, and left.
So I ask: Why didn't he do more? It has been suggested that Ed had engaged in some less-than-peaceful activities, "eco-terrorism" they call it. I personally don't believe it, I believe that any actions taken were never near the magnitude of the happenings of The Monkey Wrench Gang. Ed's books were his personal fantasies, which while not a guide, a reference point. He prefaces Desert Solitaire, describing it as an elegy. Almost as if he is passing an extinguished torch on to our time. It is frustrating and demoralizing to say the least. While grateful to read his words and as much as I concur with his notions, I disagree with hits actions (or lack thereof). I finish this book left feeling angry."
4 votes -
Suckers list: How Allstate’s secret auto insurance algorithm squeezes big spenders in the US
7 votes -
A growing number of Danes choose cold water swimming as a way to invigorate the senses and combat their winter blues
6 votes -
The BMW logo – meaning and history
4 votes -
Folding@home takes up the fight against COVID-19
21 votes -
Joe Biden outperformed because he won US voters who decide late
17 votes -
Computational predictions of protein structures associated with COVID-19
5 votes -
Ghost of Tsushima | Story trailer - Releasing June 26, 2020
3 votes -
‘The Last of Us’ series in the works at HBO from ‘Chernobyl’ creator and the game's writer and creative director
8 votes -
David Rudder - Bahia Girl (2015)
5 votes -
"Both studies ... sought to pin down how many times the human brain oscillates in and out of focus per minute."
6 votes -
What creative projects have you been working on?
This topic is part of a series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss creative projects they have been working on. Projects can be personal, professional, physical, digital, or even just...
This topic is part of a series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss creative projects they have been working on.
Projects can be personal, professional, physical, digital, or even just ideas.
If you have any creative projects that you have been working on or want to eventually work on, this is a place for discussing those.
A list of all previous topics in this series can be found here.
12 votes -
Elizabeth Warren is ending her US presidential campaign
47 votes -
Fitness Weekly Discussion
What have you been doing lately for your own fitness? Try out any new programs or exercises? Have any questions for others about your training? Want to vent about poor behavior in the gym? Started...
What have you been doing lately for your own fitness? Try out any new programs or exercises? Have any questions for others about your training? Want to vent about poor behavior in the gym? Started a new diet or have a new recipe you want to share? Anything else health and wellness related?
12 votes -
Alligatoah - Willst Du [Mit Mir Drogen Nehmen?] (Wanna [Do Drugs With Me?]) (2013)
6 votes -
Health experts want to stop daylight-saving time
19 votes -
The normalization of far-right populism in Europe
8 votes -
Reply All #158 - The Case of the Missing Hit
7 votes -
The invisible city: How a homeless man built a life underground
10 votes -
Bogus automated copyright claims by CBS blocked Super Tuesday speeches by Bernie Sanders, Mike Bloomberg, and Joe Biden
11 votes -
Why Taiwan has just forty-two coronavirus cases while neighbors report hundreds or thousands
12 votes -
The 5th-generation Waymo Driver
7 votes -
Companies are contracting out more jobs—that’s not great for workers
10 votes -
Laravel 7 Released
3 votes -
Please stop recommending Git Flow
9 votes -
Anthony Levandowski, former head of Uber's self-driving unit, files for bankruptcy after a court confirms he would have to pay Google $179 million
7 votes -
NASA won't be able to send commands to Voyager 2 for the next eleven months, while upgrades are made to the Deep Space Network
8 votes -
A future with no future: depression, the left, and the politics of mental health
11 votes -
Four companies that reinvented themselves the right way… and won
7 votes -
Australian supermarkets can’t get loo rolls on shelves fast enough - and yet even toilet paper hoarders can’t fully explain why they are doing it
8 votes -
Apple now allows push notification advertising, updates dating app review guidelines and more
11 votes -
World’s intact tropical forests reached ‘peak carbon uptake’ in 1990s
5 votes -
ExoMars parachute tests delayed, mission faces review
4 votes -
The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen in conversation
5 votes -
Download the 'Nevertheless, She Persisted' short fiction bundle for free, starting this International Women’s Day
10 votes -
Investigation launched as Lilium Jet prototype is destroyed by fire
3 votes -
WFIRST, proposed for cancellation, is approved for development
3 votes -
Swim only when the wave comes
When I was young, I went into the ocean with my older cousin. He lived near the beach, while I merely knew how to swim. We went to the deep to catch some higher waves using our bodies (in Bahia we...
When I was young, I went into the ocean with my older cousin. He lived near the beach, while I merely knew how to swim.
We went to the deep to catch some higher waves using our bodies (in Bahia we call this "pegar jacaré", or "catch the alligator").
When we got there, the wind stopped and the stream started pulling us away from the land. After a while, I was very scared and started swimming with all my strength in the opposite direction. But my efforts were much weaker than the stream, so I remained in the same position.
Then my cousin told me: "@mrbig, stop swimming otherwise you'll get tired and drown. Wait for the wave to come. Only swim when it arrives."
And so I did. Minutes later came the wave. I swam. And then another, and another after that. Little by little, by saving our energies and acting at the right times, we arrived at the shore.
And that is the story.
18 votes -
Cost matters: Why Lambda School should have a lower success rate than college
3 votes -
No Time to Die, the newest James Bond film, will have its release delayed by seven months to November 2020
12 votes -
Coding and Tracing Workflow Remix (feat. Dark)
3 votes -
Falcon Heavy to launch NASA Psyche asteroid mission
6 votes -
Twitter starts testing its own version of Stories, called "Fleets," which disappear after twenty-four hours and can't receive likes, retweets, or replies
10 votes -
Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night cancels the "roguelike" game mode from the project's stretch goals, replaces it with a "randomizer" mode
7 votes -
The high-tech iBackpack received almost $800,000 from crowdfunding, but backers never received their bags. Now the creator is being sued by the FTC and state of Texas.
13 votes