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31 votes
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World War II ‘rumor clinics’ helped America battle wild gossip
7 votes -
Salvage of the century: The lost WWII gold of HMS Edinburgh
10 votes -
Battle to save pristine prehistoric rock art from vast new quarry in Norway – archaeologists fear more than 2,000 carved figures could be destroyed
19 votes -
Packages seized by the Royal Navy from a Faroese cargo ship bound for Denmark during the Napoleonic Wars opened – previously hidden away in the National Archives
9 votes -
The decimal point is 150 years older than previously thought, medieval manuscript reveals
16 votes -
The endangered languages of New York
16 votes -
Would Roman elections pass a UN inspection?
8 votes -
The Greenwich meridian's forgotten rival
4 votes -
An American education: Notes from UATX
4 votes -
How Finland survived a 1,000,000+ Soviet invasion (1939-1940)
13 votes -
Tell me about your weird religious beliefs
Let's hear about religious and spiritual (maybe philosophical?) beliefs not considered "mainstream" in the modern West. The percentage of people who identify as "spiritual", "other", or "none" is...
Let's hear about religious and spiritual (maybe philosophical?) beliefs not considered "mainstream" in the modern West.
The percentage of people who identify as "spiritual", "other", or "none" is rising at the expense of larger "organized" religions.
Disclaimer: it's hard if not impossible to draw hard lines around what is considered a "religion" verses a philosophy, culture, or mere ritual or traditional practice. If you aren't sure if what you believe fits the prompt, err on the side of sharing.
Things that probably fit the prompt:
- Minority religions
- Native beliefs/cultures
- Highly syncretic beliefs
- Non-western religions or beliefs
- "Pagan" beliefs
- Esoteric or occult beliefs or practices
Things that might not fit the prompt
- Mainstream Christian beliefs or traditions
- Naturalism or a lack of belief in any particular religious or spiritual tradition
I don't exclude these two categories because they aren't important, but because they are incredibly important, and most of what we think about religious or spiritual beliefs exist in frameworks created by the above two groups. I want to use this opportunity to learn about others, and I feel that I already know a good bit more about atheism and mainstream Christian theism than most other perspectives.
This is a sensitive subject that is tied deeply to people's sense of meaning; please treat your fellow commentor's beliefs, cultures, and values with respect. Thank you in advance for your input and perspective.
56 votes -
Modern Viking music: Tragedy of a misunderstood art
8 votes -
The Silk Road - Into far lands
2 votes -
List of unusual units of measurement
14 votes -
The American Idol theme park experience
20 votes -
What is India's "uniform civil code" and why does it anger Muslims?
17 votes -
Two waves of mass death hit prehistoric Denmark, with farmers wiping out hunter-gatherers and pastoralists later wiping out the farmers, genetic study reveals
15 votes -
What is the horrible phrase my wife learned from her grandpa?
Hello! My wife's grandfather would say the phrase "ʃɛkrɛplj jɛɽɛ" from what I can decode from the phonetic alphabet on Wikipedia, or my best English estimation "shikrepple yere" with a flipped r...
Hello! My wife's grandfather would say the phrase "ʃɛkrɛplj jɛɽɛ" from what I can decode from the phonetic alphabet on Wikipedia, or my best English estimation "shikrepple yere" with a flipped r if that makes no sense. He would say this when he lost a hand in poker, when she repeated it as a kid got chewed out and told not to say it, and he died without having ever said what it meant. He was stationed in Germany during the Korean War, so our best guess is something Polish..? But we can't find much that matches.
Tilderinos, can you translate what horrible phrase my wife has been casually repeating to people trying to figure it out and what language it's even in? Apologies if this is a slur or something... And thanks!
71 votes -
California's push for mandatory ethnic studies classes runs into the Israel-Palestine conflict in designing a curriculum
22 votes -
American Bar Association calls for US courts to find a different word than master, citing history and negative associations
28 votes -
Christian Super Bowl commercial outrages US conservatives
39 votes -
Does your Irish child speak with an American accent? The change may not last forever, linguistic expert says.
16 votes -
Swiss police probe hotel ski rental ban for Jewish guests
14 votes -
Why does the letter 'S' look like an 'F' in old manuscripts?
22 votes -
Mennonites are pious Christians who eschew much of the modern world. But in Mexico even they have not escaped the pull of the drug cartels.
24 votes -
Russell's Paradox
4 votes -
Bellevue, WA police responded to a call from a US Air Force museum that said a man had offered to donate a Cold War-era missile stored in his late neighbor’s garage
12 votes -
shī shì shí shī shǐ - Story of Stone Grotto Poet
14 votes -
More Americans are nonreligious. Who are they and what do they believe?
39 votes -
Welcome to Sealand, the world's smallest state
13 votes -
The parliament of Imperial Austria
6 votes -
The state of the world’s 7,168 living languages
18 votes -
The dirty secrets of Pompeii: Brothels, art, and more
15 votes -
Joscha Bach: Synthetic Sentience - Can Artificial Intelligence become conscious?
3 votes -
100 years since death of Lenin marked by silence from China’s Communist Party
20 votes -
The misguided war on the SAT
30 votes -
God and the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics
26 votes -
What happened to David Graeber?
6 votes -
DNA from stone age chewing gum sheds light on diet and disease in Scandinavia's ancient hunter-gatherers
11 votes -
Feminism versus multiculturalism [an argument against feminism and multiculturalism being 'incompatible']
5 votes -
Engraving on an almost 2,000-year-old knife believed to be the oldest runes ever found in Denmark
11 votes -
Tools for thinking about censorship
9 votes -
News sources or other subtitled media in Traditional Chinese?
So I recently got back from a very comforting trip to my motherland in Taiwan. I always joke that when I get back from Asia my Chinese gets better by a lot. One thing I kinda wish I was better at...
So I recently got back from a very comforting trip to my motherland in Taiwan. I always joke that when I get back from Asia my Chinese gets better by a lot.
One thing I kinda wish I was better at was reading Traditional Chinese, since it's one of the barriers I have for fully communicating with my family and dimishes my confidence when navigating Taiwan.
Don't get me wrong, I'm fluent in speaking, I've had full on conversations with native Taiwanese and they're always surprised that I'm from America.
At the same time I feel like I should be keeping up with the news and general day to day life in Taiwan, since I plan on visiting more often because my grandparents are getting older and I really miss the country a lot.
I know we have a couple of people who are in East Asian countries/Taiwanese/Taiwanese-adjacent, I was wondering if y'all had any suggestions on things like news channels on YouTube or day in the life content that I can follow along with and match characters to practice my reading a bit. I can read at maybe a kindergarten level if that helps LOL.
15 votes -
Ohio pastor charged for housing the homeless
45 votes -
The tragic story of this famous meteorite and the boy who fought the museum that took everything from him
14 votes -
Your favourite creators who cover non-Anglo countries/cultures in English?
(That title is kind of awkward, feel free to suggest a better one.) I came across aini's channel on Youtube a while back. She does videos on different topics focused on East Asia. Her most recent...
(That title is kind of awkward, feel free to suggest a better one.)
I came across aini's channel on Youtube a while back. She does videos on different topics focused on East Asia. Her most recent video being "Why Chinese People Will Choose $5 Over $10".
I'm especially interested in native creators; those who can present a personal view from the inside. Even more so for countries that are not as well-covered for whatever reason—like places with less technological access or government limitation.
My own preference is for a more analytical presentation. I.e. looking through an academic lens incorporating sociology, psychology, etc, rather than "footage of daily life". That style is still welcome, of course!
22 votes -
G36
9 votes -
No one's names were changed at Ellis Island
41 votes -
A brief history of the United States’ accents and dialects
12 votes