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2 votes
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How elite backlash to the populist reforms of the Gracchi brothers presaged the violent collapse of the Roman Republic
18 votes -
Building the worst WW2 air force - terrible aircraft and how to sell them (feat. @AnimarchyHistory)
17 votes -
Russian Civil War, Winter 1917-1918
4 votes -
Are we all capable of being slaveowners or nazis?
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot. I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the...
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot.
I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the current racial issues in America courtesy of The Daily Show and the George Floyd riots (along with binging Watchmen) turbo-charged my desire to know more about it.
and I read Night by Elie Wiesel when I was in high school and recently read Maus, neither of which are shy to fully express the horrors the Jews went through in the Holocaust.
And the recent discovery of unmarked graves of Indigenous children from Residential school in Canada have sent me down that rabbit-hole of learning exactly what the catholic church was up to in these parts.
But I think where I get stuck is I believe that everyone is capable of empathy for a fellow human being. besides the psychopaths and sociopaths, I think we all have an innate capability to care when we see someone crying or in a bad place.
And yet, those atrocities suggest that we can be condition to turn off our ability for empathy to quite an extreme degree? Is that something that can happen to all of us?
Not sure if this thread will be taken down as I don't know the potential for this to start a good discussion, just wasn't sure where else to post it.
29 votes -
Dowding: Man behind 'The Few' | Great British Battle Commanders
3 votes -
Conversational English in 1586
5 votes -
Nationalism, explained
9 votes -
Navajo code talker who helped allies win Second World War dies aged 107
30 votes -
Investigating the most extreme ancient village in the United States
9 votes -
German Navy Enigma machine systems were different to the Army, making them tougher to crack. In this video, James Grime discusses the differences and what Alan Turing achieved in breaking the code.
8 votes -
Where does punctuation come from?!
15 votes -
A brief history of the end of the world
9 votes -
We may be close to rediscovering thousands of texts that had been lost for millennia. Their contents may reshape how we understand the Ancient World.
41 votes