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11 votes
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David Hogg, after Parkland. Furious and unflinching, an NRA enemy, an accused “crisis actor,” and a high-school grad trying to figure out what’s next.
8 votes -
New tool maps every active construction project in NYC in real time
7 votes -
What style of parent are you? It affects how much your children remember.
10 votes -
Some au pairs, in US through this visa program, say they’re treated worse than a pet
4 votes -
How to destroy people: Japan's untouchables
11 votes -
Growing-ups: Living with your parents, single and with no clear career. Is this a failure to grow up or a whole new stage of life?
29 votes -
Toxic masculinity: Helping men understand the impact of their behaviour
45 votes -
Shocking pictures show Indonesian preschoolers dressed in ‘ISIS costumes’
From Al Arabiya: Shocking pictures show Indonesian preschoolers dressed in ‘ISIS costumes’ From the Guardian: Kindergarten dresses children as jihadists for parade in Indonesia From the Australian...
From Al Arabiya: Shocking pictures show Indonesian preschoolers dressed in ‘ISIS costumes’
From the Guardian: Kindergarten dresses children as jihadists for parade in Indonesia
From the Australian Broadcasting Commission: Kindergarten under fire after parading children in niqabs, AK47s on Indonesian Independence Day
2 votes -
In the Cape Town enclave that survived apartheid, the new enemy is gentrification
4 votes -
Private dog cloning, what are your thoughts?
I had a discussion today about the ethics of cloning your pets. It's a thing you can currently pay (a lot) of money for, but I don't really see much discussion about it, even though it's absurdly...
I had a discussion today about the ethics of cloning your pets. It's a thing you can currently pay (a lot) of money for, but I don't really see much discussion about it, even though it's absurdly sci-fi and a little crazy to me that it's a real business.
So what are your thoughts? Is it ethical? Is it a bit weird? Is it perfectly healthy?
17 votes -
How to hire
5 votes -
How the everyday commute is changing who we are
9 votes -
The billionaire house hostage saga of Azealia Banks, Elon Musk, and Grimes, explained
12 votes -
Digital hygiene: How we might've fucked our attention spans
13 votes -
People Start Hating Their Jobs at Age 35
25 votes -
Low-income Canadians spend 9% of annual income on communications services: CRTC
8 votes -
Traveling the world on a third world passport
4 votes -
Inside Hong Kong's cage homes
12 votes -
Schrödinger's rapist
18 votes -
Women are 75% more likely to watch hardcore videos and 63% more likely to watch rough sex videos compared to men
9 votes -
The Indian-Australian millennials who are choosing arranged marriage
5 votes -
Society relies so heavily on plastic bags that it’s easy to forget they haven’t always been here. Initially, they got a poor reception.
21 votes -
Tiny homes, big community: Okotoks exploring affordable, eco-friendly homes
11 votes -
Three Canadian cities make top ten on global ranking of most livable cities
7 votes -
The world's most liveable cities in 2018
2 votes -
Working four-day weeks for five days’ pay? Research shows it pays off.
19 votes -
‘Just a piece of meat’: How homeless women have little choice but to use sex for survival
11 votes -
What is education for?
9 votes -
How to start a movement | Derek Sivers
2 votes -
Yuval Noah Harari on what the year 2050 has in store for humankind
5 votes -
Five reasons why the company you want to work for won’t hire telecommuters (and four ways to get hired anyway)
4 votes -
It’s not about money: we asked catfish why they trick people online
7 votes -
Open plan offices are now the dumbest management fad of all time
9 votes -
Overall health includes oral health: Should dental be part of universal health care
21 votes -
Is the door too open or too closed when it comes to population?
2 votes -
How the “happiest Muslims in the world” are coping with their happiness
8 votes -
Flexible working becoming the norm
5 votes -
Peep Shows, STD Scams, and Freak Shows: Inside the Bowery's Bad Old Days
2 votes -
How hidden bias can stop you getting a job
6 votes -
What it takes to be a trial lawyer if you're not a man
10 votes -
The age that women have babies: How a gap divides America
10 votes -
sometimes in life its enjoyable to take a step back and realize that everyone is a protaginst in their own little world.
I notice this from time to time. That mailman? He probably is holding this job to feed his family. Same with the 40 year old man at your local grocery store. Its just mind boggling, the scale and...
I notice this from time to time. That mailman? He probably is holding this job to feed his family. Same with the 40 year old man at your local grocery store. Its just mind boggling, the scale and scope of this world; we retreat into our own little world at times yet the world is not small, its huge.
also i spelled protagonist wrong oops
21 votes -
A new wave of hardline anti-BDS tactics are targetting students, and no one knows who's behind it
6 votes -
What do 90-somethings regret most?
7 votes -
The curfew myth
5 votes -
Ontario PC voter worried about family's future without basic income pilot
13 votes -
"We rise together, homie" - Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
3 votes -
My son, Osama: The al-Qaida leader’s mother speaks for the first time
11 votes -
Letters to the editor in response to "Motherhood in the Age of Fear"
7 votes