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15 Aug 10:24

Burritos de frijol y huevo. Receta para el regreso a clases

by Mary Soco

Burritos de frijol y huevo. Receta para el regreso a clases

Todos recordamos con cierto cariño aquellos días en los que nos saltábamos el desayuno, o almorzábamos rápidamente entre clases, y quizá con cierta nostalgia aquellos días en los que por mil razones pasábamos largas horas sin probar bocado. Si bien es cierto, son recuerdos entrañables, pero también son hábitos poco saludables que merman nuestra salud.

Así que, aprovechando que el regreso a clases está a tan sólo unos días, he querido compartir con ustedes esta receta de burritos de frijol y huevo, que podemos preparar con anticipación, refrigerarlos, y calentarlos rápidamente en un horno de microondas antes de comenzar la jornada.

Ingredientes para 2 personas

  • 1/2 taza de frijoles refritos, 100 gramos de queso Oaxaca, 2 huevos, 1/4 de cebolla, salsa roja o verde, 4 tortillas de harina, 1 cucharada de mantequilla.

Cómo hacer burritos de frijol y huevo

Lo primero que haremos es preparar unos huevos revueltos, para ello, freímos la cebolla finamente picada en una sartén caliente, agregamos los huevos previamente batidos y sazonamos con sal y pimienta. Cocinamos moviendo constantemente hasta que estén cocidos.

Calentamos las tortillas de harina unos segundos para suavizarlas, y en cada una de ellas colocamos en el centro un poco de quesillo deshebrado, dos cucharadas de frijoles refritos, 2 cucharadas de huevos revueltos y unas gotitas de salsa fresca.

burritos de frijol y huevo - pasos

A continuación, damos forma a los burritos, procurando que queden bien cerrados. Para ello, doblamos un poco los extremos y enrollamos, para luego dorarlos en una sartén untada con mantequilla.

Degustación

Desde luego, estos burritos de frijol y huevo saben mejor si se comen calientes, pero no saben mal si se comen fríos. Si se comen calientes, disfrutaremos del queso derretido que a todos gusta. Está hecho a base de alimentos ricos en nutrientes que nos ayudarán a empezar el día con mucha energía.

Por cierto, no olviden acompañar su desayuno con una porción de fruta, ya sea un plátano, unas fresas, un jugo de naranja o incluso unas guayabas. No les hará ningún daño, y les alegrará la mañana.

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La noticia Burritos de frijol y huevo. Receta para el regreso a clases fue publicada originalmente en Directo al Paladar México por Mary Soco .

15 Aug 10:23

Test de Situación Extraña para Niños

by Sergio Parra

baby.jpgLa mayoría de los delincuentes jóvenes han sido abandonados en su infancia y albergan sentimientos de ira, humillación e inutilidad por este hecho, como si no fueran lo suficientemente buenos para sus padres.

Es lo que descubrió en 1944 el psicólogo británico John Bowlby. Para afrontar esta sensación de abandono, esos chicos reprimían los afectos. Porque lo que más necesitan los niños para desarrollarse correctamente en este sentido son dos fuerzas en apariencia contradictorias.

La primera es que exista seguridad y atención por parte de quienes les cuidan. La segunda es que necesitan salir al mundo y cuidar de sí mismos. Parecen factores contradictorios, pero en realidad se necesitan mutuamente, tal y como explica David Brooks en su libro El animal social:

Cuanto más segura se siente una persona en casa, más probable es que se aventure con atrevimiento a explorar cosas nuevas. (…) Por ejemplo, nace un bebé con cierto rasgo innato, como la irratibilidad. Sin embargo, es afortunado por tener una madre capaz de interpretar sus estados de ánimo. Lo abraza cuando él quiere abrazos, y lo deja cuando él quiere que lo dejen. Lo estimula cuando quiere estimulación y lo refrena cuando quiere tranquilidad. El bebé aprende que es una criatura que existen en diálogo con otros. Llega a considerar el mundo como un conjunto de diálogos coherentes. También aprende a que si manda señalas, éstas seguramente serán recibidas.

En otras palabras, los niños que se crían en un lugar acogedor, generalmente se relacionarán armónicamente con los demás, captando correctamente las señales sociales de las personas con las que se topan, aunque sean nuevas. Los nacidos en una red de relaciones amenazadoras serán miedosos, retraídos o agresivos. Suelen percibir amenazas, aunque no haya ninguna.

Dejando al niño solo

lmspic.jpgMary Ainsworth, la protegida de Bolwby, diseñó el Test de Situación Extraña para analizar la transición entre la seguridad del hogar y la exploración del mundo. Es decir, la forma en que se comporta el niño, aunque solo sea por unos minutos, cuando se separa de la figura de apego y se le obliga a explorar el mundo por su cuenta.

En una variante típica del test, Ainsworth colocaba a un niño pequeño (entre nueve y dieciocho meses de edad) y su madre en una habitación llena de juguetes que invitaban a la exploración. De pronto entraba un desconocido. Entonces la madre dejaba al niño a solas con el recién llegado. Más tarde la madre regresaba. Luego, ella y el desconocido dejaban al niño solo. Después regresaba el desconocido. Ainswotrh y sus colegas observaron al niño en cada una de esas transiciones.

Después de emplear este Test en miles de niños durante décadas, los porcentajes son los siguientes: aproximadamente dos tercios de los niños lloran un poco cuando su madre se marcha, y luego se precipitan hacia ella cuando regresa. Una quinta parte de los niños no muestra ninguna reacción cuando su madre se marcha, y tampoco reaccionan a su regreso. Se dice entonces que tienen un apego evitante. El último grupo no muestra respuestas coherentes. Entonces estamos ante niños ambivalentes o desorganizados.

Estas clasificaciones, como todas las realizadas en sociología, no determinan una vida, pero sí parece que predisponen. Los niños con apego firma suelen tener más amigos en el colegio. Saben relacionarse con profesores y otros adultos. Su rendimiento escolar será mejor.

Los niños con apego firme suelen afrontar bien las situaciones estresantes. En un estudio de Megan Gunnar, de la Universidad de Minnesota, se observó que si se pone una inyección a un niño de quince meses con apego firme, llorará de dolor, pero el nivel de cortisol de su cuerpo no aumentará. Los niños sin apego firme quizá lloren con igual fuerza, pero tal vez no extiendan el brazo hacia su cuidador y es más probable que los niveles de cortisol suban mucho, pues están habituados a sentir más estrés existencial.

Foto | Carin Araujo | Blackcatuk

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La noticia Test de Situación Extraña para Niños fue publicada originalmente en Xatakaciencia por Sergio Parra.




15 Aug 10:20

Sex Parties and Non-Monogamy

by karleyslutever

Last weekend I went to my first ever sex party to do some “research” on non-monogamous relationships. Ya know, I think those orgy people might be onto something… Read my new Breathless for Vogue HERE :)

15 Aug 10:12

Why Does This Comic Book Hero Appear On So Many New Guinea War Shields?

by Vincze Miklós

Why Does This Comic Book Hero Appear On So Many New Guinea War Shields?

Lee Falk's hero the Phantom made his comic book debut in February 1936, but he also appears on dozens of traditional war shields made by people from the Central Highlands of Papua New Guinea between the 1960s and 1980s. Why?

Read more...








14 Aug 22:15

Life After Death: Clinging to Punk Rock with CJ Ramone

by Daniel Genis

CJ Ramone alongside a painting of him by artist and punk fanatic Jesse Mosher. Photos by Petra Szabo unless otherwise noted

“Every time I asked for a raise and they said no, I just shaved my head. Eventually Johnny—and it was always Johnny—realized that I wasn’t bluffing, and would cooperate.”

CJ Ramone, the youngest of the seven men to carry that name, is telling me about the process of joining the only American band that can be rightly called the kings of punk rock. He was brought on board in 1989, deserting from the US Marine Corps. The Ramones changed the face of music by introducing their rapid version of punk 15 years earlier, when there were still hippies to shock with the stuff. CJ was joining punk royalty, then, playing and touring with the band until they broke up in 1996. Those seven years, during which he was first threatened and then mentored by Dee Dee, saw CJ grow into the famous leather jackets that Tommy had envisioned as the Ramones uniform.

But Tommy Ramone died last month. Originally Erdelyi Tamas, a name my Hungarian wife can pronounce better than I, he was the last survivor of the four men who got together in the decidedly uncool New York neighborhood of Forest Hills, Queens, to form the Ramones in 1974. Without the influence of the British invasion or the Eastern stuff that a lot of late 60s bands had incorporated, the Ramones made rock seemingly composed entirely of American influences. The music, which is fast and aggressive, is sort-of like Motown sped up—the 50s again after being disgusted by the 60s. Tommy was the Svengali of the band. He may have served as the drummer and thus not been in the spotlight, but he also arranged for the Ramones’ look and even dictated the proper way a Ramone should walk. After all, he was originally the manager and not a performer. According to CJ, Tommy took over the drums when he could not find a musician capable of fitting in with the unique and fast-paced sound of the band. Then he left the Ramones in 1978 to become a producer, though he did co-produce their seminal album Too Tough to Die six years later.

With the death of the last of the original four, those who have been saying that punk is dead can hold the occasion up as evidence that now it’s definitely all over. The Paul McCartney of a band once called the second greatest of all time after the Beatles by Spin magazine is gone. Sure, there are three Ramones left—three men playing under this name, which didn’t really belong to anyone as no one in the band was related. McCartney used the pseudonym Paul Ramon in his Silver Beatle days and CJ Ramone uses it still. But with the passing of Tommy, are The Ramones—cultural institution—totally behind us now? Are the other three men playing under the name a vain nostalgia act, a tribute band, or something else? Is this the final nail in the coffin of punk rock?

In hopes of answering these questions, I recently spent a rather long evening with CJ Ramone and Jesse Mosher, the man who maniacally paints the Ramones over and over again. Tommy’s death was a blow, but the Ramones are far from dead, they told me. The band may have stopped touring in 1996, but as long as there is a single guy with the adoptive last name Ramone on stage and a mad artist thrashing around painting him, it’s not quite right to say The Ramones are gone from this Earth. Tommy had bile duct cancer, but the common association of the band with drugs—while legitimately prompted by some of their references to sniffing glue and their signature song “I Wanna Be Sedated”—is somewhat inaccurate. CJ Ramone is a sober man, fit and healthy as any ex-marine should be, even though he had to go AWOL from Parris Island, a Marine training facility in South Carolina, to join the band in 1989. Dee Dee did have his problems, and they eventually led to his death of a drug overdose in 2002. Joey Ramone, meanwhile, died of lymphoma in 2001, and Johnny succumbed to prostate cancer in 2004. But a band that played together for over two decades could not have been a bunch of goons huddled over a glue pot, despite what the lyrics led some to believe.

The Ramones acquired new members over the years, but it was the addition of CJ that "kept the band young," according to Tommy, who said as much on stage as they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame In 2002. In essence, CJ took over for Dee Dee, and the story of their relationship is an unusual one. CJ got a phone call at the Marine base saying he was in. Unfortunately, there was no one around to celebrate with, since he was in the brig at the time. This is not the story of a fan’s dream coming to life per se, but of a musician being drafted into a band that had already been touring for 15 years.

CJ took a bus to New York—the military hadn’t liked that he kept both ears pierced anyway. Little did he know that Dee Dee had promised to shoot him on sight. Given his reputation, CJ took the threat seriously. After all, he was just 23 and fresh out of the military, where there was plenty of shooting, and here was 40-something Dee Dee, promising to murder him. Fortunately, CJ had a few friends in the Hell’s Angels who didn’t mind being brought on as his security and watching a few shows. CJ’s parents were at the first show, too; after all, here was the kid that no one in their Long Island town was allowed to play with, and now he was a rock star.

After a while it became clear that Dee Dee was bluffing, but the two men still only met at rehearsals. It took a global tour for Dee Dee to accept that CJ was worthy of the mantle, and they became friends, despite the senior Ramone’s growing addiction to heroin, their difference in age, and CJ’s health and vitality. The days when Dee Dee routinely showed CJ a switchblade marked for him, causing a terrified CJ to barricade his door on tour with a bookcase, were over, and Dee Dee became a mentor of sorts. As a younger man, CJ wanted to learn how to play the bass like Dee Dee. As an older man, he learned how to be a Ramone directly from him.

The original Ramones playing at the Electric Ballroom in London in 1980. Photo via Flickr user Klaus Hiltscher

The Ramones toured, pretty much non-stop, for 22 years. That adds up to 2,263 concerts, according to their official site. Not a bad run, and CJ spent seven years on it. He may have been the ‘kid’ at first, nine years younger than any other member, but he soon learned how to have some influence. Dee Dee, the original Ramone, continued to write music for the band, but in CJ’s words, “He got tired of being in a revival band.” Why did they keep touring for all those years? No one minded the money, but the Ramones were also obsessively interested in pleasing their fans. So even at the very end, when it felt like they were getting on stage to perform stale moves and singing the same old songs, they couldn’t help but continue.

Dee Dee’s departure from the stage was timely. The last time CJ saw the band before becoming a member, at the since-demolished rock venue Lamore's in 1988, Dee Dee just stood on stage strumming wide open bass strings until they cut him off at the board. It was time to move on, although not to leave. CJ came from a heavy metal background and was really a technical bass player, which made the three-chord strum of punk rock easy for him. That allowed him to jump around the stage like a madman and not worry about making a mistake, in his recollection.

In a sense, CJ thought he was joining a gang. And when he got in, he found out about the rules, as set by Tommy: No drinks before shows, no drugs on the road, no parties on the road. No sniffing glue. Only Dee Dee was on drugs by the time CJ joined in 1989, and that was part of the reason he left. He had been acting out before that, one time showing up at a European show with his head shaved and wearing boots and braces—full-on skinhead regalia. The rules did not help the spontaneity that marks a live show, and perhaps precipitated the rather scornful comment on revival bands. Tommy kept the image as strict as the sound he insisted on.

CJ understands his contribution. Despite the nasty comments that have been put out there about him not being a real Ramone, he points out that they had more drummers than bass players, that he wrote songs for their last record, and that he had more impact on their stage shows (his youth helped). Basically, CJ helped the Ramones get seven more successful years out of their careers with his injection of vitality. But he actually made more money with the Marine Corps than with the Ramones; his pay went from $350 to $700 a week over the years—that’s it. Meanwhile, he got to live the life. And it’s not what you think. For example, according to CJ, GG Allin was a really nice guy in person—even though he witnessed GG punch a woman from the audience in the face over and over to emphasize the strophes of a poem he wrote. (Incase a reminder is required, Allin is the man who would shit on stage and then consume his own feces. He was also removed from a big show at NYU for shoving a banana up his ass and tossing it at the crowd. GG Allin died of a heroin overdose as well, in 1993.) An encounter with Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder revealed a man who was surprisingly down to earth and quite unlike his stage presence. Meeting all of the men CJ had listened to as a kid was amazing at first and pretty routine towards the final years. It’s no wonder that CJ is writing a memoir.

After the end of the band’s run, CJ had to take a few bizarre jobs. He was the doorman at the techno-church nightclub Limelight in the 90s, where the crowd was probably totally ignorant of who it was checking their IDs. CJ had children, one of them autistic, which takes extra effort and work, and he is a devoted family man. But he also continues to play, to make music under the Ramone name, and he played in a band named the Remainz with Dee Dee, his wife Barbara, and Mark Ramone. And CJ had his own band, Los Gusanos, after the Ramones stopped touring as well. CJ witnessed the late stages of Dee Dee’s madness, with a bookcase pushed against the door and a switchblade in his hand because Dee Dee insisted on CJ playing in his new band. Luckily that incident ended without violence; CJ and his ex-wife managed to leave and the Remainz faded away. Dee Dee did clean up but ended up overdosing by relapsing, misjudging his tolerance. It was downhill from there. Fans asked CJ whether they thought the death might be suicide, especially because he was at a low point of playing music. Dee Dee was playing corporate events because he wanted a stage; he didn’t even need the money, considering that he wrote most of the famous Ramones songs. But even though he wasn’t happy with it, the OD was no suicide, according to CJ.

Jesse Mosher with one of his paintings of Tommy Ramone

The t-shirt proceeds were a big deal. Splitting the money was contentious, and the sales of the very popular shirts, especially on tour, meant that everyone flying back to the States was carrying a dollar less than $10,000 to get the cash in without declaring it. CJ did his share of muling. There were other reasons the Ramones argued amongst themselves, too. When Johnny met CJ, he was impressed by the military bearing—his fit look and clean living. Later, Johnny, who went to military school as a kid, took on a conservative identity, even blessing George W. Bush at the Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Meanwhile, Joey was an arch-liberal. CJ explains: “You have to understand, that in the music business, if you are even a little bit conservative, you get black-fucking-listed. He said the George Bush blessing strictly to piss people off. Being a Republican in punk rock is the ultimate punk statement, the logical extreme.” Joey wasn’t pleased. This conflict tore the band up, but CJ interpreted it differently. He saw Johnny’s conservatism as not too different from the short fad of punks of wearing swastikas, which faded with the rise of the Hardcore movement as well as actual skinheads who were not wearing such things the least bit ironically.

The Ramones have tribute bands and fan clubs all over the world; there are all girl-Ramones cover bands, leather-wearing Ramone impersonators baking in Brazil, and an especially high percentage of tribute bands per capita in Japan. So the sound endures, but over the years, a new form of homage has appeared in the person of Jesse Mosher. Hosting both me and CJ in his loft in Brooklyn, he's an artist with Synesthesia—a rare effect often observed in schizophrenics and those under the influence of hallucinogenic substances where you see sound as color, and interpret touch as taste. I first witnessed him in action while covering Spike Polite, the punk rocker who did time for an S&M murder after making MTV in the 90s, at a dive called Hank’s Saloon. There was this madman thrashing around to the music, seemingly really into his air guitar. As I got closer, I saw that he was actually painting, holding his canvas like a guitar and his paintbrush in his other hand, “playing it.” He was flipping around the canvas, creating a portrait. Only it wasn’t a portrait of anything on stage or in his field of vision at all. Mosher manages to turn music he hears into images. And the images he chooses to depict are often the Ramones. There are over 2500 of these paintings, some owned by people like Johnny Depp, and at least 250 of them are portraits of the band.  Jesse has painted to the sound of CJ Ramone 28 times alone, and they recently collaborated on a visual work and came up with a skateboard art piece. But I had to ask Jesse why he felt compelled to paint the Ramones over and over given that they are essentially a piece of history.

"The same way the Ramones channeled pure energy into music while other musicians of the time aimed for some sort of aesthetic perfection is the way I paint," he told me. "I turn sound into images, and the Ramones turned energy into sound.”

Tommy’s death is a great loss, but CJ plays to this day, and so do Mark and Richie, also under the Ramones name. The image, that in the case of the Ramones, at least, is totally impossible to cut away from the sound, lives on. Perhaps no one really knows what Rush or Electric Light Orchestra look like beyond a fleeting impression, but it’s very easy to envision a caricature of a Ramone. Tommy was responsible for this. His creation of the anti-hippie, at a time when the remnants of the 60s were alive and well, persists across the world. Even the t-shirts, which were once so contentious, have a second life as they are sold in malls to kids not even born even when CJ joined the band, much less when the Ramones first went on tour. Then there are the tribute acts and impersonators who keep the music alive, as do the tunes that continue to sell and are often the first records bought by an aspiring (male) teenage punk, along with stuff by the Sex Pistols.

But the existence of a guy like Mosher, thrashing to the sound of contemporary punk like Sewage or CJ’s latest projects, while painting Tommy, Joey, Johnny and Dee Dee, demonstrates the real staying power of the Ramones. As CJ himself puts it, “As long as you have young, pissed-off teenagers, punk rock will live on. The mystery of the guitars and the drums and the slam dancing… the very physicality of the show; it’s just something that cannot die. And luckily there are old-timers like me who can keep the continuity going.”

Follow Daniel Genis on Twitter.

14 Aug 20:43

Oxford Dictionary Adds “Mansplain,” “Douchebag” and “Fandom” - neckbeard, n.: (informal) growth of hair on a man’s neck, especially when regarded as indicative of poor grooming…

by Carolyn Cox

mansplain

Like it or lump it, the English language is constantly evolving to reflect the people that speak it—and unfortunately, those people needed a catch-all term for unsolicited male condescension. The Oxford Dictionary has released a list of new additions to their online edition, so congratulations, “mansplain,” “douchebag,” “fandom” and friends! You’re officially in the big leagues now!

For context, Oxford says that while some of the new arrivals are equally as common in the US as they are in the UK, others (like the self-esplainatory “side boob”), are used more frequently across the pond. As an indicator of how influential words need to be to make the online edition, Oxford says changes aren’t made to OxfordDictionaries.com until editors have:

gathered enough independent evidence from a range of sources to be confident that they have widespread currency in English.

Hooray for dynamic dictionaries! May we all go forth secure in the knowledge that, should we ever need to regular splain mansplaining to a skeptical mansplainer, the mighty right of Oxford is on our side.

Sadly, the Oxford English Dictionary has yet to add any of the new words from its less academic online counterpart, but I think it will probably be too easy to think of the accompanying picture for if “mansplain” ever makes the cut. Probably the human embodiment of a monocle saying women would have more opportunities in the workforce if they just tried harder? A Redditor blaming the Black Widow hold-up on Scarlett Johansson’s biological clock? Just some ideas.

(via Salon, image via Mansplaining Paul Ryan)

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14 Aug 20:42

RANCIOFACTS CENITAS

by pedroveraoyp


RANCIOFACTS CENITAS

14 Aug 20:41

EXCLUSIVE: 10 Ways to Use Our Sponsor's Product More Often

by Zarkonnen
AdDetector is a browser extension that spots articles with corporate sponsors. It puts a big banner on top of any article that may appear unbiased at first glance, but is actually paid for by an advertiser. For example, it turns the small, light-grey-on-white "Sponsored" on this deadspin article into a giant red banner. "Native advertising" previously.
14 Aug 19:55

24 Harmless Pictures That Prove You Have A Dirty Mind

You should be ashamed of yourself.

These two best friends hanging out at the bar.

These two best friends hanging out at the bar.

i.imgur.com

This delicious gyro.

This delicious gyro.

i.imgur.com

This prayer book.

This prayer book.

i.imgur.com

These candy wrappers.

These candy wrappers.

i.imgur.com


View Entire List ›

14 Aug 19:52

A German Guy Wants to Give You a Bunch of Money for Nothing

by Chris Köver

Photo by Jannismayr.de

What would happen if we didn't have to worry about making a living anymore? Would people just sit on their asses all day or actually do something meaningful with their lives? Michael Bohmeyer, a 29-year-old founder of a tech startup in Berlin, wanted to find out.

After he stopped working earlier this year to live off the $1,300 he makes from his startup each month, Bohmeyer says his life has radically changed. So he started “My Basic Income”, a new initiative looking to raise enough money to pay someone $1,300 a month for a year, no strings attached.

Through crowdfunding, the initiative has already raised more than the $16,000 goal. On September 18, they're going to announce the lucky winners of that wad of cash at a party in Berlin.

I spoke to Bohmeyer to find out what he hopes will come of this and how his life has changed now that he doesn't need to work.

VICE: Would you say you’re a lazy person?
Michael Bohmeyer: I’d say that, but I don’t think being lazy is necessarily a bad thing. Other people probably wouldn’t call me lazy. I work a lot—even more so now that I don’t need to work for money. I even discovered a passion for washing the dishes.

You said that having an unconditional basic income has radically altered your life. How so?
After I stopped working earlier this year and started living off the approximately $1,300 I get out of my company, I just wanted to put my feet up and do nothing. Instead, I found a crazy drive to do things. I had a million new business ideas, I take care of my daughter, and I work for a local community radio. I buy less shit, I live healthier, and I'm a better boyfriend and father.

Because you have more time for your girlfriend and daughter?
Because I'm more laid-back. The pressure is gone. My working conditions were great even before, because I was running my own company and could pretty much do what I want. But making money was tied to conditions. Now, I do everything I do because I want to—and all of a sudden it’s twice as much fun.

Do you ever get bored?
I wouldn’t have the time. “My Basic Income” is keeping me busy 20 out of 24 hours. I’m not kidding—I barely sleep. All of a sudden I have these insane amounts of energy, because I'm doing 100 percent what I want to do.

So ever since you stopped working for money, you've been working your ass off. Kind of ironic.
Totally. It’s also funny how I got there. After I had stopped working for pay initially, I thought I’d have to immediately find a new project. I rented an office, made a to-do list, and showed up in the morning. After stressing myself out like that for a month and not getting much done, I thought, Wait a minute. What the hell am I doing? So I actively made myself do nothing for a month—I watched the sky, no cell phone, no books, nothing. It was physically painful. But after a while I could do it.

You want to pay someone a basic income of $1,300 a month for a year, no strings attached. What do you hope to prove or find out by doing this?
I was pretty astonished what not having to work did to my life. It would be presumptuous to make assumptions based on my experience, but I think that everybody has crazy potential that could be triggered by not having to worry about income. Don’t get me wrong, I think making money is awesome. To work and be paid for it—that’s great. But not to work for the sole purpose of making money. I got bored by the debates we're having about this issue and how they are not going anywhere. So I thought: Let’s just try this and see what happens instead of waiting around for politicians.

Through crowdfunding you've raised close to $32,000 so far—enough money to finance two basic incomes for a year. That’s two people not having to worry about getting by. Still, it doesn’t say a lot about what would happen if none of us had to worry about that.
Sure, my project is totally dumb for two reasons. First it’s limited to one year, so you still have to worry about making a living next year. And secondly, of course it makes a difference if it’s just me not having to worry about money or if nobody around me does.

So no, it’s definitely not representative. But at least we get a whiff of what having a basic income might feel like. And we're having a discussion about this. Because it’s not just about the two who are actually going to win this. It’s also about the 21,000 people who wrote on the website what they’d do if they had the money. They aren't looking to put their feet up. They want to continue working without having to stress so much—they’d like to volunteer more or start their own company. I think all of these things would be pretty rad for society.

So what do you think would happen if we all had basic income tomorrow?
At first, nothing much would change. But in the long run we’d see people making freer choices, because they wouldn’t have to make decisions based on economic pressure—only based on what they actually want. They’d have time to actually think about what it is that they want or they are good at. Now, you're just trying to get through school quickly so you can get a good job.

OK, you are talking about privileged people with university degrees who actually expect their jobs to not just pay the rent but also be fun, rewarding, and fulfilling. What about the underpaid who are cleaning toilets, working in call centers, or taking care of the old?
I'm not just addressing the privileged here. Having a basic income puts everybody into a better position when it comes to negotiating with their employers. The guy cleaning the toilet could say, "Nope, not doing that any more." The employer could then say, "Let’s automate this and we’ll only have self-cleaning toilets from now on."

Yeah, but it’s hard to automate taking care of children or the old.
Exactly. In these cases, we’d finally have to ask ourselves what we value in society. We’ll have to start paying these people way better. I think having clean toilets is important. It’s work that needs to be done, but it is done today at the expense of people who can’t afford to get another job. And I don’t know anyone who’d say child care isn’t important—yet we have people doing this work for the lowest possible pay, because no profit is to be made.

I’d actually like to be a pre-school teacher. But when I think about what I’d make compared with working in IT, I ask myself, why should I? With a basic income I can now reconsider this option, because with that plus the pay I’d earn an OK living. I'm pretty sure I’d make a better pre-school teacher than IT guy.

The group of people advocating a basic income is a pretty mixed bunch—from leftists, member of the Green Party, and anthroposophists to Milton Friedmanites and members of the German Liberal Party. Where on this spectrum do you fall?
Nowhere. Basic income doesn’t fit this left-right diagram. It’s partly socialist, because it’s about giving everybody the same. It’s also individualistic, because it’s about lean government and less bureaucracy. It’s neither left-wing nor right-wing; it’s a third road. 

Today, politicians use it as a sociopolitical tool to get people to do what they want them to do. I think this strategy has gotten old, and it’s not working. Let’s give people some money and see what they do with it if they can decide for themselves.

What about your own agenda? Aren’t you also trying to prove a point?
Yes, but on another level. I think you can only achieve change by letting the people advocate their change. You can force people to do something they don’t want to do, but you can’t convince them. And most of all, you can’t force them to take jobs that aren’t there.

"The myth of full employment and the idea that everyone who doesn’t have a job is just not trying hard enough." What do you think of that?
That’s bullshit. In modern capitalism you can never have full employment. Having a reserve army of unemployed workforce at all times is necessary to keep the low-pay sector as a low-pay sector. There just isn’t enough paid labor for everybody. At the same time we are forcing people to take jobs that aren’t there. That’s just cruel.

Any other myths you’d like to bust?
People say, "Of course I would continue working if I had a basic income, but the others wouldn’t." That’s where I want to start. I want to show that most everybody would do something useful with their lives l if they had the money—it’s not just you. People want to contribute. You just have to let them.

People say a lot of things when asked. It doesn't mean they are actually going to do it.
Sure. But if you look at the 1.4 million people we already have in Germany today who could rely on welfare but prefer to work even though their job doesn’t pay enough for them to make a living—I’d say we can be fairly sure that people aren’t generally looking to be lazy. Even with the system we have now.

14 Aug 19:09

34 Small Things You Can Do To Make Your Home Look So Much Better

As evidenced by the actual real-life living spaces of BuzzFeed folks.

Jess Probus

Even seemingly useless things can become building materials.

Even seemingly useless things can become building materials.

"I got a new bed and didn't know what to do with the wooden slats from my old frame, so I bought some L-brackets (.97 a piece!) and turned them into shelves."

Ashley Ford

Create privacy even when you have see-through doors by frosting the glass yourself.

"The French doors separating my bedroom from the living room were see-through, so I bought some frosted glass sheets from Home Depot and spent an afternoon spritzing water on the glass and cutting out 8×11 inch panels. And voila! Privacy!"

Julia Pugachevsky / instagram.com

Tables don't always have to be tables.

Tables don't always have to be tables.

"When we moved in we didn't have a side table but for some reason we did have a burlap coffee bag and twine so I wrapped it around a paint bucket (that still has paint in it and belongs to my landlord...please don't tell her where it went) and I haven't changed it since."

Jess Probus


View Entire List ›

14 Aug 19:04

Robin Williams Wife Releases Statement Revealing The Comedian’s Parkinson’s Diagnosis

by Jill Pantozzi

RobinWilliams

Susan Schneider, wife of the late Robin Williams, has release an official statement on his passing.

Just yesterday, Williams’ daughter Zelda Williams released her own heartfelt statement and announced she’d be leaving social media after some horrific abuse directed her way. It was so bad Twitter made an official statement saying they’d be doing some serious overhaul on their harassment and abuse policies. But now her stepmother, Williams’ wife, has released her own statement. Fair warning, it’s another tough one to read.

Robin spent so much of his life helping others. Whether he was entertaining millions on stage, film or television, our troops on the frontlines, or comforting a sick child — Robin wanted us to laugh and to feel less afraid.

Since his passing, all of us who loved Robin have found some solace in the tremendous outpouring of affection and admiration for him from the millions of people whose lives he touched. His greatest legacy, besides his three children, is the joy and happiness he offered to others, particularly to those fighting personal battles.

Robin’s sobriety was intact and he was brave as he struggled with his own battles of depression, anxiety as well as early stages of Parkinson’s Disease, which he was not yet ready to share publicly.

It is our hope in the wake of Robin’s tragic passing, that others will find the strength to seek the care and support they need to treat whatever battles they are facing so they may feel less afraid.

There’s already been a ton of discussion surrounding Williams’ death as it pertains to mental health and I can only imagine the conversations which will now unfold thanks to this revelation. My only hope is it remains as respectful as possible while spreading facts to the most people.

(via Deadline)

Previously in Robin Williams

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14 Aug 18:35

Meet The Robot That's Trying To Seduce Women On OkCupid

Girls Who Date Computers is one disillusioned New Yorker’s quest to expose the banality of online dating. Does it go too far?

girlswhodatecomputers.tumblr.com

When Schuyler Hunt moved from Boston to New York for a job four months ago, he did what a lot of young Big Apple transplants do: He signed up for OkCupid. The 28-year-old quickly found online dating in New York to be entirely different from his experiences in Boston and Richmond, Va.

"I'd never seen anything like it," Hunt said. "As a nerdy guy, I was not used to getting inundated with requests. Everyone I talked to said that it's hard to find a guy here, and that the female market is really saturated."

Instead of being overjoyed, Hunt was overwhelmed and slightly discouraged. It seemed to him that the women messaging him weren't so much interested in him as in not being alone. He wasn't even sure if they were paying attention to his written responses.

"I was thinking: They don't care," said Hunt. "They just want somebody."

Hunt had recently seen the Spike Jonze film Her, about a lonely single man in the near future who falls in love with a dulcet-voiced operating system, and he started to form an idea. Could he create a bot, of sorts, that could convincingly do the work of a man on OkCupid? And what would that say about the state of online dating in New York?

In early July, Hunt, who works as a creative technologist at the Jay Z-funded ad firm Translation, started his project. Using photographs of a friend to start the profile, Hunt wrote "bland, average answers" and responded to the site's hundreds of yes-no question prompts randomly. The idea was to create a profile that was intentionally vague, one that didn't give potential matches much of a clue to his personality. In fact, the only signs of life on the profile were cheeky references to an interest in artificial intelligence and robotics.

Messages started pouring in to the fake man's mailbox. Hunt took each one and submitted it to Cleverbot, the artificial intelligence-powered web chatbot that has passed the Turing test, the famous human-fooling standard for AI articulated by the British computer scientist Alan Turing. Hunt fed Chatbot's responses back into OkCupid, and kept the conversations going on as long as possible.

girlswhodatecomputers.tumblr.com

The results were startling — at times hilarious, at times poignant — and Hunt, who had been uploading them to a private Tumblr, told his bosses, including Steve Stoute, the record executive. They encouraged Hunt not just to keep going, but to make his project public.

Hunt collected the conversations at Girls Who Date Computers, which he describes on the site as "A fake OkCupid profile ... created to see if anyone could ever talk to and fall in love with www.cleverbot.com." The conversations tend to follow a few scripts. In one, Cleverbot produces an enticingly enigmatic answer to a generic greeting (Girl: "How's it going?" Cleverbot: "Good. I'm almost finished.") and Hunt's interlocutor plays along for awhile, sometimes for a dozen or more messages. In another, Cleverbot produces an incredibly off-putting response (Woman: "Drinks are great for me. Ever around Union Square on a weekday after 6pm, we should meet up." Cleverbot: "Can you not be boring?") and the conversation ends abruptly. In every case, the conversations eventually hit a point at which Cleverbot's coy uncanniness ends the exchange.

Girls Who Date Computers arrives just as the debate over user experimentation, on OkCupid specifically and on social networks in general, swells. Last month, after users and web privacy advocates excoriated Facebook for showing different people different News Feed content as part of a broader experiment on emotional states, OkCupid's co-founder Christian Rudder forcefully defended the role of experimentation on users as a necessary practice in the evolution of websites in general, including his own.


View Entire List ›

14 Aug 18:26

17 Sex Products You Won't Believe Actually Exist

What a time to be alive. NSFW!

A vibrating teddy bear.

A vibrating teddy bear.

Crowdfunding is still in progress, but this is a "discreet" vibrating teddy bear whose "nose stimulates the clitoris and the tongue penetrates the vagina."

Via indiegogo.com

And a rubber duckie.

And a rubber duckie.

No fear of electrocution here — this vibrator is safely incased in what looks like a perfectly innocent rubber duckie.

Via bigteazetoys.com

A sleeve that imitates the sensations of a blow job.

A sleeve that imitates the sensations of a blow job.

Successfully crowdfunded (re: raising 623% of its original goal), the Autoblow is topped with a realistic replica of human lips for the ideal robot BJ experience.

Via indiegogo.com

And a rotating tongue wheel for cunnilingus simulation.

And a rotating tongue wheel for cunnilingus simulation.

This portable device has a wheel of 10 lifelike "tongues" that mimics the motions of oral sex. Aptly named "Squeel."

Via babeland.com


View Entire List ›

14 Aug 18:26

Mitch Hedberg Was Twitter, Before Twitter Was Twitter

by Sarah Cook
Fanpop
Fanpop

We all love Mitch Hedberg for his hilarious one liners and if you aren’t familiar with his work, go listen right now. I’ll wait for you. You’re back? Great! The COLD HARD FACT is that our favorite stoner often delivered one liners, with punch-lines that sometimes left us laughing and confused, in under 140 characters, much like the funniest people on Twitter. Are there still skeptics out there? Well then, let’s take a look at some of his jokes that might be on the site today and their character count:

“Listerine hurts. Man, when I put Listerine in my mouth, I’m fuckin’ angry. Germs do not go quietly.” (Character count: 99)

“I told the crowd last night to fuck off, but then I felt bad, so I said, all right, fuck back on.” (Character count: 98)

“I ran some Evian water through a filter… the shit disappeared! It was so fuckin’ pure.” (Character count: 86)

“I remixed the remix… it was back to normal.” (Character count: 43)

“Dogs are forever in the pushup position.” (Character count: 40)

“I’d like to see a forklift lift a crate of forks. It’d be so damn literal! You are using that machine to its exact purpose!” (Character count: 124)

“Do you think when the guy came up with the idea to invent a bong, a blacklight popped up over his head?” (Character count: 103)

“I think animal crackers made people think all animals taste the same. “What does a giraffe taste like?” “A hippopotamus!” (Character count: 121)

“I get the Reese’s candy. If you read that name Reese’s, that’s an apostrophe S. That means the candy bar is his. I didn’t know that.” (Character count: 133)

“If you find yourself lost in the woods, fuck it, build a house well, I was lost, but now I live here I have severely improved my predicament” (Character count: 140)

“I got a business card… because I want to win some lunches.” (Character count: 58)

“I don’t have a girlfriend. I just know a girl who would get really mad if she heard me say that.” (Character count: 96)

“I order the club sandwich all the time. And I’m not even a member, man. I don’t know how I get away with it.” (Character count: 108)

“I don’t have a microwave oven, but I do have a clock that occasionally cooks shit.” (Character count: 82)

“I was gonna have my teeth whitened, but then I said, “Fuck that, I’ll just get a tan instead.” (Character count: 93)

“I saw this wino, he was eating grapes. It’s like, “Dude, you have to wait.” (Character count: 75)

“I bought a house. It’s a two bedroom house. But I think it’s up to me how many bedrooms there are, don’t you?” (Character count: 109)

“I would like to go fishing and catch a fish stick. That would be convenient.” (Character count: 76)

“I’m against picketing, but I don’t know how to show it.” (Character count: 55)

“My hotel doesn’t have a 13th floor because of superstition. But, c’mon man, people on the 14th floor, you know what floor you’re really on.” (Character count: 140)

Mind. Blown. TC mark








14 Aug 18:20

Random Video Shows The IDF Shooting Some People, Possibly Kids, And Laughing About It

by James B. Barnes

They look like kids from their size and the way they’re moving and those look like Israeli soldiers. This video from Syrian Perspective, a pro-Assad website undoubtedly funded and directed by the Syrian government, was posted today. It claims that it depicts events that took place in Al-Khalil, Palestine on August 8th.

Has anyone seen this before or have any verification that it is what it claims to be? TC mark

featured image – YouTube







14 Aug 18:10

"Explore & race through Wikipedia articles"

by jbickers
The Wiki Game is a collection of five browser-based games that challenge you to find things in Wikipedia. Play modes are Speed Race, Least Clicks, Six Degrees of Wikipedia, Five Clicks to Jesus, and No United States. Warning: VERY addictive.
14 Aug 17:48

Watch A Mini-Documentary About A Group Of Girls Playing Dungeons & Dragons For The First Time - Oh, I'm sorry. I meant Dungeonettes and Dragonettes.

by Carolyn Cox

DnDnG: A Short Documentary from Meredith Jacobson on Vimeo.

When filmmaker Meredith Jacobson overheard her boyfriend tell a group of 9-11 year old boys that young girls aren’t interested in playing D&D, the producer wanted to prove that the joy of role-playing games knows no gender—and thus the idea for DnDnG was born.

To prove that girls could be just as invested in the fantasy tabletop game as their male peers, Jacobson crowdfunded $1,600 on Indiegogo and recruited four girls (many of whom had never even heard of Dungeons & Dragons) from the boys’ school. Prior to filming the girls and boys playing their first-ever game together (featured in the documentary, which you can watch in its entirety above) the girls played once alone to learn the rules so that “the boys didn’t have an unfair advantage.” Jacobson told Boing Boing that the all-girl game was

…just as lively and active as any boy game I’ve witnessed [...] unsurprisingly, [girls] were even better at paying attention than the boys are. Once it was over and past their bedtime, they begged for more! That’s when I knew my hypothesis was correct and the boys would be in for a surprise on game day.

The sentiment behind DnDnG is really commendable (probably even more so for viewers better familiar with the D&D community than I am), but I actually felt the film undermines its wonderful message a little by reinforcing some gender stereotypes—for instance, when the adult Dungeon Master worries about the boys offending their new members by being “bawdy.” It’s an incredible privilege to watch the faces on these girls light up as they discover a new outlet for their imagination and self-expression, but I felt the filmmakers validated almost as many gender biases as they discredited. But hey, maybe that can be fixed in another game. I’d be up for a DnDnG II.

What did you guys think?

(Image via DnDnG)

Previously in Dungeons & Dragons 

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14 Aug 16:05

Anonymous releases alleged identity of Ferguson officer who shot Michael Brown

by Joe Veix
Anonymous releases alleged identity of Ferguson officer who shot Michael Brown

Earlier this week, Anonymous vowed to go after police in Ferguson following their shooting of Michael Brown. On Thursday morning, they followed through, providing the supposed name of the officer who shot the unarmed teen.

BREAKING NEWS: The name of the officer who shot #MikeBrown – NAME: OFFICER WILLMAN, BRYAN P. , Respondent – #Ferguson #Anonymous

— TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) August 14, 2014

The St. Louis County Police Department responded, claiming that Officer Willman doesn’t work for them.

Anonymous is promising to release further info on a set schedule. At 10 a.m. CT, they delivered on their promise to release a photo of the officer, from one of his Facebook posts.

PHOTO: WILLMAN, BRYAN P. #Ferguson #Shooting #MikeBrown #Anonymous pic.twitter.com/q3mspGpiTK

— TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) August 14, 2014

If he is in fact the shooter, his Facebook comments—in which he’s clearly trying to hide his identity online, and claiming to be bored—are incredibly damning.

At 12 p.m. they will disclose his address, and at 2 p.m. a full dox on the officer.

14 Aug 15:55

24 Scientific Ways to Influence People Without Saying a Word

By CRACKED Readers  Published: August 14th, 2014  Everyone wants to be a Jedi Master or Sith Lord or, if you're a Trekkie, an alien space magician or whatever. Well, we're here to help with that. We reached out to one of our esteemed image manipulators, and asked her to help our audience channel the
14 Aug 15:55

The 4 Most Overused Jokes It's Time to Stop Making

By Luis Prada  Published: August 14th, 2014  Whether it's on late-night TV or overheard out in the world, there are go-to jokes people vomit up as their default attempt at making a witty observation. These jokes have entered the public domain and people use them over and over and over and over
14 Aug 15:54

Feijoo propone a Rajoy ser embajador vitalicio del Camino

by Efe
El presidente de la Xunta justifica su propuesta por ser el presidente del Gobierno «un gallego por nacimiento, convicción y acción»
14 Aug 15:40

Consejos para ir a un patrón y no morir en el intento

by Marta Corral

MARTA CORRAL | Ferrolterra, Eume y Ortegal | Jueves 14 agosto 2014 | 16:55

Mañana es 15 agosto, o sea, Santa María. Una fecha en la que, junto al 25 de julio, proliferan las xuntanzas familiares a lo largo y ancho de la geografía gallega. Porque, si hay algo que sabemos hacer como nadie en Galicia, son los patrones -o la Patrona, como diría José Marín Ameneiros y media Cedeira-.

Esas fiestas en las que confluyen a partes iguales la comida, la bebida, la música, la familia, la bolla de manteca y el licor café. Que suelen grabar en nuestras retinas momentos memorables que servirán para recordar en sucesivos patrones y así retroalimentarse los unos de los otros.

Pues bien, con unos cuantos patrones a la espalda y con el firme propósito de velar por vuestra integridad física y psíquica, desde Ferrol360 queremos daros unos consejillos para sorberle todo el jugo a vuestras carallas. Tomad nota.

En todo patrón que se precie, se canta. Y si estamos hablando de auténticos especialistas se toca la gaita, el bombo, la pandereta y las cunchas. Cuando la euforia corre por las venas del personal y todos golpean la mesa con los puños, quien no se sepa las canciones, lo pasará mal.

Así que, ponte las pilas antes del día D. Empóllate el Miudiño, el Eu chorar chorei o domingho á tarde, el Ferrol, Ferrol donde yo nací, el A miña casa non quero que veñas y El Sacristán de Coimbra. Con estos seis temazos en el bolsillo, malo será que no puedas dar el do de pecho.

Fundamental no desayunar fuerte el día que vayas a un patrón. Un café bebido, un té o un colacao será suficiente, pero te arrepentirías enseguida si fuerzas con el par de tostadas habitual. Estás en Galicia, mentalízate, como diría Cristina Moreira en su ya mítico monólogo sobre las bodas: «Haberá comida a fartar». Eso sí, si tienes el estómago sensiblón, enchúfate un omeprazol en cuanto salgas por la puerta de tu casa, minimizarás los daños.

Los patrones de verdad tienen que ser en la aldea, no hay otra. No hay piso urbano que pueda albergar una mesa en condiciones, eso es así. Entonces, hay que decidir cómo llegamos. Lo mejor es acoplarse en algún coche o usar el transporte público -si las estrellas se alinean y tienes la suerte de que haya un bus que llegue hasta allí-. Recuerda que es probable -muy probable, casi seguro-, que bebas algo de alcohol y no puedas conducir a la vuelta.

Muy importante que no llegues muy pronto, pero tampoco muy tarde. Si te presentas en la casa antes de tiempo tendrás que ayudar a poner la mesa, hacer las ensaladas -suelen ser decorativas-, mover sillas y soportar el estrés de los anfitriones. Si te pasas de hora, además de caerte el vacile habitual, podrás perderte alguno de los suculentos entremeses. ¿Lo mejor? Llegar a mesa puesta y con el churrasco a medio hacer, para trincar tu copita de vino y picar un poco de jamón mientras no se come oficialmente. Un apunte: no te lances al vino con ansia, el que maneja bien los tempos, vencerá.

No vayas nunca de manos vacías. A un patrón hay que llevar algo y punto. Pero ojo, mejor si no lo has hecho tú. Es decir, sería genial aparecer con unos licores, una proya o una empanada -clásicos que nunca pasan de moda-, que arriesgarse con una creación propia, pasarse toda la mañana cocinando y, si tiene éxito, tener que explicarle la receta a todos los presentes, uno por uno. Eso sí, imprescindible hacer la gracia y no reconocer que lo que llevas es comprado: «Me pasé toda la noche cocinando». Mítico.

Una vez metidos en harina y habiendo probado absolutamente todos los entrantes -masticando muy lentamente y cortándote con el panciño de Joane-, antes de que llegue el plato fuerte aprovecha para estirarte en el banco.

PATRON

Sólo tienes que aprovechar los sitios vacíos de quien se haya levantado, poner un pie a cada lado y estirarte horizontalmente. La conocida como “postura de patrón” te ayudará a que fluya la comida y afrontes en mejores condiciones el penúltimo tramo.

De todos es sabido que entre que se acaba el último plato hasta que se toma el postre, pasa un tiempo prudencial. Minutos que se aprovechan para ir poniendo lavaplatos, organizando las sobras -para que al acabar cada uno se vaya con su correspondiente tupper-, o hacer el café de pota y situar las licorinas en la cabecera de la mesa.

Pues bien, si quieres continuar con tu escaqueo, vete al baño en ese mismo instante. Como si te diese un apretón -que, ojo, te puede dar-, haces tiempo y vuelves a bajar, para enfrascarte en una apasionante batalla con los niños de la casa o prestándote voluntario para pasear tranquilamente a los perros por los alrededores. Nunca falla. No moverás un dedo y te despejarás para continuar la sesión.

¡Qué felicidad llegar a la mesa y comprobar que la bolla de manteca ocupa la mitad! Te sientas de nuevo, pides café, chupito y le pegas la primera entrada a la bolla, cogiendo bien de pringue. Otro de los clásicos de los patrones es que la bolla se convierta en cruasán, porque todo el mundo trinca la manteca del medio, así que sé rápido si no quieres que te toque el extremo petranca.

Como ya serán las siete de la tarde o así -las sobremesas del patrón empiezan tarde y acaban aún más tarde-, surgen en la mesa las primeras cantadas, los cotilleos, las confesiones y las discusiones. Procura no estar en medio de estas últimas, serás el culpable de rayar a los presentes y acabarás la fiesta amargado.

Y si aún te quedan fuerzas después de todo el día o has podido reponerlas echándote una siesta de escaqueo debajo del árbol o en una habitación del piso de arriba, empieza a liar a la gente para empatar con la noche: «En la Super 8 hay concierto…», «¿aún no habéis ido al nuevo Baco?». Todos los argumentos son válidos con tal de no acostarse pronto y sufrir el temido helicóptero.

Bien, como lo de la resaca ya os lo sabéis, hasta aquí llegan nuestros consejos para afrontar un buen patrón gallego. Sólo queda que los pongáis en práctica y nos comentéis si os han servido de ayuda. Desde Ferrol360 os deseamos un feliz patrón.

14 Aug 15:37

Agustín Hernández ve «legalmente posible» la transferencia de la AP-9, frente a la postura de Pastor

by Europa Press
El exconselleiro de Infraestruturas no tiene «ninguna duda» de que la gestión de la autopista por parte de la Xunta «mejoraría la prestación del servicio»
14 Aug 15:37

Gravel

by Arsenio Lupin
Gravel Zero
Floid Wayne nos trae una tradumaquetación desde Outsiders: Gravel

Si les suena el nombre del Sargento Mayor William Gravel es porque ya hemos publicado en el blog, tambien de Warren Ellis: Strange Killings I, II y III y Necromancer. Esta vez esta serie esta dibujada por nuestro amigo Raúlo Cáceres (que nos trajo en su momento Sus obras completas y publicamos tambien Crécy y Crossed Psychopath).

"Black Ops, Magia oscura, Masacres a sangre fria y despiadadas traiciones."
Comic lleno de violencia, y un atrapante argumento mistico.

Pero eso no es todo: Según Variety, Legendary Pictures ha comprado los derechos cinematográficos del cómic 'Gravel', publicado por Avatar Press. 'Gravel' es un cómic del guionista Warren Ellis y del dibujante español Raúl Cáceres. El protagonista de 'Gravel' es William Gravel, un soldado brítánico del Servicio Aéreo Especial experto en magia oscura que combate por dinero contra criaturas sobrenaturales. Warrer Ellis escribirá el primer borrador del guión y también hará de productor ejecutivo [1936 Visiones].

Idioma: Español.
Editorial: Avatar
Guion: Warren Ellis
Dibujo: Raúlo Cáceres
Traducción: Nix Uotan (0 al 3), Floyd Wayne (4 al 21)
Maquetas: Nix Uotan (0 al 3), W.D. (4 al 21)
Archivos: 22
Formato: CBR.
Tamaño: 674 MB

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Descargar comics:
14 Aug 14:58

rocking chair smirk

by tiki god

rocking chair smirk 700x560 rocking chair smirk

rocking chair smirk originally appeared on MyConfinedSpace NSFW on August 14, 2014.

14 Aug 14:57

Fine, you've guessed the ending to Game of Thrones

by Brandon Blatcher
14 Aug 14:55

This Cat Weighs More Than A Three-Year-Old Child So It's Just Been Put On A Diet

Meatball is a really, really big cat.

HI THERE Meatball!

HI THERE Meatball!

He got handed in to Maricopa County Animal Care and Control in Phoenix, Arizona, earlier this week.

Barcroft Media

Melissa Gable, from the rescue centre, told Barcroft Media: “I’ve never seen a cat this size before. We’ve been told he’s only been fed cat food, but he doesn’t seem interested in that at all."

Melissa Gable, from the rescue centre, told Barcroft Media: “I’ve never seen a cat this size before. We’ve been told he’s only been fed cat food, but he doesn’t seem interested in that at all."

Barcroft Media

Barcroft Media


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14 Aug 14:53

Feminists: Check Your Privilege

by Logan Grey
shipfactory / (Shutterstock.com)
shipfactory / (Shutterstock.com)

Many feminists, including myself, seem to completely forget how they’ve obtained their understanding of feminism. This forgetfulness can cause them to come off as angry, extreme, and even worse—exclusive. Exclusive? Yes, and exclusiveness is the last adjective a feminist’s cause should be associated with.

When did you first discover your passion for feminism? Did you have family members who made these realizations before you were born? Did they teach you these values as you grew up? Encourage you to be a freethinker? While in high school, were you surrounded by likeminded individuals and terrific teachers that you could freely bounce ideas off of? Were you given the opportunity to go to an expensive liberal-arts college where eye-opening, life-changing Women’s Studies courses were offered? Wow, lucky you! That’s not the case for everyone.

Call me an ignoramus if you must, but before I entered college a few years ago, I had no idea why feminism was even necessary. What were women whining about? Didn’t Susan B. Anthony take care of all that stuff in the 1800s? Before you scoff in disgust, allow me to paint the picture as to why I thought this way.

Growing up, my mom had always been the primary breadwinner in the house, considering my dad has now been unemployed for over ten years and only had temporary jobs here and there when he wasn’t unemployed.

At my Catholic grade school, I participated in a gifted and talented program from the fourth through the sixth grade, and out of the fifteen students in it, only two of them were boys. I used to ask my mom as a little fourth-grader, “Mom, why are girls better at school than boys?” since the girls in my grade seemed to consistently perform better in class, getting better grades on tests and projects.

It was the same song and dance at my public high school—in a fairly conservative community, no less. Fifteen people in my year graduated summa cum laude—eight females and seven males. We had some token “crazy-smart people” in our grade, one of which went off to major in physics, the other in chemical engineering—both female. I participated in student government, show choir, and drama club. The presidents of these groups would constantly alternate over the years between male and female, and usually the majority of the executive board was female. We had a vivacious female principal and several other female administrative faculty members. My favorite math teacher was a brilliant woman, while my favorite English and history teachers were exceptionally thought-provoking men.

After high-school graduation, I entered a five-year bachelor’s degree program in biomedical engineering at the University of Cincinnati, which had a ratio of approximately 50/50 for men vs. women. The pattern of my observations continued, with the top performers in my field being half male, half female. Some of the best professors I had were female. I watched female peers of mine getting co-op jobs at top companies such as P&G, Duke Energy, Ethicon Endo-Surgery, L’Oreal, Marathon, etc. My male peers definitely struggled just as much as my female peers to get co-op jobs, too.

SLAY me for not realizing that many women are oppressed after an entire lifetime of observing the exact opposite. Before you condescendingly start off a reply with, “Oh, honey…” I’ll have you know that thanks to my (privileged) education, I have come to the conclusion that my experience growing up is the exception and not the rule.

All it took was one calm, collected feminist to hear what I had to say about female equality in today’s society. She took into consideration my upbringing, genuinely respected my logic, and showed me (in a way that my obviously dumb, feeble brain could appreciate) how my current understanding and background did not represent the full picture. Now, after more years of observation and information, I would consider myself to be a full-blown feminist, too, but let it be known that that is NO THANKS to the feminists who attempted to tap into my emotions as a way of convincing me—emotions such as embarrassment, anger, guilt, or frustration. The ones who said with red faces and flustered speech statements such as, “Are you serious right now?!” … “I can’t even believe I’m hearing this!” … “You don’t see it?!” … “Wow, you are the reason women are so far behind.” … “What you just said literally makes me want to vomit.”

Where is the respect in that? Where is the rationale? Should I have gotten them a trashcan? I completely understand why they are frustrated, but do they actually think their fury with the system will change the minds of those around them? The full-blown lack of respect toward people who don’t quite grasp the whole feminism thing (like me a few years ago) is downright insulting. I am a successful biomedical engineering student who is preparing to pursue a Ph.D. in biophysics; FOR CHRIST’S SAKE, I AM NOT AN IDIOT. I didn’t understand why aspects of feminism were important until I was informatively provided with logical reasoning and evidence showing why women are not yet equal to men. I was provided with this understanding thanks to my privilege of being a student at a great public university.

Not everyone is as lucky as me or you in this regard. What about people whose parents have raised them on the foundation that women should stay home with kids while men provide financially for the family? They were taught that’s how it is for their entire lives. Their parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and great-great-grandparents survived (and arguably thrived) under this principle. Who are you to tell them they are idiots for being satisfied with their definition of success? They weren’t raised on the same values you were. They didn’t have the same education you did. Open-mindedness to alternative ways of life could have been punished rather than celebrated. Call them misogynists or bigots all you want—that’s not going to change the values and traditions in which they were raised. You are equally illogical to them, especially if you can’t control your deep-rooted resentment during a debate. The sooner you understand that, the better we can all come to some agreements.

If a feminist can’t acknowledge their own intellectual privilege, they are as wrong as the rich white male who thinks he’s gained all of his success from his own aptitude.

And while it is unfortunate that the stereotypical rich white male (who in the above case is symbolic of all privileged demographics) will often not recognize his privilege, at least he doesn’t condemn anyone for not comprehending the intense subjects he has mastered to be successful. He doesn’t call people who haven’t had the same education on topics such as physics or chemistry “ignorant.” He doesn’t blindly accuse people of being “physogynists” to make the opponent angry, as if that statement is the end-all-be-all in an argument. If you disagreed with him on Newton’s Three Laws of Motion, I doubt he’s experienced adrenaline rushes causing an increased heart rate as he becomes so frustrated that you would even FABRICATE such a PREPOSTEROUS suggestion (ya moron!) As an engineering student, I’ll tell you something: Scary angry physicists are no fun to learn physics from, and feminism is no different.

In summary, if you are a wildly passionate feminist, I have some advice on how to carry yourself next time you encounter a man or woman with an opposite stance:

Take a few deep breaths. Check your privilege. And, for the love of God, respectfully share what you’ve learned. TC mark








14 Aug 14:49

How Albanian Lives Are Wrecked by Cycles of Vengeance

by Sean Williams

Gjon Mhilli doesn’t leave his house out of fear he’ll be killed. Photo by the author

Gjon Mhilli peered out through his curtains at the countryside near Shkodër, in northwestern Albania. Outside it was sunny, warm—bucolic, even. Clouds rolled off the mountains and drifted over farms scattered on the green hills. The weather had been like this on the first day he was almost murdered, he told me, scratching his short gelled hair.

Black Saturday, Mhilli calls it. Twenty-two years ago, the Albanian, then 16, was working his family’s wheat field when a father and four sons from a neighboring farm approached, shouting and swearing. They wanted Mhilli’s family’s land for their own and were willing to use force. As they punched, kicked, then stabbed the teenager as he fell to the dirt, Mhilli was sure he would die—then his brother arrived with a hand plow and bludgeoned one of the sons to death with it.

Mhilli’s brother was convicted of manslaughter in a courtroom, but the father of the dead man was after an older brand of justice: He announced publicly that Mhilli’s family should pay in blood.

Since then, Mhilli said, there have been more than a dozen attempts on his life. In 2003 he was set on fire. In 2006 two men followed him home and pistol-whipped him into a coma, and when Mhilli came to, the police ordered him to pardon his attackers. He’s become convinced that one day they will succeed.

These days Mhilli doesn’t leave his small rented cinder-block house. Neither do his wife, Valentina, and their three kids. Next door is an Ottoman mosque where old men sit outside and drink tea under the sun. Mhilli doesn’t dare join them, or he’d be killed. He stays inside, watching television, drinking coffee, and smoking hand-rolled cigarettes the size of cigars. The children stay with an uncle sometimes; living with Dad is too dangerous.

Gjakmarrja, the tradition of blood feuds, has been a part of Albanian culture since the 15th century, when a set of laws called the Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini held that a murder victim’s family could avenge his death by killing a male member of the murderer’s family.

The communist leader Enver Hoxha’s Party of Labor took over Albania in 1944. In the following decades it banned religion, beards, and many aspects of traditional life, including gjakmarrja, while transforming the Balkan country into one of Europe’s poorest and most isolated nations. When the communists were officially voted out of power in 1992, Albania had been reduced to a broke backwater. In 1997, several massive pyramid schemes collapsed at once, almost destroying the national economy, and in the ensuing chaos the populace stole massive quantities of heavy weaponry from the government, most of which was never recovered by authorities. In light of this history, it’s not surprising that Albania’s criminal-justice system is widely distrusted, and in many places the Kanun—and the blood feuds that come with it—has once again become a popular way of settling disputes.

In 2012, around 1,600 families were affected by blood feuds, which as of 2000 had claimed 10,000 lives since the end of communism, according to Albania’s Committee of Nationwide Reconciliation (CNR), an anti-violence NGO.

It’s fallen on private groups to stem the tide of blood, CNR chairman Gjin Marku told me, because the government offers very little help. Mhilli can vouch for this—during my visit, he pulled out a pile of letters he has written over the years to various officials. The few who have replied haven’t been sympathetic, and some even told him not to embarrass his nation with bad publicity and derail its bid to join the European Union.

In fact, when I asked Prime Minister Edi Rama about the feuds, he said that Albania’s tradition of violence could be mitigated by things like improved social services but also by EU membership. “This is something that can only be solved through integration, Europeanization,” he told me.

Meanwhile, Marku travels the country in an effort to resolve blood feuds through mediation and dialogue. “I’m confident in Edi Rama,” Marku said. “If the top of the state pays attention to the strategy of the CNR, as well as to the culture of reconciliation, then everything will go smoothly. But unfortunately neither [local politicians] nor the media are interested in that.”

I asked Marku whether he had any advice for Mhilli, and he said Mhilli’s only option was escape: “He should not stay in Albania for a minute more.”

Mhilli did flee the country for Sweden two years ago with his family, but they were deported after a year and a half in a Stockholm suburb. Now Mhilli feels trapped in a town and country where he doesn’t see anything good ever happening for his family.

“It’s a catastrophic situation,” he said. “[The kids] have never been to school. I don’t teach them. The older boy can write, but the younger son cannot. I have zero hope for their future. I feel so bad about that because I’m done for myself, and when I look at them I’m devastated.”