Shared posts

06 Jun 18:38

Great Sand Sea Glass of the Libyan Desert in Egypt

A very special and remote area between the sand dunes of the southwest corner of Egypt, the Great Sand Sea presents a rare and mysterious treasure.

There are many theories about the origins of the unique Libyan glass. Some think that it is related to radiative melting, or ancient warfare. The glass was first discovered by stone age Aterian peoples, who made tools from the glass, and later by Egyptians. A polished piece of glass was centered in an elaborate piece of jewelry found in King Tutankhamen's tomb. Since these times, the glass remained untouched because of the harshness and inaccessibility of the area.

Since King Tut's people, P.A. Clayton was the first to discover the area in the 1930's. He collected samples that served to develop the first scientific description of the glass and theories of creation. The harsh landscape and environment prevented visitors to the area until the 1970's, when two meteor impact structures were discovered, providing further evidence of the origins of the fascinating glass. Today, the glass is a popular souvenir, but how King Tut got his hands on it still remains a mystery.

It has been estimated that the glass was formed around 26 million years ago. Chemical analysis of the natural glass reveals that it is fortified with "meteoritic elements with typical chondritic proportions," leading scientists believe that the glass is the chemical result of a meteorite colliding with the nearly 100% silica composition of the sand.

06 Jun 18:35

Photo

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
Russian Sledges

I used to obsessively download japanese icon sets of this sort

06 Jun 18:33

How a Turkish Game Show Undermined Censorship of the Gezi Protests

by Dashiell Bennett
rachel shared this story from The Atlantic Wire.

If you got all your Turkish news from actual Turkish news outlets, you might not have any idea that thousand of protesters had turned the street of Istanbul and other cities into riotous battlegrounds for the last week. To say nothing of the government's ignorant anti-social media campaign, the country's three main television networks (including CNN Turkey) have almost completely ignored the demonstrations, mentioning them only in passing on the evening news, and going on with their regular programming without interruption. That's because government censors are allowed to restrict news media when "public health and morals, national security, public order, public safety, and the unity of the land are at stake."

But that didn't stop one wily show from finding its way around the media blackout. On Monday, a Scrabble-esque game show called "The Word Game," slyly crafted all of its puzzles so that each answer referenced the protests without specifically bringing them up. Host Ali Ihsan Varol asked contestants to guess words based on clues like, "A journey undertaken to see, to have fun." The answer, in Turkish, is "Gezi" the name of the park where the protests first started. Other words that had to be guessed during the show included "Freedom," "Solidarity," "Ballot Box," "Dictator," and "Twitter." 

All 70 of Monday's night answers refereced the demonstrations in some way, including the last two: "Resign" and "Apologize." 

While Varol and his staff don't appear to havebeen  punished for their civil disobedience, their performance was clearly not unnoticed by the powers that be. The next night, the show, which is normally broadcasts live, was forced to air a pre-recorded episode. "The Word Game" airs on Bloomberg TV.

Probably my favorite of the CNN-penguin mainstream media silence in Turkey memes so far! #occupygezi #occupygezinyc twitter.com/ILoveArctic/st…

— Zafer Avindik (@ILoveArctic) June 5, 2013

Those annoyed by the media blackout have other ways to thumb their nose at the media outlets that have downplayed the protests. Penguins have became a popular meme in Turkey after CNN Turkey chose to ignore the riots last weekend in order to air a primetime documentary about penguins. A famous actor showed up for an interview on CNN wearing a penguin shirt, with the popoulr Hurriyet stuck them into a front page political cartoon. People have also been photoshopping peguins into photos of the protests, replacing the beseiged demonstrators in just the latest sign of just how clever these protestors can be

    




06 Jun 18:17

Subsidies that Work; or, Why is Good Food So Cheap in Germany and Expensive in Australia?

by Tom

Two summers ago we traveled as a family to Australia, where we were based in Canberra for five weeks. This month we are in Germany, based in Freiburg. We love to travel, but since having kids, we’ve noticed that travel has become a lot more expensive. Nothing illustrates this more than our grocery bill.

At least, that’s what we’ve come to expect. Here in Freiburg, we have been floored at how inexpensive our food bill has been. Some illustrations:

  1. We always have to stock a kitchen when we arrive in a new town. In Canberra, it cost us AUD245 in June 2011. In Freiburg in June 2013, our bill was EUR62. This is the case even though we also have one more kid this time, and little AP’s diet is pretty strict (and her favorite food, avocados, is hardly a local product).
  2. One Starbucks breakfast in Sydney cost us AUD28: that’s one tea, one long black, one yogurt, and three pastries. Our dinner last night at Hausbrauerei Feierling cost us EUR23: that’s one large fresh organic beer, one fresh-pressed organic apple cider, one bitter lemon, one large fresh soft pretzel, a basket of very good bread, two Landjäger, two Weißwürste, two Bauernwürste, and a salad. This is at a biergarten, yes, but it’s the most touristy one in Freiburg and the food was very good.

Now in U.S. dollar terms, some of the comparisons might be overstating things. The $ / AUD exchange rate was about 1.2/1 in 2011, which was as bad as it’s been. The $ / EUR exchange rate right now is around 1.3/1, which is great by recent standards. Also, when it comes to stocking our kitchen, we had to be more aggressive in Canberra because we couldn’t walk to the Supabarn, whereas we can walk to the Rewe in about 7 minutes.

But those differences don’t begin to explain the stark differences in the price of food between Freiburg and Canberra. Moreover, these inexpensive foods that we’re buying here in Freiburg are tasty and nutritious. If you don’t believe me, take a look at this fried egg, which is just a normal organic cage free egg from the grocery store. 10 of these cost EUR1!

Deep orange yolk = extra delicious

Subsidies in the U.S. seem to be producing huge amounts of grains, leading to a superabundance of white flour, corn syrup, and corn-fed beef. Here, they seem to be producing nutritious, locally-grown, organic vegetables, tasty dairy, cage free poultry, and free range meat.

I see two questions here. One is why food is so expensive in Australia but so cheap here. One might think it’s just about subsidies—Australian farm subsidies appear to be very low—but don’t forget that Australia is a big sunny country with no one living in it, and (especially in Queensland) the land is incredibly fertile. Even with low subsidies, and a center which is useless for commercial agriculture, Australia is a net agricultural exporter. Agricultural subsidies in Germany are a big deal, and farmers are very powerful, yet this does not translate into either higher food prices or an abundance of lousy and unhealthy food.

Which leads us to the second question: why, given the extensive subsidies to German farmers, does this not translate into industrial farms producing bland and unhealthy corn/wheat/soy by the kiloton? The most productive farm areas of Germany would produce approximately the same types of crops as would the most productive farm areas of the U.S. Yet farmers are growing a wide range of healthy, natural foods, and for the same price.

I’ve asked around a bit, and I have some hypotheses. But none seem satisfactory.

  1. The “Freiburg” Effect. It’s possible that our experience is not a German experience, it’s a Freiburg experience. Freiburg is a very environmental town, and numerous people have explained to us that French culinary traditions shape Freiburgers’ approach to food. Maybe if we were elsewhere in Germany, we’d see fresh produce, dairy, and meats with the high prices that we expect. It’s possible that this is true, as neither JMP nor I have been anywhere else in Germany than Freiburg. But we doubt it: Germany is a capitalist economy with incredibly functional domestic transportation system, so it’d be hard to imagine that prices would differ that much in one city because competition would tend to equalize them. (Also, Freiburg is very close to France, so it should also experience competition from there as well.) This would probably only work as an explanation if the premium on local agriculture elsewhere were so high as to make it impossible to sell Freiburg’s local agricultural products elsewhere at nearly any price.
  2. EU Agricultural Subsidies. It’s also possible that EU agricultural subsidies just really work well, and that the low prices for food are just the consequence of high taxes, which we as tourists don’t see. Could be, but that doesn’t seem quite right, for one reason. German agricultural policy is made in Brussels, and we’ve been elsewhere in Europe (France, Italy, the UK) around this time of year, and seen tasty and nutritious food, but the prices were much higher prices.
  3. Farm size. One economist explained to me that German farms in what was formerly West Germany tend to be small. This creates stiff price competition, and inhibits mass production of cheap grain on an industrial scale. The former seems exactly wrong to me: small farms should be less cost-efficient, on average, than large ones. But there is perhaps something to the second argument. One piece of evidence in favor of this argument might lie in the large farms in the former East Germany, which are large as a legacy of collectivization under the GDR. Perhaps they act more like U.S.-style industrial farms, leaving the smaller farms in the former West producing other types of agricultural products that just happen to be better. But still, this does not explain why oranges (from Spain) and avocados (from Peru) are still so inexpensive.

In all, we’re stumped. But happily so: eating well and feeling healthy without breaking the bank. And it makes me wonder how agricultural subsidies here are working so well, given their incredibly distortionary effects on food production in the U.S.

UPDATE:
An old friend who is also both German and an economist writes the following:

The low price of groceries compared to really anywhere else always puzzled me, too. Even Switzerland and England are very different. Compared to the US, it’s especially striking since basically everything else is cheaper in the US. The comparison to Switzerland is the most baffling, since Switzerland has free trade with the EU. No trade economist I asked had a good explanation…What people in Germany often say is that retailing is very concentrated. But why is this market power only used to push upstream prices down, and not also used to push up retail prices? Again, I haven’t seen a good explanation or model for this…

06 Jun 17:49

raggedyanndy: IDEAS FOR 12TH DOCTOR: -Idris Elba, preferably shirtless -Willow Smith -Christopher...

Russian Sledges

shared for bonus

raggedyanndy:

IDEAS FOR 12TH DOCTOR:

-Idris Elba, preferably shirtless

-Willow Smith

-Christopher Eccleston in a wig

-John Barrowman with his Scottish accent

-Lucy Liu

-Ian McKellen, constantly stoned

-A balrog voiced by Morgan Freeman

-Alex Kingston in drag

BONUS:

Benedict Cumberbatch, with Jonny Lee Miller as his companion, but every episode they switch characters

06 Jun 17:46

watershedplus: A levada is an irrigation channel or aqueduct...

Russian Sledges

via firehose


http://www.fotocommunity.de/pc/pc/display/13372123


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Levada_Madeira.jpg


http://www.xeta.at/Madeira/_DSC6353_Wasserfall-Madeira-Levada-Ribeiro-Frio-Portugal

watershedplus:

A levada is an irrigation channel or aqueduct specific to the Portugese island of Madeira. They were created from the sixteenth century to carry water across the island from the mountainous west and northwest of the island to the drier southeast, which is more conducive to habitation and agriculture
The total levadas network extends over 2150 km in this island 57 km long, 23km wide in the widest point.

Source 1, 2, 3

06 Jun 16:02

Ex-drone operator says he's haunted by the carnage he caused from behind the cover of a computer screen | Mail Online

by russiansledges
Russian Sledges

#nightmarefuel

'I can see every little pixel if I just close my eyes,' he said. Bryant is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after his five years as a drone operator. He said he sought help for the emotions he was experiencing on his job but 'one of the weird things about the whole drone community is you don't talk about anything that you've done. You just don't,' he told NPR. He said he  began feeling paranoid that he was killing innocent people, not Taliban insurgents. And he felt that it wasn't his place to question the people giving him orders to launch the missile attacks.
06 Jun 15:42

D.C.'s 'Doissant' Has Killed This Cronut Thing Dead

by Rebecca Greenfield
Russian Sledges

thanks obama

Now that our nation's capital, already so incapable of being hip, has up and built its own donut/croissant hybrid, the "doissant" — New York's Dominique Ansel actually trademarked the cronut name — it's safe to call this the end of the end of the cross-pollinated pastry trend, or at least Washington has brought us disgustingly close. D.C bakery Chocolate Crust has mimicked Ansel's SoHo sensation with the chocolate hazelnut croissant donut creation pictured at right. DCist, which discovered its local doissant, hasn't done a taste test to see how it stacks up with the cronut, but does that even matter? The definition of cool, at least when it comes to foodie trends, is selectivity. Ansel only makes 200-250 per day to create scarcity in the market, or at least hype. Everyone wants a cronut because not everyone else can get the cronut. But now that even lame D.C. residents can get their hands on one — or at least a close enough impostor version — haute New Yorkers had better get over the fad, and fast.  

The hate for the overpriced saccharine treat had already started bubbling up, as the Atlantic Wire chronicled yesterday in our hater's guide to cronuts. Already the 99 percent of foodies had incited a mini-backlash against the the "pastry of the 1 percent." "It's a little disturbing that people are now paying $5 for a pastry. Instead we recommend making these for about 50¢ each and donating the other $4.50 to an organization like Feeding America, which seeks to feed those who don’t have enough money for regular food, let alone cronuts," writes RYOT's Isabella Sayyah, alongside DIY recipes for the working man's specialty sweet eater.

Now that budget cronuts have arrived in less trendy locations with an even more ridiculous name, it's only a matter of time before baked-good snobs turn their nose up at the too-trendy-for-its-own-good dessert as well. And Chocolate Crust isn't the only place offering a knock-off cronut. Other district bakeries DCist spoke with said they were experimenting with the idea. SFist has some at make-your-own version, too. In a matter of mere weeks, the cronut has fulfilled its destiny and become the new cupcake. Good job, guys.

    


06 Jun 15:24

Citizen complaint of the day: The mismatched bricks of the South End

by adamg
Russian Sledges

#southendproblems

Bricks

A pattern-conscious citizen complains about the bricks on Lawrence Street:

Who chose these bricks? These bricks do not match the look or feel of the existing South End brick sidewalks, Please look into this ASAP AND GIVE ME A REPORT BACK thanks

Earlier:
South End font kvetching.

06 Jun 15:13

IBM turns its ads into useful urban furniture

by Darwin Cosico

IBM turns its ads into useful urban furniture

Advertising can be an eyesore if not done properly, something that many city dwellers encounter on a daily basis. IBM and Ogilvy & Mather France had an idea. If cities were smarter, then life in cities would be better. Their solution was to create ads with purpose. By adding a simple curve, they gave advertising a new function – bench, shelter and a ramp.

Their campaign is more likely to resonate with people as it has taken the idea of utility and applied it to the traditional outdoor ad. Their goal is to encourage forward-thinking individuals and politicians to consider how to make their neighbourhoods smarter and better.

IBM02 IBM03

The post IBM turns its ads into useful urban furniture appeared first on Lost At E Minor: For creative people.

06 Jun 14:52

Lucky Star bus company out of service

by By Marie Szaniszlo
Russian Sledges

fungwahed

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has ordered Boston-based bus line Lucky Star to immediately cease all operations, calling its vehicles and drivers an “imminent hazard” to public safety.

“There is no higher priority than safety,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a statement. “Bus and truck companies must comply with federal safety regulations, which protect every traveler on our highways and roads. Companies that disregard the safety rules will not be allowed to operate.”

06 Jun 14:51

Where Coming Out Takes Real Courage

by Andrew Sullivan

Joe My God passes along the trailer for Call Me Kuchu, opening in NYC on June 14th and LA the following week. A synopsis:

In an unmarked office at the end of a dirt track, veteran activist David Kato labors to repeal Uganda’s homophobic laws and liberate his fellow lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender men and women, or “kuchus.”  … But one year into filming Call Me Kuchu and just three weeks after a landmark legal victory, the unthinkable happens: David is brutally murdered in his home. His death sends shock waves around the world, and leaves the Bishop and Kampala’s kuchus traumatized and seeking answers for a way forward. With unprecedented access, Call Me Kuchu depicts the last year in the life of a courageous, quick-witted and steadfast man whose wisdom and achievements were not fully recognized until after his death, and whose memory has inspired a new generation of human rights advocates.

Elsewhere, Stephen Fry shares a shocking quote from his upcoming documentary Out There, which looks at the experience of being gay around the world:

I actually got a Ugandan minister to say on camera — he’s the Minister for Ethics and Integrity; it’s the only such ministry in the world — and I said to him, ‘Look, even if these… utterly false supports on which you base your homophobia were true, which they aren’t, there’s so much more to worry about in your country than the odd gay person going to bed with the other gay person. For example, you have almost an epidemic of child rape in this country, which is just frightening.’ And he said, ‘Ah, but it is the right kind of child rape.’ …

I said ‘That was on camera. Do you know that that was on camera?’ He said yes. I said, ‘Can you just explain what you mean? He said, ‘Well, it is men raping girls, which is natural.’


06 Jun 14:41

itscarororo: burn-thenightaway: pondermoofin: watchtheskytonig...

















itscarororo:

burn-thenightaway:

pondermoofin:

watchtheskytonight:

purplesmauge:

crowleysdelicateass:

popsible:

I love this new trend of actresses calling reporters out on their bullshit.

Can I just, Renner’s face is the second and third frames. He’s so disappointe in the male race at that moment. And so proud of Scarlett.

Scarlett Johansen, you are badass.

Bless her.

Four for you, Scarlett! You go, Scarlett! 

Forever reblog this damn woman.

augh actresses must get SO TIRED of this shit, I would not have been as polite as she was

get it TOGETHER reporters!!

06 Jun 13:34

chicken riding tortoise

Russian Sledges

thank you otters



chicken riding tortoise

06 Jun 13:19

Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia rebels.

Russian Sledges

I think I saw her at a laibach show



Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia rebels.

06 Jun 11:44

Oh, How Pinteresting!, Where’s That Pin Again? Search Your Pins!

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
Russian Sledges

now your work can be of use to you, in addition to marketers

Oh, you think?

We’re happy to announce you can now search for your own pins. This makes it easier to rediscover stuff you’ve pinned.

Original Source

06 Jun 11:20

The One In The Bow Tie 1. John Glenn and the Mercury astronauts.

Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide



The One In The Bow Tie 1.

John Glenn and the Mercury astronauts.

06 Jun 11:20

The One In The Bow Tie 4. John Glenn.

Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide



The One In The Bow Tie 4.

John Glenn.

06 Jun 03:00

Restaurant review: At Lineage, in Brookline’s Coolidge Corner, a new chef, lobster tacos, and under-the-radar excellence - Food & dining - The Boston Globe

by russiansledges
Russian Sledges

<3 lineage

But Sewall’s lowest-profile restaurant — which he owns with wife and pastry chef Lisa — rivals the others with which he is involved. Lineage’s seafood dishes are as strong as Island Creek’s, sometimes stronger. Its service is gracious. Its cocktails are excellent (try the crimson Fiore, made with a cardamom-scented hibiscus liqueur called Hum). Seven years after it opened, it glides along, quiet but sure. Now it has a new chef de cuisine, Alex Sáenz, who won me over at Ten Tables Provincetown when it opened in 2011. (He has also worked at the former Great Bay, Spire, and Straight Wharf in Nantucket, among others.) At Ten Tables he turned out dishes that combined New England seafood with the flavors of the world — think grilled bluefish with clams, chorizo, red peas, eggplant, and herbed yogurt. Sáenz grew up in Lima, and South Carolina, and one can taste whispers of both in his food.
06 Jun 02:50

The Mantra is WTF

by Josh Marshall

I'd noticed in recent months that one-time action star Steven Seagal was helping members of Congress investigate the Tsarnaev brothers in Russia, chillin' with various warlords and also some sort of Deputy for Sherif Arpaio down in Phoenix. In addition to now maybe become the pitchman for the Russian weapons industry. So I asked Hunter Walker to find out what was up and whether Seagal was losing a sense of where his movies ended and reality starts. Here's what he came up with.

    


06 Jun 02:49

Against Intimidation

by Josh Marshall

Protestor: "I feel like [these Muslims] are attempting to intimidate people with the freedom of speech and that bothers me."

    


06 Jun 01:56

neraiutsuze: imperfectwriting: I just needed to reblog this...













neraiutsuze:

imperfectwriting:

I just needed to reblog this again.

Because jfc, you don’t understand how important this scene is to me.

Or maybe you do!

Because it has Jack openly showing his affection and admiration for two people of different gender in the exact same way, making no difference at all, and neither do Rose nor the Doctor. Zilch. No hesitating, no flinching, no comic relief.

I wish it could be like this more often.

That scene up there is doing everything right, end of story. And while Jack’s sexuality is often made out to be something to smile at, it’s also shown as very natural and Nine was just cool with that, no reason not to be.

Acceptance: You’re doing it right.

I remember reading that John very intentionally made sure to kiss Chris exactly like he kissed Billie, because he wanted it to be very clear that the male-male kiss was exactly the same as the female-male kiss, exactly as real as the female-male kiss, and that there was nothing humorous about the gay kiss as compared to the straight one.

06 Jun 01:45

wiigipedia: klartie: i do believe i won this round of “best...



wiigipedia:

klartie:

i do believe i won this round of “best yearbook quote” 

05 Jun 20:03

n284_w1150

by BioDivLibrary
Russian Sledges

via a colleague who just stopped by my desk and and said "you should visit my library; we have shrooms"

BioDivLibrary posted a photo:

n284_w1150

Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen nach der Natur :.
Nürnberg,1817-.
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32574548

05 Jun 20:02

n288_w1150

by BioDivLibrary

BioDivLibrary posted a photo:

n288_w1150

Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen nach der Natur :.
Nürnberg,1817-.
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32574552

05 Jun 20:02

n300_w1150

by BioDivLibrary

BioDivLibrary posted a photo:

n300_w1150

Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen nach der Natur :.
Nürnberg,1817-.
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32574564

05 Jun 19:38

Man Invisible On Gchat Observes World From Impregnable Perch

Russian Sledges

yfaoaam

ST. LOUIS—Having earlier in the day set his Gchat status to “invisible,” local man Jeff Young, 29, reportedly spent his Wednesday afternoon monitoring the comings and goings of his various online contacts as a silent and unknowable obser...
05 Jun 19:36

Photo

Russian Sledges

#yitb

via firehose



05 Jun 19:08

Willow (Capcom - NES - 1989) note this is a completely different...

Russian Sledges

via firehose



Willow (Capcom - NES - 1989)

note this is a completely different game than the arcade Willow

05 Jun 18:44

Word on the Street

Russian Sledges

via firehose