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GOOD’s Essential Albums, Books, TV Shows, And Political Moments Of 2016

2016 had its bright spots and this list proves it

2016 has been tough on us, but that doesn’t mean that it was all tragedy. It has been an incredible year in music. I’m sure if someone had asked you last year at 11:59 pm on New Year’s Eve if you’d predict Solange—sister to Queen Bey—would make an album to rival her her sister and the biggest star in the world, you’d have spit out your champagne and chuckled. Well, it happened.

This year sounds of protest filled the interstitial spaces between racial strife, economic strife, and social media dustups. We lost a great many of our idols, leaving us here without their continued inspiration. What worked? Not prayer. Not worry. Not perpetual, self-satisfying motion. Only your own will to make the world a better place. And all that’s left is the continued will to do that. To push on as previous generations have.

These are the albums, television shows, books, and political moments that both defined our year, but also taught us that we can get through this year—and the next four years—with our sanity intact.

Leonard Cohen in "You Want It Darker"

The Albums That Got Us Through

\nSolange: A Seat at the Table”

Solange’s breakout masterpiece was a watershed moment for R&B in 2016 and brought the listener into Solange’s inner-space with a clarity that escaped even some of the rising hope of golden age 70s-era soul. It carried us through this year because of it, seemingly capturing the zeitgeist of this time while never sinking into despair.

Its soundscape lay in parallel to several interludes—musings by Master P, a comment on blackness from Tina Knowles, and it continued from there—molding old superstars and upstarts into a single vision.

\nJamila Woods: Heavn”

Jamila Woods is the real deal: the voice of a jazz soloist and the mind of an activist, Woods is the associate artistic director of the nonprofit organization Young Chicago Authors. Her songs jingle and twirl as though they were developed in a child’s bedroom, the banality of marginalization hanging like an aroma blowing in from the street below.

For all its sorely needed innocence,Heavn” is also brave, adding levity to Woods’ grim neo-soul baseline of martyrdom. Between the Facebook Live stream of Philando Castile to the seemingly sudden return of nationalism, America has experienced a sort of collective trauma—the kind of sudden instability that once exclusively belonged to marginalized communities, or so we thought. “Heavn” is the kind of album that ropes you back from the abyss.

\nLeonard Cohen:You Want It Darker”

Leonard Cohen’s final LP, earmarking a superb, multidecade career, was one very much interested in the soul. How does a life’s worth of thinking and doing sum up? Does it all matter in the end? “You Want It Darker” explored both questions with grit and promise as Leonard winds the listener – you – down a path of demons and angels with no hallelujahs to be found. The cement piece comes at the beginning, with Cohen remarkably describing our collective mood: “A million candles burning for the help that never came. You want it darker …” It would seem, this year, we did.

Donald Glover's "Atlanta"

The Television That Challenged Us

Atlanta

Donald Glover’s masterpiece is a deep dive into the psyche of America through the peculiar lens of blackness. Its focus is the absurdity of the black experience, therefore highlighting the drag that our miserly sub-realities play on our minds. It constantly asks, ‘Are you viewing this correctly?’ giving it the illusion of complexity when the burn is a simple one. Black folks multi-varied, multitudinous lives often cannot be seen. They are hidden, purposely, from view, thereby guaranteeing exploitation. Atlanta would have none of it. And is must-see tube watching because of it.

\nO.J.: Made In Americaand The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story\n

20 years later and we’re still infatuated with O.J. Simpson and the horrific tragedy of his wife’s murder. There has always been more than meets the eye with Simpson. Son of a closeted gay man whose turn to masculinity took on fevered importance. Football star—no, idol—who transcended race with his stately afro and withered turn at one film after another. The story is prototypically American: He had the whole wide world in his hands, then it came crashing down. The rotten glove, still blood-spattered. The brilliant defense. The near incompetent prosecution, all but giving away a conviction. The verdict, to the bafflement of us all, came back “not guilty.” But there was even more to unpack. And these two brilliant dramas took turns giving us one side and then another. His obsession with Nicole was both small and large. Still, the man is obscured to us and we have no idea who he is. Maybe we don’t know who anyone is.

Westworld

The robots figure it out, eventually. Their masters are cruel and faithless. But it is their agency that, robbed from them, they are furious about. You must wonder why? The show acts as a lightning rod for us amateur web sleuths. There are literally thousands of theories floating out there. Are these just narratives previously installed or are they practicing real decision-making? The thinly veiled metaphor is that they are not. No one is. Put another way, free will works in innumerable, and— not only that—completely confusing ways. All our decisions are, in a way, predetermined and made in a determined universe. In a year when people seemed to make decisions that seemed to be awful, yet determined, these ideas need to be wrestled with now more than ever.

Karan Mahajan's "The Association Of Small Bombs"

The Books That Moved Us

\nColson Whitehead: The Underground Railroad\n

Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad won 2016’s National Book Award for fiction. It was well deserved. He has been exploring the manifestations of racial indifference for many years, but it was the surreality of this book, combined with his penetrating insight and slick humor that won us all over. Not only does the Underground Railroad become a literal thing, but the ride becomes its own kind savage look into the hearts of mankind.

‘What will we do with this question of race?’ is the centrality of the book. Escaping from it. Demanding it. Committing acts of inhumanity on its account. Is this all there is? The Underground Railroad answers that question through the only vehicle appropriate to it: indictment.

\nJane Mayer: Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right\n

In practically all of Ridley Scott’s films, explorers find themselves in completely alien places confronted suddenly by a fragment of long-lost humanity: a giant head. Often, the entire film feels set up to confront this moment. Dealing with the trenches dug by some previous set of bipedal hominid, it adds a sense of magic to the picture, but also a danger, as the intrepid realize they must not also deal with each other but some foreign ancient ancestor.

This feeling is what makes Jane Mayer’s Dark Money so good. The Koch Brothers, locked out of politics in 1980 after David Koch ran as the vice-presidential Libertarian candidate, decided simply to buy the Republican Party. They set about doing this by investing money at all levels of government everywhere, jerry-rigging state and city politicians to think tanks, news organizations, and other kinds of political middle-dom, creating an entire infrastructure in the process. But, at the core, it’s the megalomania of it all that shines through. In much the same way brilliant painters are obsessed with the “self-portrait,” the Koch’s have remade the political world in their own image. Staring at themselves must be great fun.

The book draws an intense corollary—that this election and this year is the culmination of these investments. Now, with republican control of the House, Senate, and the White House, and with the judiciary branch scuttling behind, we’re going to get to see the United States become the House of Koch.

\nKaran Mahajan: The Association of Small Bombs\n

What’s lost in the black-and-white narrative of us or nothing is the humanity that escapes when extraordinary acts of violence become mundane. There is America’s mass shooter. There is the Middle-Eastern world’s suicide bomber. Each one, whether sympathetic (they were lonely, quiet, a good student) or apoplectic (they were radicalized, a follower, a zealot) prove themselves meaningless. What in the world is driving people to see no other way than blanket violence? The pressure must be total; the world must seem grave. Karan Mahajan’s book, while fatalistic, peels the curtain back to explore the commonalities of calamity—that even if you survive the bomb you are changed from it. Cracks show in places that were once sure. In all of it, we are still startlingly human and very much the same. Even as the book hurries toward its climax, it never leaves the reader behind with the shells of empty rhetoric.

Donald Trump

The Political Moments That Made Us Pay Attention

Donald Trump Wins the Presidency

Eight years ago we elected the first black president in the history of the United States. Monumental, obviously. He seemed like a unicorn: president of the Harvard Law Review; Hawaiian, with a half-white mother and a Kenyan father; a man, viewed shallowly, as in between two worlds. He walked both of them perfectly, leveraging the hopes of so many while balancing the skepticism of his most fervent detractors. He ran on “hope” and on “change,” and we believed him to wins over decent folks like Mitt Romney and John McCain. We had no idea—though we should have—that the backlash to his ascendency would be unforeseen, desperate, and massive. It’s the year 2016, and Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in the most divisive election of our time.

Powered by a melody of constituents, Trump tapped into fear and anger, yes, but also into a hope. Namely, the hope of those adrift among declining union power, a slumping manufacturing sector, and a world that is now far more progressive than it was at the end of the Bush presidency. Those very sane people, their world around them changing without them, voted as they did, but so did white supremacists who viewed Trump as a clean break from modern conservatism. A break from idea-based conservatism to an ethnic one. The Boogey people are everyone else: immigrants, the LGBTQ community, the unpatriotic, the media, and the “elites.” A coalition of the forgotten has been joined by a coalition of the relentless. Nothing can sway this reckoning, it seems. Not news that Russia interfered on Trump’s behalf. Not news that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. Not anything, it seems, that would have swayed audiences of the past. In fact, as thousands of people tried to sway electors all around the country, more defected from Clinton than from Trump.

There’s so much to be afraid of with a Trump presidency. Bigots have been emboldened. Hate crimes are spiking all over the country. He joins a series of nationalist politicians all over the world. His conflicts of interest are numerous. His inability to deal diplomatically with other powers is seen as a great boon by his base and as stupidity by his detractors. The country is now split directly in half. California is considering its own #Calexit. Middle ground, bipartisan politics has been tossed out in favor of single-minded viewpoints that folks plan to carry to their logical conclusion.

Now, we wait.

Hillary Clinton Becomes First Female Candidate of a Major Party

When we speak about Hillary Clinton, so many of us now echo the machinations of her loss. From not spending enough time in the rust belt to her email scandals, we overlook the fact that her nomination was historic and decades in the making. She was the first woman presidential candidate for a major political party. She went from being the first lady to the secretary of state. Her qualifications were vast. An industry politician with a powerful foundation standing behind her, Clinton had been molding policy for years. She was shrewd, and years of political wrangling taught her how to make a deal. She was not afraid to go against a previous statement or idea, showing the intellectual rigor she kept herself beholden to.

For some, she was shrouded in secrecy and scandal. With wild conspiracy theories being cooked up to blight whatever she touched. Even women were unmoved by her, with this election showing that a large band of female democratic voters did not vote for her, even in the areas she won.

In short, the messaging machine erected to defeat her worked. And as person-after-person questioned her secrecy and loyalty, her best traits turned into dystopian narratives. Her quiet leadership turned to silent conniving. Her ability to view things from multiple points of view turned into being wishy-washy.

We now have no discernible way to view Hillary Clinton, who is, arguably, one of the greatest politicians of her time.

The Rise of Nationalism

History tends to repeat itself. 2016 was a year, then, of hard-line nationalists threatening to take over the western world. Brexit, the U.S. election, Erdogan’s coup, Duterte’s ascent to power, and others all show a worldwide shift toward leadership that values country and control over all else.

Duterte’s deadly campaign in the Philippines has been a literal bloodbath, as he targets drug pushers and users. It has been estimated so far that he’s sanctioned the murder of over 2000 people, and he has said, “You can expect 20,000 to 30,000 more.”

Farage in the U.K. made outlandish promises, buttressed by a nationalist sentiment opposing the Europen Union, along with fear—blaming immigrants for a host of problems in the U.K. What began as a protest vote, ended up a victory for the hardliners, as regret swept the country the next day and the British pound began to be battered by insecurity.

Terror campaigns in France have the French retreating under the warm blanket of nationalist security. The rest of the west are facing similar attacks, delegitimizing the strength of their individual democracies.

We're now confronted by the slippery slope into hard line politics. Hate crimes have gone up considerably in the west. People are moving toward intolerance at warp speeds. Will it be stopped? Only the future can answer that question. Though, if it’s anything like the past, the answer is not without tolerance getting its day in court. We all must show up for that trial.

Articles

14 images of badass women who destroyed stereotypes and inspired future generations

These trailblazers redefined what a woman could be.

Throughout history, women have stood up and fought to break down barriers imposed on them from stereotypes and societal expectations. The trailblazers in these photos made history and redefined what a woman could be. In doing so, they paved the way for future generations to stand up and continue to fight for equality.



This article originally appeared on December 14, 2016.

Articles

Why mass shootings spawn conspiracy theories

Mass shootings and conspiracy theories have a long history.

AP Photo/Jessica Hill/The Conversation

Shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

While conspiracy theories are not limited to any topic, there is one type of event that seems particularly likely to spark them: mass shootings, typically defined as attacks in which a shooter kills at least four other people.

When one person kills many others in a single incident, particularly when it seems random, people naturally seek out answers for why the tragedy happened. After all, if a mass shooting is random, anyone can be a target.

Pointing to some nefarious plan by a powerful group – such as the government – can be more comforting than the idea that the attack was the result of a disturbed or mentally ill individual who obtained a firearm legally.

In the United States, where some significant portion of the public believes that the government is out to take their guns, the idea that a mass shooting was orchestrated by the government in an attempt to make guns look bad may be appealing both psychologically and ideologically.

Our studies of mass shootings and conspiracy theories help to shed some light on why these events seem particularly prone to the development of such theories and what the media can do to limit the ideas' spread.


Back to the 1990s

Mass shootings and conspiracy theories have a long history. As far back as the mid-1990s, amid a spate of school shootings, Cutting Edge Ministries, a Christian fundamentalist website, found a supposed connection between the attacks and then-President Bill Clinton.

The group's website claimed that when lines were drawn between groups of school-shooting locations across the U.S., they crossed in Hope, Arkansas, Clinton's hometown. The Cutting Edge Ministries concluded from this map that the "shootings were planned events, with the purpose of convincing enough Americans that guns are an evil that needs to be dealt with severely, thus allowing the Federal Government to achieve its Illuminist goal of seizing all weapons."

Beliefs persist today that mass shootings are staged events, complete with "crisis actors," people who are paid to pretend to be victims of a crime or disaster, all as part of a conspiracy by the government to take away people's guns. The idea has been linked to such tragedies as the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida, and the Sandy Hook Elementary attack that resulted in the deaths of 20 children in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012.

These beliefs can become widespread when peddled by prominent people. U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has been in the news recently because of her belief that the Parkland shooting was a "false flag," an event that was disguised to look like another group was responsible. It's not clear, though, in this instance who Rep. Greene felt was really to blame.

Conservative personality Alex Jones recently failed to persuade the Texas Supreme Court to dismiss defamation and injury lawsuits against him by parents of children who were killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting. Jones has, for years, claimed that the Sandy Hook massacre didn't happen, saying "the whole thing was fake," and alleging it happened at the behest of gun-control groups and complicit media outlets.

After the country's deadliest mass shooting to date, with 59 dead and hundreds injured in Las Vegas in 2017, the pattern continued: A conspiracy theory arose that there were multiple shooters, and the notion that the shooting was really done for some other purpose than mass murder.

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Shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

Making sense of the senseless

These conspiracy theories are all attempts to make sense of incomprehensibly terrifying events. If a lone shooter, with no clear motive, can singlehandedly take the lives of 60 individuals, while injuring hundreds more, then is anyone really safe?

Conspiracy theories are a way of understanding information. Historian Richard Hofstadter has indicated they can provide motives for events that defy explanation. Mass shootings, then, create an opportunity for people to believe there are larger forces at play, or an ultimate cause that explains the event.

For instance, an idea that a shooter was driven mad by antipsychoticdrugs, distributed by the pharmaceutical industry, can provide comfort as opposed to the thought that anyone can be a victim or perpetrator.

Polls have shown that people worry a lot about mass shootings, and more than 30% of Americans said in 2019 that they refused to go particular places such as public events or the mall for fear of being shot.

If the shootings are staged, or the results of an enormous, unknowable or mysterious effort, then they at least becomes somewhat comprehensible. That thought process satisfies the search for a reason that can help people feel more comfort and security in a complex and uncertain world – especially when the reason found either removes the threat or makes it somehow less random.

Some people blame mass shootings on other factors like mental illness that make gun violence an individual issue, not a societal one, or say these events are somehow explained by outside forces. These ideas may seem implausible to most, but they do what conspiracy theories are intended to do: provide people with a sense of knowing and control.

Conspiracy theories have consequences

Conspiracy theories can spark real-world threats – including the QAnon-inspired attack on a pizza restaurant in 2016 and the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.

They also misdirect blame and distract from efforts to better understand tragedies such as mass shootings. High-quality scholarship could investigate how to better protect public places. But robust debates about how to reduce events such as mass shootings will be less effective if some significant portion of the public believes they are manufactured.

Some journalists and news organizations have already started taking steps to identify and warn audiences against conspiracy theories. Open access to reputable news sources on COVID-19, for example, has helped manage the misinformation of coronavirus conspiracies.

Explicit and clear evaluation of evidence and sources – in headlines and TV subtitles – have helped keep news consumers alert. And pop-up prompts from Twitter and Facebook encourage users to read articles before reposting.

These steps can work, as shown by the substantial drop in misinformation on Twitter following former President Donald Trump's removal from the platform.

Mass shootings may be good fodder for conspiracy theories, but that does not mean people should actually consume such ideas without necessary context or disclaimers.

Michael Rocque is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Bates College.

Stephanie Kelley-Romano is an Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Film, and Screen Studies at Bates College


This article first appeared on The Conversation on 02.20.21.. You can read it here.

Between the bras, makeup, periods, catcalling, sexism, impossible-to-attain beauty standards, and heels, most men wouldn't survive being a woman for a day without having a complete mental breakdown. So here's a slideshow of some of the funniest Tumblr posts about the everyday struggles that women face that men would never understand.

All photos courtesy of Tumblr.




This article originally appeared on 01.09.16



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Cancel all coal projects to have 'fighting chance' against climate crisis, says UN Chief

"Phasing out coal from the electricity sector is the single most important step to get in line with the 1.5 degree goal."

Photo from Pixabay.
A coal power plant.

This article originally appeared on Common Dreams on 3.3.21. You can read it here.



Emphasizing that the world still has a "fighting chance" to limit global warming with immediate and ambitious climate action, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday urged governments and the private sector to cancel all planned coal projects, cease financing for coal-fired power plants, and opt instead to support a just transition by investing in renewable energy.

"Once upon a time, coal brought cheap electricity to entire regions and vital jobs to communities," Guterres said in a video message at the virtual meeting of the Powering Past Coal Alliance. "Those days are gone."

"Phasing out coal from the electricity sector is the single most important step to get in line with the 1.5 degree goal," Guterres continued, referring to the policy objective of preventing planetary temperatures from rising more than 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels. "Global coal use in electricity generation must fall by 80% below 2010 levels by 2030," he added.

Meeting the 1.5 °C climate target over the course of this decade is possible, according to Guterres, but will require eliminating "the dirtiest, most polluting and, yes, more and more costly fossil fuel from our power sectors."

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In his address, the U.N. chief outlined three steps that must be taken by public authorities as well as companies to "end the deadly addiction to coal."

  • Cancel all global coal projects in the pipeline;
  • End the international financing of coal plants and shift investment to renewable energy projects; and
  • Jump-start a global effort to finally organize a just transition.

Guterres called on the 37 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)—a group of relatively rich countries with a greater historical responsibility for extracting fossil fuels and emitting the greenhouse gasses that are causing deadly pollution and destroying the climate—to "commit to phasing out coal" by 2030, while urging non-OECD countries to do so by 2040.

Pleading for an end to the global bankrolling of coal projects and a move toward supporting developing countries in transitioning to clean energy, Guterres asked "all multilateral and public banks—as well as investors in commercial banks or pension funds—to shift their investments now in the new economy of renewable energy."

While stressing that "the transition from coal to renewable[s] will result in the net creation of millions of jobs by 2030," Guterres acknowledged that "the impact on regional and local levels will be varied."

"We have a collective and urgent responsibility to address the serious challenges that come with the speed and scale of the transition," he continued. "The needs of coal communities must be recognized, and concrete solutions must be provided at a very local level."

The U.N. chief urged "all countries to embrace the International Labor Organization's guidelines for a just transition and adopt them as minimum standard to ensure progress on decent work for all."

The coronavirus pandemic, Guterres noted, has "accelerated" the decline in "coal's economic viability," while recovery plans provide an opportunity to bring about a green transformation of the world's infrastructure.

In many parts of the world, a just transition dovetails with guaranteeing universal access to energy, said Damilola Ogunbiyi, CEO and special representative of the secretary-general for Sustainable Energy for All.

Ogunbiyi told conference attendees that almost 800 million people worldwide still lack access to basic electricity, while 2.8 billion are without clean cooking fuels.

"Right now, we're at a crossroads where people do want to recover better, but they are looking for the best opportunities to do that," she said. "And we're emphasizing investments in sustainable energy to spur economic development, create new jobs, and give opportunities to fulfill the full potential."

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Satanists put up a billboard in Florida promoting state's abortion law loophole

Another surprising act of public service from the Satanic Temple.

via The Satanic Temple / Twitter

Unexpected acts of public service.

This article originally appeared on 12.30.20.



In some states, women are put through humiliating and dangerous pre-abortion medical consultations and waiting periods before being allowed to undergo the procedure. In four states, women are even forced to bury or cremate the fetal remains after the procedure.

These government-mandated roadblocks and punitive shaming serve no purpose but to make it more difficult, emotionally damaging, and expensive for women to have an abortion.

Eighteen states currently have laws that force women to delay their abortions unnecessarily: Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin. In a number of other states, mandatory-delay laws have been enacted but are enjoined or otherwise unenforced.

To help women get around these burdensome regulations, The Satanic Temple is promoting a religious ritual it believes provides an exemption from restrictions. According to the Temple, the ritual is supported by the federal Religious Freedoms Restoration Act.

GIF from media3.giphy.com.

Pentagram GIF

The Temple is a religious organization that claims it doesn't believe "in the existence of Satan or the supernatural" but that "religion can, and should, be divorced from superstition."

The Temple says its exemption is made possible by a precedent set by the Supreme Court's 2014 Hobby Lobby decision. According to the Temple, it prevents the government from putting a "burden on free exercise of religion without a compelling reason."

Ironically, Hobby Lobby's case claimed that providing insurance coverage for birth control conflicted with the employer's Christian faith. The Satanic Temple argues that unnecessary roadblocks to abortion conflict with theirs.

via The Satanic Temple

Religious freedoms.

The Temple is promoting the ritual on I-95 billboards in Florida where women must endure an ultrasound and go through pre-procedure, anti-choice counseling before having an abortion.

The Temple's billboards inform women that they can circumvent the restrictions by simply citing a Satanic ritual.

"Susan, you're telling me I do not have to endure a waiting period when I have an abortion?" one of the women on the billboard says.

"That's true if you're a SATANIST!" the other replies.

Next to the ladies is a symbol of a goat head in a pentagram and a message about the ritual.

via The Satanic Temple

Image of The Satanic Temple billboard.

The Temple also provides a letter that women seeking abortions can provide to medical staff. It explains the ritual and why it exempts them from obligations that are an undue burden to their religious practice.

The Temple believes that some medical practitioners may reject its requests. However, it believes that doing so is a violation of religious freedom and it will take legal action if necessary.

"It would be unconstitutional to require a waiting period before receiving holy communion," the temple says in a video. "It would be illegal to demand Muslims receive counseling prior to Ramadan. It would be ridiculous to demand that Christians affirm in writing the unscientific assertion that baptism can cause brain cancers."

"So we expect the same rights as any other religious organization," the video says.

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The Satanic Temple’s Religious Abortion Ritual

To perform the ritual, a woman looks into a mirror to affirm their personhood and responsibility to herself. Once the woman is focused and comfortable, they are to recite two of the Temple's Seven Tenets.

Tenet III: One's body is inviolable, subject to one's own will alone. One's body is inviolable, subject to one's own will alone.

Tenet V. Beliefs should conform to one's best scientific understanding of the world. One should take care never to distort scientific facts to fit one's beliefs.

Then they are to recite a personal affirmation: "By my body, my blood. Then by my will, it is done."

The ritual affirms The Temple's belief in personal responsibility and liberty that, coincidentally, mirror that of the U.S. Constitution.

"Satan is a symbol of the Eternal Rebel in opposition to arbitrary authority, forever defending personal sovereignty even in the face of insurmountable odds," the Temple's website reads.

Hail Satan!

There are two types of people in this world – those who panic and fill up their cars with gas when the needle hits 25% or so, and people like me who wait until the gas light comes on, then check the odometer so you can drive the entire 30 miles to absolute empty before coasting into a gas station on fumes.

I mean…it's not empty until it's empty, right?

But just how far can you drive your car once that gas light comes on? Should you trust your manual?

Photo from Pixabay.

I believe that reads empty.

Now, thanks to Your Mechanic sharing this information in a recent post, you can know for sure. Of course, they also want to warn you that driving on a low fuel level or running out of gas can actually damage your car.

Proceed at your own risk.

Graph from Your Mechanic.

How far you can go on empty.

Here's a link to a larger version of the chart.

Now, thanks to Your Mechanic sharing this information in a recent post, you can know for sure. Of course, they also want to warn you that driving on a low fuel level or running out of gas can actually damage your car.

Proceed at your own risk.

These are, of course, approximations that depend on several factors, including how you drive, your car's condition, etc. So don't automatically blame your mechanic if you find yourself stranded on the side of the road.


This article originally appeared on 06.25.21.

Articles

19 countries photoshopped one man to fit their idea of the perfect body

Beauty is in the eye of the photoshopper.

If you ask people what they think the “perfect" body looks like, you're sure to get a range of answers, depending on where the person is from. Last year, Superdrug Online Doctor created a project, “Perceptions of Perfection" that showed what people in 18 countries think the “perfect" woman looks like. The project was a viral hit.

They've recently released the male version.

This time, they asked graphic designers—11 women and eight men—in 19 countries to photoshop the same image to highlight the male beauty standards for their country.

Some of the images are certainly amusing, but the collective result is an interesting look at what people find attractive around the world.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection"

The original photo.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for U.K.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Venezuela.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for South Africa.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Spain.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Serbia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Portugal.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Macedonia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Nigeria.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Indonesia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Pakistan.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Bangladesh.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for China.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Colombia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Croatia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Russia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Australia.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for United States.

Image from “Perceptions of Perfection”.

Photoshopped for Egypt.


This article originally appeared on 09.14.17

Articles

A viral Twitter thread about body autonomy is a reminder of the ‘fear’ and ‘shame’ women still are forced to confront.

Body autonomy means that a person has the right to whatever they want with their own body.

Body autonomy means a person has the right to whatever they want with their own body.

We live in a world where people are constantly telling women what they can or can't do with their bodies. Women get it form all sides — Washington, their churches, family members, and even doctors.

A woman on Twitter who goes by the name Salome Strangelove recently went viral for discussing the importance of female body autonomy.

Here's how it started.

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She continued talking about how her mother had a difficult pregnancy.

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Her mother asked her doctor about the possibility of sterilization.

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As was typical of the times, she was chastised by her male, Catholic doctor.

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Her mother was made to feel guilty about simply exploring the medical options about her own body. But later on, a new doctor made her feel more comfortable about her situation.

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Once her mother had the courage to speak up, her own family members supported her.

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Amen.


This article originally appeared on 6.20.21.