An Uprising Comes From the Viral Underclass
And the Black Lives Matter movement could be the vaccine the country needs
Showing 25 articles matching fccoins26 Coinsnight.com FC 26 coins 30% OFF code: FC2026. The best place for game coins.28oS.
And the Black Lives Matter movement could be the vaccine the country needs
Steven W. Thrasher Slate Jun 2020 20min Permalink
What the journey of swifts, who spend all their time in the sky, tell us about the future.
Helen Macdonald New York Times Magazine Jul 2020 10min Permalink
This guide is sponsored by Dear Thief, the new novel from Samantha Harvey. A letter to an old friend, a song, a jewel, and a continuously surprising triangular love story, Dear Thief is about the need for human connection and the brutal vulnerability that need exposes. And it is about how we remember, or fail to remember, our stories.
The Sunday Telegraph called Dear Thief "an incandescent vision of hope and acceptance." The Guardian said it's "a heady, elegiac combination of eroticism and loss, loathing and rapture."
"This is how I think of that landscape when I stop to remember—although I know, before you raise a sceptical brow, the over-optimism of memory.
Memories of a distant relationship, excerpted from Dear Thief.
Samantha Harvey 20min
On the fallibility of memory.
Oliver Sacks New York Review of Books Jan 2013 15min
On childhood amnesia, or why we don’t remember much before age seven.
Kristin Ohlson Aeon Jul 2014 15min
How our memories become contaminated by inaccuracies.
Erika Hayasaki The Atlantic Nov 2013 10min
Life after losing your memory at 22.
Dan P. Lee New York Sep 2014 35min
Inside the minds of two people, one with the world’s best memory and one with the world’s worst.
Joshua Foer National Geographic Nov 2007 25min
How memories go wrong.
Evan Ratliff New York Times Magazine Jul 2006 20min
Jul 2006 – Sep 2014 Permalink
The night America elected Donald J. Trump president, 38-year-old Richard B. Spencer, who fancies himself the “Karl Marx of the alt-right” and envisions a “white homeland,” crowed, “we’re the establishment now.” If so, then the architect of the new establishment is Spencer’s former mentor, Paul Gottfried, a retired Jewish academic...
Jacob Siegel Tablet Nov 2016 20min Permalink
The unmaking of a legend.
Scott Anderson Outside Jul 1995 40min Permalink
How the fatwa changed his life.
Salman Rushdie New Yorker Sep 2012 50min Permalink
On the moral behavior of animals.
Mark Rowlands Aeon Oct 2012 15min Permalink
On the gay community’s political progress.
Alex Ross New Yorker Nov 2012 30min Permalink
How the biker gang makes money.
Andy Serwer Fortune Nov 1992 15min Permalink
A postmortem.
Michael Kranish The Boston Globe Dec 2012 20min Permalink
An explanation of enduring distaste.
James Fallows The Atlantic Feb 1996 35min Permalink
How the borough bounced back.
Pete Hamill New York Jul 1969 35min Permalink
On the new science of collective behavior.
Meet Colorado’s suburban, Ramada-dwelling homeless.
Monica Potts The American Prospect Mar 2013 30min Permalink
On addiction and addiction narratives.
Lauren Quinn Vela Apr 2014 10min Permalink
On the decline of America.
David Remnick GQ May 1988 15min Permalink
100 miles, 24 hours.
Navigating the alligator-infested rivers of North Florida.
Wells Tower Outside Mar 2009 20min Permalink
ISIS vs. the Kurds.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Sep 2014 40min Permalink
The story of an American myth.
John Swansburg Slate Sep 2014 1h Permalink
On BP’s actions after the oil spill.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Mar 2011 1h10min Permalink
Why the boom in scientific progress stalled.
Michael Hanlon Aeon Dec 2014 Permalink
Can the Internet be archived?
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2015 25min Permalink
Portraits of the 99 percent.
George Packer New Yorker Nov 2011 25min Permalink
The Vancouver riots and an unforgettable image.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Dec 2011 20min Permalink