Damned to Fail
Unregulated dams across Texas are increasingly failing—putting people and property in jeopardy.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Best selling magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules company in China.
Unregulated dams across Texas are increasingly failing—putting people and property in jeopardy.
Naveena Sadasivam Texas Observer Apr 2019 20min Permalink
The long fight against racism in romance novels.
Lois Beckett The Guardian Apr 2019 30min Permalink
In Kansas, girls didn’t have a wrestling championship. Mya Kretzer changed that.
Liz Clarke Washington Post Nov 2019 15min Permalink
Can his cerebral politics still galvanize voters in an age of extremes?
Ryan Lizza Politico Nov 2019 15min Permalink
How acute childhood trauma infects and compromises relationships later in life.
Tega Oghenechovwen Longreads Jan 2020 15min Permalink
What happens when humans, not algorithms, are in charge.
Simon van Zuylen-Wood Wired Jan 2020 Permalink
A hundred and fifty years ago, slightly more, a strange notion: the dead could be counted. In the Civil War, in the lush fields of the South, Americans first, as a culture, began to imagine death in numbers. Rosters of soldiers, as well as lists of war casualties, were not common practice in the mid-nineteenth century. Many officials feared responsibility for the dead by numbering or naming them, and military leaders felt an accurate count might embolden their enemies.
Shannon Pufahl NY Review of Books Apr 2020 10min Permalink
In 1992, thousands of furious, drunken cops descended on City Hall—and changed New York history.
Laura Nahmias New York Oct 2021 20min Permalink
In Oakland, California, when it comes to Black homelessness and dispossession, dystopia is already here.
Carina Chocanohelsea Edgar Places Journal Nov 2021 40min Permalink
On the shady underworld of door to door magazine sales teams, in which teens roam the country in vans, con locals with sob stories, party constantly in cheap motels, and leave behind a trail of rapes, fiery crashes, and new subscriptions.
Craig Malisow Houston Press Jul 2008 25min Permalink
TM The only other time I saw you was in Bleecker Bob’s in the ‘70s. You walked in eating pizza and wearing aviator glasses and Bleecker Bob showed you an Ian Dury picture sleeve and you said, “I don’t listen to music by people I don’t wanna fuck.” PS (laughter) Yeah, that was me.
Patti Smith, Thurston Moore BOMB Magazine Nov 1996 20min Permalink
The story of Levine’s father and his involvement in the legal battle over the 798 finished paintings Rothko had in his studio when he was discovered there in a pool of blood. The case spawned a feature film, Legal Eagles, and hinged on an unusual question; was Mark Rothko an artistic genius?
David Levine Triple Canopy Jul 2011 Permalink
A trip to Scotland and an investigation of enduring belief.
“I remember reading about the deathbed confession, and how strangely sad it made me, even though I had not, at that point, believed in the monster for years. How much sadder, I wondered, would it make those who still believed in the existence of a monster in Loch Ness?”
Tom Bissell VQR Aug 2006 35min Permalink
Earlier this month, while China's leaders were staging a grandiose celebration of their revolution's 40th birthday, thousands of somber Hong Kong residents gathered for a dreary commemoration of their own. Far from the fireworks display in Beijing, Hong Kongers huddled in a rainstorm near the bronze statue of Queen Victoria, singing patriotic songs and listening to mournful poems dedicated to those who died in Tiananmen Square.
Margaret Scott The New York Times Oct 1989 20min Permalink
Joshua Williams was 18 when he was arrested in 2014 for stealing a bag of chips and lighting a QuikTrip trash can on fire in the aftermath of a protest sparked by the death of Antonio Martin near Ferguson, MO. He is still in prison.
Zach Baron GQ Jun 2020 10min Permalink
Jackie Thomas was $29,134 in debt and in trouble with state regulators. She hadn’t slept in days. If a judge ruled against her, she’d fail the mothers who could only keep their jobs thanks to the 24-hour child care she offered.
Lizzie Presser ProPublica May 2021 25min Permalink
A first-person account of the author’s time spent volunteering with a group of Burmese activists in Thailand, who turn out to be not Korean but in fact Karen, members of Burma’s persecuted ethnic minority. In the course of her time there, they show her videos of their risky forays across the border, and she shows them MySpace.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Apr 2011 40min Permalink
Best Article Crime History Science
In the 1880’s, a shabbily dressed man popped up in numerous America cities, calling upon local scientists, showing letters of introduction claiming he was a noted geologist or paleontologist, discussing both fields at a staggeringly accomplished level, and then making off with valuable books or cash loans.
- Skulls in the Stars Feb 2011 30min Permalink
In 1962, Siffre spent two months living in total isolation in a subterranean cave, without access to clock, calendar, or sun. Sleeping and eating only when his body told him to, his goal was to discover how the natural rhythms of human life would be affected by living “beyond time.”
Joshua Foer Cabinet Jun 2008 10min Permalink
A diagnosis in question.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Apr 2014 20min Permalink
A profile of a doctor fighting Ebola in Uganda.
Blaine Harden New York Times Magazine Feb 2001 30min Permalink
An American journalist on being kidnapped, tortured and released in Syria.
Theo Padnos New York Times Magazine Oct 2014 35min Permalink
The life’s work of Cosmo editor-in-chief Helen Gurley Brown.
Judith Thurman New Yorker May 2009 10min Permalink
A profile of Chan ‘Cat Power’ Marshall adrift in Miami.
Amanda Petrusich Pitchfork Aug 2012 15min Permalink
The false promise and double standard of integration in the Obama era.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Sep 2012 40min Permalink