One of the worst natural disasters in American history, the 1896 New York heat wave killed almost 1,500 people in ten oppressively hot days. The heat coincided with a pitched presidential contest between William McKinley and the upstart Democrat William Jennings Bryan, who arrived in New York City at the height of the catastrophe. As historian Edward P. Kohn shows, Bryan's hopes for the presidency began to flag amidst the abhorrent heat just as a bright young police commissioner named Theodore Roosevelt was scrambling to mitigate the dangerously high temperatures by hosing down streets and handing out ice to the poor.A vivid narrative that captures the birth of the progressive era, Hot Time in the Old Town revives the forgotten disaster that almost destroyed a great American city.
Saturday, August 31, 2024
Hot Time in the Old Town The Great Heat Wave of 1896 and the Making of Theodore Roosevelt by Edward P. Kohn
History
Archaeologist Howard Carter found incredible things in the Tomb of Tutankhamun, where he found more than 5300 artifacts, and among these strange things found by Carter.
— ArchaeoHistories (@histories_arch) July 12, 2024
The dagger of King Tutankhamun made of meteoric iron, which is not found on the surface of the globe.
Grand… pic.twitter.com/LfCzEqh5rP
If diesel Caltrain were a car, it would be class as one of the heaviest polluters per passenger.
Promotional materials for the new trains tout that the switch will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 250,000 metric tonnes per year, which is roughly the annual output of 55,000 cars, on average. The new electric trains will buy electricity only from zero-emission sources, according to Caltrain spokesperson Dan Lieberman. These numbers sound very positive, until you step back and consider their actual meaning, namely that the old diesel caltrain was using many times more fuel than its passengers would have burned if they each drove private SUVs, and that the train in general is hugely inefficient.This is surprising, as the common public perception is that trains are more energy efficient than cars, and the initial instinct is to consider public transit as the greener choice. The math says otherwise, and in the case of Caltrain, it says it overwhelmingly. Nonetheless, this issue is not just one for this particular railroad, and applies to all systems, particularly in the U.S.PROMOTEDThe numbers mean Caltrain was burning about 25 million gallons of diesel annually. But today, Caltrain has around 590,000 boardings/year and an average of 24,600 on weekdays. That means 3.5 gallons of diesel per boarding, on average, which is equivalent to 4 gallons of gasoline. Each round trip thus burned the equivalent 8 gallons of gasoline per person. A 30 miles each way round trip in a car with the average load of 1.5 people, which is less that one gallon per person in a Prius, and 2 gallons per person in a large SUV. Even if each passenger were given a personal Hummer H2 to drive, they would only burn 4.6 gallons for that round trip. If diesel Caltrain were a car, it would be class as one of the heaviest polluters per passenger.This happens because the trains don’t run full, and they run all day. Trains can, in theory, be very efficient, but only if they run full all the time. The most efficient trains in the U.S. are the commuter rail lines that run all the trains inbound in the morning, with all those trains staying at the station all day to take the commuters home in the evening. Those trains run fairly full and don’t run in the anti-commute direction or at off-peak times. Most passengers, though, want to know they can come and go when they wish and demand trains all day, which Caltrain offers. The theoretical efficiency of the train is good, but moving empty seats isn’t of value.[snip]Promotional materials for the new trains tout that the switch will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 250,000 metric tonnes per year, which is roughly the annual output of 55,000 cars, on average. The new electric trains will buy electricity only from zero-emission sources, according to Caltrain spokesperson Dan Lieberman. These numbers sound very positive, until you step back and consider their actual meaning, namely that the old diesel caltrain was using many times more fuel than its passengers would have burned if they each drove private SUVs, and that the train in general is hugely inefficient.This is surprising, as the common public perception is that trains are more energy efficient than cars, and the initial instinct is to consider public transit as the greener choice. The math says otherwise, and in the case of Caltrain, it says it overwhelmingly. Nonetheless, this issue is not just one for this particular railroad, and applies to all systems, particularly in the U.S.PROMOTEDThe numbers mean Caltrain was burning about 25 million gallons of diesel annually. But today, Caltrain has around 590,000 boardings/year and an average of 24,600 on weekdays. That means 3.5 gallons of diesel per boarding, on average, which is equivalent to 4 gallons of gasoline. Each round trip thus burned the equivalent 8 gallons of gasoline per person. A 30 miles each way round trip in a car with the average load of 1.5 people, which is less that one gallon per person in a Prius, and 2 gallons per person in a large SUV. Even if each passenger were given a personal Hummer H2 to drive, they would only burn 4.6 gallons for that round trip. If diesel Caltrain were a car, it would be class as one of the heaviest polluters per passenger.This happens because the trains don’t run full, and they run all day. Trains can, in theory, be very efficient, but only if they run full all the time. The most efficient trains in the U.S. are the commuter rail lines that run all the trains inbound in the morning, with all those trains staying at the station all day to take the commuters home in the evening. Those trains run fairly full and don’t run in the anti-commute direction or at off-peak times. Most passengers, though, want to know they can come and go when they wish and demand trains all day, which Caltrain offers. The theoretical efficiency of the train is good, but moving empty seats isn’t of value.
An Insight
One of the reasons why government absorbs so much money and takes on ever increasing powers is that it is home to so many people whose beliefs could not withstand the draconian tests of science, the marketplace or a scoreboard. What we the taxpayers are ultimately paying for is…
— Thomas Sowell Quotes (@ThomasSowell) July 12, 2024
I see wonderful things
Mexico is the home to an ancient and spectacular ceremony that still succeeds -
— Archaeo - Histories (@archeohistories) July 13, 2024
Danza de los Voladores (game of the fliers), a ceremonial ritual dance of Mexico, with deep spiritual significance originating from Veracruz, Mexico.
The tradition ultimately originating among… pic.twitter.com/RHbKA5ijAQ
Offbeat Humor
Every now and then it’s nice to remember this orangutan’s reaction to this trick.pic.twitter.com/pFNihSMfWS
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 29, 2024
Data Talks
Canada Divided into Four Equally Populated Regions pic.twitter.com/LtWgrtuIWh
— Epic Maps 🗺️ (@Locati0ns) August 1, 2024
Still-Life of Glasses in a Basket, 1644 by Sebastian Stoskopff (German, 1597–1657)
Friday, August 30, 2024
Authoritarian repression is obvious when you look.
As long as that mentality and policy were dominant, a military confrontation was unavoidable with a China which sought a new national identity and had begun to resist imperialist domination. Why were the Japanese people intolerant of Chinese and Koreans? Why did they lack the capacity for critical analysis of imperialist policies and the wars they bred? I think the answer lies in the state’s manipulation of information and values to produce mass conformity and unquestioning obedience.[snip]In 1868, the new Meiji government moved immediately to control newspapers and publications in order to suppress support for the former regime. A series of internal security laws, starting with the publishing regulations (1869) and the newspaper law (1873), restricted freedom of speech. These laws carried sweeping provisions such as “To publish indiscriminate criticism of laws or to slander individuals is prohibited” or “To add indiscriminately critical comments when describing government actions and laws is forbidden.” Officialdom sought immunity from criticism by these regulations.1 The 1875 libel law and newspaper regulations were extremely severe; there was for a time a reign of terror against journalists.A vigorous nationwide challenge to the new government, the People’s Rights movement, occurred in the 1870s and 1880s. To divide and weaken the movement, authorities dangled the carrot of financial rewards before some of the opposition. Others were harassed, locked up, and silenced. Strict enforcement of ever-tougher internal security laws proved to be the most effective weapon against dissent: regulations on assembly (1880), revision and amendment of the same law in 1882, revision of the newspaper regulation (1883), and a law prohibiting the disclosure of petitions to the throne and the government (1884). Freedom of assembly and association were also severely restricted. The People’s Rights movement was destroyed, and political activity of any kind became extremely difficult.[snip]The Meiji Constitution did not guarantee basic human rights. Freedom of expression was recognized only “within the limits of the law.” The liberties granted in the constitution could be virtually abolished by subsequent laws. Restrictions soon tumbled from the government’s authoritarian cornucopia. Freedom of publication was affected by the Publication Law (1893) and the Newspaper Law (1909); freedom of assembly and association by the Assembly and Political Organization Law (1890) and its successor, the Public Order Police Law of 1900; and intellectual freedom by the lèse majesté provision of the criminal code and by the Peace Preservation Law (1925). Movies and theatrical performances were strictly controlled by administrative rulings rather than by laws passed by the Diet. Thought and expression were so circumscribed that only a small sphere of freedom remained.[snip]The Meiji political system gagged and blindfolded the populace. Denied the basic facts and a free exchange of opinion on the major issues of state and society, the public could hardly participate in charting Japan’s future. The sensitive areas noted above were stated in the law as vague categories; they could be interpreted broadly and stretched to trap the dissident. Any major contemporary issue might fall under one of the dangerous categories. There was always the fear that newspapers, other publications, and public speeches would be prohibited by an arbitrary police ruling. No appeal was possible against police harassment. Scripts of movies and plays were subject to prior censorship and controlled in the same way as publications and public speeches. Furthermore, these internal security laws carried criminal penalties. Under the lèse majesté provision and the Peace Preservation Law, individuals with beliefs repugnant to the government, even if those beliefs were not expressed overtly, could end up in prison.Of course, not every idea that incurred official wrath was a valuable contribution to Japanese political life. But a healthy political and social consciousness cannot develop in a society where the exchange of vital facts and ideas is fettered. Leaving other deleterious effects aside for the moment, the impossibility of reporting information essential for informed, independent judgments about war and national security left an intellectual vacuum. It was filled by official militarism, and the public, unaware of the truth or of alternatives, automatically came to support the government position.
History
When it comes to the juxtaposition of the magnificent amongst the squalid, this photo has it all - an amazing view through the slum gardens of London's Millwall to the majestic bow of the 3-masted barque 'S.V. Penang', sitting in dry dock at the Isle of Dogs in 1932.
— BabelColour (@StuartHumphryes) July 13, 2024
I've… pic.twitter.com/pX80O0Gfad
An Insight
The two problems of climate activists is that they want to be the face of the solution and they want to be it now.
— Luca Dellanna (@DellAnnaLuca) June 25, 2024
So, they only have ~useless options left.
Meanwhile engineers get things done and actually solve problems by working as cogs on decade-long projects. https://t.co/XLx0LBb21s
I see wonderful things
Border collies are a breed of herding dog, and typically outstanding sheepdogs. They've been doing this job along the English-Scottish border for about 300 years always with extreme efficiency and precision.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 13, 2024
This is Kate.
[📹 seanthesheepman]pic.twitter.com/ebIhNHnRFb
Data Talks
A new paper finds that "community notes might be an effective approach to mitigate trust issues" on Twitter. I believe this is partly because the algorithm identifies consensual fact-checking even when fact-checkers disagree. I describe this algorithm here:… https://t.co/jc6fygQpIC pic.twitter.com/vFf49cWrXA
— Lionel Page (@page_eco) July 2, 2024
Thursday, August 29, 2024
History
I never tire of viewing the famed bronze ‘Boxer at Rest’ at the #PalazzoMassimo in Rome. This one work of art - a Hellenistic Greek original, perhaps inspired by the work of Lysippos - feels the most human. Tired, beaten, bloody, scarred, and mortal.
— Chapps (@chapps) July 11, 2024
2nd c.-1st c. BCE
📸 me pic.twitter.com/on8OKAXzzz
An Insight
The two problems of climate activists is that they want to be the face of the solution and they want to be it now.
— Luca Dellanna (@DellAnnaLuca) June 25, 2024
So, they only have ~useless options left.
Meanwhile engineers get things done and actually solve problems by working as cogs on decade-long projects. https://t.co/XLx0LBb21s
I see wonderful things
African Ground Hornbills going for a wander
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) July 12, 2024
pic.twitter.com/mICFHqOT1G
Offbeat Humor
Magpie following a cat pretending it’s not
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) July 13, 2024
pic.twitter.com/NftmN9Jq3b
Data Talks
A new paper finds that "community notes might be an effective approach to mitigate trust issues" on Twitter. I believe this is partly because the algorithm identifies consensual fact-checking even when fact-checkers disagree. I describe this algorithm here:… https://t.co/jc6fygQpIC pic.twitter.com/vFf49cWrXA
— Lionel Page (@page_eco) July 2, 2024
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
History
Drawings by a 7-year-old boy named Onfim, from 13th century, Novgorod, Russia. pic.twitter.com/apzfAuCFBY
— Archaeology & Art (@archaeologyart) July 12, 2024
An Insight
I am blown away by the people who keep angrily informing me that Biden is fine because FDR ran for president when he was dying. Yes, and because he was so ill, he went to Yalta, handed Eastern Europe to Joseph Stalin, then died! This is not a role model to emulate!
— Megan McArdle (@asymmetricinfo) July 12, 2024
An Insight
The dumbest and most dangerous idea in the world. https://t.co/grhNmNpZcQ
— Scott Adams (@ScottAdamsSays) July 26, 2024
I see wonderful things
This is a real-time video of extremely precise deposition of 1 nanoliter to 1 microliter droplets inside of 96 well plates.
— Andrew Côté (@Andercot) July 13, 2024
Equivalent to developing photolithography but for life sciences. Absolutely incredible tech tree unlock. We live in an age of miracles. @M2_Automation pic.twitter.com/doOadrRFCx
Offbeat Humor
The NYT *this morning* accused the right of pushing a “conspiracy theory” that Dems are secretly plotting to replace Biden at the top of the ticket…
— Joseph A. Wulfsohn (@JosephWulfsohn) July 12, 2024
Meanwhile, Axios is reporting *this morning* how Dems are secretly plotting to replace Biden at the top of the ticket.
Unreal. pic.twitter.com/MPhKFHtvtS
Data Talks
When you ask people which countries they want to move to, America has held the top slot for a long time, and it will likely continue to for the foreseeable future. pic.twitter.com/VwMZ7kKpiB
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 4, 2024
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
History
Sir Isaac Newton's own copy of the first edition of Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, annotated by himself for the second edition. pic.twitter.com/9xudA8aRaV
— Physics In History (@PhysInHistory) July 12, 2024
An Insight
Cities or counties or whatever government entity can easily include quantification & contribution of Urban Heat Island effects upon a given area as a requirement for permits through zoning.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) July 12, 2024
Plant trees, build parks w/bodies of water (to punch thru heat island bubble), reduce…
I see wonderful things
The glacier melt water's intense blue color is due to fine silt particles, or glacial flour, in the water, result of glacial erosion.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 12, 2024
This is a creek flowing from Cerro Mercedario, Argentina, 6,720 m on the sea level.
[📹 escalandomendoza]pic.twitter.com/E2DnQ0XBqF
I see wonderful things
Crow having fun wind surfing by himself.. 😅 pic.twitter.com/R7Rhgf2X3r
— Buitengebieden (@buitengebieden) July 11, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Has nobody made a film of this? It is a truly amazing event. For younger readers, Allen Funt was the creator of Candid Camera - the 1960s precursor of shows such as You've Been framed pic.twitter.com/8TPKqP2hwa
— Rory Sutherland (@rorysutherland) July 13, 2024
Data Talks
Where Roman coins have been found. pic.twitter.com/xidFF3gP1e
— Epic Maps 🗺️ (@Locati0ns) August 2, 2024
Portrait of a young Lady, circa 1560 attributed to Catarina van Hemessen (Dutch, circa 1527/1528–after 1560)
Monday, August 26, 2024
History
The Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent at the Xochicalco archaeological site in Morelos, Mexico, is dedicated to the god Quetzalcoatl, a revered feathered serpent deity.
— ArchaeoHistories (@histories_arch) July 11, 2024
Adorned with intricate carvings depicting religious and mythological scenes, this pyramid stands as a… pic.twitter.com/ZyazDsQ4iu
An Insight
C. S. Lewis, echoing loudly pic.twitter.com/Z0DEqsNFhF
— Dylan O'Sullivan (@DylanoA4) July 9, 2024
I see wonderful things
A family of owls in a clock tower in France
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 11, 2024
[📹 Nicolas Dubois / _nicolasdubois] pic.twitter.com/AcqTzuwp0T
Loss of revenue from cancellation is due to decreased platform access and not to a fall in popularity
This paper investigates how the consumption of an artist's creative work is impacted when there's a movement to "cancel" the artist on social media due to their misconduct. Unlike product brands, human brands are particularly vulnerable to reputation risks, yet how misconduct affects their consumption remains poorly understood. Using R. Kelly's case, we examine the demand for his music following interrelated publicity and platform sanction shocks-specifically, the removal of his songs from major playlists on the largest global streaming platform. A cursory examination of music consumption after these scandals would lead to the erroneous conclusion that consumers are intentionally boycotting the disgraced artist. We propose an identification strategy to disentangle platform curation and intentional listening effects, leveraging variation in song removal status and geographic demand. Our findings show that the decrease in music consumption is primarily driven by supply-side factors due to playlist removals rather than changes in intentional listening. Media coverage and calls for boycott have promotional effects, suggesting that social media boycotts can inadvertently increase music demand. The analysis of other cancellation cases involving Morgan Wallen and Rammstein shows no long-term decline in music demand, reinforcing the potential promotional effects of scandals in the absence of supply-side sanctions.
Does 'canceling' an artist on social media affect their music consumption? Daniel Winkler, @roamer_09, and I explore this in our new paper.Spoiler: The answer is more complicated than you think.Let’s start with R. Kelly (remember 'I Believe I Can Fly'?). Comparing his streams to similar artists, we see a clear drop. Is this a consumer-led boycott, or did his music just become less visible due to a supply-side effect?
We utilize a natural experiment: Spotify's policy to sanction R. Kelly by removing his songs from playlists and algorithmic recommendations. Spotify later received pushback and reversed the policy—but didn’t reinstate his tracks.Why is this natural experiment helpful? We have 2 cancellation efforts–one with platform action and one without. This allows us to separate supply-side from demand-side changes and ask: Would consumer-led boycotts have impacted music consumption without platform intervention?We show that R. Kelly’s decline was mainly driven by Spotify’s sanctions, not an active consumer boycott. The drop was even steeper for ad-supported streams, showing the critical role of playlist visibility, especially when consumer listening experience is less deliberate6 months later, after the documentary "Surviving R. Kelly," his streams surged by over 100%. Despite increased #MuteRKelly boycott activity, the documentary sparked increased interest in his songs for 3 weeks. Are these new listeners or existing fans?The spike in streams was most pronounced in regions where R. Kelly was already popular, suggesting that likely existing fans revisited his music rather than new listeners checking him out for the first time.
Other cancellation cases, like those of Morgan Wallen and Rammstein, show that when platforms did not intervene, calls for cancellation did not harm music consumption—in fact, they can do the opposite.It’s platform decisions, not consumer actions, that made the real impact.
Offbeat Humor
Ken Allen, the orangutan from San Diego Zoo, escaped his enclosure 3 times in the 1980s.
— Nature is Amazing ☘️ (@AMAZlNGNATURE) July 12, 2024
His apparent goals were visiting other animals, throwing rocks at a despised orangutan rival, and taking photos with tourists. He never acted aggressively towards anyone during his escapes. pic.twitter.com/Gv4S4rSP0e
Data Talks
The U.S. experienced a discontinuity in fertility alongside the Great Financial Crisis.
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 2, 2024
After it, fertility rates changed from relative stability to a continuous downturn. pic.twitter.com/SFXFH1jvJF
Sunday, August 25, 2024
History
This lovely Hellenistic mosaic glass bowl looks so modern, yet it was made over 2,000 years ago!
— Alison Fisk (@AlisonFisk) July 13, 2024
Ancient glassmakers created the tiny flower pattern using a technique now known as ‘millefiori’ (thousand flowers). A timeless design still made by glassmakers today!
Photo my own.… pic.twitter.com/4ixZsE8ZKW
An Insight
Here's the Warren Buffet clip
— ALEX (@ajtourville) July 9, 2024
“I could end the deficit in 5 minutes.
You just pass a law that says any time there's a deficit of more than 3% of GDP, all sitting members of Congress are ineligible for re-election.
Now you've got the incentives in the right place.” pic.twitter.com/2SpW4vqpa7
I see wonderful things
Trips to the hospital are so outdated.. pic.twitter.com/MeFCuGuaNH
— H0W_THlNGS_W0RK (@HowThingsWork_) July 12, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Baby elephant interrupts a TV Reporter in Kenya. pic.twitter.com/XlRNhwY5iJ
— Nature is Amazing ☘️ (@AMAZlNGNATURE) July 11, 2024
Data Talks
The numbers of nuns in the U.S. might soon be nunhttps://t.co/tBG9mhSmvn
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 29, 2024
A Dandelion with a Tiger Moth, a Butterfly, a Snail, and a Beetle, ca. 1730 by Barbara Regina Dietzsch (German, 1706–1783)
Saturday, August 24, 2024
History
Beautifully-preserved 3,800 year-old cosmetic box of pharaoh’s cupbearer Kemeni, with ointment jars and hand mirror, found in 1910 in tomb shaft at Thebes, now held by Metropolitan Museum https://t.co/atUWUu0lv8 pic.twitter.com/3saEqXNwdp
— Journal of Art in Society (@artinsociety) July 13, 2024
An Insight
on any given day that you are not training hard, just remember: someone else is and all else equal, when you meet them, they will win.
— el gato malo (@boriquagato) July 10, 2024
(sound on) pic.twitter.com/zRqEierIKc
I see wonderful things
One of the most fascinating facts about the ocean, is that there are whales alive today who were born before Moby Dick was written.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 10, 2024
Some of the bowhead whales in the icy waters off of Alaska today are over 200 years old.pic.twitter.com/o7a78hCAq4
Offbeat Humor
For those who may be confused about who was first in flight 💁🏼♀️ pic.twitter.com/A3mLxgU4WQ
— Cassie Clark (@dogwoodblooms) July 12, 2024
Friday, August 23, 2024
History
The first major Roman road, famed Appian Way (Queen of Roads) was constructed in 312 BC to serve supply route between republican Rome and its allies in Capua during 2nd Samnite War. From then on, road systems often sprang from Roman conquest.
— Archaeo - Histories (@archeohistories) July 12, 2024
As legions blazed a trail through… pic.twitter.com/9qBKbyaGI3
An Insight
Beautiful - and absolutely true pic.twitter.com/SFHpYYxIwD
— Istra of Glome (@tillwehvfaces) July 8, 2024
I see wonderful things
Is there any creature in the world that is more attractive and beautiful than this? pic.twitter.com/OaJDJvUgD7
— s0nhri sn0w(ڈاکٹر سوہنی) (@s0nhri_sn0w) July 9, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Your prize for making it to Friday is 92 seconds of Kenneth Williams talking about accents.
— James Hogg (@JamesAHogg2) July 12, 2024
Good morning. pic.twitter.com/nWuGIAghCL
Data Talks
"Sociopaths, who comprise only 3-4% of the male population and less than 1% of the female population...are thought to account for over 50% of all crimes in the U.S." https://t.co/87pVcqHKVR pic.twitter.com/YFS6yXDQJk
— Rob Henderson (@robkhenderson) July 13, 2024
Thursday, August 22, 2024
History
#otd (or tomorrow) 783 died Bertrada of Laon, Frankish queen and wife of Pepin 'the short'. She was buried in the Basilica of St Denis, where this tomb commemorates her today. #medievaldeath #medieval
— dailymedievaldeath (@dailymedievald1) July 12, 2024
Pic: Wikipedia Commons pic.twitter.com/0q1EzfHesu
An Insight
The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ( IPCC) was not created by a group of scientists in the late-1980s with the intention of studying both natural and man-made impacts on the global climate system.
— Chris Martz (@ChrisMartzWX) July 8, 2024
That did not happen. Period.
Why would the IPCC be… pic.twitter.com/BbBeAFdfYC
I see wonderful things
A brinicle, also known as an ice stalactite, is an underwater icicle formed in polar regions when supercooled, saline water seeps from sea ice, creating a downward flow that freezes surrounding seawater and anything in its path.
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) July 9, 2024
📽: BBC, Frozen Planet pic.twitter.com/79ebHk1UFr
Offbeat Humor
That's my side of bed 😅 pic.twitter.com/sr3OvOvRSq
— Mirthful Moments (@moment_mirthful) July 9, 2024
Data Talks
"Compared to women, men do not seem to prefer mates who outcompete same-sex others in face-to-face contests...harming other women is not linked to female reproductive success in the same clear way as is winning physical fights for men." https://t.co/0UjD0iaRrD pic.twitter.com/nasDyFu8E4
— Rob Henderson (@robkhenderson) July 12, 2024
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
History
How cigarettes were once packaged in France in 1930.pic.twitter.com/76k6iBMbC7
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 12, 2024
An Insight
Dr. Patrick Moore, co-founder of Greenpeace: "There is no evidence whatsoever that carbon dioxide is the control knob of the Earth's climate."
— Wide Awake Media (@wideawake_media) July 8, 2024
"Carbon dioxide is lower now than it has been for almost the entire history of the Earth... It is colder now than it has been through… pic.twitter.com/t8N08RJvpb
I see wonderful things
Sea lions playing in huge waves near Santa Barbara Island.
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) July 10, 2024
📽: Ryan Lawler pic.twitter.com/FE5S8mn0Ti
Offbeat Humor
One of these guys was a KKK member, another left a young woman to die in a car he crashed. The third threw a snowball on the Senate floor once.
— Zach Parkinson (@AZachParkinson) July 9, 2024
Guess which is which? pic.twitter.com/23QcyqiIvm
Data Talks
Neat!
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 13, 2024
Studies of rent control tend to find that
- leads to lower rents for controlled housing
- boosts rents for uncontrolled housing
- while making a lot of other things worse https://t.co/0u0cUrTbbm pic.twitter.com/xMrRnfvx7U
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Song of a Man Who Has Come Through by D. H. Lawrence
Song of a Man Who Has Come Throughby D. H. LawrenceNot I, not I, but the wind that blows through me!A fine wind is blowing the new direction of Time.If only I let it bear me, carry me, if only it carry me!If only I am sensitive, subtle, oh, delicate, a winged gift!If only, most lovely of all, I yield myself and am borrowedBy the fine, fine, wind that takes its course through the chaos of the worldLike a fine, an exquisite chisel, a wedge-blade inserted;If only I am keen and hard like the sheer tip of a wedgeDriven by invisible blows,The rock will split, we shall come at the wonder, we shall find the Hesperides.Oh, for the wonder that bubbles into my soul,I would be a good fountain, a good well-head,Would blur no whisper, spoil no expression.What is the knocking?What is the knocking at the door in the night?It is somebody wants to do us harm.No, no, it is the three strange angels.Admit them, admit them.
History
DNA analysis of late antique and medieval mummies from the Canary Islands finds that the pre-Spanish inhabitants were closely related to North African Berbers. pic.twitter.com/uT87pAilC0
— LiorLefineder (@lefineder) July 9, 2024
An Insight
VIDEO: Why Thomas Sowell doesn't think Obama Is a Socialist.
— James Lindsay, anti-Communist (@ConceptualJames) July 8, 2024
My belief is that the 20th century saw a strategic blending of Communism and Fascism, and Obama is a main mover in that. pic.twitter.com/EQi0xvmpdQ
I see wonderful things
There is perhaps no music made by man that steadies more absolutely the human spirit, across ocean and earthly border, than the Serbian Orthodox chant of Psalm 136. pic.twitter.com/QTYTWU5eqL
— Western Exile (@westernexile) July 9, 2024
Offbeat humor
How economist @steve_tadelis quickly saw through the bullshit of some marketing consultants, @Freakonomics edition: pic.twitter.com/t3OqR0iK5L
— Garett Jones (@GarettJones) July 9, 2024
Data Talks
"In 1300 Europe Only nine cities seem to have had more than 55,000 inhabitants and five of those were in Italy." pic.twitter.com/NHdWYP49lI
— LiorLefineder (@lefineder) July 13, 2024
Monday, August 19, 2024
Mad As The Mist And Snow by William Butler Yeats
Mad As The Mist And Snowby William Butler YeatsBolt and bar the shutter,For the foul winds blow:Our minds are at their best this night,And I seem to knowThat everything outside us isMad as the mist and snow.Horace there by Homer stands,Plato stands below,And here is Tully's open page.How many years agoWere you and I unlettered ladsMad as the mist and snow?You ask what makes me sigh, old friend,What makes me shudder so?I shudder and I sigh to thinkThat even CiceroAnd many-minded Homer wereMad as the mist and snow.
History
A #Roman mummy portrait of a woman, shown dressed in bright clothing with a lot of beautiful gold jewellery. We don't know who she was or anything about her life (apart from the fact that she was presumably wealthy), & probably lived & died in #Egypt in the later C2nd AD. pic.twitter.com/RJ3TaOtLYR
— Dr Jo Ball (@DrJEBall) July 7, 2024
An Insight
Always fun to be reminded the sort of people Jesus spent time talking with. pic.twitter.com/RzrLNOzOtg
— David Rowe (@mrdavidrowe) July 7, 2024
I see wonderful things
Fascinating footage of a human white blood cell chasing a bacterium captured through a microscope.
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) July 9, 2024
📽: David Rogers pic.twitter.com/LAaHjUHLXF
Data Talks
"undergraduates’ IQs have steadily fallen from roughly 119 to a mean of 102 today — just slightly above the population average of 100. In short, undergraduates are now no more intelligent on average than members of the general population." https://t.co/Yx76QH6qu1
— Rob Henderson (@robkhenderson) July 12, 2024
Sunday, August 18, 2024
History
Etruscan War Chariot, dated 6th Century BC, photographed by Jason Martinez Photography.
— ArchaeoHistories (@histories_arch) July 9, 2024
Monteleone chariot is one of 6 known to remain in this condition and was undoubtedly used to accomodate a driver and a highly distinguished individual. Made of bronze with heavy useage of… pic.twitter.com/3gzkVwkdi4
An Insight
Your risk of dying from climate-related disasters dropped 99% since 1920.
— Bjorn Lomborg (@BjornLomborg) July 9, 2024
This is because richer societies are much more resilient to disasters
Read more in my peer-reviewed article: https://t.co/CC0h7JKIKv pic.twitter.com/LeHYuKaV2F
I see wonderful things
Life finds a way
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 8, 2024
Two tenacious cedar trees truly living at the edge, Nevada Falls, Yosemite
[📹 Mark Camp] pic.twitter.com/qGln5fH1Sc
Offbeat Humor
"You had the keys in the pub."
— Christopher Howse (@BeardyHowse) July 11, 2024
"No, you put them in your handbag." https://t.co/6ykrrrns65
Data Talks
70% of the way through the Arctic melt season, Arctic sea ice extent is closely tracking the thirty year average. Nothing has changed and the oceans are not "boiling." The #ClimateScam is the religion of morons.… pic.twitter.com/PkEMZtywqQ
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) July 8, 2024
Saturday, August 17, 2024
History
This chart of the Roman legions' emblems is like astrology for guys.
— Learn Latin (@latinedisce) July 9, 2024
Which symbol best represents you? pic.twitter.com/FyWtosEPxF
An Insight
1/ My long-but-worthwhile-read @nytimes is about the American political class's self-righteous detachment from the economic and social conditions of its nation.
— Oren Cass (@oren_cass) July 8, 2024
This is the root cause of present instability and poses the most serious long-term threat to the Republic. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/CV8mqoYgqP
I see wonderful things
Hummingbird pool party
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) July 8, 2024
pic.twitter.com/CmIvRVCxDL
Data Talks
If it wasn’t for non-Western mass immigration, the amount of crime here in Copenhagen would only be 1/3 of what it is now. https://t.co/EqxQJxJQim
— Jonatan Pallesen (@jonatanpallesen) July 8, 2024
Friday, August 16, 2024
History
Like Greenland, The Azores were temporarily settled by Vikings.
— LiorLefineder (@lefineder) July 8, 2024
"Azorean house mice share a substantial amount of DNA with house mouse populations that originated in northern Europe. The mice could have hitched a ride on the Viking ships...The mice are like 'living artifacts,' of… pic.twitter.com/vNs1qBiI8B
An Insight
“Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire.”
— Mark W. (@DurhamWASP) July 7, 2024
Gustav Mahler, born 7th July 1860 pic.twitter.com/vLeLkiWfbj
I see wonderful things
Paradise Black Mansion, south of France -
— AA$MAco (@as_ma_co) July 9, 2024
It is sheltered from shore and open to sea, seeming to invite waves and winds in Tall columns and arched windows give building grandeur and luxury. Panoramic views of vast ocean fill mind with freedom and boundlessness.
☆ sunt_mrr (IG) pic.twitter.com/MvxTUquHoJ
Data Talks
I encountered a delightful little astrodynamics proof last week when an astronaut casually stated it as a fact, and when I looked skeptical, he just smiled and said, "Check it yourself."
— Max Fagin 🚀🔴🌐☄🌘 (@MaxFagin) July 9, 2024
Here's the statement:
"It takes 2 hours to orbit at the surface of any object made of rock"
Thursday, August 15, 2024
History
King Herod's Palace, also known as Herodium, is a remarkable archaeological site located in the Judean Desert, near present-day Bethlehem in Israel.
— ArchaeoHistories (@histories_arch) July 7, 2024
Built by King Herod the Great around 23-15 BC, it served as a fortress, palace, and final resting place for the king.
The site… pic.twitter.com/oQN7GTOZfQ
An Insight
Predicting ten years into the future is hard pic.twitter.com/kh3mDAOIgd
— Peter Wildeford 🇺🇸🇬🇧🇫🇷 (@peterwildeford) July 7, 2024
I see wonderful things
Where there is life there is a pattern, and where there is a pattern there is mathematics. Once that germ of rationality and order exists to turn a chaos into a cosmos, then so does mathematics. There could not be a non-mathematical Universe containing living observers.
— Physics In History (@PhysInHistory) July 9, 2024
- John… pic.twitter.com/SJ1uF23ngs