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Saturday, August 31, 2024

Momma Knows Football

 

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/C_TKmC9O6qj/

https://www.upworthy.com/mom-teaches-football-in-her-work-clothes

We All Know Someone, Are Kin to Someone, or Fit the Bill Ourselves

An excerpt from YourTango - 

8 Subtle Traits Of People Who Have A Low IQ

People are intelligent in their own ways, but someone who exhibits these subtle traits has a low IQ.

By Alexandra Blogier

MAYA LAB | Shutterstock

Intelligence can be defined as a person’s general mental abilities to reason, solve problems, and learn. Someone's level of intelligence includes their cognitive abilities, like perception, language, planning, and memory.

There's a difference between being book-smart and street-smart, yet people with low intelligence may struggle with both. Because reasoning, learning, and solving problems are essential aspects of intelligence, someone with low intelligence will have difficulty mastering those areas.

Here are 8 subtle traits of people who have a low IQ

1. They're not very curious

People with low IQs show little interest in learning new things or digging deeper into topics they already understand. They're content to have a shallow conceptualization of issues, without thinking about the underlying causes.

They also tend to have smaller vocabularies and lower intellectual curiosity overall. They don't think outside of their own worldview, and have a limited ability to see other people's perspectives, which can make them fairly close-minded.

The Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania defines open-mindedness as the "willingness to search actively for evidence against one's favored beliefs, plans, or goals, and to weigh such evidence fairly when it is available." They define the opposite of open-mindedness as "the myside bias," in which people search and evaluate evidence in ways that favor their initial belief systems.

The Center notes that people who are open-minded score higher on tests that measure cognitive ability, which supports the association between lower intelligence and closed-mindedness.


2. They struggle to adapt to new situations

Oftentimes, people with low IQs have a hard time in new environments. They can have trouble with planning and problem-solving, which translates into difficulty getting used to new places or new roles.

While someone with a low IQ might have skills that look good on paper, they're often challenged by being thrown into real life situations, and don't have the mental capacity to find a way out.


3. They don't know what they don't know

People who have low IQs might think they're actually very intelligent, which is called the Dunning-Kruger effect. According to the Dunning-Kruger effect, people who actually know very little on a certain topic assume they're very knowledgeable about it.

Psychologist David Dunning wrote that "The scope of people's ignorance is often invisible to them." He referred to that lack of understanding of one's own mental limitations as "meta-ignorance," or being ignorant of "the multitude of ways they demonstrate gaps in knowledge."

Whereas high intelligence performers openly recognize what they don't know, people with low intelligence go the opposite route. They lack intellectual humility, which means they don't acknowledge that they struggle to understand certain topics. This creates a level of low-self awareness and, oftentimes, an inflated sense of self or ego.

Sesame Street Was Onto Trump YEARS Ago

 

@savvy_from_maine I know why Christian nationalists hate Sesame Street… The satire we all needed. #savvyfrommaine #sesamestreet #donaldgrump #cult45 #oscarthegrouch #foryou #project2025 #donaldtrump #trump #satire ♬ original sound - Savvy from Maine 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️

https://www.tiktok.com/@savvy_from_maine/video/7391624486115872046?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc&web_id=7395959271928956458 

Teacher Has Found Clever Way of Teaching Art

Art Instructor Draws Clever Images With His Finger on the Windows of Dirty Cars

By Lori Dorn

Kundan Chowdhury of the Chandan Art Academy in Bhadreswar, Hooly in West Bengal, India, draws clever and teachable art with his finger on the windows of dirty cars. He starts with very simple shapes and then shows how the shapes connect to make the whole as a sum of its parts.







British Writer Describes Trump

From the London Daily - 

Copied in its entirety from Nate White's article as found in the London Daily - It is too good to cherry-pick - Faye

~~~~~

British Writer Pens The Best Description Of Trump I’ve Read

Nate White

“Why do some British people not like Donald Trump?” Nate White, an articulate and witty writer from England wrote the following response:

A few things spring to mind. Trump lacks certain qualities which the British traditionally esteem. For instance, he has no class, no charm, no coolness, no credibility, no compassion, no wit, no warmth, no wisdom, no subtlety, no sensitivity, no self-awareness, no humility, no honour and no grace – all qualities, funnily enough, with which his predecessor Mr. Obama was generously blessed. So for us, the stark contrast does rather throw Trump’s limitations into embarrassingly sharp relief.

Plus, we like a laugh. And while Trump may be laughable, he has never once said anything wry, witty or even faintly amusing – not once, ever. I don’t say that rhetorically, I mean it quite literally: not once, not ever. And that fact is particularly disturbing to the British sensibility – for us, to lack humour is almost inhuman. But with Trump, it’s a fact. He doesn’t even seem to understand what a joke is – his idea of a joke is a crass comment, an illiterate insult, a casual act of cruelty.

Trump is a troll. And like all trolls, he is never funny and he never laughs; he only crows or jeers. And scarily, he doesn’t just talk in crude, witless insults – he actually thinks in them. His mind is a simple bot-like algorithm of petty prejudices and knee-jerk nastiness.

There is never any under-layer of irony, complexity, nuance or depth. It’s all surface. Some Americans might see this as refreshingly upfront. Well, we don’t. We see it as having no inner world, no soul. And in Britain we traditionally side with David, not Goliath. All our heroes are plucky underdogs: Robin Hood, Dick Whittington, Oliver Twist. Trump is neither plucky, nor an underdog. He is the exact opposite of that. He’s not even a spoiled rich-boy, or a greedy fat-cat. He’s more a fat white slug. A Jabba the Hutt of privilege.

And worse, he is that most unforgivable of all things to the British: a bully. That is, except when he is among bullies; then he suddenly transforms into a snivelling sidekick instead. There are unspoken rules to this stuff – the Queensberry rules of basic decency – and he breaks them all. He punches downwards – which a gentleman should, would, could never do – and every blow he aims is below the belt. He particularly likes to kick the vulnerable or voiceless – and he kicks them when they are down.

So the fact that a significant minority – perhaps a third – of Americans look at what he does, listen to what he says, and then think ‘Yeah, he seems like my kind of guy’ is a matter of some confusion and no little distress to British people, given that:

• Americans are supposed to be nicer than us, and mostly are.

• You don’t need a particularly keen eye for detail to spot a few flaws in the man.

This last point is what especially confuses and dismays British people, and many other people too; his faults seem pretty bloody hard to miss. After all, it’s impossible to read a single tweet, or hear him speak a sentence or two, without staring deep into the abyss. He turns being artless into an art form; he is a Picasso of pettiness; a Shakespeare of shit. His faults are fractal: even his flaws have flaws, and so on ad infinitum. God knows there have always been stupid people in the world, and plenty of nasty people too. But rarely has stupidity been so nasty, or nastiness so stupid. He makes Nixon look trustworthy and George W look smart. In fact, if Frankenstein decided to make a monster assembled entirely from human flaws – he would make a Trump.

And a remorseful Doctor Frankenstein would clutch out big clumpfuls of hair and scream in anguish: ‘My God… what… have… I… created?' If being a twat was a TV show, Trump would be the boxed set.

#Donald Trump 

https://londondaily.com/british-writer-pens-the-best-description-of-trump-i-ve-read?sfnsn=mo

Where Folks Cuss a Lot

An excerpt from Readers' Digest - 

This State’s Residents Curse the Most (Hint: It’s Not New York!)

By Kiersten Hickman

Well, dang. This state sure loves a good cussing.

In some cases, swearing makes you feel better. No, really! There’s science behind it. Research shows that profanity can help keep your emotions in check and positively correlates with honesty. It can even reduce your perception of pain. Pardon our French, but cursing comes in handy, gosh darn it!

So if you can’t help but swear, well, that’s not such a bad thing. Still, swearing isn’t for everyone. In fact, a new survey shows that residents of some states use more profanity than others.

To find out which U.S. state is the “sweariest” of them all, WordTips analyzed 1.7 million English-language geotagged posts on the social platform X (formally Twitter) and used a database of 1,600 profanities to uncover the most and least foul-mouthed places. Read on to find out which states’ residents curse the most and which are most likely to refrain from using profanity.

What other states round out the top five?

Along with Maryland, here are the states that tend to use the most curse words online (plus their average number of curse-word-laden posts):

Maryland (66.3 posts on average)

Louisiana (61.7 posts on average)

Georgia (57.4 posts on average)

Virginia (47.6 posts on average)

Ohio (47.3 posts on average)

After Ohio, many other states averaged in the 45-post range, including Mississippi (45.9), Pennsylvania (45.7), New Jersey (45.5), Nevada (45.5), Michigan (45.3) and Illinois (45).

https://www.rd.com/article/states-swear-the-most/

⭐ Sewing Trick. The Easiest Way to Sew a Stylish Shopping Bag (Part #86)


Mind-Blowing Kitchen Tips 🤯 Part Two

Please watch on YouTube using the link below.  


Flood Barriers


Most-Spoken Languages Besides English And Spanish

An excerpt from Mental Floss - 

The Most-Spoken Language Besides English and Spanish in Every State, Mapped

The analysis from WordFinderX took a deep dive into the languages of the United States—and revealed some fascinating trends along the way.

By Paul Anthony Jones 

The United States is, famously, a linguistic melting pot, with estimates ranging from 350 to as many as 430 different languages being used across the country.

Out of all those, English understandably comes out on top nationwide. Almost four-fifths of Americans reported in the last census that they only speak English at home, making English America’s de facto official language (though, oddly, no de jure official language has ever been legally or formally recognized in the United States). After that, Spanish is America’s second most widely-spoken language, used in 62 percent of non-English speaking households, and giving America the world’s second-largest Spanish-speaking population, after Mexico.



But what would happen if we were to take English and Spanish off the table, and look instead at how the other 400 or so languages of the United States are used? A fascinating new analysis has done precisely that.

Language blog WordFinderX took household population data from the last census to discover the most spoken languages—outside of English and Spanish—across the United States. Breaking down the Census Bureau data by regions, states, major cities, and even individual districts and neighborhoods showed just how linguistically diverse American households truly are, and revealed some surprising geographic and linguistic trends in the process.

https://www.mentalfloss.com/posts/most-spoken-language-in-every-state-besides-english-and-spanish-map

Let's Give Our Girls a Heads Up

An excerpt from YourTango - 

12 Lessons Most Women Learn Too Late In Life

We all want to better ourselves, but learning how isn't always easy.

By Marielisa Reyes

Here are 12 lessons most women learn too late in life


1. You're responsible for how people treat you

                                                                     Dragana Gordic | Shutterstock

We've all been disrespected or undermined, and in the moment we might feel like nobody respects us or people don't know how to treat us right. But the reality of the situation is this: you are responsible for how people treat you.

You set the limits and you set the boundaries. And if someone treats you with disrespect, you step away from them. Because if you don't, this will only lead to more disrespect later down the road.

In fact, one study found that those who are disrespected have cynical views about human nature. This, in turn, leads to treating yourself and others with disrespect, and losing the respect of people around you.


2. Attitude is everything

                                                                Andrea Piacquadio | Pexels

Whether we had a bad morning or a raging headache, most of us struggle to keep a positive mindset. Even more, most of us learn far too late what a change in mindset can accomplish.

For instance, multiple studies have shown that a change in mindset leads to greater motivation and academic success among students. According to an additional study, "Positive thinking and interventions can increase older adults' resilience, and thereby improve their quality of life. High quality of life can lead to greater life satisfaction."

So, even when it's hard, find things to be grateful for each and every day. Focus on the positives throughout your day and keep yourself in high spirits — your overall health depends on it. 


4. Actions speak louder than words

New Africa | Shutterstock

According to licensed counselor Lee Wichman, "The unconscious is incredibly powerful and one's behaviors cannot help but betray one's true sentiments." This means that if a friend or partner says, "I care about you," but their actions don't align, they likely don't care or value you.

It's a tough pill to swallow for most, but it's important to truly understand the meaning of that phrase. Because if we don't, we might find ourselves in relationships that drain us instead of inspire us.


https://www.yourtango.com/self/lessons-most-women-learn-too-late-life

Costco Snacks Rated

From CouponBirds - 



At-Home Salad Bar

 


https://www.instagram.com/reel/C-ySg7tJTzL/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading 

Magnificent Time Covers For Sale

From Time - 

Chadwick Boseman

https://timecoverstore.com/collections/100+years+of+time

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Why "Windy City?"

An excerpt from Readers' Digest - 

The Surprising Reason Why Chicago Is Called the "Windy City"

It's got nothing to do with the weather.

By Meghan Jones

Grey Tree Studios/Shutterstock

When you hear someone mention the “Windy City,” you immediately know they’re talking about Chicago, as surely as the “Big Apple” means New York and “Sin City” refers to Las Vegas. Knowing this, you might make sure to pack your best windbreaker for your first trip to Illinois’ biggest city. But it turns out that, while Chicago is as prone to a blustery day as any other metropolis, its wind isn’t particularly exceptional. How did the city get this nickname?


Well, when the nickname came to be, the “Windy City” meaning wasn’t describing the weather but the people. (Don’t worry, not that kind of wind.) Nineteenth-century journalists first gave Chicago this designation when criticizing the city’s elite as “full of hot air.” In the Chicago Daily Tribune, a reporter wrote in 1858 that “[a] hundred militia officers, from corporal to commander … air their vanity … in this windy city.” Another reporter, a proud citizen of Milwaukee, boasted that his own city was the better of the two: “We are proud of Milwaukee because she is not overrun with a lazy police force as is Chicago—because her morals are better … than Chicago, the windy city of the West.” They meant that the city was full of “windbags,” people with inflated egos who cared about nothing but profit. (Learn these 12 signs someone has a massive ego.)

https://www.rd.com/article/chicago-windy-city/

Monday, August 19, 2024

21 Clever Memory Tools

An excerpt from Buzzfeed - 

21 Clever Mnemonic Devices That Will Help You Remember Almost Everything

Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally.

By Sarah Aspler, BuzzFeed Staff, Canada


1. The order of planets from the sun:

BuzzFeed / Getty

4. The order of mathematical operations:


BuzzFeed / Getty

5. When to use "affect" or "effect":



BuzzFeed / Getty


7. How to remember who is on which bill:


Buzzfeed / Getty


14. How to set the table:

Upgrading a Cooler

 

@unclejhonn What a Women… #diy #patiodiy ♬ original sound - Uncle Jhonn

A Freshman at Georgia Tech at 13

An excerpt from CBS Evening News - 

He was reading at 1 and doing fractions by 2. At 13 years old, he's majoring in aerospace engineering at Georgia Tech.

By Mark Strassmann


The 360 Degree Revolving, Titling House

An excerpt from designboom - 

alex schweder + ward shelley's 'ReActor' house rotates atop a concrete column


the house has been conceived as a piece of performance architecture
video courtesy of art OMI / © richard barnes 


‘ReActor’ is the latest work in an experimental, performative series of ‘social relationship architecture’ designed and built by artists alex schweder and ward shelley. this summer, for a total of five days, the architect-artist duo lived in the rotating house, located in upstate new york. the habitable sculpture measures 44-foot by 8-foot (13.4 x 2.4m) and rotates a complete 360-degrees atop a 15-foot (4.5m) concrete column.

https://www.designboom.com/architecture/reactor-house-alex-schweder-ward-shelley-omi-international-arts-center-new-york-08-21-2016/

The Valley of the Dolls

An excerpt from AllThatsInteresting - 

Haunting Photos Of Nagoro, The Japanese Village Where The Dead Are Replaced With Life-Size Dolls

Artist Tsukimi Ayano has made at least 400 dolls to repopulate the dwindling village of Nagoro

By Erin Kelly | Edited By Jaclyn Anglis




The streets in the tiny village of Nagoro, Japan are far from bustling. In fact, things are remarkably still. Then, through the corner of your eye, you see a figure — then a group of figures huddled together.

Then you realize they're everywhere you look.

But these aren't people. They're actually life-size dolls — and they make up most of Nagoro's population. The dolls outnumber humans by a ratio of more than ten to one.

The handmade dolls are one woman's attempt to fill the loneliness that exists in Nagoro. This small village becomes increasingly void of people as time goes on. The elderly die and the young people leave for city jobs. Not even a local grocery store remains open.

The village, also called Kakashi No Sato, or Scarecrow Village, is not unlike other rural areas in Japan facing this depopulation trend. Since 2010, the nation has lost about 1.4 million of its people — and it's having a major impact on both the economy and society.

However, here in Nagoro, it's like no one has left; each doll seems to contain the soul of a departed villager. A local official told one tourist that "the figures have even been added to the census records of the village, with detail descriptions of each figure."

In this way, it really does seem like the dolls have a larger-than-life presence in the village of Nagoro.


Several dolls sit lined on a bench. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP via Getty Images


BACK-TO-SCHOOL

 


https://x.com/i/status/1823817240791191558 

Time Magazine's 2024 Kid of the Year

An excerpt from Time -  

Heman Bekele Is TIME’s 2024 Kid of the Year

Dreaming of a cure

By Jeffrey Kluger




Heman Bekele whipped up the most dangerous of what he called his “potions” when he was just over 7 years old. He’d been conducting his own science experiments for about three years by that point, mixing up whatever he could get his hands on at home and waiting to see if the resulting goo would turn into anything.

“They were just dish soap, laundry detergent, and common household chemicals,” he says today of the ingredients he’d use. “I would hide them under my bed and see what would happen if I left them overnight. There was a lot of mixing together completely at random.”

But soon, things got less random. For Christmas before his 7th birthday, Heman was given a chemistry set that came with a sample of sodium hydroxide. By then, he had been looking up chemical reactions online and learned that aluminum and sodium hydroxide can together produce prodigious amounts of heat. That got him thinking that perhaps he could do the world some good. “I thought that this could be a solution to energy, to making an unlimited supply,” he says. “But I almost started a fire.”

After that, his parents kept a closer eye on him. As it turned out, having adults watching what he does is something that Heman, now 15, would have to get used to. These days, a whole lot of people are paying him a whole lot of attention. Last October, the 3M company and Discovery Education selected Heman, a rising 10th-grader at Woodson High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, as the winner of its Young Scientist Challenge. His prize: $25,000. His accomplishment: inventing a soap that could one day treat and even prevent multiple forms of skin cancer. It may take years before such a product comes to market, but this summer Heman is already spending part of every weekday working in a lab at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, hoping to bring his dream to fruition. When school is in session, he’ll be there less often, but will continue to plug away. “I’m really passionate about skin-cancer research,” he says, “whether it’s my own research or what’s happening in the field. It’s absolutely incredible to think that one day my bar of soap will be able to make a direct impact on somebody else’s life. That’s the reason I started this all in the first place.”

It’s that ambition—to say nothing of that selflessness—that has earned Heman recognition as TIME’s Kid of the Year for 2024. 

Facts About the US Black Population

An excerpt from Face2Face Africa - 

8 facts about the U.S. Black population you should know

BY Kofi Oppong Kyekyeku


Facts about Black people in U.S. - Original photo credits:
Pew Research Center and ABC News

Population

The U.S. Black population in 2022 can be categorized into four distinct groups:

  1. The total U.S. Black population
  2. Single-race, non-Hispanic Black people
  3. Multiracial, non-Hispanic Black people
  4. Black Hispanic people

Geography

Geographically, the majority of Black Americans reside in the South, with more than half (56%) living there in 2022. Meanwhile, 17% live in the Midwest and Northeast, and 10% reside in the West. Texas is home to the largest Black population among the states, with approximately 4.2 million Black residents. Florida follows with 3.9 million, and Georgia ranks third with 3.7 million.

The New York City metropolitan area, which includes parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, is the preferred metropolitan area for Black Americans, with 3.6 million residents. The Atlanta metro area is the second most popular, with 2.2 million Black residents, followed by Chicago, which is home to 1.7 million Black residents.

The Tiffany Problem - As told by Abraham Piper

 From Abraham Piper


https://www.instagram.com/p/C-n2r2jJ3be/ 

Daddies and Daughters

An excerpt from The Daily Beast - 

Why Every Father Needs to Watch the Netflix Film ‘Daughters’

The new documentary is about a father-daughter dance at a prison. As one dad of two girls writes, it’s a must-see film that brings all of parenthood into perspective.

By Andrew Crump



Reams of data exist that highlight the range of effects a father’s absence can have on his daughters. They’re likely to struggle with trust issues. Their confidence might flag. They may wrestle with feelings of abandonment, low self-esteem, and rejection, or develop aggressive or otherwise antisocial behaviors, or risk-taking behaviors; they may become depressed, detached, or anxious. Fathers shape their daughters’ relational lives—the foundation and maintenance of meaningful relationships, with family, with friends, with romantic partners, with communities—and spur their creativity.

Angela Patton and Natalie Rae’s Daughters, the Festival Favorite and Audience Choice: U.S. Documentary Competition winner at this year’s Sundance Film Festival—now available to watch on Netflix—side steps statistical analysis and instead strives for emotional impact.

I have two daughters myself. For their privacy’s sake, I’ll refer to them by their nicknames: Brontosaurus, my eldest, and Elephant, my youngest. I love them more than anything I’ve loved in my forty years on this Earth.

On behalf of that, I intentionally avoided Daughters in my remote coverage of Sundance, knowing full well a movie with that title, focused on the subject of barriers forced between young girls and their incarcerated dads, would likely break me in two; the idea of being separated from my girls is the stuff of my nightmares, as unlikely as it is that we’ll ever be separated. (Sending them off to summer camp and, soon, back to school is hard enough.) I am not a statistic. Brownie and Elephant aren’t, either. All the same, my reality didn’t blunt Daughters’ effect on me.

This is not a film about the numbers: How many girls grow up fatherless in the U.S.; how many of those girls end up in bad partnerships; how many of them become teen mothers; how many are burdened by mental health problems; how many attempt suicide. Frankly, that wouldn’t be a film at all, had Patton and Rae chosen these details as their subject. It would be an academic paper instead, dry and sans any human sensation.

Sensation is what Daughters is all about, of course, a front row seat to an overwhelming reconnection between a cadre of girls and their fathers, each behind bars for reasons Patton and Rae refuse to detail. (Those reasons are neither our business nor relevant to the film’s thesis.). At the same time, it’s an elegant condemnation of America’s love affair with crime and punishment, exhibited through varied atrocities carried out within its prison system.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/obsessed/netflixs-daughters-the-movie-every-father-needs-to-watch

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Veteran SHREDS Trump-Vance for Attacking Walz's Service –They're Running...


August 13 is Left Handers Day!

Celebrate the lefties in your world! 


Did you guess?  I'm a lefty, too!

https://www.lefthandersday.com/

Who Decides Who's Black Enough?

An excerpt from the LA Times - 

Opinion: Denigrating Drake, and Kamala Harris, as ‘Not Like Us’

By Michael Eric Dyson

Arguments that question the racial identity of the hip-hop artist
and the presidential candidate deny the complexity of Blackness.
(Los Angeles Times photo illustration;
photos by Carmen Mandato / Getty Images, Matt Rourke/ Associated Press)



On the same day that former President Trump claimed before a national gathering of Black journalists that Vice President Kamala Harris “was Indian all the way, and then all of a sudden she made a turn, and she became a Black person,” his running mate Sen. JD Vance accused Harris of being a “phony” who “grew up in Canada” (she attended high school in Montreal) and used “a fake Southern accent” at a rally.

Both men’s accusations sound eerily like those leveled against the rapper Drake by his fellow hip-hop titan Kendrick Lamar (and many others) in a rap beef whose effects linger. Drake has been accused of being a “colonizer” whose Canadian identity and eager embrace of various aspects and accents of a wide range of Black culture make him racially suspect.

Such arguments, whether made by racially troubled white men or Black icons, deny the complexity and diversity of Blackness.

~~~~~

Ironically, that cosmopolitan vision of Blackness is at the heart of the Lamar and Drake dustup. Their kerfuffle — playing out fiercely this spring in a series of releases — is a battle over cultural cachet, racial authenticity and group pride. And it exposes a provincialism that undercuts the global currents of hip-hop.

In his hit “Not Like Us,” Lamar accuses Drake of being a “colonizer” because Drake supposedly “run[s]” to Atlanta to partner with some of the paragons of its trap music to bolster his Blackness. Lamar’s argument echoes long-standing criticisms that Drake’s biracial Canadian roots render him suspect as a bona fide Black artist. Drake’s artistic experimentation with different accents and musical genres has prompted many to claim, as Vance did with Harris, that Drake is a phony.

Lamar’s beef with Drake is rooted in a parochial, claustrophobic vision of Blackness.

Drake grew up in Toronto the son of a Jewish Canadian mother; he spent summers in Memphis, Tenn., with his Black American musician father. His artistic tastes were deeply influenced by a wide swath of the Black diaspora — Afro-Caribbeans, Londoners, American Southerners, especially Memphians, and Torontonians. The multicultural makeup of Toronto, with its sizable Italian, Portuguese, Jamaican and Filipino immigrant populations, also fed his musical appetite.

https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2024-08-11/kendrick-lamar-drake-hip-hop-kamala-harris-blackness

Comparing Crowd Size

 

Fmr. Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura shares his impressions of Gov. Tim...


Friday, August 9, 2024

THE Arizona Turnout for VP Harris & Gov Walz

 


https://x.com/sambbenson/status/1822042965298311628 

Monday, August 5, 2024

Do you Know Your Salts?

An excerpt from ChowHound - 

Table Salt Vs Sea Salt Vs Kosher Salt: When To Use Each Type In Your Kitchen

BY MATTHEW LEE

Westend61/Getty Images



It doesn't matter if it's the kitchen of an amateur home cook who barely uses the space or that of a professional chef, you'll be hard-pressed to find one that doesn't have a jar of salt somewhere. And that jar will most likely contain table salt, also known as "common salt." This fine-grained variety is super versatile and can be used for both seasoning and cooking just fine. But if you want to get the most out of your cooking, you'll need to expand your salt collection, stat. There are dozens of notable salt varieties; but to start, try adding sea salt and kosher salt to your pantry.


Table salt is great for most applications

Ws Studio / Getty Images


The salt you'll find sitting in those fancy glass shakers at restaurants and cafés is most likely table salt. Odds are good that the one you have in your kitchen right now is this type, too. Table salt is produced by blasting high-pressure water at underground salt deposits to reduce them to brine. It's taken up to the surface by a pipe and into a factory where it's dried. After going through several more processing steps, the results are tiny, dense salt crystals that — under a microscope — look like perfect little cubes.



Sea salt for extra flavor


Sea salt, as its name suggests, comes straight from the ocean. Large puddles of seawater are left to bake in the sun, and once all the water has evaporated, flakes of salt appear at the bottom of these pools, ready for harvesting. Unlike table salt, sea salt doesn't go through a lot of processing steps, so it retains trace minerals like magnesium and calcium. 


Kosher salt for everything

AlexPro9500 / Getty Images


Even though table salt is the most common, if you can only choose one type of salt to stock your pantry with, pick kosher salt. Think of it like a salty Swiss Army knife. Whatever task you have in mind — from cooking and seasoning a dish, to canning, pickling, and curing — kosher salt can handle it.



Houston barbershop now officially recognized as historical site