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Thursday, September 7, 2017

The Decade That Built the Next iPhone

Why Hurricane Categories Make a Difference

Where do new words come from? - Marcel Danesi

Black Men Need Yoga Too

An excerpt from Salon -

Black men need yoga, too: “We tend to wait until we hit the bottom floor to then pop up and save ourselves”
Salon talks to the founder of the Black Male Yoga Initiative about promoting mindfulness in the Black community
By D. WATKINS

Changa Bell is the founder of The Black Male Yoga Initiative, which provides training, information, workshops and retreats to help black men of all ages to become aware, engaged and empowered in mindfulness, meditation and yoga. He says one of his key challenges is engaging “the population I’m trying to serve.”

“The black community doesn’t necessarily value yoga as a preventive health care measure,” Bell told me. “We tend to wait until we hit the bottom floor to then pop up and save ourselves.”

http://www.salon.com/2017/09/06/black-men-need-yoga-too-we-tend-to-wait-until-we-hit-the-bottom-floor-to-then-pop-up-and-save-ourselves/



What’s Baseball Without a Side of Grasshoppers?

The colleges where the American dream is still alive

"This is America"

From the Huffington Post -

Philly Driver Shouts ‘This Is America’ To The Wrong Asian-American
“Yes, this is America. I am American,” reporter responds in viral video.
By Brittany Wong

https://www.facebook.com/6abcNydiaHan/videos/10156752826863508/

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/asian-american-reporter-video-bigoted-driver-philadelphia_us_59aee63ae4b0354e440d1069

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

A Powerful, Enlightening Message

These podcasts are all great, but #8 is especially powerful and should be required listening for all black parents.

"What is Wrong With You?"

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

White Woman Asks White Supremacists: ‘What Is Wrong With You?’
In a recent letter to the editor, Jonna Ramey said what we’re all thinking.
By Elyse Wanshel

Ramey put her thoughts on paper and sent a letter to The Salt Lake Tribune, which ran it under the headline “Letter of the week: What is wrong with you, white supremacists?” (The letter appeared in print on Aug. 20 and was published online on Aug. 26.)

The letter begins:

I am a 67-year-old American white woman. My parents enlisted in World War II to fight fascism. They both served; my mother was a nurse, my father navigated bombers. They lost friends in that bloody war so that all the world could be free of fascism. They did not fight so that some white people could claim supremacy or that Nazis could openly walk the streets of America.

White person to white supremacist person: What is wrong with you?




http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/white-woman-white-supremacists-letter_us_59b040b8e4b0dfaafcf4f628?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

Quote

peppa pig- mr skinny legs

From Slate -

Peppa Pig Episode Pulled From Australian TV for Telling Children That Spiders Are Harmless
By Rachel Withers





http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2017/09/05/australia_pulls_a_peppa_pig_episode_in_which_daddy_pig_says_spiders_are.html?wpsrc=newsletter_tis&sid=554654ea10defb39638b510d

Hear Bill Withers

From Rolling Stone -

Bill Withers Covers Little Jimmy Dickens on First New Song in 32 Years
By Elias Leight

Bill Withers covers "(You've Been Quite a Doll) Raggedy Ann" as part of a tribute album dedicated to Little Jimmy Dickens, the famously pint-sized country singer and a Grand Ole Opry stalwart. Withers' version of the song marks his first solo recording since 1985, when the man behind hits like "Ain't No Sunshine" and "Lovely Day" released his album Watching You Watching Me and walked away from the music business.

                                         

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/hear-bill-withers-first-new-song-in-32-years-w501371

The life cycle of a t-shirt - Angel Chang

DACA, explained

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Cross a Canyon on Peru’s Last Handwoven Bridge

Black Girl Magic - Tennis

From the Root -

3 Black Women Advance to US Open Semifinals
By Angela Helm

Venus Williams; Sloane Stephens; Madison Keys (@rantoddj via Twitter screenshot)
For the first time in U.S. Open history, three black women have advanced to the quarterfinal round; and, in this case, they all happen to be American. As of Monday, Venus Williams, 37, Sloane Stephens, 24, and Madison Keys, 22, are all vying for the Tiffany-engraved trophy.

Oh, and it’s all going down at a stadium named for an African-American tennis player, Arthur Ashe.

https://thegrapevine.theroot.com/three-black-women-advance-to-u-s-open-semifinals-1799943507?utm_source=theroot_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2017-09-05


Drones Helping Relief Effort

An excerpt from Wired -

ABOVE DEVASTATED HOUSTON, ARMIES OF DRONES PROVE THEIR WORTH
By Aarian Marshall

“This is the one of the first big disasters where we can show how valuable drones can be,” says Brandon Stark, who directs the Center of Excellence on Unmanned Aircraft System Safety at the University of California, Merced. In the coming weeks and months, they'll help locals assess damage to homes, roads, bridges, power lines, oil and gas facilities, and office buildings—and determine whether it's safe to go back.

https://www.wired.com/story/houston-recovery-drones?mbid=nl_090417_daily&CNDID=%%CUST_ID%%

His Message Can't Be Silenced

From CNN -

(CNN) A political cartoon of Colin Kaepernick kneeling with his Afro in the shape of a black fist has gone viral.

But the illustration -- which has been adopted by sports fans, civil rights activists and celebrities -- comes from an unlikely artist.
Khalid Albaih, a Romania-born Sudanese artist living in Qatar, is renowned throughout the Middle East for addressing controversial political and social issues, including government corruption, the war in Yemen and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/04/us/colin-kaepernick-khalid-albaih-cartoon-trnd/index.html

A post shared by @Khalidalbaih (@khalidalbaih) on