March 2012
1 tag
Mar 30th
3,798 notes
2 tags
Mar 30th
92 notes
2 tags
Mar 30th
379 notes
1 tag
Mar 30th
128 notes
1 tag
Mar 30th
46 notes
Street Art Shamans
Could street art change your life?
Mar 29th
40 notes
Mar 29th
35 notes
3 tags
A Skull of Books →
A metaphor for the age of paper?
Mar 29th
18 notes
2 tags
Mar 16th
42 notes
“People tend to be far more tolerant of variable spellings (and probably...”
– Jessica Love talks about language, and the 20-odd variants of “caddy-corner.” Read. (via theamericanscholar)
Mar 16th
26 notes
Mar 15th
67 notes
Mar 15th
1,762 notes
3 tags
Mar 15th
34 notes
2 tags
Mar 14th
22 notes
1 tag
Mar 14th
23 notes
2 tags
Porno and Prudes →
It’s out of vogue for girlfriends and wives to complain about their significant others’ porn use, and a bride who asks her groom to forgo bachelor party strippers is universally seen as insecure and controlling—or at the very least an unrealistic simpleton. Only someone hopelessly outdated and provincial would turn away from Dan Savage’s advice to accept that it’s normal and healthy for people to...
Mar 13th
50 notes
3 tags
Mar 13th
21 notes
2 tags
Kombucha: A Microbrew for What Ails You
There’s something new on tap, though it’s been around for two thousand years. Kombucha, a fizzy, fermented tea drink purported to have healing properties, is steadily rising in mainstream popularity, finding success with commercial kombucha brewers, home brewers, and bartenders alike. Made by fermenting tea and sugar with a culture of bacteria and yeast, kombucha is effervescent and potent, its...
Mar 12th
68 notes
3 tags
WatchWatch
Soldiers march through the streets. The town square a dozen blocks away is full of young, idealistic protesters. Whispers of revolution begin to glide through social media websites. From the anonymous refuge of cyberspace, people call for earthly liberation. But then, inexplicable gunfire punctuates the pregnant night air. Something violent is happening, and internet access has been blacked out...
Mar 12th
16 notes
3 tags
Mar 9th
68 notes
Mar 9th
19 notes
1 tag
Mar 8th
19 notes
4 tags
The Triumph of the Co-Op Bookstore →
A town without bookstores is like a town without churches or bars. Minus the hymnals and happy-hour specials, the best bookshops are vital community centers where patrons can gather, share ideas, and have grand revelations or quiet discoveries. When Buffalo Street Books in Ithaca, New York, began to fail, it tapped into the strength of its community with an inspired idea: cooperative ownership. ...
Mar 7th
43 notes
3 tags
“The raised window glass still rather damp from the steam, she looked through a...”
– From an extended rumination on the fleeting nature of time. Keep reading …
Mar 6th
9 notes
3 tags
“I became intensely aware of things: the trees, the angle of sun, the curvature...”
– An epileptic explains the first few surreal seconds before a seizure hits. Keep reading . .
Mar 5th
88 notes
Mar 5th
50,291 notes
4 tags
Mar 5th
23 notes
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Mar 2nd
54 notes
Mar 2nd
354 notes
4 tags
Organic Farmers Lose More Ground to Monsanto →
Monsanto’s bullying tactics received a legal nod of approval on February 24th, when Judge Naomi Buchwald dismissed a suit brought against the company by the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association (OSGATA). The association was joined by 82 other plaintiffs. Nearly 300,000 organic farmers were represented in the action. According to Judge Buchwald, the plaintiffs failed to prove their...
Mar 2nd
43 notes
3 tags
Mar 1st
15 notes
Mar 1st
30 notes
5 tags
Mar 1st
120 notes