gingeriana: (ax)
[personal profile] gingeriana
В субботу, по пути на пляж-пиво-шашлыки, заехали на биоферму, из тех, где платишь за корзину и накидываешь туда всё шо бох послал (попутно объедая кусты, само собой).
Собрали: бокс лохины трёх сортов, бокс вишен, бокс смородины всех возможных цветов.
Бонусом я собрала ещё борщевик, голой рукой.

Самое обидное, что я ЗНАЮ, как выглядит борщевик и в обычной городской жизни вполне его обхожу. Но этот экземпляр вероломно притаился в кустах порички. Наверное, ума не приложу, где я его нашла даже.

Что я узнала вчера: инкубационный период этой заразы (наверное, это называется иначе, ну да пофиг) -- до 48 часов. Подозревать неладное я начала в понедельник утром только.
Не рекомендую гуглить имиджы на предмет hogweed blisters (я предупредила), там показывают пограничные случаи.
Мне же попался борщевик-эстет, видимо. Ожог выглядит как идеально ровная и круглая жемчужина размером с крупную ягоду крыжовника. Не болит, не колет, лишь загадно поблескивает. В целом выглядит, как будто на дворе 3025 и пришельцы пришили мне на запястье девайс с супер-силой (всегда мечтала силой взгляда прокалывать шины машинам, проезжающим переход на зелёный, можно мне вот это плиз?)

Отдельно доставил канацкий протокол "лечения":
начитавшись интернетов (всё брехня!) про кортикостереоидные кремы и прочие приблуды, пошла я в аптеку знач. Где фармацевт абсолютно флегматично сказала мне: Если не болит и не воняет -- ничего мазать не надо, оно само засохнет. :)

Hope this helps, dear blog!

fossa_s: (Default)
[personal profile] fossa_s
Я наконец поняла какой мужчина мне бы подошёл. Очень жалею, что не понимала этого когда была молодой и тратила своё время на козлов. Если бы можно было передать себе в прошлое одно сообщение, я бы отправила себе этот пост.
Деньги и внешность это херня, тем более какой-то дебильный абстрактный статус. Работа, образование, происхождение и семья это тоже херня. Привычки, темперамент и вкусы - тоже. Самое главное - чтобы мужчина был на твоей стороне, чтобы был за тебя. Неважно в чём. Например, был у меня друг, к которому я ездила в Кфар-Сабу на автобусе. И однажды один тупой водитель хотел чтобы я заплатила, хотя у меня был дорогущий проездной, по которому я всё время ездила. Я рассказала об этом другу и он сказал, что, наверное, проездной какой-то не такой. Хотя, в проездном всё прописано: когда он действует, где он действует... Да, это мелочь. Но так было всегда и во всём. Он всегда был на стороне людей, которые против меня. Он всегда подозревал, что в любом конфликте изначально всегда виновата я. Никогда не верил моим объяснениям и доказательствам. В итоге мы расстались. Никогда у меня не было мужика, который был бы за меня.

Murderbot TV vid: I Lived

Jul. 15th, 2025 07:58 am
sholio: tv murderbot andrew skarsgard looking to the side (Murderbot-MB)
[personal profile] sholio posting in [community profile] vidding
Title: I Lived
Character/Relationship: Team as family, Team + Murderbot
TV Series: Murderbot TV
Music: I Lived by OneRepublic
Length: 3:57

AO3 | DW | Tumblr | Youtube

Contains some sci-fi violence as per the show (but generally not the most graphic scenes), flickering/flashing lights in a couple of scenes; also has the canon pairings in the background, but it's mostly focused on the team + Murderbot being Intrepid Galactic Explorers. Spoilers for all of season one.
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Posted by Marcie Jones

"Jeffrey Epstein" by Gamma Man is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Well, well, well! Late last night, seven Republicans on the House Rules Committee said no to an amendment to the GENIUS Act brought by Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna, which would have mandated the retention and release of all of the government’s Jeffrey Epstein records and evidence within 30 days.

What are these Republicans so afraid of that they won’t even let the full house vote on this? Direct some coffee to the conspiracy-theory part of your brain, and go wild!

Voting against: Republican Reps. Virginia Foxx of North Carolina, Michelle Fischbach of Minnesota, Nicholas Langworthy of New York, Erin Houchin of Indiana, Morgan Griffith of Virginia and Brian Jack and Austin Scott of Georgia.

Subscribe!

Whatever are they so scared of, especially if, like Pamela Jo Bondi just said last week, these files do not actually exist? Or if they do exist, and are full of baby-blood drinking elites? Don’t the people have a right to know? Why are Republicans covering this up? Maybe the President should appoint a special counsel to get to the bottom of this!


PREVIOUSLY!


Before Trump’s frantic story-shifting, we were fairly sure that there were no Epstein Files in a vault somewhere. Because how bad at covering up is he if he didn’t do it during his first term? Trump was president while Epstein was being prosecuted for the second time in 2018. Bill Barr, whose father wrote creepy sci-fi book featuring 15-year-old girls getting raped called “Space Relations,” and also hired Epstein for a teaching job working with teenagers, was head of the DOJ and head of the prison where Epstein died, and where the surveillance cameras and prison employee witnesses conveniently all saw nothing. Alexander Acosta, Trump’s Secretary of Labor in his first term, was before that the US Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and in 2007 he approved a non-prosecution agreement with Epstein in secret, without consulting his more than 30 underage victims, in a move so sleazy and egregious (sleazegregious?) that a federal judge later ruled that it violated the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, and Acosta resigned when that detail came out. That would seem to cover the covering-up, if the covering up was to be done! But, also, if Trump, Barr and/or Acosta really did make a coverup, then they can never be completely sure that all evidence and witnesses have been buried, can they? Ghislaine Maxwell is still alive.

And then Trump jumping frantically on Saturday to typing that there were files, and they were manufactured by Obama and Hillary, and why didn’t Biden release them, and the way he has been huffing and puffing that everyone should just move on, who really cares about pedophiles anyway, well, that sure does it sound like he knows that there could be more files out there that Acosta and Barr forgot to shred, and Epstein’s dead heart is still beating under Trump’s floorboards!

Trump and every other malignant narcissist’s narrative always follows the same predictable pattern, and it sure has moved from “that didn’t happen” to “if it did it was somebody else’s fault and it was no big deal, and why are you so obsessed? You’re being too sensitive!” in FloJo speed-record-level time.

The whiplash of changing stories is so brain-melting that even the most conspiracy-minded of the Trump camp are starting to have a hard time pretzeling around it. You’ll never guess who said these things:

I just think it’s frankly very grifty to have spent your entire career promoting, even if it weren’t the Epstein thing directly, but the idea that there is this deep state, the idea that there’s this unelected class of, you know, bankers, corporation, countries, intel agencies, blah, blah, blah. And then finally, you have the power to expose it, and either you’re not, because there’s nothing there, in which case it makes you a liar — and I don’t believe that — or you’re ineffective, or you’re compromised.

No one is buying it. No one is dropping it.

Mr. President, yes, we still care about Epstein. Is there a time not to care about child sex trafficking? Read the damn room.

A.: Steve Bannon’s protege Natalie Winter, Mike Cernovich, and Roseanne Barr.

Even his daughter-in-law Lara thinks there should be more transparency.

Weird how Trump’s 180’d overnight from an all-powerful man who doesn’t have to follow what any stinking judge says to someone who “can’t” release records, he just can’t.

Anyway, cynical Sammys and Sandras out there are sure that Trump cultists will find a way to pretzel their brains into making Donald Trump, Epstein’s best friend of more than a decade, blameless for breaking his promise to them. At the least they’ll pull a Charlie Kirk and pronounce that they have decided to trust Dear Leader in all matters. Like a Doomsday cult constantly pushing out the date for the end of the world, many brains in a state of cognitive dissonance strain to stay there, like a losing gambler doubling down.

Most of them probably will!

But the more time goes by between the first cracks in the facade and the cult getting a cogent message about what to think and repeat to one another, the more the cracks of doubt spread. People do get out of cults, and that is how. And he’s not making it any easier for them to justify their mental gymnastics. After all, it was Dear Leader himself who taught them all to seek conspiracies everywhere and had been pumping Epstein as the poster peen for the Elite Globalist Cabal. If he is going to take their favorite story away he needs to replace it with something else, or placate them somehow. Demanding that they just move on is a hard bleach shot for even the very stupidest to swallow.

And he knows it, as a whelp of the National Enquirer and reality television. He knows what the people want, and can’t get enough of.

Give us dirty laundry!

What will the Epstein narrative be next? We shall see!

[Miami Herald / New York Times archive link]

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TV Tuesday: New Visitors

Jul. 15th, 2025 10:41 am
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[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] tv_talk

Laptop-TV combo with DVDs on top and smartphone on the desk



Do you recall favorite guest stars that outshone the main cast, or perhaps were such a perfect choice that they became part of the main cast later on? And if so, do we see less of this now that entire seasons are finished before they’re ever shown to an audience?

The Big Idea: Josh Rountree

Jul. 15th, 2025 02:35 pm
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Posted by Athena Scalzi

When author Josh Rountree’s story just wasn’t quite working, he decided to change his perspective. Literally. Travel back in time in the Big Idea for his newest novel, The Unkillable Frank Lightning, and see how switching things up narratively ended up being the solution to his problem.

JOSH ROUNTREE:

Well, I’m knee deep in monsters now, aren’t I?

A lot of my Big Ideas these days seem to involve them. For a while now I’ve been working on a series of monster stories set in long ago Texas.  I’ve tackled werewolves and snake-headed harvest gods.  Vengeful mermaids and The Creature from the Black Lagoon. Now I’ve worked my way up to one of the greatest monsters of all time.

Frankenstein!  (Cue lightning strike.) 

Or Frankenstein’s monster, I guess.

My Big Idea for The Unkillable Frank Lightning was to tell a version of the Frankenstein story, set in the Old West. I had plenty I wanted to say about death.  How breaking the fundamental laws of nature to bring a person back to life would be a really bad idea, with consequences that would reach far beyond the reanimated corpse and those responsible for his resurrection. Frank Lightning is not the only character in this story who has cheated death, and all carry that around like a weight on their souls. And I wanted to say a lot about the mythology of the Old West. How wild west shows and Hollywood movies have sold us an often sanitized version of the period, that centers the wrong heroes.

But also? I wanted to see my monster go on a rampage. I wanted to see what would happen when an unkillable person found himself in a gunfight. I wanted black magic and secret occult orders and townspeople with torches.

I wanted my monster to tell us his story.

But of course, the Big Idea doesn’t always unfold the way a writer expects it to. And the character you think is going to be at the center of it all isn’t always the voice that comes alive and demands to be heard. I worked several months, trying to tell this story through the monster’s point of view, and eventually realized it just wasn’t working.  I tried alternating points of view, trying to tell the story through the eyes of various characters. But one voice, that of Catherine Coldbridge, spoke louder than all the rest. And I realized she was my protagonist. She was the character to tell this story.

Catherine is my “mad scientist” in this tale. My Dr. Frankenstein stand-in.  She’s a doctor in the 1870’s, and she’s a member of an occult order called the Three Rose Temple.  Catherine is an orphan, and when she loses her husband too, it causes her to make one terrible decision that will haunt her for decades.

Catherine is terribly flawed, and desperate to make amends. She is determined and practical and willing to forgive anyone but herself. She is an exceptionally strong woman who has, for a time, given up on her life and let the world ruin her. But as she beings to tell her story, Catherine is finally beginning to emerge from that sorry state, and planning to take control again. Catherine is endlessly fascinating to me, and as soon as she started telling the tale, it poured out of her, and it poured out of me, and I knew we were in this together.

Catherine Coldbridge is not our typical pulp western hero. But who needs more cowboys in white hats? Who needs another hard man with a thousand-yard stare to ride in and save the day?

Catherine is so much more than that.


The Unkillable Frank Lightning: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s

Author socials: Website|Bluesky|Facebook|Instagram

Read an excerpt.

Just one thing: 15 July 2025

Jul. 15th, 2025 09:39 am
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)
[personal profile] chestnut_pod posting in [community profile] poetry
Andrea Gibson died yesterday of ovarian cancer. They were a great guiding light of spoken word, and their poem "Ashes" was a touchstone for me as a teenager. In their honor:




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Posted by Gary Legum

Looking fit as a fiddle and not at all like a doddering old man, sir.

We’re not sure what’s funnier: Donald Trump finally realizing, a decade after everyone else did, that Vladimir Putin is jerking him around; Trump pathetically whining about Putin jerking him around; Trump giving Putin a deadline to end the war in Ukraine or else; or Trump announcing that the or else is slapping huge tariffs on Russia. Who takes Trump’s tariff threats seriously anymore? The man changes his mind on tariff deadlines and rates more frequently than he changes his Depends. (We are guessing.) Just ask literally any other country on the planet that the great dealmaker has threatened with tariffs in the last six months.

Our dimwitted big boy made the announcement on Monday morning during an Oval Office meeting/press spray/venting session. Seated next to Secretary-General of NATO Mark Rutte, and surrounded by all the gold he has added to the Oval Office so that it resembles nothing so much as the home of an incredibly insecure warlord, Trump announced that Putin better bring the war to a close in 50 days, or suffer the wrath of having 100 percent tariffs slapped on whatever the hell it is we import from Russia. Oil? Pickled herring? Hockey players? Cyrillic lettering?

Something pithy about why you should subscribe to Wonkette.

The economist Justin Wolfers took to Bluesky to explain that actually we import almost nothing from Russia already thanks to the crippling sanctions we leveled on them for various past misdeeds, including the Ukraine invasion. “A 100% tariff on almost nothing will do almost nothing,” Wolfers said. We’ll assume he’s correct, math was our weakest subject in school.

Here is Trump making the announcement. In 40 seconds, he manages to complain about how much money the US has spent on the war ($350 billion according to him, much less than that according to reality), declaim any responsibility at all by calling it “Biden’s war,” whine about how disappointed he is that Putin hasn’t yet made a deal to stop the fighting, and try to sound magnanimous, as if he’s doing everyone a favor by working to bring the war to an end.

Masterful pissing and moaning, sir.

Why Putin would find this threatening is beyond us, not that Trump asked our opinion. But there is a reason the acronym TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out) has become ubiquitous in describing him. First widespread tariffs were going into effect on April 2. Then Trump postponed that for 90 days so he would have time to negotiate 90 deals. Then the 90 days was up and nothing happened. Then out of the blue last week he sent embarrassingly written letters to 22 countries announcing new tariffs, including 35 percent on Canada because the Canadians don’t hate us enough already, and 50 percent on Brazil unless it stops prosecuting its former president for corruption. These new tariffs all go into effect on August 1.



In what we’re sure will also be a shock to everyone, Trump has not thought through any of the possible repercussions at all. We know, we also couldn’t believe it:

“There are a lot of people dying on something that should be able to be settled.” Sure, Putin’s ancient grudge and existential angst about reclaiming Ukraine for the Russian empire is something that shouldn’t be a big deal for him to give up, he has only been obsessing about it for years.

We will be unsurprised if later reporting reveals that Trump surprised his advisers and pulled that “50 days” number out of his ample tush while he was sitting there.

Of course if you ask Trump, he’ll tell you that Putin fooled every other president, but not him. Which will be news to literally anyone who hasn’t been in a coma since 2015.

While he was at it, Trump took a victory lap of sorts on the trade deals he thinks he negotiated with those countries he sent letters to last week:

That’s not how international trade deals work. You don’t just send a letter you dashed off on hotel stationary and say, “Okay, that’s done. Melania! Get out of the bathroom already!” There are all sorts of legal steps that you go through before a trade deal is official, which Trump damn well knows. He signed enough of them in his first term.

Anyway, August 1 is just over two weeks away. That’s plenty of time for Trump to TACO again. And then again. And then probably again after that.

If we were all our trading partners, including Russia, we would just sit tight. There’s a good chance he’ll change his mind or forget he even said anything in the first place.

By the way, it’s been posted elsewhere, but this happened in Trump’s luncheon with his faith and spirituality crew just an hour after Trump’s “threats” above, him and the crowd laughing it up about how he has these great meetings with Vladimir Putin, and then Melania has to tell him Putin just bombed a nursing home. Ha ha! They all laugh.

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A Maze of Stars by John Brunner

Jul. 15th, 2025 09:07 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


An intelligent ship crisscrosses space-time to track the progress of the colonies it established

A Maze of Stars by John Brunner
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Posted by The Editors

Historians have trust issues—and they should. When scholars evaluate texts, art, material objects, and oral histories from the past, they’re diving into deeply personal and inherently human sources. And humans lie all the time. As professionals, we understand that no single source stands alone as a voice of authority. The research process requires contextualization, layering, and a nuanced understanding of interpersonal dynamics. In my classroom, this is a problem.

My students often struggle to see historical actors as real people. They don’t struggle to understand that Abraham Lincoln was a real person—that he was born in 1809 and lived an actual life until his untimely death. Their problem lies in thinking about Lincoln as a teenage boy worrying about making the wrestling team.

Understanding documents is much harder when students don’t see historical actors as people with actual lives and personalities. Failure to see the humanity in a source means students might miss when a law is written to exact revenge, when a diary is embellishing an event, or when a preacher’s sermon has a joke in it. However, these types of sources exist everywhere. Just like today, people in the past stretched the truth on personal documents because they knew those documents could later be used to support claims in court or to verify property ownership for taxation. Even in our most personal diaries and letters, humans decontextualize and exaggerate to save face. A historian’s job is to see people for who they are—humans.

So, how do I teach students to approach this process? I expose them to a wide variety of primary sources and ask them the kinds of questions historians would likely ask if they were using it in their research. Let’s look at some examples that you can use in your own course.

Primary Source 1: Appraisal of the Estate of William B. Stover, 1850

Appraisal of the estate of William B. Stover, 1850
Appraisal of the estate of William B. Stover, 1850. Click on the image to take a closer look.

Activity

The above document is an appraisal of William B. Stover’s estate in 1850, shared via JSTOR by Grand Valley State University. In my class, I introduce the activity by asking students if anyone knows what the terms “appraisal” or “probate” mean. This appraisal was conducted about six weeks after Stover’s death, and we work together for a few moments to define the probate process and determine why people with property sometimes needed that property appraised—before and after death.

For this document, students consider the following questions:

  • Given what you know about the 1850s and the information on this document, what can you assume about Stover?
  • How and why might inaccuracies be introduced in an appraisal conducted after Stover’s death?
  • If this appraisal had been conducted before Stover’s death, what potential reasons would someone involved in the appraisal process have for lying about any of the information in this document?
  • What would be the repercussions if someone did lie while producing this or a similar document?
  • What other sources would a historian use to double-check that this document is accurate?

Analysis

Stover’s estate record lists the names of approximately fifty-five enslaved individuals and their appraised value. We know from the 1850 census that about 2.3 percent of the Americans who enslaved people claimed ownership of fifty or more people as property. This tells us that Mr. Stover was likely very wealthy. We can also make a reasonable assumption that if he was wealthy, he wanted to protect that wealth by making sure he could pass it down to his heirs.

In the case of a probate appraisal, potential heirs and creditors are invested in the accuracy and speed of the estate appraisal. It’s possible that Stover had his property appraised for insurance purposes at various times before his death, as people do today for their home insurance. If Stover had overvalued something on his list of assets and then something happened to one of those assets, he could recover money from his insurance company for that loss. However, if he lied during that appraisal, and it was found out, he might face charges of fraud and potential jail time. After death, the paper trail could lead to contradictions and slow down the process of settling the estate.

A historian would likely start by looking internally at the document itself. For example, does the list make sense as a complete set? Would it make sense for the estate to claim ownership of fifty-five enslaved people but no working animals (which isn’t the case here)? Does the ratio of five spinning wheels to one cotton gin feel right?

If all of these things seem correct, a historian would then look into other documents, such as previous appraisals or the plantation’s accounting ledger, which might be housed in the same collection or might be in another archive. This ledger could contain information about the purchase of the items listed in the estate record. For more important items like enslaved persons or equipment, historians may find a record at auction houses or in county records.

Primary Source 2: American Prison Newspapers

A selection of newspaper covers from the American Prison Newspapers collection.

Activity

JSTOR hosts a collection of more than 700 prison newspapers as part of the Reveal Digital collections. These newspapers come from US prisons in all fifty states and span a history of over 200 years. Students can choose from any of the collections to complete this exercise, but you may find it helpful to narrow down the activity by choosing one collection for them to work from.

For this set of documents, students should consider the following:

  • In your chosen issue, where is the editor being funny? How can you tell?
  • What does this newspaper tell us about daily life in the prison that other sources cannot? Why is that the case?
  • What should historians do with information in these sources that they find surprising?
  • How can historians fact-check the information in this newspaper?

Analysis

Students will find jokes in every one of these newspapers because humor is a natural part of social interaction. We don’t stop being human beings just because bad things are happening; in fact, humor is frequently used as a method of coping and passive resistance. Even newspapers created by students during Japanese American Incarceration in World War II had a joke section. Great examples of these from the American Prison Newspapers collection can be found in “Pen Puns” from The Angolite, out of the Louisiana State Penitentiary, and “Buffalo Chips” from Granite Nugget, out of the Oklahoma State Reformatory.

A cartoon From Volume 7, Issue 22 of The Angolite
From Volume 7, Issue 22 of The Angolite. Click on the image to take a closer look.

The newspapers discuss the daily issues the inmates face—weather, facilities problems, slow mail, and more. The contributors also tell us that life inside the prison is socially complex and busy—so busy that the newspaper is an essential means of informing inmates about opportunities to work outside the prison’s walls, updates to systems within, and new opportunities to socialize and learn.

From Volume 1, Issue 1 of Granite Nugget, published in 1937.
From Volume 1, Issue 1 of Granite Nugget, published in 1937. Click on the image to take a closer look.

This perspective about inmate life is essential because though the newspapers are censored by prison staff, they’re largely written by incarcerated individuals and driven by topics that interest them. The newspapers also cater to the interests of the prison population at large, which offers different information than a scholar might get from reading the personal correspondence of a single or few incarcerated people. The perspective of the newspapers is also critical because most information about incarceration comes from law enforcement personnel and prison data, which tend to frame prison populations as a singular unit and focus on data instead of people.

A crossword puzzle From Volume 9, Issue 12 of Hill Top Crier, published in 1965.
From Volume 9, Issue 12 of Hill Top Crier, published in 1965. Click on the image to take a closer look.

If a historian finds something surprising in an issue, they should look for more instances of it in other issues or publications. For example, I was surprised to find a crossword puzzle in a 1965 issue of the Hill Top Crier of the Greencastle Indiana State Farm. It seemed like creating a crossword puzzle by hand would be a lot of work to do regularly. By looking at additional issues of that publication, I found a few other crossword puzzles. It didn’t seem, however, to be a regular or weekly occurrence, which fit with my theory that it was likely difficult to find people to write them. As a historian, I would be interested to see if I could find who was responsible for writing them and what their previous or later occupation was. Was there a prison library with encyclopedias available to the newspaper’s editorial team?

Historians can cross-check the information in prison newspapers against internal prison records as well as any collections of correspondence they may have access to. However, many of the newspapers act as the sole record for the information they house, such as card game scores, movie night schedules, and jokes. In these cases, historians may seek out oral histories by formerly incarcerated or currently incarcerated individuals to provide context to the sources they are using.

Primary Source 3: A General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America

A General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America, 1775.
A General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America, 1775. Click on the map to take a closer look.

Activity

This eighteenth-century map by Thomas Jefferys depicts the “Middle British Colonies in America.” Begin this exercise by looking at this area on Google Maps, Google Earth, or a similar modern map of the region. Ask students what information the map is giving them and for whom that information is helpful. If they were lost in the woods, would that map help them? Then, provide them with the Thomas Jefferys map and the following questions.

For the map provided, students should consider the following questions:

  • Under what circumstances was this map commissioned?
  • What is the purpose of the map? What would it be useful for?
  • What are the different colors on the map for?
  • Does Thomas Jefferys have any reason to draw the map inaccurately?
  • Why would a historian need to look at a map like this? What would they be using it to confirm or rule out?

Analysis

When we think about the circumstances under which this map was commissioned, we need to consider the date, the cartographer, and the subject matter. This map was created in its basic form by Philadelphia cartographer Lewis Evans. Thomas Jefferys, identified as “geographer to the King,” added his own observations and additions to the map in the 1770s. Given the hostilities between the British and indigenous peoples of this area in the 1760s, it would make sense that King George III would commission a map of the region. The introduction to the map in the top left corner also gives away the important point that the map’s author was particular about representing specific Indigenous peoples and places on the map because “whatever is such is expressly acceded to the English by Treaty with the French.” In other words, they want to make sure their claims are well-documented so that the French can’t come back and try to take them later.

So, what’s this map for? We certainly wouldn’t use it to give directions. Its utility is in the commentary. Zooming in to each region, scholars can read the name(s) of each Indigenous group living there as well as notes about their foreign policy relationship. One could also argue that it’s meant to be used as documentation to show the French in case they claim that the English aren’t holding up their side of the treaty.

More to Explore

Pensive attractive curly African American female being deep in thoughts, raises eye, wears fashionable clothes, stands against lavender wall.

Asking Scholarly Questions with JSTOR Daily

Help students develop analytic and scholarly questioning skills using a quick activity built on JSTOR Daily roundups and syllabi.

Thomas Jefferys, as an extension of the English crown, had plenty of reasons to draw or analyze the map incorrectly. He could be taking bribes from the French, from someone local who wants to lay claim to the land, or from one of the Indigenous groups. He could also have a philosophical problem with what the map represented, or he could be sympathetic to the growing colonial resistance movement. More likely, however, this map is reasonably accurate. As a professional cartographer, his reputation and ability to make a living is on the line if his map was found to be less than useful. As “geographer to the King,” he also potentially had his life on the line.

Historians love maps like this because they’re layered with information. Not only does it tell us what geopolitical boundaries looked like in the eyes of the British crown in the 1770s, but it tells us what the relationships within those boundaries looked like. More importantly, it tells us how the existence of those boundaries shaped and reshaped existing relationships on the ground. Historians can also use a map like this to confirm information they’ve read in the personal diaries of people living in these regions or contextualize the creation of laws meant to shape the dynamics seen on the map.

On the Fast Path

Primary sources are more than the speeches, letters, and images that we use to construct a timeline of our past. They’re dynamic pieces of our history that only work as part of a larger human story. For our students, the key to understanding a primary source’s purpose, audience, context, or message lies in answering the questions “why this?” and “why this way?” If students can start to question historical actors and their motives as human agents of change, they’ll be on the fast path to deeper historical analysis.

The post Lies, Damn Lies, and…Primary Sources? appeared first on JSTOR Daily.

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Posted by Livia Gershon

Your Brain is a Clock (Nautilus)
by Dan Falk
From catching a ball to holding a conversation, our ability to function depends on calibrating our brains to action happening in the world around us. And our minds’ grasp of time may also be one of the things that make us a unique life form.

Where Mountain Streams Come From (Eos)
by Mark DeGraff
Each spring, snow melts on the mountains of the American West, and streams across the region burst with fast-flowing water. But new research shows that the intuitive assumption that the water is mostly newly melted snow or fresh rain is dead wrong.

Black Women for Human Rights (Black Perspectives)
by Keisha N. Blain
Black women have often been at the center of calls for universal human rights, linking abuses in the US to struggles in Africa and around the world.

The Radicalism of a “Boring” Philosopher (Liberal Currents)
by Matthew McManus
As political philosophers go, John Rawls isn’t the most grand, sweeping thinker. But his defense of liberalism, which rejects considerations of what anyone deserves, is in some ways more radical than many flashier schools of thought.

What is the New Apostolic Reformation? (The Conversation)
by Art Jipson
Leaders of the New Apostolic Reformation generally don’t call for violence, but people linked to it have been involved in attacks. What ideas drive this politically radical Christian movement?

Got a hot tip about a well-researched story that belongs on this list? Email us here

The post Brain Time, Mountain Streams, and Rawls the Radical appeared first on JSTOR Daily.

Thunderstorms!

Jul. 17th, 2025 07:09 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Gosh it's thunderstorming out there!

**********************************


Read more... )

Arcane Zoning Laws

Jul. 15th, 2025 08:35 am
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[personal profile] mallorys_camera
I'm bored with grieving.

Brian would have thoroughly sympathized.

Brian was one of the least sentimental humans I've ever met.

###

Daria & I are sentimental enough to want to do a memorial. Flavia is not interested at all in doing a memorial, says Brian wouldn't have cared one way or another, which may or may not be true, but anyway, even if it is true, is entirely irrelevant: Memorials are for the survivors.

Flavia's reluctance does raise some issues, though. Like is she reluctant because she is too prostrate with grief to participate in anything? As the kinda/sorta Official Grieving Widow, will she resent it—consciously or unconsciously—if two survivors lower down on the Grief Ladder seize the initiative here?

No real plans have been made other than a vague commitment to the third or fourth week in September, a date far enough ahead in an indeterminate future to seem doable.

But if we really want to do it, we're gonna have to begin to make some concrete plans sooner rather than later. Pin down an actual date; pin down a venue. New Paltz is the obvious venue, but I've also been wondering about Norma's, BB's & my favorite cafe in Wappingers Falls, or Tranquili-Tea, that adorable little rabbit hole in (of all bizarre places) Middletown that we stumbled across that day:



I had a busy weekend: Democratic Committee meeting, D&D with the Boneyard BoyZ, & a tea party that doubled as a Democratic fundraiser. Also I baked a sour cherry pie:



The aesthetics are off. As I say, I am just terrible with crusts! But the pie tastes great.

I hadn't exercised in 10 days, but yesterday I trotted off to the gym and today I plan to tromp before it gets too hot.

###

I've been trying to think of a plot to graft on to the Neversink backstory.

Of course, it should focus on the animosity between the folks who've been farming in these parts for three or four generations and the recent emigrants from the Big City, 'cause that's a very real dynamic in these parts plus the whole water theft—They drowned our homes so their city could have water!—demands it.

Possibly a young, idealistic Brooklyn immigrant runs for the village planning board? Maybe there's still some arcane zoning law that she opposes that allows stores to be built in the middle of the reservoir? (But why would she oppose it? There are tons of arcane laws dating back centuries in every town in these parts! People just ignore them.) And, of course, on the actual night of the election, the reservoir recedes so you can see the chimneys & spires & mercantile towers of the drowned town.

Writing style I'm aiming for is Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. Susanna Clark does a most excellent job of integrating fantasma into everyday.

I will mull it over some more.

But not too much. Some things just naturally work themselves out while you're writing.

Во все тяжкие

Jul. 15th, 2025 03:53 pm
fossa_s: (Default)
[personal profile] fossa_s
После столкновения в коридоре нн написала мне в вотсапе чтобы я к ней зашла. Но у меня были дела, к счастью вне лаборатории. Потом она мне звонила несколько раз, но я бы ей не ответила даже если бы была свободна. Когда закончила дела пошла обедать. После обеда у нас была лекция на общеобразовательную тему. После лекции я пошла работать. Она мне опять звонила и я не ответила. Приходит она в лабораторию и происходит такой разговор:
- Я видела, что ты прочитала сообщение. Почему ты не ответила?
- Потому что не хотела.
- Что???
- Не хотела отвечать.
- Когда закончишь здесь, зайди ко мне в офис.
- Не хочу.
- Ты не можешь делать что хочешь!
- Могу!
Про себя я подумала: "А ты меня заставь." Я взрослый человек, не рабыня и не служанка. Конечно, я могу не идти к ней в офис выслушивать дурацкие выговоры, которые портят мне нервы и здоровье. После первого разговора с ней (на второй неделе после моего прихода) я плакала весь шаббат. Зачем мне это нужно в мои сорок четыре года... Не нужно мне это, тут не платят такие бешеные деньги за которые я согласилась бы подобное терпеть.
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Posted by Evan Hurst

tabs gif by Martini Glambassador!

Morning, let’s have tabs.

The Republican-controlled House Rules Committee voted to block the release of the Epstein files last night. Does Committee chair Rep. Virginia Foxx love protecting pedophiles or something? What’s that about? Is it something that just comes with being a 950-year-old white Republican Karen? What about all the other Republicans on the Committee? (Republican Rep. Ralph Norman voted with the Democrats to release the files.) We are just asking questions about the Epstein files and why Republicans are so protective of them, just like everybody else in America is asking questions. What are they hiding? What are they hiding? What are they hiding? What are they hiding? What are they hiding?

What …

Are they hiding?

Guess somebody stuck a Trump-dick-flavored lollipop in Charlie Kirk’s mouth because he says he’s done talking about Epstein now. Okeydoke. [Media Matters]

You need to watch this interview with Youman Wilder, a youth baseball coach in Harlem, describing how armed Trump Gestapo tried to harass and terrorize his players, pretty obviously because they aren’t white. “I’m willing to die to make sure” these kids get home safely, he said he thought at the time, choking up as he recalled it. Because that’s what Trump and his Nazis are doing to children. You know, when they’re not protecting pedophiles.

Oh yeah, did we mention that this youth baseball coach is also a man with a law degree? He is also that.

Trump’s ICE Nazis have declared now that all the millions of people who have ever crossed the border illegally are no longer entitled to bond hearings, which means they could be held in Trump’s Nazi concentration camps indefinitely. Hey, do you think they’re really going to just stop at imprisoning millions of people — or that it’s even tenable to do that — or are you still in denial about what is happening? Do you think they’re going to go ahead and put US citizens in prison because they didn’t have proof of citizenship on them, or is your head in the sand? [Washington Post]

All should watch this video from Maddow last night about the abhorrent conditions inside the Trump Nazis’ first domestic concentration camp in Florida.

Here is Trump yesterday during a luncheon of the fascist charlatan pig fundamentalist Christians who make up his faith team, and they’re all yukking it up about how Vladimir Putin is always one way with Trump, and then bombs nursing homes the second he quits paying attention. Ha ha! laughed the Trump Christians. Melania has to tell him Putin bombed the nursing home! Ha ha!

Sam Stein and Andrew Egger talk about how thoroughly fucking weird that entire Trump faith luncheon was. [Bulwark]

Over at my Friday place, it’s now been six months since I started tracking pastors, youth group leaders, Christian school teachers and so forth who’ve been accused/arrested for/sued for/convicted of sexually abusing/grooming/preying on kids, and now we can start compiling some data. Which segment of conservative Christianity has had the MOST separate stories this year about people like that? Is it the Baptists? Which kinds of Baptists? Is it the Southern Baptists, AKA Speaker Mike Johnson’s denomination? Click to subscribe and find out! [The Moral High Ground]


Subscribe!


The Supreme Court is totally fine with Trump abolishing the Department of Education, we guess. Is it possible that there’s confusion here and the illegitimate partisan hack Supreme Court Six think when it says the president must take care that the laws are faithfully “executed,” that it means “executed” like Kristi Noem’s puppy? It’s possible! Samuel Alito is a very dippy, unserious man!

Apparently GOP Rep. Cory Mills — yeah THAT scumbag — was evicted from his DC penthouse yesterday for $85,000 IN UNPAID RENT? Um, party of fiscal something or other, you betcha! Anyway, read Josh Marshall’s thread, and the underlying stuff from Justin Baragona, and laugh a bunch. [NBC News]

Marc Andreessen and the Billionaire Victims Club. Good read, and more people need to get wise to who Andreessen is. [Jonathan Last]

“You just deploy the magic word and the thinking stops.” This whole essay isn’t about the word “woke,” but that quote is, and you should read the whole essay it comes from. {Notes from the Circus]

It is HOT OUTSIDE in southern Europe. In general, in a climate change way. (The major heat wave of a week or two ago has lifted, for the moment.) But hey, at least in Spain, they are trying to do progressive things to deal with it. [New York Times]

The Defense Department is set to start using Grok, so that’s awesome. Did Secretary Shtifaced get a thrill up his leg when Grok went Nazi last week? Just asking. [Washington Post]

“I Once Thought Fatness Would Ruin My Life. Having a Daughter of My Own Changed That.” That’s an article in Vogue written by a personal friend of ours who was on “America’s Next Top Model” back in the day, who’s super funny, and now she’s got a new book out! Go read! [Vogue]

MEETUP ALERT FROM ZIGGY WIGGY: "I am hosting a Cleveland Wonkmeet on Aug. 16, at the Boss Dog Brewing Company at 1 p.m. in Cleveland Heights. Rebecca and family will be attending. Thank you!"

I ain’t got a recipe for you this week, so here’s a song to make you dance around.

Evan has a side project called The Moral High Ground, you should check it out and subscribe there too!

Follow Evan Hurst on BlueSky!

Are you guys on Instagram? Let’s get that going.

Follow Evan on Facebook.

Here, a LinkTree!

Share


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spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I went downtown as usual today and hit Walmart, Price Chopper and the Feedbag. (The first time I’ve been to the Feed Bag since before mom’s surgery! Pip has been having to do the bird seed run.) I also got in a walk around the park and picked up Chinese for lunch.

I was up an hour before Pip, so before I left the house I did a load of laundry, hand-washed dishes, and scooped kitty litter. After I got home I did another load of laundry (both loads got washed and dried, one got folded), hand-washed more dishes, baked chicken for the dogs’ meals, grilled country style pork ribs for Pip’s supper, ran a load in the dishwasher, and shaved.

I finished the Kindle cozy and read more in Amelia Peabody. Hold onto your hats, folks, because I also managed to write ~500 words on a new fic for [community profile] smallfandomfest!!

Temps started out at 70.7(F) and reached 93. We didn’t get the forecasted rain last night, so I didn’t mow the lawn today. It was hot. Hot. Pip wanted to show me where he’d found more berry bushes, so I went for a walk with him and the dogs after lunch. He hadn’t exaggerated, the bramble was huge! So many berries. We picked about two cups, but could’ve been there much longer just to get the ones we could reach. I was ready to die when we got back from that short walk. I had to splash my face with cold water and sit in the AC’d bedroom for a while to cool back down. So HOT. And that was just a short walk, including a bit through the shaded orchard.


4 photos I took on that walk )


Mom Update:

Mom had the appointment with her oncologist today. more back here )

Pan And.....

Jul. 15th, 2025 10:14 am
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[personal profile] poliphilo

IMG_8212.jpeg

This is an antique copy of a very popular classical statue known variously as Pan and Olympus and Pan and Daphnis. We know it was popular because we possess so many versions of it. From what I've seen, this version- at Petworth House- is one of the better ones. 

Pan is teaching his protege Olympus or Daphnis to play the Pan pipes. The original was created c. 100 CE-and- on the basis of an inconclusive passage in Pliny- has been attributed to a sculptor called Heliodorus of Rhodes.

These days we treat antique statues as archaeology and- apart from cleaning them up- leave them pretty much as found- but the 18th century thought of them as art and had no qualms about making them as good as new. The Earl of Egremont's statue passed through the hands of a couple of Italian restorers before achieving its present form-  and I'm not competent to say how much of it is original. One thing I do know is that Daphnis/Olympus was found without a head- and the one he now wears once belonged to a quite different statue. It's remarkable how well it fits.....

(no subject)

Jul. 15th, 2025 10:04 am
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[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] owlectomy and [personal profile] talking_sock!

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