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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Civilization 7 has a new launch window and it’s good news for fans
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Civilization 7 has a new launch window and it’s good news for fans

There are few games as anticipated, at least in PC gaming circles, as Civilization 7. Each game in the series explores a different take on history and what it means to grow as a civilization throughout the eons. While the sixth game remains strong after plenty of updates, it has been eight years since it launched and the feeling is generally that we’re due another entry. That may be coming true sooner than many might have expected, with new Civilization 7 launch window information dropping as part of Take-Two's new earnings report. Continue reading Civilization 7 has a new launch window and it’s good news for fans MORE FROM PCGAMESN: The best 4X games on PC, The best strategy games on PC, Civ 7 wishlist
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Archaeologists In Norway Unearth Human Remains From A 17th And 18th Century Whalers’ Cemetery
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Archaeologists In Norway Unearth Human Remains From A 17th And 18th Century Whalers’ Cemetery

Archaeologists studying human remains from whalers' cemeteries in Svalbard, Norway have uncovered fascinating information about working class life in the 17th and 18th centuries. The post Archaeologists In Norway Unearth Human Remains From A 17th And 18th Century Whalers’ Cemetery appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
2 yrs

CBS News: Advocates Say Free Tampons in School Are Essential (To Boys?)
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CBS News: Advocates Say Free Tampons in School Are Essential (To Boys?)

CBS News: Advocates Say Free Tampons in School Are Essential (To Boys?)
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
2 yrs

Lefty 'Censorship Cartel' GARM Disbands Facing Lawsuits From X and Rumble
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Lefty 'Censorship Cartel' GARM Disbands Facing Lawsuits From X and Rumble

Lefty 'Censorship Cartel' GARM Disbands Facing Lawsuits From X and Rumble
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
2 yrs

Harris Team Scrambles to Quietly 'Edit' Military Claims in Walz Campaign Bio
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Harris Team Scrambles to Quietly 'Edit' Military Claims in Walz Campaign Bio

Harris Team Scrambles to Quietly 'Edit' Military Claims in Walz Campaign Bio
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
2 yrs

More Details Announced on Thwarted Terror Attack on Series of Taylor Swift Concerts in Vienna
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More Details Announced on Thwarted Terror Attack on Series of Taylor Swift Concerts in Vienna

More Details Announced on Thwarted Terror Attack on Series of Taylor Swift Concerts in Vienna
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

ChatGPT now lets free users generate up to two images per day made by DALL-E 3
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ChatGPT now lets free users generate up to two images per day made by DALL-E 3

Image: The Verge OpenAI is going to let users of ChatGPT’s free tier make up to two images per day with its DALL-E 3 model, the company announced on Thursday. When the company launched DALL-E 3 in September, it was available first to users who paid for ChatGPT Plus. One of DALL-E 3’s key improvements is that ChatGPT can come up with a prompt to make an image, which should make it easier to make images. For example, as my former colleague Emilia David wrote last year: In a demo to The Verge, Aditya Ramesh, lead researcher and head of the DALL-E team, prompted ChatGPT to help him come up with a logo for a ramen restaurant in the mountains. ChatGPT then wrote a longer prompt, and DALL-E came up with four options. We’re rolling out the ability for ChatGPT... Continue reading…
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

Now anybody with a Substack account can publish content
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Now anybody with a Substack account can publish content

Illustration by The Verge Anybody with a Substack account can now publish posts on Substack’s web and mobile app, the company announced on Thursday, turning the newsletter platform into even more of a social network. (Currently, users publishing posts on their profile from mobile can only do so via the Substack iOS app, though support for Android is coming soon.) Substack members can publish content, get paid and free subscribers, and accumulate pledges from their Substack profile without needing to create a publication. Creating a publication, however, allows them to take advantage of more advanced features like a website, multiple admins, and sections. If they do choose to start a new one, Substack says, they can import any subscribers they may have... Continue reading…
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

Turkey blocks Roblox
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Turkey blocks Roblox

Illustration: The Verge The Turkish government has blocked access to Roblox following a government investigation that found content that could lead to child exploitation. “According to our Constitution, our State is obliged to take the necessary measures to ensure the protection of our children,” Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc says in a machine-translated post on X. It’s unclear when Roblox might be unblocked in the country. “On Aug 7, we learned that Roblox was blocked in Türkiye, and we are working urgently to understand the issue with the goal of resolving it,” the company said in a statement on its website. “We are mindful that millions of people use our platform in Turkey everyday, including a vibrant community of developers whose businesses rely on Roblox.... Continue reading…
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

The Collapse of the Bison Population in the US: Evaluating the Legislation of HR. 921
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The Collapse of the Bison Population in the US: Evaluating the Legislation of HR. 921

Over the course of the 19th century a significant environmental cataclysm befell the United States’ Great Plains. The bison which roamed the plains for millennia went from a population ranging between 30-50 million in the early 1800s to less than 1,000 at the turn of the century. Multiple historiographical traditions exist in attempting to discern what occurred and what ultimately spelled the death knell for the great buffalo herds, however, the importance of consulting primary sources can still elucidate greater understanding in comprehending the complexity of the rapid downfall of the bison.Roy Williams explains. Indians hunting the bison by Karl Bodmer. For the last century, images of bison carcasses and skeletons piled high have haunted the memories of American conservationists. Artistic renderings such as American Progress by John Gast which shows the steady retreat of the bison and the Native Americans who depended upon it at the march of civilization as a hallmark of the ideology of manifest destiny. Artistic renderings also show the wanton mass killing of bison from settlers shooting the animals from trains for cheap thrills. What then caused this massive collapse of the bison populations? The answer, like most of is buried within a labyrinth of complex interactions.Popular mythology has created a narrative built upon the legacy of the Indian Wars and the genocidal heritage of United States policy towards Native Americans in arguing that the Reconstruction era United States government willfully and intentionally sought to destroy the bison as a form of ecocide and biological warfare against Great Plains Native Americans tribes in attempting to cut off their primary form of subsistence and force them into state sponsored subservience in reservations. While Native Americans of the Great Plains had always depended on the bison as a supplemental source of food, before the introduction of European horses and diseases, they primarily depended upon agriculture. The addition of European diseases such as smallpox forced Great Plains Native Americans to adapt and reconfigure their way of life to nomadic sole dependence upon the bison for subsistence, trade, and political autonomy. This change put additional stress on an animal population which already had to contend with the dynamic and volatile nature of the Great Plains environment. Each year natural factors such as wolf predation, disease, and drought significantly reduced bison numbers. The introduction of European horses also dramatically increased hunting efficiency leading to greater harvests and additional pressure on herd populations. These numbers could rebound with steady levels of human predation but could not endure multiple upheavals which would ultimately lead to their near extinction. Phillip SheridanOne of the most frequently cited primary source examples of United States government complicity in destroying the bison is the 1875 speech of Phillip Sheridan before the Texas legislature. Supposedly, the Texas legislature was considering conservation measures and protections for bison to reduce the number of market hunters who were driving the southern herd to near extinction. Phillip Sheridan is cited as appearing before the legislature to oppose these protections arguing that, “These men [buffalo hunters] have done more in the last two years, and will do in the next year, more to settle the vexed Indian question than the entire regular Army has done in the last thirty years. They are destroying the Indians' commissary; it is well known that an army losing its base of supplies is placed at a great disadvantage. For the sake of lasting peace, let them kill, skin, and sell until the buffaloes are exterminated. Then your prairies can be covered with speckled cattle and festive cowboy, who follows the hunter as a second forerunner of an advanced civilization.”The only problem with this primary source rests in the reality that Phillip Sheridan never appeared before the Texas Legislature in 1875 because there never was any consideration by the Texas legislature to protect the southern bison herd. No archival data supports this primary source as being legitimate, the only appearance of this source rests in the memoirs of a hide hunter named John Cooke, with The Border and the Buffalo multiple years after the supposed encounter. More troubling however, is the reality of another primary source which flies directly in the face of historiographical traditions claiming a conspiratorial link between United States government’s policy against the bison. LegislationThe legislation of HR. 921 stands as one of the most important primary sources in reconsidering the collapse of the bison populations. If the United States government intentionally committed a conspiracy of destroying the bison to force Great Plains into subservience on the reservation system, why did both the House of Representatives and Senate of the United States of America in 1874 introduce a bill to regulate the hunting of bison only to Native Americans? Congressman Fort of Illinois introduced the bill with the goal of stopping the early extermination of the bison, recognizing that bison were “killed every year in utter wantonness without any object whatever except to destroy them.”  The fact that H.R. 921 passed in the House with a tally of 132 ayes and the nays remaining uncounted, shows that there was ample interest in protecting the bison from the onslaught of illegal hide hunters. H.R. 921 was designed to protect bison and give favorable hunting rights to Native Americans, stating, “That it shall hereafter be unlawful for any person who is not an Indian to kill, wound, or in any manner destroy any female buffalo, of any age.”H.R. 921 ultimately failed to pass, dying at President Grant’s desk due to a pocket veto, however the significance of its passage in both the house of Representatives and Senate cannot be understated. The most likely culprit of the collapse of the bison of the Great Plains rests in the ascendancy of market hunting. For a time, it was profitable to hunt bison on a vast industrial scale. These hunts prioritized female bison for their tongues and robes providing the best meat and the best quality leather for production. The industrial revolution occurring in the east fueled the need for more leather products putting unsustainable strain on the bison populations. For a time, bison boomtowns popped up overnight in the northwest territories trading goods at extortionate rates to Native Americans who had honed and perfected their hunting techniques and could trade bison materials for these goods. This interaction in addition to the larger share of market hunting by white hide hunters ultimately spelled doom for the bison populations. The reason for this conclusion is not revolutionary in nature, the bison followed the same trends as any other animal in the United States that experienced the pressures of market hunting. The beaver of the northeast and northwestern United States was reduced to virtual extinction from market hunting. The whitetail deer and alligator of the southeast were also led to near extinction from the combined forces of deforestation and market hunting which prioritized meat and leather over the preservation of animal species. The collapse of the bison provides a cautionary tale of the dangers that unregulated capitalism can inflict upon the natural environment. Without the presence of clear and strict conservation measures, environmental cataclysm can and will occur again. Rather than being a story of intentional and willful political malevolence, the tale of the bison represents the dangers that unregulated capitalism can inflict upon nature.   Find that piece of interest? If so, join us for free by clicking here.   ReferencesDodge, Richard Irving. The Hunting Grounds of the Great West. 1877. The Newberry Library. Accessed July 2, 2024. https://www.americanwest.amdigital.co.uk/Documents/Detail/the-hunting-grounds-of-the-great-west.-a-description-of-the-plains-game-and-indians-of-the-great-north-american-desert/4455563?item=4455597.Flores, Dan. The Natural West. University of Oklahoma Press, 2003.Gast, John. American Progress. Oil on canvas. Brooklyn, New York: Autry Museum of the American West, 1872.Geist, Valerius. Buffalo Nation. Stillwater, MN: Voyageur Press, 1996.Isenberg, Andrew C. The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750-1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.Kindy, Dave. “How Buffalo Bill and a Civil War General saved Yellowstone National Park.” The Washington Post, March, 6, 2022.Krech, Shepard. The Ecological Indian: Myth and History. New York, New York: W.W. Norton, 2001.Library of Congress. The Far West-Shooting Buffalo on the Line of the Kansas-Pacific Railroad. 1871. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington D.C. Accessed July 2, 2024. https://www.loc.gov/resource/cph.3c33890/?st=image.Meriwether, Lewis, and William Clark, Jonathan Carver, and Alexander Mackenzie. The Travels of Capts. Lewis & Clarke. Philadelphia: Hubbard Lester, 1809.Protection of Buffalo. HR 921. 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., Congressional Record, Pt.3: 2104-2109.Ramsay, Crooks. Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. 1849, 31sr Cong., 1st sess. (Serial 550), 1022.Sandoz, Mari. The Buffalo Hunters. Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska, 1978.Wade, Mason. The Journals of Francis Parkman. vol 2 New York: Harper, 1947.
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