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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
1 y

Surprising Facts About ‘Alice In Wonderland’
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Surprising Facts About ‘Alice In Wonderland’

For many of us, Alice in Wonderland is a beloved cartoon from our childhood. However, the 1951 Disney adaptation was not always so popular. It spurred from a tale written by Lewis Carroll almost a century beforehand. Walt Disney grew up admiring the story and even produced a silent film series about Alice in the '20s. The original story was based on a real little girl and was written per her... Source
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

WIZARDS The Podcast Guide To Comics | Episode 100
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theretronetwork.com

WIZARDS The Podcast Guide To Comics | Episode 100

It’s our 5th anniversary, our 300th episode and issue 100 of Wizard magazine! All four WIZARDS hosts Adam, Mike, Michael and Steven reunite to discuss the best comics of the 20th century (according to the CONTINUE READING... The post WIZARDS The Podcast Guide To Comics | Episode 100 appeared first on The Retro Network.
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

“Play It Cool Boy:” Facts About West Side Story
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“Play It Cool Boy:” Facts About West Side Story

West Side Story is a musical by Arthur Laurents, with music by Leonard Bernstein, and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Inspired by Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, West Side Story is set in New York in the 1950s and follows two star-crossed lovers from the rival gangs, the Jets and the Sharks. The musical premiered on Broadway in 1957 and ran for 732 performances for which it was nominated for six Tony... Source
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

Steel-Hard Facts About The Industrial Revolution
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Steel-Hard Facts About The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution refers to a time of transition in Britain and the United States, when manufacturing became the main form of production. Lasting from the mid-18th century to the mid-19th century, the world saw the rise of mechanized machinery that shaped the world as we know it. However, not only did industrialization influence production and trade, but it also had astounding social... Source
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
1 y

Trump Needs to 'Seize' and 'Pounce' on the Opportunity to Create Enduring Coalition
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Trump Needs to 'Seize' and 'Pounce' on the Opportunity to Create Enduring Coalition

Trump Needs to 'Seize' and 'Pounce' on the Opportunity to Create Enduring Coalition
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Protecting The Real-Life Paddington: Science's Quest To Save Vulnerable Andean Bears
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Protecting The Real-Life Paddington: Science's Quest To Save Vulnerable Andean Bears

The number of wild Andean bears is declining.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

The Oldest Text In The World
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The Oldest Text In The World

Humans have been communicating about their experiences and reality for millennia – it just wasn’t written down in ways we would recognize today.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

The 1987 Goiânia Accident: How A Piece Of Radioactive "Scrap Metal" Contaminated A City
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The 1987 Goiânia Accident: How A Piece Of Radioactive "Scrap Metal" Contaminated A City

Nobody realized why the strange capsule's contents was glowing blue until it was too late.
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
1 y

Woke of the Weak: Feminism Falls Short For Women Who Defy the Left
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Woke of the Weak: Feminism Falls Short For Women Who Defy the Left

For the past nine years, our cultural overlords have been using media pundits and pop stars to beat everyday women over the heads with what we’re supposed to believe. Being a “strong,” “independent” woman means you blindly enslave yourself to an ideology and lifestyle that wants to erase you. The left’s feminism stops short for those who refuse to march in lockstep form to their progressive dictates. I discussed this on Tuesday’s episode of “Woke of the Weak.”
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

A win (and a loss) for democracy
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A win (and a loss) for democracy

The American electoral system was stronger when the sun rose Wednesday than it was the morning before — but not simply because President-elect Donald Trump won the White House. Nor was it left without suffering some lasting injuries, either. Two things are essential for electoral government to function. One: Votes must be fairly and accurately tallied and reported. Two: The public must believe that is the case. If the first breaks down, the system is no longer representative. If the second breaks down, it doesn’t matter anyway. Accuracy and trust are the essential foundations of a free society (a key reason that “democracy” can’t simply be airdropped into Iraq, Afghanistan, or other places where governing honesty and mutual trust are not ingrained in the society). The Democratic Party faithful were not asked who their nominee would be — they were told. The experts knew better, and maybe they did? Going into Tuesday, both suffered in the United States. The previous presidential election was beset by “glitches,” new regulations, broken rules, and suspicious counts. It’s unlikely we’ll ever understand how 129 million people voted in 2016, 137 million in 2024, and a whopping 155 million in the mail-in no-check days-long COVID-emergency election, so let’s not dwell on it any longer. Either way: The trust was shattered. The necessary ingredients to rebuilding that trust were not just a return to expectable numbers, but a quick election decided while Americans were awake. That’s a hard thing to pull off, but to their everlasting credit, election officials did it. While counties that (rightly or wrongly) had garnered suspicion publicly stated that it might take days or even weeks to count the ballots, by and large, results came in. Better yet: Urban counties kept up with rural counties. Again, rightly or wrongly: Large, late-night, election-altering ballot dumps from partisan cities do a lot to undermine the opposition’s trust that the election is being run fairly and properly. And then there’s the money. Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign and its friends raised nearly $1 billion in just months — almost three times the money Trump and Co. raised. Since the dawn of American politics, people have grumbled sagely that money buys elections. As with 2016, 2024 was a blow to this rule. That’s not to say the person with the most money deserves to lose — just that it’s healthy to see it happen from time to time. Then there are the powerful interests, which have earned their reputations as the bogeymen of the republic since slaveholding planters first battled it out with Northeast traders. While Trump earned wider high-profile backing than at any other time in his political career, Harris garnered the support of the vast majority of the country’s rich and powerful. That billion-dollar campaign wasn’t built on $5 donations. Sometimes the rich and the powerful are correct about what direction the country should be heading in, but again, it’s good to know they can’t always make that decision for us. And that’s where we get to the bad parts for American democracy: what it means and how it functions. There is a powerful contingent among the American elites, in the federal and state bureaucracies, and in the sprawling world of international and national non-governmental organizations who believe that their strategic interests, plans for your children, novel concepts of fairness and justice, and opinions on morality, science, gender, and sex are the proper “democratic beliefs.” In this framework, opposition to their agenda is “anti-democratic.” You see this method of thinking all across the United States, the Anglosphere, and the European Union. The United Nations is a particularly egregious offender. Like it or not, an overarching message since January 2020 has been that the experts don’t care what you think – and further, the experts will tell you what you think. As an exercise, next time you hear someone complaining about Trump’s “assault on democracy,” replace the word “democracy” with “the elite agenda” or “the bureaucracy.” There you’ll have it. Harris’ nomination was the epitome of this and is both the reason the past four months have seen the worst of this rule-by-experts since COVID — and the second wound the Democratic Party has laid on American governance. The Democratic Party faithful were not asked who their nominee would be — they were told. The experts knew better, and maybe they did? A primary would have been messy, and the money already raised needed to be protected, after all. The transition from President Joe Biden to his running mate might have been forced on the old man, but in public it would need to appear peaceful and seamless. The Democratic voters told whom they had picked, however, didn’t quite buy it. Worse: It set a very undemocratic precedent. While it didn’t work out for Harris and the Democrats, we have now officially determined that you can replace a nominee without an election if it’s clear that the nominee is not going to win. That’s not great. It undermines the system and the trust, simultaneously. Of course, few of the guilty parties are going to talk about that, if they even realize it at all. There will be no introspection, no autopsy. Harris will be blamed as the weak and lazy candidate she always was. Biden will be blamed as the fading and elderly, power-obsessed man he always was. But the people who put them there won’t look inward. After all: Everything they did, they did for their democracy. And you don’t want to be undemocratic, do you? Sign up for Bedford’s newsletter Sign up to get Blaze Media senior politics editor Christopher Bedford's newsletter.
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