Christopher columbus and america

Quipu

2019.08.10 17:21 alcofrybasnasier Quipu

History, archeology, ethnography of the indigenous cultures of North, Central, and South America before and after Columbus. A Quipu is a series of strings and knots said to communicate and contain the history of a people. The word is used here as a metaphor for a lost time, lands, and peoples.
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2018.09.23 13:16 Katherine Barrell

Katherine Barrell
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2008.12.28 07:46 Today I Learned (TIL)

You learn something new every day; what did you learn today? Submit interesting and specific facts about something that you just found out here.
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2024.06.09 20:07 Marty_Glaubermann Stamp exchange

Stamp exchange
Looking for stamp exchange, I'd love the Leo stamp, the metal eh stamp especially, but any others I don't have would be amazing. I can offer the following in return:
Slowly _ Aries _ Hello world _ Around the world _ Happy birthday to you 2019 _ Happy birthday to you 2021 _ Happy birthday to you 2022 _ Happy birthday to you 2023 _ You've got mail _ Footprints on Europe _ Long time no see _ Typing machine _ Let's talk slowly _ Serious writer _ Bronze collector _ Old friends _ Footprints on Asia _ Footprints on Africa _ Footprints on South America _ Footprints on North America _ Let's go shopping _ Early bird _ 1st bucket of gold _ Keep warm _ Year off the dog _ Silver collector _ 1st anniversary _ 2nd anniversary _ 3rd anniversary _ 4th anniversary _ 5th anniversary _ Next level _ Hello from the outside _ Fasionista _ Never stop writing _ Generous heart _ Traveler _ 1st hot air balloon flight _ 1st ascent of everest _ 1st telegraph message _ International tea day _ 1st laser _ Discovery of DNA _ bigfoot _ Chupacabra _ Mokole mbembe _ Mothman _ Nessie _ Yeti _ Penny black _ World wide web _ Read across America day _ Hari raya aidifitri _ Non binary pride flag _ Alice in wonderland day _ World bicycle day _ Sherlock Holmes day _ Towel day _ Walpurgis night _ International day of human space flight _

Paradox

Slowlys birthday _ Imbolc _ World wetlands day _ Year of the rabbit _ Happy new year 2023 _ World braille day _ World introvert day _ Merry Xmas 2022 _ International mountain day _ Happy Halloween _ World toilet day _ St Martins day _ Sukkot _ Columbus day _ World mental health day _ World octopus day _ International raccoon day _ Rosh hashana _ World rhino day _ International talk like a pirate day _ Day of the programmer _ World letter writing day _ International black cat appreciation day _ International lefthanders day _ International clouded leopard day _ International mon day _ Mandela day _ World emoji day _ International rock and roll day _ Dilophosaurus _ Brontosaurus _ Triceratops _ Parasausolophus _ Tyrannosaurus rex _ Velociraptor _ World giraffe day _ World juggling day _ Pen pal day _ Ice hockey _ Football _ World parrot day _ World turtle day _ Vesak day _ Friday 13th _ Flag of Europe _ May day _ Marathon _ World art day _ World health day _ The red poppy _ Semana santa _ Tartan day _ Tiny but mighty _ Earth hour _ International seal day _ World sleep day _ Purim _ Pi day _ Shrove Tuesday _ Horse racing _ Cupid _ World radio day _ World pulses day _ Rugby _ Skiing _ Year of the tiger _ World logic day _ Rally _ Happy new year 2022 _ Merry Christmas 2021 _ Pavlova _ Human rights day _ Day of the ninja _ World philosophy day _ World vegan day _ Hanukkah _ All souls day _ World post day _ International coffee day _ World gorilla day _ International day of sign language _ International red panda day _ International day of charity _ International literacy day _ Qixi festival (七夕) _ World dog day _ World photography day _ World elephant day _ International cat day _ Eid al adha _ Bonfire _ World chess day _ World ufo day _ International asteroid day _ Dragon boat festival (端午節) _ International day of yoga _ World oceans day _ World bee day _ Cinco de mayo _ International jazz day _ Happy Easter _ International Nowruz day _ Happy fathers day _ International polar bear day _ Happy mother's day _ Groundhog day _ Data privacy day _ National hugging day _ Happy new year 2021 _ Merry Christmas 2021 _ World children's day _ World teachers day _ International day of peace _ Workout _ Play games _ Watch TV _ Wfh _ Sleep in _ Write letters _ International youth day _ International day of friendship _ World environment day _ Rainbow flag _ World press freedom day _ International workers day _ Happy Easter 2020 _ Pôhela boishakh _ Ramadan _ St George's day _ World book day _ World poetry day _ Stay strong _ International women's day _ Chocolate heart _ World cancer day _ Year of the rest _ International day of education _ Epiphany _ Happy new year 2020 _ Drink mulled wine _ Wrap some gifts _ Hello. _ Sleeping _ Stretching _ Freezing _ Liquifying _ Hunting _ Meowing _ Body be active _ Mind keep learning _ Spirit give _ People connect _ Place take notice _ Planet care _ Happy Easter 2019 _ Chocolate egg _ Burger egg _ Chicken egg _ Dinosaur egg _ Earth egg _ Rocket mail _ Rose bouquet _ Spring blessings _ Year of the pig _ Million thanks _ Happy new year 2019 _ Macchiato _ Mocha _ Latte _ Americano _ Cappuccino _ Espresso _ Merry Christmas 2018 _ Best penpal trophy _ Astronomy day _ Albuquerque international balloon fiesta _ Martin Luther king Jr day _ Mevlana festival _ Ha'amonga 'a maui _ National children's day (วันเด็กแห่งชาติิ) _ Songkran _ Nu Ian pyramids _ Masskara festival (День знаний) _ It's time _ Dia de todos es santos _ Coquito _ Andrzejki _ Soroka show _ Inti raymi _ Kerstkrans _ Prinsjesdag _ Argangu festival _ Piedra del sol _ Ponche de frutas navideño _ Dia de muertos _ Mongol archery _ Thingyan _ Jāņi _ Kūčiukai _ Esala perahera _ Coming of age day (성년의 날) _ Hangul day (한글날) _ Chol ch am thmay _ Bom pm touk _ Torii _ Kanninzaki lighthouse (観音埼灯台) _ Setsubun (한글날) _ Greenery day (みどりの日) _ Festa d'Ella republica _ Shabe yalda _ Jama. Masjid _ Makar sankranti _ Pushkar fair _ Diwali _ Holi _ St Patrick's day _ Cheung chau bun festival (長洲太平清醮) _ Big ben _ Tower Bridge _ London eye _ St Paul's cathedral _ Stonehenge _ St John's point lighthouse _ South stack lighthouse _ Bell rock lighthouse _ Eddystone lighthouse _ Scottish bagpiper _ Tolkien reading day _ Darwin say _ Up holy aa _ Caernarfon castle _ Edinburgh castle _ Carrickfergus castle _ Windsor castle _ Guy Fawkes night _ Roast dinner day _ Ada lovelace day _ Her majesty the queen _ Flag of Scotland _ Goth day _ Flag of England _ Flag of Wales _ Flag of northern _ Burns night _ Dundee cake _ Christmas pudding _ Flag of northern Ireland _ Flag of the United Kingdom _ Wimbledon _ Shakespeare day _ Full English breakfast _ England rose _ Scotland thistle _ Wales daffodil _ Bournemouth Ireland shamrock _ Jour des crêpes _ Tió de nadal _ Día del pasillo ecuatoriano _ The little mermaid _ Weihnachtsstollen _ Harbin ice and snow festival (哈尔滨冰雪节) _ Jeûne fédéral _ Winterlude _ Carnaval do Brasil _ Willkakuti _ White Christmas _ Allerheilligen _ Vardavar _ Al Dhafra festival _ Flag of andorra _ Wiphala
submitted by Marty_Glaubermann to slowlyapp_stamps [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 15:15 WeeklyLengthiness7 Unproduced Marvel Screenplays

Since 2016, i search and colected many unproduced Marvel movie Screenplays, especialy a Marvel movie ones. some of them should be filmed, some of them deserved to be shredded. here are my collection. (Check my comment or check my profile)
Amazing Spiderman (2002) by David Koepp
Ant Man (1988) by Neal Ruttenberg
Black Widow (2005) by David Hayter
Captain America (1985) by Michael Winner
Daredevil (1995) by Chris Columbus
Daredevil: Blind Justice (1998) by Terrence J Brady
Dr. strange (1990) by Alex Cox
Dr Strange (2010) by Donelly and Joshua Oppenheimer
Dr. strange (1986) by Bob Gale
Dr. Strange (1997) by Jeff Welsch
Fantastic Four (1992) by Greg Jevius
Gambit (2015) by Joshua Zetumer
Ghost Rider (2001) by David S. Goyer
Hulk (1994) by John Turman
Hulk (1997) by Jonathan Hensleigh
Hulk (2000) by David Hayter
Iron Fist (2001) John Turman
Iron Man (1997) by Jeff Vintar
Iron Man (2004) by David Hayter
Luke Cage (2003) by Ben Ramsey
Magneto Origins (2004) by Michael Turner
Namor The Submariner (2004) by David Self
Nick Fury - Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. (1980s) G.J. Pruss
Punisher 2 (2005) by Jonathan Hensleigh
Silver and Black (2017) by Christopher Yost
Silver Surfer (1995) by John Turman
Silver Surfer (2000) by Andrew Kevin Walker
Spider-Man - The First Adventure (1989] by Scott Leva & Steve Webb
Spider-man (1999) by David Koepp (based on James Cameron treatment)
Spiderman (1993) by Barry Cohen, Ted Newson and James Cameron
Spiderman (1987) by Goldman and Puyn
The Wolverine (2009) by Christopher McQuarrie
Thor (2007) Mark Protosevich
Venom (1997) by David S Goyer
Wolverine and the X-Men (1991) by Gary Goldman
Wolverine and the X-Men (1995) by Laeta Kalogridis
X-men (1994) by Andrew Kevin Walker
X-men (1995) by Andrew Kevin Walker
X-men Fear The Beast (2016) by Byron Burton
submitted by WeeklyLengthiness7 to marvelstudios [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 15:01 ibid-11962 Worldbuilding and Touring [Post Murtagh Christopher Paolini Q&A Wrap Up #10]

As discussed in the first post, this is my ongoing compilation of the remaining questions Christopher has answered online between August 1st 2023 and April 30th 2024 which I've not already covered in other compilations.
As always, questions are sorted by topic, and each Q&A is annotated with a bracketed source number. Links to every source used and to the other parts of this compilation will be provided in a comment below.
The previous post focused specifically on inspirations and other media. This installment will focus on Worldbuilding and Touring, how Christopher constructs his worlds, and how he goes about promoting them on tours. The topics aren't actually linked, but they both fill up around half a post and so are being joined here. The next and final post will focus on miscellaneous questions about the real world.

Worldbuilding

Creating Magic Systems
Did you have a research process when you were writing the Inheritance Cycle? I put a fair bit of thought into the story itself of the Inheritance Cycle, and then some general stuff as to the society and just kind of where things were in the world before writing it. I put a medium amount of thought into the magic system before I started writing, and then as I wrote the implications of it became much more apparent to me, and I really sort of dove deep into it. In retrospect, were I to create a fantasy world from scratch now, I would really put a lot of attention into that magic system and the society beforehand, just to have a good feel for that before I even start chapter one. I would put more restrictions on the magic too. I think the more restrictions, the more interesting, even the more realistic in some ways. [3]
If I were designing a magic system from scratch nowadays I would put way more restrictions on it because I find that the limitations are useful, I don't want the characters getting overpowered, but also just from a storytelling standpoint, incantations, rituals, spells, prayers, potions, all of those mechanical things are just kind of interesting and of course they give lots of opportunities for things to go wrong if you don't follow the correct steps. So I think if I were designing magic from scratch right now I'd put a lot of restrictions and rituals associated with it. So costs, more costs. [25]
What kind of hacks do you have to developing a magic system? Once I have a general idea of the setting, whether science fiction or fantasy, the first question I ask myself is how does it diverge from physics as we know it? Because that is a fundamental question that's going to determine what is possible in this world. It might determine what's possible with warfare, with politics, with industry, manufacturing, travel times, it could affect everything depending on what type of divergence you have. In the World of Eragon, the divergence is that living creatures have the ability to directly manipulate energy using their minds. The reason for that is kind of handwavy, although I have an explanation for it, but that is the divergence and then I tried to be as consistent and physically possible with it at every step of the way past that. When people play games you always get people who are looking how to exploit it. "What's the most I can get out of this game? What's the most I can do?" That's basic human nature. Science is a speedrunning nature I think. So the same sort of thing. You assume that if magic existed there's going to be someone sitting in their basement who's absolutely obsessive about it and is going to figure out every single advantage that that divergence gives them. And you have to be realistic and work that into your world and say "Well people aren't stupid. They are going to figure this out and use it in this way, and what are the implications, socially, physically, and everything else?" Once I have that then you can think about society and culture and everything else, but that basic physical difference from our reality is just to me fundamentally important to understand before I even begin to write. [25]
With standalones you're not dealing with continuity or what rule did you break or things like that. That's interesting, because I would say that writing a sequel for me is faster than writing a standalone. At least for me, the more I know the characters and the world, the faster, like I don't have to do the groundwork of creating a magic system, creating a society, creating the gods and the history. All that's done for me, so I can just slip into it like slipping on an old glove. [33]
Creating Religions
A socio-political religion in your world helps drive characters or stories or die-hard fanatic characters forward. How do you go about developing those? Have the courage to let your characters actually believe the things that they are supposed to believe. If you look back historically people really did truly believe these different religions and different systems. Too often I think with modern stories we have people only giving lip service to the supposed belief and instead having very modern attitudes toward it which perhaps doesn't always work. That's understandable if you want a character to be relatable to a modern reader, but there are so many examples of interesting belief systems throughout the world. To me that's something fascinating to write about. But the main thing is just accept that when people truly believe something they're genuine about it and then you can follow that from a logical and storytelling standpoint. What I'd also say is, if you're writing about something that is very different from your own belief system, assuming it's not like completely evil, to try to approach it with a sense of charity. With the understanding that everyone is searching for meaning and understanding. I've always had a soft spot for the old television show Babylon 5, because although I don't believe that the creator J. Michael Straczynski is religious, he writes all of his characters with great sympathy and understanding, he's never cynical about it, and he's not putting up straw man arguments or criticizing any of the characters. He's like "They're searching for meaning. They're struggling with the great questions as we all do, and each one is trying to solve those questions in their own way." And I always really appreciated that he wasn't being cynical about it or really shallow. [25]
Creating Languages
Did you think of the ancient language, not just as a mechanic, but also as a parable of our own language? I was thinking about how language itself feels like magic to me. You can write a story, you can convey information. Language in many ways is our greatest tool and makes us human along with, I would argue, our hands, our ability to manipulate objects and use actual tools. But one without the other wouldn't really work and wouldn't allow us to be a technological species. We could have language with no ability to handle tools, and then we wouldn't be what we are now. But I find language fascinating and I find the function of language incredibly interesting. And there is this idea in the real world going back to the beginning of time, that to name something is to understand it, and gives you a certain amount of power over it, whether that's a person or a physical object. And the ancient language is just taking that idea seriously. And I'm not the first author or tradition to do that, but is it a parallel? Is it a metaphor? I don't know if I'd go that far, but it definitely ties into the use of language and my ideas about it. What's crazy to me is there is a theoretical arrangement of words right now that would give us a massive breakthrough in science and physics. There's a theoretical arrangement of words that were I to write it or anyone else would influence how people think about the next presidential election to such a degree that it might actually changed the election. These are all theoretically possible and you can think of many many other things that you could do with language. We just lack the knowledge of what those arrangement of words are, and so we're constantly clawing our way toward new knowledge and new uses of language. [19]
The languages that you were playing around with in The Inheritance cycle, they were Germanic, Anglo Saxon based? The ancient language, the magical language, is based very strongly on Old Norse, which of course is Germanic or related to Old High German. The Dwarven language was invented pretty much from scratch although it is an agglutinative language like German is. And then the other languages have not appeared very much in the series. They're just little scraps here and there. To be clear, I am not a linguist, and I have not devoted the time and energy to developing these in a formal or rigorous way, the way that Tolkien did. Tolken was a linguist and that was his forte. I got far enough down that path while working on the Inheritance Cycle that I really began to appreciate how every word has a history and that history is inexorably tied to the history of the land. It's often said that Tolkien created Middle-earth just to explain his languages, as a setting for the languages. Which isn't entirely true, but there is truth to that. That's what I was encountering and I was realizing that I could spend 20 years, 10 years, just working on the languages and building this out. It might have been a worthwhile venture, but the tradeoff would have been no more books published during that time. I want to tell a story. [28]
What I would do these days, or what I did with other languages, is come up with a couple of words that sort of had a general feel that I liked and then extrapolating from those invented words, figuring out what consonants and vowels and clusters thereof that I wanted. Come up with some more sample words based off that and then start working out some grammar. Grammar is probably my weakest spot since at the time I wasn't really aware of non-English grammar systems and I've put some more attention in that since then. [34]
The language and culture that you describe in the books seem very real. How do you start inventing a language? You shamelessly steal from Germanic mythology and Scandinavian mythology, just like Tolkien did. But I'm no linguist, I did my best, I have a copy of the Nibelungen up on my shelf along with the Eddas, and I based one of my languages on Old Norse, which gave it a nice sound and feel. So the main thing is picking things that make sense for your world and then trying to be internally consistent. [2]
Creating Maps
At what point in your writing process do you start creating the map? I've created the maps at different times in different books. At first I thought I didn't need a map because I thought that a good book should be perfectly understandable without a map. You shouldn't need to rely on anything outside of the text in order to enjoy it. And I still think that's generally true, but a map can add a lot. So for Eragon, I did it partway through the book. If I were to do a stand-alone fantasy novel, I would definitely want to work out the maps and stuff before writing it. [12]
The map for Eragon, the original black and white map, I did about halfway or a third of the way into Eragon. My idea was, and I still kind of believe this, that a well-written book shouldn't need a map in order to understand the story. You should be able to keep your bearings just based off the text. What I ran into though was that I was getting lost in the world myself with the amount of places and things after a certain point. And so I drew a map. [34]
For me I think if you're creating something in the real world obviously that gives you certain constraints and certain advantages but if you're starting with something from scratch, I find creating a map right up front is really helpful because your story is not going to visit every square inch on your map so by filling in those other details on the map you're going to get more story ideas and also ideas for potential conflicts, travel distances. It all feeds into the realism of the story as well as potentially future stories. It's fun stuff. The downside is you could spend your whole life worldbuilding. There's a there's a book from World War Two called Islandia, and the guy just spent his whole life creating this island and its culture to the point of working out the actual layers of geography of stone in the island. I've never actually read the book, I don't know if it's any good, but I know it was fairly popular when it came out. [25]
What hacks do you have for for creating geography and points of interest within your world? When I was creating the map for Alagaësia I actually used a old National Geographic Atlas and traced over various coastlines and then distorted them and pasted on top of each other in order to get sort of a natural feeling coastline. Please don't compare the island of Vroengard to the outline of Greece. Please don't do that. And then you have Robin Hobb who just turned Alaska upside down for her map which I always love because I've lived in Alaska twice. I think she told me that she never actually expected the book to get published, but then she got stuck with that because everything was tied to the geography that she started with. [25]
I think that a good map ought to have lots of points of interest, and the tricky bit is, without getting so detailed that it becomes cluttered. You see that sometimes with real world maps, like atlases and stuff, where there's a ton of place names, city names, river names, road names. All of which are useful and necessary, but it can actually visually get in the way of the art, perhaps the artistic effect that you would want a fantasy map to have in a book or a movie or even a game. [12]
There are world generators that you can just click through. It's really easy nowadays with technology to build worlds just by snapping your fingers. Even with those tools, if you have the time and inclination, I think there is some benefit to redrawing or painting the maps in your own style. I don't know about you, I love seeing when the maps are from the author themselves. I remember Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn by Tad Williams. Tad did all the maps himself, and I love that. Even if it's imperfect or a little amateurish it just gives it a really nice feel. I love Tolkien's original art for the same reason. [25]
Creating Dragons
You are the creator of your own world. Do you feel that you have follow certain canons of fantasy worlds, for example, dragons have four legs and wyverns have two? Or do you feel that you can practically do whatever you want because it's fantasy and you create everything? Yes and no. No because I have already established rules and traditions and precedence in The World of Eragon, so I have to be consistent with that. But if I were writing a new fantasy, I would not feel beholden to any tradition. If I wanted to write a world where the dragons have three legs or feathers or something like that then I would feel free to do that. That's the great thing about speculative fiction is it gives you the freedom to write and create whatever you want to. The thing is when you have a genre where anything is possible it actually reveals the limitations of your imagination. And there are very few authors, myself included, who really make full use of that. But at the same time, limitations can make your fiction more interesting. I think it's important to pick some limitations and that will help actually improve the quality of your work. [7]
Why did you decide to have your dragons have a saddle? I was around horses growing up. And the thought of actually physically being on a creature with very hard scales was rather terrifying if thought about in a practical sense. And so it just seemed to me that there had to be some protection. [33]
When you're writing fantasy and you include dragons, especially a dragon rider fantasy, depending on how many there are there, it's actually quite a difficult thing to not solve all your problems with dragons. I think the solution to that is you focus on the problems that dragons present, which balances out the advantages. And of course people are smart, whether we're talking about humans or elves or dwarves or any other invented species. If dragons were real, you'd come up with counters to them, whether it's a bunch of giant ballistae on your walls, or building domed fortresses, or building underground. You would come up with solutions and it would negate those advantages. And that's always my issue with writing fiction with dragons in the real world. If it's a slightly more modern, then you have to ask, well, why isn't everything different in history? Like if dragons were a constant part of our world, architecture would be different, warfare would be different, politics would be different. Well, no, politics would be the same. What am I saying? [30]
I'm sure all of us have seen the fantasy paintings of like a knight in armor with a lance on a horse facing off against a dragon. Now, to be fair, a lance moving at a decent speed at a horse galloping will have enough kinetic energy behind it to punch through just about anything. It could do a lot of damage. But any decent sized dragon would move so fast and be so strong, you wouldn't have a chance with a lance. You'd need a giant crossbow. That'd be your only choice. The size of a dragon, intelligence of a dragon. Until you get to projectile weapons, you have no chance. [30]
We all know what any creature gets when they bond with a dragon. They get a dragon. But why would a dragon create that bond? Why would they do it? Is it the bond, is it their nature? I think for me, having other species bond with the dragons was essentially a way to keep the dragons from getting wiped out. Because dragons are such a huge threat. If you imagine in the real world, we don't suffer giant predators to be constantly predating and disrupting our world. We remove that threat. Especially if there's magic involved, the ability to remove that threat gets even bigger. So in a way I viewed the bond between rider and dragon as essentially self preservation for the dragons, if not the other species as well. Without some sort of symbiotic relationship, coexistence becomes very, very difficult. That, or the dragons have to be smart enough to just essentially remove themselves from the world and live off in the far off places. But that gets really difficult when you start considering how much they need to eat. I remember reading the Live Ship Trader series and I remember the end of that spoiler alert where it's become clear that true dragons have returned now. And it really was kind of an oh crap moment because you start thinking about what that actually means for there to be dragons in the world again. It's kind of like Reign of Fire. [30]

Promoting The Books

Touring Hazards
How did you do on your book tour? It was a lot. It was a lot. I did 50 days of touring last year between Fractal Noise and Murtagh. Obviously the majority of that was for Murtagh. And of course I had a couple other trips in there as well. I went to New York Comic Con. I had one or two personal trips. So there was a lot of travel last year. My goal is to not have as much travel this year. In general, the book tours were awesome, great crowds for the Fractalverse, enormous crowds for World of Eragon/Murtagh. I don't normally talk about this stuff, but since we're past it, it doesn't matter. I started touring for Murtagh November 6th and then got home for good on December 16th. But there's always a risk of getting sick while you're traveling. And I did pretty well in the US leg of things. And then over in Europe between the jet lag and not sleeping- I had a really amazing dinner, one of my publishers took me out to a three star Michelin restaurant. The problem was the dinner started at 8pm and didn't finish till midnight. And there were two or three desserts, and the last dessert was full of coffee, and I didn't realize it. Absolutely full of coffee. And I did not get to sleep until like four in the morning. And I only had three hours of sleep that night. So I think I got sick the day after as a result. I got so sick on the European tour that at one of my stops I had to call paramedics to my hotel room at 2 a.m. because I couldn't breathe. Ended up with bronchitis for the first time in my life. But I'll have you know, I did every event. I didn't miss a single event. I managed to do all my presentations and made it through in one piece. I've never, never backed down from doing an event, even while bleeding. Can you tell us a little bit about the time that you were bleeding in an event? Well, I was in Europe. I was touring for Inheritance, I'd already toured North America, and then I started in Europe, went to UK, and then I went to Australia and New Zealand. But first country was Germany, and I think I did Munich and Cologne, and then I ended in Berlin. And in Berlin, they had me in this wonderful theater that's like over 100 years old, which is very rare in the city, considering all the bombing during the war. And I'm backstage, which meant down in the basement of this theater. And there's like 500 people out waiting for me to make an appearance and there's someone introducing me and they say my name and everyone starts clapping. And of course you want to get on stage before the applause dies down. And the way you got onto stage in this theater was through a set of stairs. And it really wasn't even steps. It was almost like a ladder and it was wood. And the steps were so old that they were basically hollowed out from all the people that have gone up and down it over the years. So I'm scrambling up this and about halfway up, my right foot slipped off the edge of one of the steps because it was hollowed out and full speed, full strength, full weight, I slammed my shin into the edge of one of the steps, stumbled forward two more steps and did it a second time. But momentum, adrenaline, I keep going, I get up on stage, I waved to everyone. And fortunately for me, because I was speaking to a foreign audience, they had me sitting at a table with a translator and a presenter. So I got to sit down and the table kind of hit everything from view. And I start the presentation, start the event. And after about, I don't know, five minutes, I'm thinking to myself, okay, I've banged my shin before. We've all banged our shins before, but this really bleepin' hurt. So I looked under the table and the whole front of my jean leg on my shin is soaked with blood. There is blood dripping onto the floor and my sock is soaked with blood. So I poked my translator, the presenter next to me that I was doing a couple of events with, and I said, "Hey, look at this". And he glances under and his face just goes white. And I'm colorblind and I saw his face go white. And he said, "Do we need to call an ambulance?" And I'm like, "No, no, we're going to do this." So I did an hour-long presentation. And then I got up and managed to quickly limp over to a signing table. And no one really noticed that I wasn't feeling so hot. And I got behind the signing table, and I signed books for 400 or 500 people. And the funny thing is, I was traveling with this foreign rights agent publicist for Random House named Jocelyn, who was just an absolute beast of a woman. I love her to death. You have to understand, she did a European book tour with me while eight months pregnant. The woman was and is just very impressive. But she grew up on a farm. German family in the US, grew up on a farm. So I showed her my leg when I was sitting down to sign and she just looked at me and she said, "You need to go to the hospital?" I said, "Nope". She said, "I knew you were country. Good man." Slapped me on the back. So I finished signing and then I went back to the hotel and I had to get into a tub of water to soak my jeans off because the blood had dried and glued them to my shin. And the problem was I had a dent all the way down to the bone. And I really should have gone to a hospital because, sorry for the gory details, but what happens is when you get a dent like that, you lose the fat under the skin between the skin and the bone and it doesn't come back unless you get an injection to help it puff out and heal. And I didn't do that because I was on tour, there was no time. So the next day I had to fly to pretty sure it was Barcelona for the St. George Book Festival, which is a walking festival. So you have to walk from bookstore to bookstore in the city and do signings. But that was a bit rough. That actually took over a year to heal properly. I still have that dent. Stuff happens. I've heard some crazy stories with other authors. I'd rather it's my blood, not the fan's blood. [32]
Touring Difficulties
We've got blood and sweat, any tears from tour? On occasion. The biggest one is just being away from home. And if anything is a bit off for whatever reason, you can't just pop home and hold someone or do this or do that. It's just difficult to be that far away from home for so long. [32]
If you're not familiar with book tours, the way it often works is that you fly to a city, you get to your hotel room, you have a little bit of time to freshen up, maybe get some food and then you go to the bookstore and you do your event. And it has to be after people get off from work, so it tends to be a later evening event. If you have a large number of people show up, that means that that time spent talking and signing pushes fairly late in the evening. You go back, you get dinner, and if you're a semi-introvert like so many authors tend to be, you need some time to decompress, which means you probably stay up a little too late reading or writing. And then in the morning, you got to go get another airplane flight and go to the new city. All of which is fine, but going to the airport, doing those flights, with the time it takes to go through an airport these days, it means that the schedule has very little time in it. When I toured for Fractal Noise, the publisher one of the days had me fly from Tampa to Portland and I still had to do an event that day. Which I agreed to. It was my own fault because they had everything on the East Coast and I said, "Well, what about the West Coast? You know, I have readers on the West Coast. They need to get a chance to get a signed book." It was my own fault. But that can get rough when you're doing it for weeks on end at a certain point. You just can't recover. A day off? What's that? But it's a good problem to have. That people want to see you and want to read your books. It's an awesome career to have. [1]
I'm also a big fan of coffee naps. So I will drink a cup of coffee, usually my second cup of coffee, and then I'll go take a nap, and I will nap for about 30 minutes, because after 30 minutes the coffee wakes me up. And I find that 15 to 30 minutes is the perfect length of a nap for me, and if I go past that, I need to sleep for about three hours, because otherwise I get into the middle of a REM cycle, and if I wake up in the middle of a REM cycle, I'm just like groggy and drugged, and I feel worse than if I hadn't napped at all. And then of course, if you're on book tour, the way I have been for a while, you gain the ability to just close your eyes at any point and take a 10 minute nap 15 minute nap anywhere, and it at least helps you stay upright. [19]
Meeting Fans around the World
You just got back from the U.S. leg of your book tour — who’s making up the crowd? The readership is broad and probably older than it was back in the day. There are still a lot of 8-year-olds, but now there are grandparents, too. I’ve even met some kids who’ve been named after the characters, which is pretty amazing. Because people have been reading the series for so long, I tend to get a mix of incredibly detailed, hyper-focused, deep-dive questions about some of the lore, but also some more general ones about Eragon’s name. [16]
I'm sure you hear personal stories all the time especially at your readings and your your appearances. It must be lovely, and I guess overwhelming to connect with your fans. That's a good way of putting it: lovely and overwhelming. Everyone has their own personal history with these books. I have people showing up who named their children after the characters, or who've gotten tattoos. Oh my goodness, what's the one you get? Multiple Saphiras, Aryas, Rorans, a couple of Eragons. As a writer, you want people to read your stories, enjoy them, be affected by them. If they're affected so strongly they name their children after your characters, you feel pretty good about it. [28]
Are your European fans different from your American fans? I actually haven't met any children here who are named after characters from my books. That seems to be an American phenomenon. The language barrier sometimes makes it a little more difficult to talk to European fans. But the love for Eragon is just as strong in Europe as it is in the US. This is not your first time on tour in Europe. Is there something you're missing here? I actually noticed that hotels in Europe usually don't have ironing boards or irons. This is standard equipment in America. [24]
My great-grandmother was from Sicily and then my grandfather was from Bologna. I just found out recently that my grandfather as a child was tutored by Fellini's wife. [7]
My grandfather was the stereotype of an elderly Italian gentleman. He had a mustache, he cooked spaghetti and he made the most amazing red sauce for the spaghetti. He used too much profanity. He was quite the character. [35]
Amsterdam is a beautiful city, but if I had grown up here I would probably still have written fantasy, but it would probably have influenced the type of fantasy I write. [23]
I was just in Stockholm on book tour for my latest book. And I've sold a really large number of books, proportionally in Sweden, and I'd never been there before. And I was kind of curious what their thoughts and feelings were on it, given the fact that I have shamelessly pillaged, Anglo-Saxon Scandinavian mythology for my own work. And they said native Swedish authors don't write using their own mythology, they go into the more literary veins and they import and translate other authors who are writing about Scandinavian mythology and they enjoy it immensely, but it doesn't seem to be a homegrown thing for them, which is rather odd, I think. [30]
Old Norse is not so far from German, do you speak a little bit of German? I understand a fair bit. When I've done presentations in Germany, I've had children ask me questions in German, and I can sometimes understand the entire question without translation, but I only speak a few words. [Host 2]: Let's try it. Can you ask the next question in German? Of course. Oh dear. [speaking quickly] Herr Paolini, wie viel von ihrer Vision für die ganze Serie hat sich mit der Zeit verändert? Hat es sich überhaupt verändert? Denn wenn man sich die frühen Werke anguckt, erkennt man, dass sehr viele Sachen aus den frühen Werken in den späteren wieder auftauchen. So dass es eigentlich unmöglich sein kann, dass sie das nicht von Anfang an komplett geplant haben? Translation please. That was not fair. But funny. Yeah, I was just asking, when you started writing the book, and it became not just one book, it became a whole world, it became a series, and I don't want to spoil anything, but if you read the first books and you read the later books, stuff comes up again, and it seems like you actually knew where it was going when you started writing, which is again insane because you were 15. Is that something you just got lucky, or did you really plan for a whole series when you started writing the first one? I planned because I tried writing some stories before Eragon, and I never got past the first five or ten pages because I didn't have a story. I would only have an inciting incident, like a young man finds a dragon egg in the forest. Well, fun, awesome, but that's not a story. So Eragon and the series as it was, was a writing exercise for myself to see if I could outline, plot, and then write at least the first book of a series. So yes, if you read the first book, Eragon, there's actually a scene, a dream sequence in the first book. And it is the very last scene of the last book. And I did that specifically so that I could point to it and say to my readers, "See, I knew what I was doing." But of course, it isn't the last book now. [2]
Before he finished signing them all he asked if I read Fractal Noise, I said yes. He then asked how I liked it. I said I liked To Sleep far more. And to be fair I did. But I could've been a little more less brunt about it. All in all I'm sorry Paolini. I hope you see this. Dude -- No need to apologize! I was the one who put you on the spot. I was just curious about Fractal Noise as it's pretty different from what I normally write. That said, I'm a big boy, and it doesn't bother me in the slightest if someone prefers one book over another. [R]
Have you been on TikTok? How do you find it? I have an account that my assistants post content on for me because I don't have the time and I don't want it on my phone, but it has been a really useful way to connect with readers, and I had a lot of people who came up during my book tour end of last year, who said that they found out about the events I was doing from the posts on TikTok. [33]
Outside of the tour, did you do anything to personally celebrate the release of Murtagh? No. Not to sound blase, but this isn't my first book I've released. Going on the tour is the celebration. Getting to meet the fans. It's an enormous expenditure of energy, time, effort, and it's very joyous and touching and meaningful for me. And I think for a lot of the readers. So that's the celebration. My team and I, we all kind of take a moment to pat ourselves on the back every time a book comes out and then it's back to the grind a bit. Also, I got to celebrate my 40th birthday while on book tour, and I got to celebrate it with my editor, my publicist, my former publicist who's been with me since the beginning. So that was really nice. [32]
Appearance
Being an author is like the best kind of semi-celebrity, because nine times out of ten, no one knows who you are, you can live a nice quiet life, and then you get to go out and meet people who like your work. And that's a real treat. I grew the beard partly to keep people from recognizing me. But then I've had it for so long that it doesn't work anymore. And I got tired of shaving. But the problem is the beard takes so much time and effort to take care of it, it doesn't save me any time. [1]
Did your hat end up getting fixed post-tour? Yup. Fixed it myself with a rivet. [T]
Any advice on how to wear a pirate's hat without it being weird? It's very simple. There's one ingredient. You wear it with confidence. That's all. [36]
Signing Books
People people don't maybe don't realize what an endurance race it is, especially when when books are this big and successful. Like the amount. I once did 9,280 books in an afternoon and a half at a warehouse. I had nine people helping. I stood. I find that if I stand, I don't use my wrist. I can isolate the arm. And I just had someone shove it under me, someone pull it out for me, and everyone else was boxing, unboxing and flapping. But it hurt. It really hurt. I dropped my first name this past year. For the first time in a 20 year career, I finally dropped my first name. Did you feel defeated? Yes. But I have kids now and I just could not afford the time and the strain on my body. I actually got two typewriters. I got really bad inflammation in my right thumb from all the signing and I find that typewriters alleviated that. Also heavier like mechanical keyboards seem to help. So I know like Robin Hobb has suffered some severe problems with her hands with the amount of typing she's done over the years. So yeah, it is an occupational hazard. [33]
I have to say, signing 30,000 sheets is SIGNIFICANTLY harder than mining or placing 30k blocks in #Minecraft. Lol. [T]
Do you have a PO Box or something? I’d pay shipping both ways to have you sign my books. P.O. box is listed on paolini.net. Just include return shipping, please. :D Alternatively, you can arrange signed copies through Conley's Books & Music in Livingston, MT. [R]
If I send a book to a P.O. Box and pay for shipping there and back, would you sign it? Yup. Address is on paolini.net [T]
submitted by ibid-11962 to Eragon [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 07:00 WildAdhesiveness4170 🦊 Jun 9 - [HIRING] 99 new Python Jobs

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2024.06.09 06:16 FluoriteEye Prince intros shortest 2 longest

I may be late to celebrate his royal badness' birthday, but I did this to honor him. . Wedding Feast - 0:00/0:54 My Little Pill - 0:00/1:09 An Honest Man - 0:00/1:13 Sister - 0:00/1:31 Breathe - 0:00/2:01 All the Midnights in the World - 0:00/2:21 The Flow - 0:00/2:26 Extraordinary - 0:00/2:28 There is Lonely - 0:00/2:29 Don't Play Me - 0:00/2:48 The Marrying Kind - 0:00/2:49 Everywhere - 0:00/2:54 Noon Rendezvous - 0:00/3:00 Aintturninround - 0:00/3:02 Dream Factory - 0:00/3:07 I Like It There - 0:00/3:15 Da Bang - 0:00/3:19 The Same December - 0:00/3:24 Pretzelbodylogic - 0:00/3:26 When Eye Lay My Hands on U - 0:00/3:41 S.S.T - 0:00/3:42 Funky Design - 0:00/3:45 4ever - 0:00/3:47 Solo - 0:00/3:48 The Morning Papers - 0:00/3:57 $ - 0:00/3:57 Valentina - 0:00/3:59 Make Your Mama Happy - 0:00/4:01 The Latest Fashion - 0:00/4:02 Screwdriver - 0:00/4:14 Work That Fat - 0:00/4:35 U're Gonna C Me (MPLSound) - 0:00/4:36 Circle of Amour - 0:00/4:43 Illusion, Coma, Pimp and Circumstance - 0:00/4:45 Mr. Happy - 0:00/4:46 Dance 4 Me - 0:00/4:58 Dolphin - 0:00/4:59 7 - 0:00/5:10 Thunder - 0:00/5:45 Big Tall Wall v1 - 0:00/5:58 Van Gogh - 0:00/5:59 3 Chains O' Gold - 0:00/6:03 Chocolate Box - 0:00/6:13 . The Rest of My Life - 0:01/1:40 Feel Better, Feel Good, Feel Wonderful - 0:01/3:52 Strange But True - 0:01/4:12 Slow Love - 0:01/4:22 The Love We Make - 0:01/4:39 Housequake - 0:01/4:42 Wally - 0:01/4:44 Man 'O' War - 0:01/5:15 Sex in the Summer - 0:01/5:57 The Holy River - 0:01/6:55 . For You - 0:03/1:08 Teacher, Teacher (1985) - 0:03/3:08 If Eye Was the Man in Ur Life - 0:03/3:09 Teacher, Teacher (1982) - 0:03/3:36 What It Feels Like - 0:03/3:53 Violet the Organ Grinder - 0:03/5:00 Call My Name - 0:03/5:15 Cloreen Bacon Skin - 0:03/15:37 . Cybersingle - 0:04/2:43 Escape - 0:04/3:30 Damn U - 0:04/4:25 Another Lonely Christmas - 0:04/4:53 It - 0:04/5:09 Mad - 0:04/5:35 . Satisfied - 0:05/2:50 I Wanna Melt With U - 0:05/3:50 Like A Mack - 0:05/4:04 Anotherlove - 0:05/4:16 No Call U - 0:05/4:29 Let's Go Crazy - 0:05/4:40 White Mansion - 0:05/4:47 Glam Slam - 0:05/5:07 Sexy M.F. - 0:05/5:26 . Comeback - 0:06/1:59 Let's Have A Baby - 0:06/4:07 . Do U Lie? - 0:07/2:44 Witness 4 The Prosecution v1 - 0:07/4:00 We Gets Up - 0:07/4:18 Call the Law - 0:07/4:21 . Walk in Sand - 0:08/3:29 Strollin' - 0:08/3:47 Alphabet St. - 0:08/5:38 Big Tall Wall v2 - 0:08/5:46 The Cocoa Boys - 0:08/6:05 I Rock, Therefore I Am - 0:08/6:15 Holly Rock - 0:08/6:38 . Splash - 0:09/2:59 Way Back Home - 0:09/3:05 Kiss - 0:09/3:37 Dreamin' About U - 0:09/3:52 Good Love - 0:09/4:55 5 Women - 0:09/5:13 . Starfish and Coffee - 0:10/2:50 Pearls B4 The Swine - 0:10/3:01 What's My Name - 0:10/3:03 Walk Don't Walk - 0:10/3:07 4 the Tears in Your Eyes - 0:10/3:25 In A Large Room With No Light - 0:10/3:27 On the Couch - 0:10/3:33 Musicology - 0:10/4:24 Rockhard in a Funky Place - 0:10/4:34 Dead On It - 0:10/4:40 Slave - 0:10/4:51 200 Balloons - 0:10/5:06 . Objects in the Mirror - 0:11/3:27 Lemon Crush - 0:11/4:15 One Kiss at a Time - 0:11/4:41 Same Page, Different Book - 0:11/4:41 Hot Wit U - 0:11/5:09 La, La, La, He, He, Hee - 0:11/10:53 . Sarah - 0:12/2:52 Boom - 0:12/3:18 A Case of U - 0:12/3:39 Judas Smile - 0:12/6:33 Something Funky (This House Comes) - 0:12/7:04 . Marz - 0:13/1:48 Velvet Kitty Cat - 0:13/2:42 Da Bourgeoise - 0:13/3:23 One of Your Tears - 0:13/3:27 Silly Game - 0:13/3:30 Resolution - 0:13/3:37 Incense and Candles - 0:13/4:04 Lolita - 0:13/4:06 Moonbeam Levels - 0:13/4:22 I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man - 0:13/6:29 . Have a Heart - 0:14/2:04 Into the Light - 0:14/2:46 Gotta Stop (Messin' About) - 0:14/2:57 You're All I Want - 0:14/3:00 Thieves in the Temple - 0:14/3:20 I Will - 0:14/3:37 Hardrocklover - 0:14/3:42 Stare - 0:14/3:45 When You Were Mine - 0:14/3:46 All A Share Together - 0:14/3:47 There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool - 0:14/3:49 Everybody Loves Me - 0:14/4:08 Lion of Judah - 0:14/4:10 If It'll Make U Feel Happy - 0:14/4:12 The Most Beautiful Girl in the World - 0:14/4:25 Soul Sanctuary - 0:14/4:41 The Arms of Orion - 0:14/5:03 S&M Groove - 0:14/5:07 Planet Earth - 0:14/5:51 . Had U - 0:15/1:26 Tangerine - 0:15/1:33 Make-Up - 0:15/2:26 I Would Die 4 U - 0:15/2:59 The Other Side of the Pillow - 0:15/3:21 Old Friends 4 Sale - 0:15/3:28 Girl - 0:15/3:48 Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad? - 0:15/3:49 When Will We B Paid - 0:15/4:07 Partyup - 0:15/4:22 Mellow - 0:15/4:24 Private Joy - 0:15/4:28 I Pledge Allegiance to Your Love - 0:15/4:41 Joy in Repetition - 0:15/4:53 The Dance (3121) - 0:15/5:20 I Wanna Be Your Lover - 0:15/5:50 Just as Long as We're Together - 0:15/6:25 Do Me, Baby - 0:15/7:44 . Dinner With Delores - 0:16/2:46 Soft and Wet - 0:16/3:05 Act of God - 0:16/3:13 Tell Me How U Wanna Be Done - 0:16/3:15 New World - 0:16/3:43 Free Urself - 0:16/3:47 Graffiti Bridge - 0:16/3:51 When 2 R in Love - 0:16/3:59 Rocknroll Loveaffair - 0:16/4:01 Breakdown - 0:16/4:04 The Dance - 0:16/4:45 Loveleft, Loveright - 0:16/5:00 Uptown - 0:16/5:29 Peace - 0:16/5:32 The Daisy Chain - 0:16/6:12 Sleep Around - 0:16/7:42 . Arrogance - 0:17/1:35 I Wish U in Heaven - 0:17/2:48 Life Can Be So Nice - 0:17/3:13 Dionne - 0:17/3:13 Wonderful Day - 0:17/3:47 Cinnamon Girl - 0:17/3:56 2 Whom It May Concern - 0:17/4:00 Sweet Baby - 0:17/4:01 Supercute - 0:17/4:13 Money Don't Grow on Trees - 0:17/4:19 Vavoom - 0:17/4:35 Nothing Compares 2 U - 0:17/4:39 High - 0:17/5:05 Girls & Boys - 0:17/5:29 Baby You're A Trip - 0:17/5:51 Wouldn't You Love to Love Me? - 0:17/5:56 Get Yo Groove On - 0:17/6:31 Positivity - 0:17/7:11 . The Morning After - 0:18/2:11 Tamborine - 0:18/2:44 Manic Monday - 0:18/2:51 Last Heart - 0:18/3:01 Jack U Off - 0:18/3:09 Fallinlove2nite - 0:18/3:12 Fury - 0:18/4:02 Don't Say U Love Me - 0:18/4:20 Now - 0:18/4:30 Don't Let Him Fool Ya - 0:18/4:34 Ripopgodazippa - 0:18/4:38 Jealous Girl v2 - 0:18/4:52 Jughead - 0:18/4:57 Little Red Corvette - 0:18/4:58 Witness 4 The Prosecution v2 - 0:18/5:02 Daddy Pop - 0:18/5:17 I Need A Man - 0:18/5:33 Trouble - 0:18/5:36 Eye Hate U - 0:18/5:53 Ain't Gonna Miss U When U're Gone - 0:18/6:01 Purple Rain - 0:18/8:40 Come - 0:18/11:13 . Lavaux - 0:19/3:03 Man in a Uniform - 0:19/3:07 I Feel for You - 0:19/3:24 Forever in My Life - 0:19/3:30 Katrina's Paper Dolls - 0:19/3:30 My Love is Forever - 0:19/4:11 Horny Pony v2 - 0:19/4:21 You're My Love - 0:19/4:23 Prettyman - 0:19/4:24 Goodbye - 0:19/4:34 Money Don't Matter 2 Night - 0:19/4:47 U're Gonna C Me - 0:19/5:16 Damned If Eye Do - 0:19/5:21 Adonis and Bathsheba - 0:19/5:27 We Can Funk - 0:19/5:28 Schoolyard - 0:19/7:11 She Spoke 2 Me - 0:19/8:20 . Gotta Broken Heart Again - 0:20/2:16 X's Face - 0:20/2:38 The Lubricated Lady - 0:20/2:39 Jungle Love - 0:20/3:03 Boyfriend - 0:20/3:08 It Be's Like That Sometimes - 0:20/3:19 Ain't About 2 Stop - 0:20/3:38 New Power Generation - 0:20/3:39 Crimson and Clover - 0:20/3:51 Boytrouble - 0:20/3:53 Compassion - 0:20/3:55 The Question of U - 0:20/3:59 Tip O' My Tongue - 0:20/4:08 Love and Sex - 0:20/4:11 Silicon - 0:20/4:15 What Do U Want Me 2 Do? - 0:20/4:15 Chaos and Disorder - 0:20/4:19 Life 'O' the Party - 0:20/4:29 Blue Light - 0:20/4:38 The Voice - 0:20/4:42 Anna Stesia - 0:20/4:57 Willing and Able - 0:20/5:00 Hide the Bone - 0:20/5:03 Beginning Endlessly - 0:20/5:27 When the Dawn of the Morning Comes - 0:20/6:16 Northside - 0:20/6:31 . Crazy You - 0:21/2:17 Shut This Down - 0:21/3:03 Reflection - 0:21/3:04 Baby - 0:21/3:10 Face Down - 0:21/3:17 Sexual Suicide - 0:21/3:39 Strange Relationship - 0:21/4:01 Silver Tongue - 0:21/4:22 Trust - 0:21/4:24 The Work, Pt. 1 - 0:21/4:28 3121 - 0:21/4:31 My Computer - 0:21/4:37 Sticky Like Glue - 0:21/4:46 Crucial - 0:21/5:06 My Tender Heart - 0:21/5:06 When We're Dancing Close and Slow - 0:21/5:19 Dear Michaelangelo - 0:21/5:22 Acknowledge Me - 0:21/5:27 Beautiful, Loved and Blessed - 0:21/5:43 Love 2 the 9's - 0:21/5:44 Bold Generation - 0:21/5:53 Get On the Boat - 0:21/6:11 Last December - 0:21/7:57 . New Position - 0:22/2:20 Interactive - 0:22/3:03 The Truth - 0:22/3:33 Do It All Night - 0:22/3:41 Elephants and Flowers - 0:22/3:54 Love... Thy Will Be Done - 0:22/4:07 2morrow - 0:22/4:13 Gett Off - 0:22/4:32 Props'N'Pounds - 0:22/4:35 1010 (Rin Tin Tin) - 0:22/4:42 Standing at the Altar - 0:22/4:49 The Sun, The Moon and Stars - 0:22/5:16 (There'll Never B) Another Like Me - 0:22/6:02 . She Loves Me 4 Me - 0:23/2:49 Sex Shooter - 0:23/3:06 Look At Me, Look At U - 0:23/3:27 Pope - 0:23/3:29 Raspberry Berret - 0:23/3:33 Love Like Jazz - 0:23/3:49 Breakfast Can Wait - 0:23/3:55 La, La, La Means I Love You - 0:23/3:59 The Future - 0:23/4:07 Horny Pony - 0:23/4:19 Annie Christian - 0:23/4:21 Train - 0:23/4:22 It's About That Walk - 0:23/4:25 Mr. Goodnight - 0:23/4:26 The One U Wanna C - 0:23/4:29 Hold Me - 0:23/4:36 Eggplant - 0:23/5:18 In This Bed Eye Scream - 0:23/5:40 All the Critics Love U in New York - 0:23/5:56 Rearrange - 0:23/6:11 Pink Cashmere - 0:23/6:15 . I Wonder U - 0:24/1:39 Everybody Want What They Don't Got - 0:24/2:08 Christopher Tracy's Parade - 0:24/2:11 Courtin' Time - 0:24/2:46 Papa - 0:24/2:48 Curious Child - 0:24/2:57 With You - 0:24/4:00 Something in the Water (Does Not Compute) - 0:24/4:01 Glasscutter - 0:24/4:40 Head - 0:24/4:42 Dance On - 0:24/3:44 How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore - 0:24/3:53 Running Game (Son of a Slave Master) - 0:24/4:05 Wall of Berlin - 0:24/4:16 Undisputed - 0:24/4:20 Muse 2 the Pharaoh - 0:24/4:21 Shy - 0:24/5:03 It's Gonna Be Lonely - 0:24/5:30 Billy Jack Bitch - 0:24/5:31 Cosmic Day - 0:24/5:39 Sexmesexmenot - 0:24/5:40 18 & Over - 0:24/5:40 Superfunkycalifragisexy - 0:24/5:58 Cindy C - 0:24/6:18 Gold - 0:24/7:22 . Horny Toad - 0:25/2:13 319 - 0:25/3:05 And God Created Woman - 0:25/3:18 She's Always in My Hair - 0:25/3:27 Check the Record - 0:25/3:28 Tick, Tick, Bang - 0:25/3:31 Promise To Be True - 0:25/3:38 I Love U in Me - 0:25/4:13 Darling Nikki - 0:25/4:14 Wow - 0:25/4:28 The Song of the Heart - 0:25/4:36 Strays of the World - 0:25/5:06 U Make My Sun Shine - 0:25/7:05 Automatic - 0:25/9:24 . Loose! - 0:26/3:26 2 Y. 2 D. - 0:26/3:49 U Know - 0:26/3:56 Skip to My You My Darling - 0:26/3:57 A Million Days - 0:26/3:50 Movie Star - 0:26/4:25 Power Fantastic - 0:26/4:45 Electric Intercourse - 0:26/4:57 The Ladder - 0:26/5:28 Blanche - 0:26/5:36 Hot Thing - 0:26/5:40 Push - 0:26/5:53 Everyday is a Winding Road - 0:26/6:11 United States of Division - 0:26/6:18 Ol' Skool Company - 0:26/7:30 Shockadelica - 0:26/3:31 . New Power Generation pt. II - 0:27/2:57 Madrid 2 Chicago - 0:27/3:14 Stopthistrain - 0:27/3:41 Whitecaps - 0:27/3:43 Peach - 0:27/3:48 Vicki Waiting - 0:27/4:52 Cause and Effect - 0:27/5:00 The Beautiful Ones - 0:27/5:13 Our Destiny/Roadhouse Garden - 0:27/6:25 2045: Radical Man - 0:27/6:34 Internarional Lover - 0:27/6:36 Time - 0:27/6:49 Joint 2 Joint - 0:27/7:52 Days of Wild - 0:27/9:18 . Betcha By Golly Wow! - 0:28/3:31 Te Amo Corazón - 0:28/3:35 Eye Love U, But Eye Don't Trust U Anymore - 0:28/3:36 Mountains - 0:28/3:57 Still Waiting - 0:28/4:28 Calhoun Square - 0:28/4:46 Da, Da, Da - 0:28/5:15 Stand Up and B Strong - 0:28/5:18 F.U.N.K. - 0:28/7:36 The Everlasting Now - 0:28/8:18 . Yes - 0:29/2:56 Martika's Kitchen - 0:29/4:21 Magnificent - 0:29/4:36 One Day We Will All B Free - 0:29/4:41 Guitar - 0:29/3:45 U Got the Look - 0:29/3:47 Erotic City - 0:29/3:55 Can't Stop This Feeling I Got - 0:29/4:24 Paisley Park - 0:29/4:41 Future Baby Mama - 0:29/4:47 This Could Be Us - 0:29/5:12 Walkin' In Glory - 0:29/5:14 Turn It Up - 0:29/5:23 The Greatest Romance Ever Sold - 0:29/5:33 The Sacrifice of Victor - 0:29/5:40 . Partyman - 0:30/3:11 Here On Earth - 0:30/3:23 Tictactoe - 0:30/3:38 Melody Cool - 0:30/3:39 The Ballad of Dorothy Parker - 0:30/3:55 Lauriann - 0:30/4:15 Sign 'O' The Times - 0:30/5:02 Dreamer - 0:30/5:30 Can I Play With U? - 0:30/6:39 Style - 0:30/6:40 . Ronnie, Talk to Russia - 0:31/1:57 Fixurlifeup - 0:31/3:12 Welcome 2 the Dawn - 0:31/3:17 Take Me With U - 0:31/3:54 Electric Chair - 0:31/4:08 No More Candy 4 U - 0:31/4:12 Emancipation - 0:31/4:13 Rock 'N' Roll is Alive! (And It Lives in Minneapolis) - 0:31/4:34 Right the Wrong - 0:31/4:39 Saviour - 0:31/5:48 Hey U - 0:31/6:10 I Can't Make U Love Me - 0:31/6:37 Controversy - 0:31/7:13 . Baby Knows - 0:32/3:18 So Far, So Pleased - 0:32/3:24 Hot Summer - 0:32/3:32 Pop Life - 0:32/3:43 Delirious - 0:32/3:59 The Word - 0:32/4:11 Cream - 0:32/4:13 1000 X's and O's - 0:32/4:27 Poom Poom - 0:32/4:32 Gigolos Get Lonely Too - 0:32/4:41 The Cross - 0:32/4:45 Free - 0:32/5:08 Shhh - 0:32/7:17 . Laydown - 0:33/3:06 In Love - 0:33/3:37 Emale - 0:33/3:38 This Could B Us - 0:33/4:10 Love and Sex - 0:33/5:00 Play in the Sunshine - 0:33/5:05 Still Would Stand All Time - 0:33/5:23 The Continental - 0:33/5:31 Bob George - 0:33/5:39 When Doves Cry - 0:33/5:53 Gangster Glam - 0:33/6:05 Le Grind - 0:33/6:47 Lady Cab Driver - 0:33/8:16 . Wherever U Go, Whatever U Do - 0:34/3:17 Dig U Better Dead - 0:34/3:59 Sexy Dancer - 0:34/4:18 Alice Through the Looking Glass - 0:34/4:18 Get Blue - 0:34/4:43 Dark - 0:34/6:10 Adore - 0:34/6:31 Feel U Up - 0:34/6:42 Purple Music - 0:34/10:58 . Black Sweat - 0:35/3:11 Underneath the Cream - 0:35/3:59 Y Should Eye Do That When Eye Can Do This - 0:35/4:31 Clouds - 0:35/4:34 Streetwalker - 0:35/4:48 Letitgo - 0:35/5:32 Chelsea Rodgers - 0:35/5:41 Love - 0:35/5:45 . Around the World in a Day - 0:36/3:28 Vagina - 0:36/3:28 Sea of Everything - 0:36/3:49 Diamonds and Pearls - 0:36/4:45 Here - 0:36/5:15 Hypnoparadise - 0:36/6:03 We Can Fuck - 0:36/10:17 . Yah, You Know - 0:37/3:10 Anotherloverholenyohead - 0:37/4:00 Scarlet Pussy - 0:37/4:19 Colonized Mind - 0:37/4:48 Future Soul Song - 0:37/5:08 Welcome 2 America - 0:37/5:23 Jam of the Year - 0:37/6:10 . Baltimore - 0:38/4:33 Somebody's Somebody - 0:38/4:43 3rd Eye - 0:38/4:53 I'm Yours - 0:38/5:02 Groovy Potential - 0:38/6:16 Black Muse - 0:38/7:21 . When She Comes - 0:39/3:45 Animal Kingdom - 0:39/4:01 Sexuality - 0:39/4:19 So Blue - 0:39/4:30 The Human Body - 0:39/5:42 The Last Dance (Bang Pow Zoom And The Whole Nine) - 0:39/5:36 Do Yourself A Favor - 0:39/9:00 . Under the Cherry Moon - 0:40/2:56 Dirty Mind - 0:40/4:13 Irresistible Bitch - 0:40/4:13 Dear Mr. Man - 0:40/4:14 Bambi - 0:40/4:23 Emotional Pump - 0:40/4:59 Lovesexy - 0:40/5:49 Scandalous - 0:40/6:15 . Zannalee - 0:41/2:43 A Place in Heaven - 0:41/2:57 Endorphinmachine - 0:41/4:06 Funknroll (Art Official Age) - 0:41/4:08 Funknroll - 0:41/4:10 Rebirth of the Flesh - 0:41/5:28 The Dance Electric - 0:41/11:29 . Avalanche - 0:42/4:24 Race - 0:42/4:28 Xtralovable - 0:42/5:00 If I Was Your Girlfriend - 0:42/5:01 Somewhere Here on Earth - 0:42/5:45 Wonderful Ass - 0:42/6:24 . Computer Blue - 0:43/3:59 17 Days - 0:43/4:00 The Max - 0:43/4:30 Right Back Here In My Arms - 0:43/4:43 Better with Time - 0:43/4:53 1000 Light Years From Here - 0:43/5:46 . One Nite Alone... - 0:44/3:37 Open Book - 0:44/4:59 Live 4 Love - 0:44/6:59 . Million $ Show - 0:45/3:10 June - 0:45/3:21 The Glamorous Life - 0:45/4:11 When She Comes - 0:45/4:46 Beautiful Strange - 0:45/4:56 Born 2 Die - 0:45/5:03 P. Control - 0:45/5:59 Possessed (1984) - 0:45/7:56 . Golden Parachute - 0:46/5:35 Possessed (1982) - 0:46/8:47 . She Gave Her Angels - 0:47/3:52 Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic - 0:47/4:19 Baby I'm A Star - 0:47/4:24 . Let's Work - 0:48/3:55 The Ball - 0:48/4:34 Friend, Lover, Sister, MotheWife - 0:48/7:37 . Spirit - 0:49/4:32 My Medallion - 0:49/5:07 . America - 0:50/3:45 Space - 0:50/4:28 The Gold Standard - 0:50/5:53 1999 - 0:50/6:15 . Young and Beautiful - 0:51/2:44 God - 0:51/4:02 Let's Pretend We're Married - 0:51/7:18 Temptation - 0:51/8:20 . 100 MPH - 0:52/3:30 The Ride - 0:52/5:13 . One of Us - 0:53/5:19 . Love or $ - 0:54/6:55 . All My Dreams - 0:55/7:24 . Digital Garden - 0:56/4:07 It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Night - 0:56/9:01 . D.M.S.R. - 0:57/8:17 . Pain - 0:58/5:57 . Art Official Cage - 1:00/3:41 We March - 1:00/4:49 . Insatiable - 1:01/6:39 . Revelation - 1:03/5:21 . Fascination - 1:04/4:55 Big City - 1:04/6:25 . Pheromone - 1:11/5:08 My Name is Prince - 1:11/6:38 . 1+1+1 is 3 - 1:16/5:17 . Eye No - 1:22/5:46 . Rainbow Children - 1:27/10:03 . Sometimes It Snows in April - 1:33/6:48 . Crystal Ball - 1:34/10:27 . Hello - 1:59/6:19 . When the Lights Go Down - 2:33/7:11 . Condition of the Heart - 2:45/6:47 . Family Name - 3:01/8:16
submitted by FluoriteEye to PRINCE [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 05:53 SquirelFeed 25 [F4M] [Online] Drama Nerd Looking for the Phantom to my Christine

Hey there gentlemen! Name's Sky, and I want the level of passion of the relationship mentioned in the title. Before anyone says anything, yes I know it's an awful relationship as a relationship. Yes, I know that the Phantom is a psycho stalker. Yes I know Christine had at least some level of brainwashing to be worked out. Do I care? No, though I'm realizing now that I could've used Morticia and Gomez for the same effect.
As you may have guessed, I'm an avid horror enjoyer. My favourite movie ever is The Black Cauldron, followed rather closely by Tarot, Sinister, and Barbie's Fairytopia. No, I'm not joking, Fairytopia is one of my favourite films. My comfort TV series isn't necessarily horror, though. It's Dr. Who (Followed by tbh any sort of Scooby-Doo show). My favourite series is Grimm.
I'm an Autistic ADHD voice actress with Dissociative Identity Disorder, just to get that out of the way. If you're not interested in the possibility of being in a relationship with everyone in my skull (in some form, though there are other genders bashing round up here) or you probably having to be the one to text first, then we will not work.
I also DM (and play) Dungeons and Dragons. I enjoy a lot of other games too, to the point of planning a Redfall themed tattoo to go on the arm with the Wizard101 one, so please just ask if you have an idea for something to play together. Chances are, I probably have it and am willing to play it.
Hobbies of course vary from alter to alter (we call them shards because it's easier to envision it as a broken mirror for some people.... Plus it sounds cool.) but in theory there's a solid baseline of enjoyed things somewhere. Some kinda common ground.
One of the shards designs games as a hobby, and he also likes examining things that may be overlooked. That said, he's very comfortably uncomfy in his bubble so it may take time to get to know him. Beware, as I'll flirt with musical/play/film references, he will do the same... But Doctor Who themed or Supernatural themed. I have read some of the things he's typed, and I have cringed.
I'm rather trash at introductions, so I guess I'll just list off some hobbies below
Swimming, archery, going to theme parks, playing guitar, gaming, cosplaying, acting, listening to music, researching things/learning new things.... Going to haunted houses, looking at snakes, etc.
My favourite colour is the barely-tacky red/brownish colour that blood dries to when it's almost dry. I'm not too sure how to describe it, but it isn't crimson. It's not brown either, it's like an in between. Favourite holiday is Halloween, my favoured song right now is honestly the whole of Epic The Musical. If I had to choose one, I'd probably go with The Music of the Night from The Phantom of the Opera. If we get together on VRChat or watch it as a movie somehow, I will sing along. No buts. The quietest I'll be is humming during the ending of the titular song since I haven't hit that note in forever. If we go to the theatre, though, I won't make a peep except for claps (especially for the technical team because they need all the love for that show) at appropriate times. My favourite movie genre is, of course, horror.
My favourite food is hard to choose, and my favourite play isn't Phantom. It's Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe. My favourite musical stage show is Phantom.
My ideal date would probably include the following, in no particular order. A stage show or movie, some time in some sort of interactive entertainment experience (think a theme park, haunted house, or interactive performance such as the Peaky Blinders interactive experience), and we'd likely squeeze in food somewhere along the way. Oh yeah, course you'd be there too. That was just a given so I thought about leaving it out.
I want someone who can match my energy, but isn't dead-set on a specific thing. Course, when all's said n done I'm a bit of a people pleaser so I'll bend over backwards to try to make things work. I live in North America, but my sleep schedule is very wonky.
If after all that info dumping you're lacking on conversation starters, there's a few ideas below 👇
Favourite playwright?
Favourite style of entertainment?
Favourite color?
What's your Hogwarts House? Your Camp Half-Blood cabin? (Slytherin. Apollo (not including the big 3 in the running) or Poseidon)
Would you rather spend a day inside your favourite video game or your favourite film? Why?
Favourite band?
And just to prove you've gotten this far, and aren't a bot, what's your favourite dinosaur? I'll start. I really like raptors and pterodons.
submitted by SquirelFeed to r4r [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 01:56 ZeroCentsMade Not Cricket – Black Orchid Review

This post is part of a series of reviews. To see them all, click here.
Historical information found on Shannon O'Sullivan's Doctor Who website (relevant page here and the TARDIS Wiki (relevant page here). Primary/secondary source material can be found in the source sections of O'Sullivan's website, and rarely as inline citations on the TARDIS Wiki.

Serial Information

Review

What's the matter, old girl, why this compulsion for planet Earth? – The Doctor
I started out my last review talking about how long it had been since we last saw a historical. And how the last time we had a historical, there were two in a row. And I'd love to start out this review in the same way, pointing out that we once again have two in a row, and I suppose I kind of have. But that feels dishonest.
Black Orchid leaves a bad taste in my mouth. It's perfectly well acted and directed, none of the dialogue is especially bad, there's some good jokes and a fun double act for Sarah Sutton to perform, but the whole thing feels just kind of cruel. The story has a kind of mean-spirited edge to it, in a way that just doesn't sit well with me. In episode 1 we meet a bunch of characters at a garden party. In episode 2 I learned to hate most of them.
Okay, now hang on a second. Why is this a problem? Not for the first time, I find myself wanting to reference the most recent Doctor Who episode to come out, at least at time of writing (the original draft of this was written about a week before posting). I praised "Dot and Bubble" for revealing that all but one of its secondary characters were awful people, I thought it saved the episode. But that episode could also be described as mean spirited. That episode could also be described as kind of cruel. What's the difference?
The difference is, of course, that "Dot and Bubble" has a point, and one beyond a facile "humans are the real monsters" commentary. Black Orchid feels like it's making me hate its characters by accident. I don't think writer Terence Dudley wanted his group of rich idiots to actually be rich idiots. I think it just sort of happened. I don't think he intended to be quite so nihilistic about human nature. I just think that, with only two episodes to work with some things got rushed – although for a two-parter this story is weirdly padded in places.
Oh and there's a hint of, maybe not racism exactly, but certainly uncriticized colonialist attitudes. Specifically in the story of George Cranleigh, British explorer of the Americas, who was mutilated for taking a sacred flower from an Brazilian tribe. Now this is a minor point, but it still stuck with me as the story being very reductionist in its own way – although also worth noting that George was rescued by a member of another tribe, Latoni, who befriended him and in spite of his unusual looking lip, is one of the few characters of this story to kind of get out without feeling like a bad person at some point. Even then though, due to George's trauma from the events and his tongue being cut out, he's extremely disturbed and his kept by Latoni and George's mother tied up to his bed.
And he escapes and murders a servant, who's basically just there as a victim to frame the Doctor for murder. Because why not?
Okay, let's take a step back. What's going on here?
This review isn't written like one of my typical posts, in large part because I'm not entirely sure I can review this story properly. A review is a collection of opinions on a given thing – in this case a television serial – and, more importantly, the reasons behind those opinions. I can tell you that I don't like Black Orchid. But I can't really tell you why I don't like Black Orchid. Looking at the above paragraphs, they're all accurate, but I don't think they fully explain my distaste for this story. And that's because the story just feels ugly in a way I can't fully put my finger on.
Like, when I start talking about its secondary cast being pretty awful people…are they really? I compared them to the secondary cast of "Dot and Bubble" up above, an entire town of vapid future racists. That feels excessive. And yet…it feels honest. They're not quite that bad of course, but I get the same genuinely unpleasant feeling from them in a way that I can't quite explain. It's emotional, and it's honest, but I don't think I can justify it. I'd love to tell you that the colonialist stuff is the reason but, come on, that's a tiny portion of the story. I'd like to say that how George's mother treats him, how Lord Cranleigh honestly creeped me out a bit, or how Ann turned on the Doctor and company so quickly, that these are the reasons but…no that doesn't feel right either. It's a feeling of genuine repulsion that I can't say is warranted, but it's there nonetheless.
Which is a shame because this story brings back a lot of old ideas that were worth bringing back. Black Orchid is the first "true" historical story since The Highlanders way back in Season 4. There's a fun little parallel with The Time Meddler, the show's first "pseudo-historical" as well. In that story, the idea of having science fiction elements in a story set in the past was the twist. Here, it's the reverse – the twist is that everything that happens is completely time-appropriate. And that's a twist that, under other circumstances, I could absolutely see myself enjoying.
Or how about a return of the doppleganger concept. Originally it used twice with the Doctor – once in a true historical and once in a story that was futuristic, but without aliens, it was more recently used with Romana. Here Sarah Sutton gets a chance to both play Nyssa and soon-to-be Cranleigh daughter in law Ann. Ann is honestly a bit insipid, and as mentioned above turns on the Doctor and his friends real quickly in part two, but Sutton seems to be having fun. The shame is, aside from a really fun sequence where Nyssa and Ann use their doppleganger status to confuse their friends, Nyssa doesn't really get any meaningful characterization out of this.
I will say that that dance sequence is the one part of this story I genuinely enjoyed. Nyssa and Ann playing off each other was fun. Tegan and Lord Cranleigh dancing felt off at times, but Tegan was fun during it. Adric ignoring the dancing for the food – a request from Matthew Waterhouse since he had, quoting the production team here "two left feet" – was a funny bit, one of the more likable moments from the character. And through it all, the Doctor is off investigating, even asking himself "Why do I always let my curiosity get the better of me?"
There's also a cricket sequence that felt a bit self-indulgent to me, to be honest. The whole thing of "The Doctor shows up and dominates a friendly game of cricket" just felt goofy. Although I liked it when the same thing was done with the 11th Doctor and soccer (sorry, football) in "The Lodger" so maybe this is another example of me not quite being able to put my finger on why something bugs me. Though I did like this as a moment where Tegan understood more than Adric and Nyssa for a change. The two younger companions are so much more academically intelligent than her, that it's fun seeing Tegan getting invested in this game that the two aliens are thuroughly baffled by.
Look, I'm aware that this review is lacking. I do not enjoy Black Orchid. It just feels like a very cruel story. It just leaves me with kind of a queasy feeling, and I'm not entirely sure why. It's definitely not one of the worst Doctor Who stories. It's absolutely got moments in it that I like. But the whole thing just feels off. So, I don't know, have a score out of ten, that should tie this all up in a bow or something.
Score: 3/10

Stray Observations

Next Time: We learn what killed the dinosaurs, and who else died in the conflagration.
submitted by ZeroCentsMade to gallifrey [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:49 jaydenholt70 1491 by Charles Mann Free Audiobook and Review

"1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus" by Charles C. Mann is a thought-provoking exploration of the Americas before the arrival of Christopher Columbus. Mann challenges conventional narratives about pre-Columbian societies, presenting evidence that indigenous civilizations were more populous, sophisticated, and environmentally impactful than previously believed. He discusses topics such as agriculture, urbanization, trade networks, and the impact of diseases on native populations. Mann's writing is well-researched and engaging, drawing on a wide range of archaeological and historical sources. While some scholars have raised questions about certain interpretations and generalizations, overall, "1491" is praised for its ambitious scope and its contribution to reshaping our understanding of pre-Columbian history.
Listen for free at link in sidebar
submitted by jaydenholt70 to Audiobooksharehere [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 18:18 arabbitfromrussia A report I made on the vocations crisis in the US last fall. I flew to Rome and submitted it to several dicasteries.

The Vocations Crisis
To understand what is going on with the vocations crisis, it is necessary to read “The Religious State” by Saint Alphonsus Liguori. In particular here are the most relevant quotes to our modern present-day circumstances:
It is worth noting that Saint Alphonsus lived in the Catholic confessional state of yore. This is certainly not the case with regards to the United States. But thanks to the heresy of Americanism, the Church in America by and large actually believes it does live in a Catholic confessional state and acts accordingly, apparently clueless as to what century they live in.
Self-Inflicted Wounds:
Failure to Enforce Catholic Teaching on Birth Control
One theme that comes through repeatedly in the writings of Saint Alphonsus is the deleterious effects of family on vocations. This in a time before birth control and when presumably there were other children not called to the religious state who could carry on the family name and line. When a family has 5+ children it really isn’t a blow to parental ambitions and familial concerns to have 1 or 2 children called to a religious vocation. When most everyone instead has birth controlled down to 1, 2, or 3 kids, suddenly this becomes a very big deal, the commensurate temptations are that much greater. In fact in these scenarios, it likely won’t even be on the table, discussed or considered by anyone as an option, especially in a Protestant/Darwinist/secular society that denigrates the priesthood and celibacy. So chalk up some of the attrition in vocations to parents pushing their children into the secular world and the lay state. And some of this attrition comes about unknowingly as parents do not really understand that what they are doing is in error, both in the usage of birth control and in unwittingly pushing their children into the world because “that’s just how things are done/how things are supposed to be”.
Turning People With Religious Vocational Callings Away Over Student Loan Debt
In other words, allowing the brazenly, transparently anti-Catholic US system of governance and student loan debt to paywall Holy Orders and religious life. How extensive is this problem? The Laboure Society, an organization which helps prospective seminarians and religious pay off their student loan debt, deals with dioceses and religious orders across the United States. They say that 42% of all people showing interest in pursuing that calling to the religious life are turned away on account of student loan debt and even those who overcome this obstacle sometimes delay vocations by as much as 10 years. I personally called this organization to check that this was still the case, which they confirmed to me that it was. The primary reason for this state of affairs (besides the increasingly demonic US Government making student loan debt unforgivable in bankruptcy some decades back while aiding and abetting the creation of a rigged Lockean credentialism that consigned people to poverty or riches on the basis of a piece of paper) is the acceptance of Catholics in religious orders and vocations offices around the country of the legitimacy of the debt in the first place. They have, as noted Catholic intellectual E. Michael Jones has mentioned, “a pagan understanding of debt”, in other words, you accepted the usurer’s contract under immense social and material duress, and possibly while ignorant of the mechanics of interest and it’s attendant consequences, so now you are morally obligated and bound to fulfill this contract and if you don’t it’s a sin. Pacta Sunt Servanda. If a Catholic marriage were performed under these circumstances, it would be grounds for annulment.
On the website of the Laboure Society, a video is featured with the former vocations director of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia(2013-2021) where he says that without the Laboure Society he would “have to” turn away people until they paid down their debts which he acknowledges might be a 10 or 20 year process. In reality, none of these people “have to” turn people away over unjust debt, they just choose to because of faulty moral reasoning where they accept as givens the immoral premises given to them by the US Government and attendant US financial system. In reality there really is nothing that Uncle Sam can do if the religious orders in particular just go on a debt strike and refuse to pay off their unjust debts. They won’t be collecting a paycheck ever again anyways. Rather than taking point on this issue, the religious orders are actually the most compliant and obedient to the unjust demands of the US government, with most requiring entrants to be totally debt free. They are probably responsible for over half of those financially originated priesthood rejections and certainly when it comes to women’s vocations must be responsible for the lion’s share.
Ultimately, the mental colonization and spiritual corruption of the parties involved in this fiasco is stunning. The fact that the people responsible for nurturing the clergy and religious of the future have accepted unthinkingly the terms and conditions of a transparently unjust and manifestly uncharitable system is a scandal. The lives of people God wishes to be consecrated to Himself, are absolutely not something that “Caesar” is due. Apparently they did not even think of other ways to deal with the problem than simply rejecting people until they find a way to pay the loans off. They could have at minimum sought help from other parts of the Catholic world both within and without the country. People skip the country and renounce their citizenship to escape student loan debts for their own secular purposes, showing more gumption in pursuit of their worldly ends than Catholics in the US do for building the City of God and doing His Will. The subject of student loan strikes is totally within the realm of proper application of occult compensation, likely something that the average Catholic clergyman or professed religious hasn’t any clue of. This once again is a topic that Saint Alphonsus Liguori waded into with the light of moral clarity. A good rundown is available for free from the University of Chicago: https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/intejethi.4.3.2375170
Clearly, Catholic leadership of all stripes, especially those involved with vocations, could stand to give this topic a good read.
This topic is grave, and if the Church in the United States of America was a parent or individual described in Saint Alphonsus’s “The Religious State” behaving as the American Church has, they would deserve to be condemned for systemically thwarting the Will of God. While religious orders are a big part of the problem, so too are some of the dioceses. To find out which dioceses were part of this problem, I spent the better part of two weeks canvassing by phone the various dioceses in the US, giving them my story as a prospective seminarian with about the amount of student loan debt that the Laboure Society states is the average amount that they help seminarians deal with, which I actually have outstanding in fact. I was looking to find out if the diocese was turning prospective priests away for having student loan debt and if so, for what dollar amount were they handing persona Christi over to the Sanhedrin. Here are my findings:
In Need of Correction
These dioceses are part of the problem.
The Archdiocese of Los Angeles
This is both the largest Archdiocese in the entire country as well as being the worst diocesan level offender on student loan debt. The vocations director admitted to me that they turn people away if their student loan debt is more than 10-15k saying it reflects poorly on their character. While other dioceses also put dollar amounts on prospective vocations, none set the dollar amount as low as the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
The Diocese of Stockton
Stockton is similar to Los Angeles, except the limit is 20k and the rationale is “taking responsibility for what you owe”.
The Archdiocese of Atlanta
Admits to turning away seminarians until they “pay most or all of it off”, the office manager didn’t have the exact cutoff number as director was on retreat.
The Archdiocese of Minneapolis-St. Paul
The limit is 40k although they are also encouraged to pay off 100% of their balances before entering the seminary. The vocations director seems kind-hearted but operating from invincible ignorance. He states that it hasn’t been an obstacle to anyone who “was serious” about their vocation.
The Archdiocese of Chicago
The vocations director uses strong indirect language to dissuade applicants without “directly” rejecting them, told story of “very impressive” seminary applicant but when finding out about this persons 250k outstanding balance told this person “I’m just trying to be realistic, you have a long road ahead of you” leading of course to this person “taking the hint” and finding other more worthwhile things to the Holy American System of Usury than joining the priesthood. This vocations director has drank the kool-aid.
The Diocese of Cleveland
The vocations director is another word-gamer similar to Chicago but admits that he strongly encourages people to pay down what they owe, leading to people heading back into the world to do that, and then many not returning. States that the prospective seminarians are on their own to pay down this debt and that the diocese does not help them with that at all or cooperate with organizations like the Laboure Society. Like Chicago, likes to use the word “realistic” overmuch. Pagan understanding of debt.
The Diocese of San Diego
Director of the Office of Priestly Formation stated that they do turn people away and emphasized repeatedly the necessity of having “a plan and the means” of repayment, effectively paywalling the priesthood. He also stated that the diocese does not help seminarians or priests pay down their debts because it’s “not just for the diocese to take that on”. I can’t say I’m surprised to see a problem with Americanism in San Diego, owing to the overweening US Military presence.
The Diocese of Arlington
The debt limit is 45k or you are turned away. Likely a similar issue as San Diego with overwhelming US Government presence.
The Diocese of Columbus
At about the 6-figure amount, they start to turn people away on the financial basis.
The Diocese of Fresno
The vocations director took to playing word games saying it is an issue and intimates that there is a “too much” number while also saying it isn’t the first consideration of discernment and tried to redirect the conversation. Pagan understanding of debt.
The Diocese of Orlando
The vocations office administrator was hostile to me. After some verbal wrangling I got, “I can neither confirm nor deny if we have ever rejected seminarians over student loan debt” as an answer. Unsurprisingly, I was unable to reach the vocations director during repeated callbacks.
Several other Dioceses and Archdioceses had also clearly spent 20-30 years turning people away over student loan debt, and basically only recently changed when they got a younger vocations director.
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2024.06.08 15:27 Dhylan Thomas Mahnken, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies professor and CEO of Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments: the USA is “currently involved in two wars: Ukraine in Europe and Israel in the Middle East”, is “facing the prospect of a third over Taiwan or South Korea.”

Is a “Three-Theater” war scenario both feasible and desirable for the US? Some think so. American analysts within the Establishment are in fact calling for war “in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.” This is what Thomas G. Mahnken (both a Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies professor and the CEO of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments) is urging Washington to do, in his most recent piece.
For Mahnken, Washington is “currently involved in two wars—Ukraine’s in Europe and Israel’s in the Middle East”, while also “facing the prospect of a third over Taiwan or South Korea in East Asia.” Moreover, “all three theaters are vital to US interests, and they are all intertwined.” Deprioritizing Europe and disengaging from the Middle East can only weaken American security, he argues: “The U.S. military drawdown in the Middle East, for instance, has created a vacuum that Tehran has filled eagerly.” Of course, such reasoning can only make sense if American “security” is equated with Washington’s unipolarity.
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, during his recent speech at Shangri-la Dialogue (in Singapore), made it a point to stress that “despite historic clashes in Europe and the Middle East… the Indo-Pacific has remained our priority theater of operations.” According to Austin, the US is a Pacific nation (with a capital P, and with no pun intended, presumably), and added that “the US can be secure only if Asia is secure. That’s why… [we have] long maintained our presence in this region. And that’s why we continue to make the investments necessary to meet our commitments to our allies and partners.” As for the relationship with China, the Secretary was more ambiguous, claiming that “a fight with China is neither imminent nor unavoidable.”
While Lloyd Austin seems to differ from Mahnken (on emphasis), there is not necessarily a dilemma there. I’ve often described Washington’s ambitions as being all about having the cake and eating it too. Jerry Hendrix (retired Navy captain, formerly an adviser to Pentagon senior officials, and currently a senior fellow with the Sagamore Institute) has written that, in Mackinder terms (classic Geopolitics), the US has embarked on a quest for the “Heartland”, and this contradicts its true “sea power” nature. This is so because Washington, in recent times, has been “burdened” by mostly “land-based actions in Iraq and Afghanistan fought primarily by a large standing army operating far from home”.
Rather than doing that, Hendrix urges the Atlantic superpower to, once again, “think and act like a seapower state”, that is, with a focus on deriving its might from “seaborne trade”, employing “instruments of sea power” to advance its interests. The expert describes the post-World War II period as an exceptional “free sea” period, marked by a “secure environment” which has supposedly allowed free trade to flourish in a globalized planet – this being the rather gleeful manner in which he describes the US-led world order, in spite of the fact that Washington has always weaponized protectionism.
In any case, as Hendrix notes, the American superpower acts both as a “continental power” and as a “sea power”. I’ve described its foreign policy as resembling the swing of a pendulum. Give or take, all Great Powers engage to some extent in proxy conflicts amid their geoeconomic and geopolitical disputes with other powers. In terms of regional disputes, whether one likes or not Moscow’s foreign policy today, one can at least concede that historically Russia and neighboring Ukraine have an intertwined and complicated shared history, and the same applies to China-Taiwan relations. But America is something quite different. To keep things in perspective, one should keep in mind, for example, that, amazingly, the only place in the entire world China has an overseas military base is Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa. In contrast, depending on how one counts it, Washington, in 2015, had about 800 military bases in over 70 countries.
Moreover, the US has in fact invaded 84 out of the 194 nation-states recognized by the United Nations, and has been militarily involved with no less than 191 of those, according to Christopher Kelly and Stuart Laycock, the authors of “America Invades: How We’ve Invaded or been Militarily Involved with almost Every Country on Earth”. The hard truth is that the United States of America is the only nation today (and arguably ever) to potentially engage in warfare across three continents – a scenario, keep in mind, that is cheered by prominent mainstream American commentators and scholars.
Other analysts, such as Andrea Rizzi, writing for El Pais, have described the possibility of war fronts in the Middle East, Europe and the Asia-Pacific becoming connected as a “nightmare” scenario – although not so convincingly, in Rizzi’s case, who seems to believe the political West has necessarily something to do with “democracy”, a historically controversial premise to say the least. Rizzi, however, makes the very valid point that “in geopolitics — and in life — high-stress situations lead to a greater margin for unforeseen events, errors in calculation and communication, uncontrolled actions by minority factions and escalations that are unintended, at least by the key players.” Even the main actors have an interest in keeping stability, at some point someone (or one’s proxies) may indeed make “a daring movie”, in Rizzi’s words, and thus bring about an escalation and unpredictable outcomes.
A series of Ukrainian and Western actions arguably represented precisely such a red-line crossing, in Moscow’s perspective. While some worry about the same thing happening in the Pacific, thus inadvertently igniting yet another war, others call for and crave for precisely such a war – not just in the Indo-Pacific region, but also in Europe and the Middle East, simultaneously. It is hard to describe such a call in any way other than as a will to set the world on fire – after all, one cannot literally desire war between Great Powers in three continents and not expect everything else that often comes with it (call it apocalypse in disguise, if you will).
Unbelievably, such bellicose calls, rather than being confined to the hate speech of extreme and fringe individuals and organizations, pass as reasonable and mainstream discourse, produced as it is, by respectable experts with impeccable credentials. And, mind you, Foreign Affairs will even publish it. It is no wonder: Washington foreign policy itself is, after all, largely built on the premise of American unipolarity and global war if need be.
submitted by Dhylan to conspiracy [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 11:37 garageboxnick73 Review: 6 Years with CrossFit Linchpin at age 51

Disclosure: I am a paying member of CrossFit Linchpin and not paid or endorsed in anyway to write this review.
Crash course on my background: a non-athlete for the majority of my 51+ years on the planet. In my late 20s, I got sucked into the running community and over 17 years, I racked up 61 finishes of a marathon or longer… 32 ultras plus 29 marathons to include 3 x 100 mile finishes in 2009. Enter CrossFit on 11/4/2014 when I was invited to my first CrossFit class. The rest is history, as they say. Growing up, I did one season of track and nothing else and being on active duty in the Navy in the 90s didn’t require any real level of fitness. Prior to that first CrossFit class in 2014, I had never touched a barbell. I had a “great” pear shape of a running body. Long strong legs and the ability to run for hours upon hours but no strength up top. CrossFit changed it all and it was intoxicating. I cold-turkey quit running races and fully leaned into CrossFit. After two CrossFit gyms, my wife and I drove to Rogue Fitness in Columbus, OH after the CrossFit Open in the Spring of 2016 and loaded up our SUV full of gear to “open” our garage gym. For the next two years, I scoured the interwebs for workouts and injected as much variance as possible on my own, occasionally creating my own. We also built a 3rd “car” garage that became our CrossFit gym…and has never had a car in it. One of those programs I used occasionally was Pat Sherwood’s CrossFit Linchpin.
On May 8, 2018, I decided to join Linchpin. I kept doing searches for his brick-n-mortar gym and found nothing yet he was and is listed as a CrossFit affiliate. Turns out, Pat lives in Washington state and programs for his members and works out alone or with his wife, Emily, in their garage. It was really that simple. The subscription was (and remains) dirt cheap so I figured there was no danger in giving it a go. 6+ years later, I have never left and for as long as Pat continues programming, I have no plans to!
Pat has very much created his own path when it comes to style and approach to programming. There are a LOT of programs out there from Street Parking to Mayhem Athlete and countless others. Many programs cater to both the garage athlete and CrossFit “boxes” or gyms. In many CrossFit gyms, the “normal” one hour class includes a brief warmup, a strength component and some kind of WOD (workout of the day). Because classes are on a schedule, members will often find themselves rushed through the strength part. CrossFit Linchpin runs counter to that approach. A common phrase heard is “Respect the Heavy Days.” When we lift heavy, that is ALL we do. We properly warm up, give the lifts the respect they deserve, and go home. Pat also encourages athletes to do workouts “not for time” some days and lately, has been not suggesting but rather directing “for quality” vs. “for time.” It is common to see these on days where there are more complex movements and this provides the opportunity to focus on the movements and getting better at them. But don’t get me wrong… we light the fire quite often! It is normal to light the fuse with intensity about 2 out of 5 workouts a week. Two days (Thursdays and Sundays) are programmed rest days. If you dig back to what CrossFit truly is, it is constantly varied movements that are performed at a (relative) high intensity. “Varied” does NOT mean “random” at Linchpin. In fact, I would consider Pat more of a mad scientist of sorts. He looks at large blocks of time and ensures that the variance is VERY intentional. From going short vs. long, below parallel, overhead, light vs. heavy, and the list goes on and on. There is an incredible amount of focus that he gives to the programming and it is anything BUT random. In fact, Pat wrote a digital book on programming and offers it for free on his site.
One of my favorite things about Linchpin is how we live the quote “Lift Heavy Run Fast.” Just this week, we had 10 x 100m sprints. What brick-n-mortar boxes program that?! Just two days prior, we had a heavy day full of squat cleans and thrusters. One of my favorite workouts is Linchpin Test #5. 20 Back Squats (225/155), 2mi run, 20 Back Squats.
My reason for showing up in my garage every day is simple: care for my body in such a way that it fosters living a full and healthy life with my wife that I’ve been married to for 31+ years … for as long as possible. That includes being able to get out of a chair unassisted, to carry 2 x 40lb bags of salt down to the basement softener for years to come and to be able to react quickly in a crisis to help her or even a random stranger. I do not want to become a sedentary statistic. Our country is obese, on lists of medication and the majority truly does not take care of themselves. I seek to run against this and be an example of someone who was never an athlete, is physically built pretty darn wonky and will put on the pounds just by looking at food, yet remains fit, SHOWS UP every day and takes care of the body given to me.
But hold up! Pat doesn’t just program things into an app. He doesn’t promote another huge component of CrossFit Linchpin much but here it is: EDUCATION. He refers to this as increasing our “Fitness IQ.” What if you could walk into the garage every day, look at the prescribed workout, then make proper decisions for YOU on how to approach it? Choices like how much weight or what implements to even how much intensity to bring… Pat educates every single day and the cumulative effect of this over days and weeks and months and now over 6 years for me, is quite powerful. To look at a workout, acknowledge what the intent of it is, then making educated decisions on how to best retain the intended stimulus to meet the athlete where they are is KING. Some days I don’t want to touch a barbell so I lean on those dumbbells. Other days, my sandbags call and I bring them out to play. Some times here in NE Ohio in the middle of winter, there is a foot of snow on the ground but “Nancy” is programmed which has 400m runs in it. Do I bike? Ski? Row? No matter what life deals us at CrossFit Linchpin, we are equipped to handle it. Stress, sickness, lack of sleep, anxiety, little kids scurrying about… LIFE HAPPENS but FITNESS needs to happen, too. Pat has taught me how to navigate these waters called LIFE to come out on the other side stronger, fitter, and older by the day.
Case-in-point, I had knee surgery on my right knee in April 2023. I had a meniscus tear that appeared during 10x100m sprints in Aruba a few months earlier. 17+ years of distance running finally caught up to me! For me, I cannot miss days in the garage. Even if I’m sick, I go and modify it but I still show up. So as I recovered from this surgery, I continued showing up daily in the garage, even the DAY AFTER SURGERY. For that day, all I did was sit on the Echo Bike and very gently, move through full range of motion just to encourage blood and oxygen flow. As the days and weeks progressed, I would listen to my body and modify workouts to what I could do, smartly. I recall duing box squats at one point under a light load on a day where heavy back squats were prescribed. When running came up, I opted for one of the machines. The point is: my fitness IQ is high and I was able to keep showing up and modifying the daily workouts to meet me where I was in my life and recovery from knee surgery. I ended up recovering fully and today have zero limitations of any kind.
Here’s what you get for $18/mo or $90 for 6 months ($15/mo):
Here’s what you get that you don’t pay for:
If you want to check out CrossFit Linchpin, Pat offers a 30 day free trial. You’ll get full access to the btwb app as well as the closed FB group. Give it a shot! There is a welcome video from Pat and his wife, Emily, here and tons of information about Linchpin and it’s foundational principles.
If you have any questions at all, you can reach out to Pat at [info@crossfitlinchpin.com](mailto:info@crossfitlinchpin.com). If you have a question for me, it’s probably easiest to look me up on Instagram at garageboxnick and send me a DM.
Our Garage Gym Tour
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2024.06.08 04:22 BooshCrafter Comprehensive Bushcraft Reading List

A list of some of the books that I found beneficial to improve my bushcraft skills. In some order.
The 10 Bushcraft Books – Richard Harry Graves
Bushcraft – Mors Kochanski
Outdoor Survival Skills – Larry Dean Olsen
Primitive Technology: A Book of Earth Skills – David Wescott
Primitive Technology II: Ancestral Skill - From the Society of Primitive Technology – David Wescott
Camping in the Old Style – David Wescott
Essential Bushcraft – Raymond Mears
Primitive Technology – John Plant
The Trapper’s Bible – Eustace Hazard Livingston
First Person Ecology – Tim Smith
The Woods Cook: Outdoor Cooking With A Professional Guide – Tim Smith
98.6 Degrees: The Art of Keeping Your Ass Alive – Cody Lundin
Earth Knack: Stone Age Skills for the 21st Century Kindle Edition – Bart Blankenship
United States Air Force Search and Rescue Survival Training: Af Regulation 64-4 – U.S. Department of the Air Force
The Book Of Camping And Woodcraft – Horace Kephart
The Complete Woodsman – Paul Provencher
Camp Life in the Woods and the Tips and Tricks of Trapping: How to Build a Shelter, Start a Fire, Set Traps, Capture Animals, and More – William Hamilton Gibson
Ashley Book of Knots – Clifford W. Ashley
The Klutz Book of Knots – John Cassidy
Outward Bound Ropes, Knots, and Hitches – Buck Tilton
Wildwood Wisdom – Elsworth Jaeger
Camp-Lore and Woodcraft – Daniel Beard
Shelter’s, Shacks, and Shanties: A Guide to Building Shelters in the Wilderness – Daniel Beard
How to Stay Alive in the Woods: A Complete Guide to Food, Shelter, and Self-Preservation – Bradford Angier
Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants – Bradford Angier
A Comprehensive Guide to Wilderness & Travel Medicine – Eric A. Weiss M.D.
Wilderness Medicine – Paul S. Auerbach
Wilderness First Responder – Buck Tilton
68W Advanced Field Craft: Combat Medic Skills – AAOS
Traditional Bowyer's Handbook: How to build wooden bows and arrows: longbows, selfbows, & recurves – Clay Hayes
Traditional Bowyer’s Bible Volumes 1-4 – J. Hamm
Primitive Skills and Crafts: An Outdoorsman's Guide to Shelters, Tools, Weapons, Tracking, Survival, and More – Richard and Linda Jamison
Survival Skills of the Native Americans: Hunting, Trapping, Woodwork, and More – Stephen Brennan
Making Native American Hunting, Fighting, and Survival Tools: The Complete Guide to Creating Arrowheads, Axes, and Other Primitive Implements – Monte Burch
Crafts And Skills of the Native Americans: Tipis, Canoes, Jewelry, Moccasins, and More – David R. Montgomery
Native American Crafts And Skills: A Fully Illustrated Guide to Wilderness Living and Survival – David Montgomery
Insects: An Edible Field Guide – Stefan Gates
The Complete Guide to Edible Plants – The Department of the Army
Edible Wild Plants and Useful Herbs – Falcon Guides
Foraging Wild Edible Plants of North America – Falcon Guides
Flintknapping: Making and Understanding Stone Tools – John C. Whittaker
Flintknapping: A Guide to Making Your Own Stone Age Tool Kit – Robert Turner
Firearms, Traps, and Tools of the Mountain Men – Carl P. Russell
Bush Leatherwork – Ron Edwards
SAS Survival Handbook, Third Edition: The Ultimate Guide to Surviving Anywhere – Lofty Wiseman
SAS Tracking Handbook – Barry Davies
The Science and Art of Tracking – Tom Brown Jr.
Tracks and Trailcraft: A Fully Illustrated Guide To The Identification Of Animal Tracks In Forest And Field, Barnyard And Backyard – Ellsworth Jaeger
A Field Guide to Mammal Tracking in North American – James Halfpenny
The Amateur Trapper – Stanley Harding
The Science of Trapping: Old-Time Lessons on Catching Animals for Fur – Elmer Harry Kreps
Primitive Outdoor Skills – Richard L. Jamison
The Ultimate Guide to Survival Shelters – Tim Macwelch
The Complete Survival Shelter Handbook – Anthonio Akkermans
The Pocket Field Guide: Survival Tarp Shelters – Creek Stewart
Woodcraft: Master the Art of Green Woodworking with Key Technologies and Inspiring Projects – Barn The Spoon
Bushcraft Spoon Carving – Leigh Robinson
Bushcraft Kuksa Carving – Leigh Robinson
Bushcraft Bow Drill Bible – Leigh Robinson
Guide to Making Fire Without Matches – Christopher Nyerges
Fire Making – Daniel Hume
Making Fire In The Wild – Louella Bath
Building the Perfect Fire – Miles Tanner
Simple Shelters – Jonathan Horning
We Are Nature – Raymond Mears
The Art of Whittling – Walter L. Faurot
50 Things to Do with a Penknife – Matt Collins
Pencil, Paper, and Stars: The Handbook of Traditional & Emergency Navigation – Alastair Buchan
Make Your Own Traditional Fishing Tackle – Paul Duffield
The Beginner’s Guide to Traditional Archery – Brian J. Sorrells
Be Expert With Map & Compass – Bjorn Kjellstrom
Finding Your Way Without Map or Compass – Harold Gatty
Collins Ultimate Navigation Manual – Lyle Brotherton
Wilderness Navigation Handbook – Fred Touche
The Practical Guide to Celestial Navigation – Phil Somerville
The Natural Navigator – Tristan Gooley
The Lost Art of Reading Nature’s Signs – Tristan Gooley
Reading Weather – The Field Guide to Forecasting the Weather
Basic Illustrated Weather Forecasting – Falcon Field Guide
Weather Forecasting Made Simple – Stan Yorke
submitted by BooshCrafter to advancedbushcraft [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 03:45 OrganizationFalse668 [WTS] silver and gold down at the atomic wrangler! 777

Shipping and Payment
USPS priority box /envelope $10
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“ Risky “ 1st class 🫧 envelope non-machinable $2 -
I take Zelle , Venmo , Cash App and PayPal
No notes ! emoji okay
I also accept Mailed Cash and trades for gold, goldbacks , maybe platinum and palladium.
I make excellent packages but after I drop it off its the responsibility of USPS.
Date proof:
https://imgur.com/a/E1jvRYK
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1990 silver kookaburra $50
2009 koala $40
2010 koala $40
2014 koala $38
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Proof
https://imgur.com/a/OOmnl7r
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https://imgur.com/a/dvaAwhv
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$90
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Donald Duck $45
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1 oz proof ablum
https://imgur.com/a/tYA9NDZ
Silver $1 commemorative
Capsule only
Baseball $1 proof $27
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D-day $1 bu $27
Wright brothers $1 $27
Capsule proof:
https://imgur.com/a/9sCzhiP
In original mint packaging 📷
1993 WW2 2 coin set $1 - $33
1996 national community service proof $28
1996 Smithsonian $1 proof $28
1998 Robert f Kennedy $1 proof - $35
1999 Yellow stone national park $28
2003 wright brothers first flight $1 proof - $28
2006 San Francisco old Mint $1 proof $28
Benjamin Franklin founding father proof $28 Comm proof:
https://imgur.com/a/iaF31xI
Silver Dollars 💵
1883 o $100
Nicer 1921 Morgan in cap $33
1926 D peace dollar $29
1887 $1 - $70
1921 Morgan plastic flip $35
1886 $1 $70
Proof:
https://imgur.com/a/fBk2WiY
1921 Morgan MS $60
1896 Morgan $65
1885 Morgan $90
1878 CC $1 $170
1897 $1 $85
1890 O $1 $80
1921 MS $60
Open to offers on multiple morgans.
Proof;
https://imgur.com/a/jJbdBJa
Fallout New Vegas
Lucky 38 1oz silver “ platinum chip “ $45
Vintage 1977 Coca-Cola 1oz silver bar
Nashville TN $65
Norfolk Va $65
Atlanta $65
Contemporary Coca-Cola 1oz silver bar $40
Contemporary Coca-Cola 1oz silver round $34
Coca-Cola Christmas 2019 Fiji Santa Clause 1oz - $50 🎅
Fiji 🇫🇯 1oz coca-cola bottle cap $149 📷
10k gold coca-cola pin 📌 $150 📷 tx
7.5 oz 1:1 scale .999 silver derringer - $400 ⭐️
3oz M4 carbine 🐆 $170
1oz army man $90
Sunshine 1oz $140
Cyborg 1oz $140
Art cola Proof ;
https://imgur.com/a/mlUyEQZ
HALF DOLLARS and more 💵
1822 Bust half dollar $60
1825 bust half dollar $55
1876 seated half $40
Proof
https://imgur.com/a/PhO1Bhq
SETS 📺 📷
Dimes of the 20th century $5
Bill of rights silver 50c young collector set
$14
Jewelry 💍
Check back soon
Rarities 🦜 📷
1/4 oz art bar gilded Halloween $35
1/4 oz art bar gilded Pug $35
I don’t know where I put these.
COPPER 📣
Copper Cannabis Leaf 🍁 Round $1.50
2023 year of the Dragon 🐉 copper round $1.50
Lincoln Wheat Cent 1oz COPPER $1.50
Copper proof;
https://imgur.com/a/b6dcW1Y
🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 GOLD 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
30 count - 1 GoldBack $5 each - free ihp with purchase and ground shipping limit 4 ihp .
https://imgur.com/a/JBEAJ4j
Bank of America 10k pendant with seed pearls , I think it’s 3.6 grams. $095
Bank of America 10k pin 📌 no pearls, $60
📷
Fractional silver
1 gram silver in card or loose $2
📷 https://imgur.com/a/x4CsSMR
CANADA SILVER 🇨🇦 🍁
Canada 1955 50c $20 📷
Canada $1 1987 proof $20 📷
Superman $20 silver $25
Batman vs Superman Canada $20 silver coin $29
Star trek 2016 silver $20 coin. $35
2016 Canada $20 silver T-Rex $25
2014 Canada $20 Snowman $22 2014 Canada $20 silver summer swimming coin $22
Canada proof
https://imgur.com/a/bUSuicI
Bank bag assortment :
Futurama Shut up and take my money 1oz - $45
vintage coke bar 1oz $55
https://imgur.com/a/q8pR7c3
USPS priority box /envelope $10
USPS 1st class $6 up to 7 oz
Risky envelope shipping $2
I take Zelle and Venmo Cash App and Mailed Cash and small gold or 1 goldbacks @4 each
I make excellent packages but after I drop it off it is the responsibility of USPS
Don’t give me or anyone your password or sensitive information beyond what is required to complete the transaction. Mods will never ask.
Please read Safety guide:
https://imgur.com/a/I2Dz45q
Proof:
https://imgur.com/a/E1jvRYK
submitted by OrganizationFalse668 to CoinSales [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 03:44 OrganizationFalse668 [WTS] silver and gold at the wrangler! 777

Shipping and Payment
USPS priority box /envelope $10
USPS 1st class $6 up to 7 oz
“ Risky “ 1st class 🫧 envelope non-machinable $2 -
I take Zelle , Venmo , Cash App and PayPal
No notes ! emoji okay
I also accept Mailed Cash and trades for gold, goldbacks , maybe platinum and palladium.
I make excellent packages but after I drop it off it’s the responsibility of USPS.
Palladium 1 gram bars $46
Date proof:
https://imgur.com/a/E1jvRYK
1990 1oz panda 🇨🇳 $70
2003 panda 1oz 🇨🇳 $70
2003 panda 1oz 🇨🇳 $70
2005 panda 1oz 🇨🇳 $45
2008 panda 1oz 🇨🇳 $45
2011 panda 1oz 🇨🇳 $41
1990 silver kookaburra $50
2009 koala $40
2010 koala $40
2014 koala $38
Panda and koala
Proof
https://imgur.com/a/OOmnl7r
50 40% half dollars at spot
$4.33 each $216 all
40% photo
https://imgur.com/a/dvaAwhv
1899 barber quarter $40
1873 seated dime $25
Photo
https://imgur.com/a/PcKRowk
Head or Tails nude 1oz silver round $70
$1 fv 50c 90% $22
$99 3 oz lot
.999 and 1 oz - $99
SILVER COINS AND ROUNDS 🕰️
Star Wars beskar bar 1oz $40
1oz silver 5 mark Germania “ witchcraft “ - $60
Homer Simpson 2019 donut $70
Simpson family Christmas $60
1oz silver Superman Samoa 🇼🇸 $5 coin $34
Spider-Man 1oz $38
2021 Wonder Woman 1oz $70
Batman 1oz $55
Scarface movie 🍿 .999 1 oz $40
🥤 Coca-Cola 1 oz silver round 1 oz $32
Grogu Star Wars 1oz silver $32
🇺🇸 Army 1 oz silver bar $35
Bar 1
Bar 2 digital camouflage
Street fighter chun lee 1oz 🇯🇵 - $3a
Wolverine 1oz 🇨🇦 $45
The Godfather 1oz silver $40
Silver Bart Simpson 1 oz $60 🛹
2023 Homer Simpson carded 1 oz $60 📷
SWAMP THING 1oz colorized- $50 📷
2024 silver shield 1oz silver cannabis round $40
ET 🪐 Niue 1oz 2 dollar movie poster bar $40
Beavis and butthead 🔥 🧻 1 oz silver
$90
Intaglio Mint 1oz “ the 4 seasons “ nude art 🖼️ round $60
Donald Duck $45
1oz Silver Camel Cigarettes Joe Camel 🐪 - $60
Vintage Disneys snow White doc 1 oz $40
1 oz proof ablum
https://imgur.com/a/tYA9NDZ
Silver $1 commemorative
Capsule only
Baseball $1 proof $27
Lewis and Clark proof $27
1992 Columbus $1 - $27
D-day $1 bu $27
Wright brothers $1 $27
Capsule proof:
https://imgur.com/a/9sCzhiP
In original mint packaging 📷
1993 WW2 2 coin set $1 - $33
1996 national community service proof $28
1996 Smithsonian $1 proof $28
1998 Robert f Kennedy $1 proof - $35
1999 Yellow stone national park $28
2003 wright brothers first flight $1 proof - $28
2006 San Francisco old Mint $1 proof $28
Benjamin Franklin founding father proof $28 Comm proof:
https://imgur.com/a/iaF31xI
Silver Dollars 💵
1883 o $100
Nicer 1921 Morgan in cap $33
1926 D peace dollar $29
1887 $1 - $70
1921 Morgan plastic flip $35
1886 $1 $70
Proof:
https://imgur.com/a/fBk2WiY
1921 Morgan MS $60
1896 Morgan $65
1885 Morgan $90
1878 CC $1 $170
1897 $1 $85
1890 O $1 $80
1921 MS $60
Open to offers on multiple morgans.
Proof;
https://imgur.com/a/jJbdBJa
Fallout New Vegas
Lucky 38 1oz silver “ platinum chip “ $45
Vintage 1977 Coca-Cola 1oz silver bar
Nashville TN $65
Norfolk Va $65
Atlanta $65
Contemporary Coca-Cola 1oz silver bar $40
Contemporary Coca-Cola 1oz silver round $34
Coca-Cola Christmas 2019 Fiji Santa Clause 1oz - $50 🎅
Fiji 🇫🇯 1oz coca-cola bottle cap $149 📷
10k gold coca-cola pin 📌 $150 📷 tx
7.5 oz 1:1 scale .999 silver derringer - $400 ⭐️
3oz M4 carbine 🐆 $170
1oz army man $90
Sunshine 1oz $140
Cyborg 1oz $140
Art cola Proof ;
https://imgur.com/a/mlUyEQZ
HALF DOLLARS and more 💵
1822 Bust half dollar $60
1825 bust half dollar $55
1876 seated half $40
Proof
https://imgur.com/a/PhO1Bhq
SETS 📺 📷
Dimes of the 20th century $5
Bill of rights silver 50c young collector set
$14
Jewelry 💍
Check back soon
Rarities 🦜 📷
1/4 oz art bar gilded Halloween $35
1/4 oz art bar gilded Pug $35
I don’t know where I put these.
COPPER 📣
Copper Cannabis Leaf 🍁 Round $1.50
2023 year of the Dragon 🐉 copper round $1.50
Lincoln Wheat Cent 1oz COPPER $1.50
Copper proof;
https://imgur.com/a/b6dcW1Y
🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 GOLD 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
30 count - 1 GoldBack $5 each - free ihp with purchase and ground shipping limit 4 ihp .
https://imgur.com/a/JBEAJ4j
Bank of America 10k pendant with seed pearls , I think it’s 3.6 grams. $095
Bank of America 10k pin 📌 no pearls, $60
📷
Fractional silver
1 gram silver in card or loose $2
📷 https://imgur.com/a/x4CsSMR
CANADA SILVER 🇨🇦 🍁
Canada 1955 50c $20 📷
Canada $1 1987 proof $20 📷
Superman $20 silver $25
Batman vs Superman Canada $20 silver coin $29
Star trek 2016 silver $20 coin. $35
2016 Canada $20 silver T-Rex $25
2014 Canada $20 Snowman $22 2014 Canada $20 silver summer swimming coin $22
Canada proof
https://imgur.com/a/bUSuicI
Bank bag assortment :
Futurama Shut up and take my money 1oz - $45
vintage coke bar 1oz $55
https://imgur.com/a/q8pR7c3
USPS priority box /envelope $10
USPS 1st class $6 up to 7 oz
Risky envelope shipping $2
I take Zelle and Venmo Cash App and Mailed Cash and small gold or 1 goldbacks @4 each
I make excellent packages but after I drop it off it is the responsibility of USPS
Don’t give me or anyone your password or sensitive information beyond what is required to complete the transaction. Mods will never ask.
Please read Safety guide:
https://imgur.com/a/I2Dz45q
Proof:
https://imgur.com/a/E1jvRYK
submitted by OrganizationFalse668 to Pmsforsale [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 23:03 real_life_groot i am speed

i am speed submitted by real_life_groot to eu4 [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 18:11 saumikn Why St. Louis should not build the Green Line

Why St. Louis should not build the Green Line
Note: This post was copy-pasted from my blog, but I’ve put the full text (minus images) here so it’s easier to engage with. I wrote this so it's more general about light rail, but this post was directly inspired by the St. Louis North-South Metrolink (i.e. Green Line), since I think it's a really bad use case for light rail and I want to advocate against its construction. Most of the examples I reference in the article come from St. Louis, when possible.
If you're not interested in the general bus/light rail debate and only care about the relevancy to St. Louis, I essentially want our city to create something like this 100 mile BRT network instead, which will cost about half the price of the 5.6 mile Green Line and be exponentially more useful to all St. Louis residents.

Introduction

Light rail (or LRT) is a type of transit which uses street-running, at-grade trains to transport passengers. It’s been seeing a growing surge of interest in American cities over the last few decades, and politicians across the country are proposing light rail as a solution to their cities’ transit challenges. The reason is that light rail is seen as a technology which can improve a city’s transportation network at a fraction of the cost of heavy rail (i.e. subways or elevated rail).
However, I strongly feel that we should not be pursuing the construction of new light rail (and the related mode of streetcars) systems in America. The simple reason for this is cost - new light rail lines cost anywhere between $100 million to $200 million per mile to construct. As an example, the proposed 5.6 mile St. Louis Green Line) is projected to cost $1.1 billion.
This high price tag isn’t inherently a bad thing. There have been many expensive projects over history which were well worth the cost. The problem with light rail specifically is that we get almost no value back from its construction. For transit riders, there are almost no benefits to a light rail line over a simple bus line, and in a lot of respects, light rail is even worse for riders. And for cities as a whole, light rail does lead to some improvements and increased development, but at a scale which is very out of line with its high cost.
Instead of light rail or streetcars, I propose that transit agencies invest heavily in a different mode of transit - “Light BRT”. If you haven’t heard of this term before, it’s because I invented it for the purposes of this article, as there is no single widespread term which characterizes this mode. I’m personally hoping that the phrase Light BRT catches on, as it’s a very convenient nomenclature to describe these existing transit lines and in a way which is easily distinguishable from the more traditional Gold-Standard or Heavy BRT.
So what is Light BRT? Essentially, Light BRT is a type of city bus which includes many infrastructure upgrades to increase the speed and reliability of the bus line. While not every light BRT line has all of these features, in general, light BRT lines are characterized by the following:
  • Wider stop spacing: Light BRT buses have stops every 1/4 to 1/2 miles, rather than the 1/8 to 1/4 mile stop spacing of regular city buses. This reduces the amount of time the bus spends at stops.
  • High frequency: Light BRT lines come frequently, ideally at least every 10 minutes. This reduces passenger waiting time.
  • Signal priority: Light BRT buses have technology which integrates with city traffic lights. This reduces the amount of time the bus is waiting at a red light.
  • Off-board fare collection: Instead of the bus operator collecting fares for each passenger, passengers pay at the station itself, and fares are validated using a proof-of-payment system. This reduces the amount of time the bus spends at stops.
  • Bus lanes: Light BRT may operate either entirely or partially in dedicated transit lanes. This increases bus travel speeds while in motion.
  • Larger buses: Light BRT takes advantage of larger buses with many doors, such as articulated or bi-articulated buses. This increases the capacity of the system and reduces the amount of time the bus spends at stops.
Each of these improvements leads to a much nicer transit experience for passengers, directly leading to faster trips and higher ridership. For example, in Minneapolis, the D Line launched in late 2022, where they implemented most of the above features on the existing #5 local bus. The D Line was a huge success, well beyond anyone’s expectations. In the first month alone, ridership on the D Line increased 50% when compared with the previous city bus. And by the end of the first year, ridership had nearly doubled! As of early 2024, the D Line has a ridership of over 13,000 daily riders, a number which is actually higher than many light rail systems, and this number is projected to hit 23,000 riders by 2030.
And the best part? This line was incredibly cheap. The 18 mile D Line cost about $75 million in total to construct, for an average cost of about $4 million per mile. Compared to light rail, which can cost $200 million per mile, light BRT is a steal. Or in other words, for the same cost it would take to build a 5 mile LRT line, we could build over 200 miles of light BRT, leading to a much better transit network for an entire city.
As a side note, I want to contrast Light BRT with the more traditional form of BRT (which I’ll denote as “Heavy BRT”) which features very prominently in the transit systems of many international cities like Istanbul, Jakarta, and Bogota. Heavy BRT is also growing in popularity in the US in cities like Albuquerque, Richmond, and Cleveland. It is characterized by a dedicated concrete guideway which separates the bus from car traffic, and often features center running operations. There is a wide range of intensity of BRT operations (hence the need for the BRT Standard rubric). But in general, heavy BRT can cost anywhere between $8 million to $50 million per mile to construct, with the lower end of this spectrum mostly resembling light BRT.
In the rest of this post, I hope to make a convincing argument on why we should stop building new light rail and streetcar lines, and instead transition to prioritizing light BRT. First, I will give a brief overview on the various forms of transit so that we have a common set of definitions to work off of. Next, I will provide an objective set of differences between light rail and light BRT, going over the benefits and drawbacks of each mode for both transit riders and non-riders. Finally, I will give my personal opinions on each of these differences, and why I believe that we should not pursue light rail in America.
In many of the examples and discussions, I will specifically reference the example of the proposed St. Louis Green Line LRT, since it’s one I’m more familiar with and I think it’s an example of an egregiously bad light rail line. But my comments are generally applicable to any new light rail or streetcar line in the US.

Overview of Transit Modes

In this section, I’ll give a brief overview of the various types of transit modes which are built with rail and buses.

Types of Rail

  • Heavy Rail: This is the highest capacity and most expensive transit mode, consisting of long train sets operating in an entirely grade-separated right-of-way. Examples include the New York Subway or the Chicago L.
  • Light Rail: This is a lower capacity mode and less expensive than heavy rail. LRT systems are mostly not grade-separated, but run alongside street corridors, usually operating in a dedicated lane outside mixed traffic. Examples of light rail are the Minneapolis Light Rail or the San Diego Trolley.
  • Heavy+Light Rail: As a side note, there are many LRT systems which are very close to heavy rail but are still considered light rail. In these systems, where the vast majority of the system is grade-separated and operates like heavy rail, but there are still a few at-grade crossings. Examples of this are the Seattle Link or the St. Louis MetroLink.
  • Streetcars: In America, the distinction between LRT and streetcars is very fuzzy, but in general, streetcars usually refer to at-grade trains which run in mixed traffic, and are essentially treated like a city bus on rails instead of tires. Examples of streetcars include the Portland Streetcar or the Kansas City Streetcar.

Types of Buses

  • "Heavy" BRT: Heavy BRT aims to replicate heavy or light rail with buses as much as possible, with dedicated concrete guideways separated from mixed traffic and rail-like stations. Examples of heavy BRT include the Albuquerque ART or the Cleveland HealthLine.
  • "Light" BRT: Light BRT can be thought of as an upgraded city bus, with features like transit signal priority, optimized stop spacing, and off-board fare collection. Examples of light BRT include the Minneapolis aBRT, the New York SBS, or the Seattle RapidRide.
  • City Buses: This is the standard mode bus which operates in every major city, operating in mixed traffic without any extra features to improve transit operations. It’s possible for buses to use special propulsion technology like electric engines with batteries, or elevated wires (i.e. trolleybuses).

Light Rail vs Light BRT

Next, I will go over the differences between light rail and light BRT. Because there are a lot of differences, I’m going to organize my thoughts into two sections. First, I will discuss the difference between modes in terms of the experiences that actual riders on the system will encounter. Second, I will discuss the difference between modes for everybody else - how it affects non-riders, government officials, citizens, etc. In both of these sections, I’ll describe what makes LRT better than light BRT, and vice versa, and I will do my best to make these sections as objective as possible.
Before I begin, I would like to acknowledge that many of these thoughts come from my reading on transit modes and systems around the country. In particular, Jarrett Walker’s post on Rail-Bus Differences was a very useful starting point for this post. Also, I'd like to acknowledge the discussions I’ve had with other transit enthusiasts for pointing out things I've missed (shout-out St. Louis Urbanists!)

Differences for Transit Riders

How Light Rail is better than Light BRT

  • Overall Capacity: This is the biggest, most-cited reason why light rail is better than light BRT. Most common LRT vehicles have a carrying capacity of 200 to 300 passengers per car and can be connected in sets of two or three cars. Assuming a maximum of 2 minute frequency, this gives us a potential capacity of 27k passengers per hour per direction (PPHPD). On the other hand, the largest bi-articulated buses can carry 300 passengers at most. With no ability to combine buses together, this means a maximum capacity of 9k PPHPD.
  • Bike/Wheelchair Capacity: On a related note, LRT can carry not only more passengers, but more large mobility aids like bikes, wheelchairs, or strollers. A single bus can only really hold 3 bikes on the front racks, while the interiors of LRT can be arranged to accommodate more bikes. The extra space on LRT also allows for more space for wheelchairs, strollers, scooters, and other types of mobility devices, or even just large items in general like suitcases or furniture.
  • Ride Smoothness: Because LRT is on metal rails, it is more smooth while accelerating, decelerating, and driving. This can be mitigated for buses by ensuring the street is well-paved and using bulb stations so that buses don't have to switch lanes every other block, but some intrinsic difference remains.

How Light Rail is equal to Light BRT

  • Speed: Overall, the speed of buses and trains on city streets are approximately the same. I've seen some claims that buses are slightly faster at accelerating/decelerating, but most of the speed differences are due to the infrastructure supporting the transit, not the vehicles themselves. If both modes have dedicated lanes, signal priority, equal stop spacing, and off-board fare collection, they will both be roughly the same speed.
  • System Legibility: For new riders who have never taken transit, learning how to take the train is generally easier to learn how to take the bus. However, with enough effort, transit operators can make buses just as legible. Well-designed maps can highlight BRT routes, and bright, continuous, red-painted lanes make it equally easy to understand the direction of a bus and a physical rail line.

How Light Rail is worse than Light BRT

  • Operating Costs: The data shows that LRT generally has higher operating costs than buses. According to analysis by Christopher MacKechnie in 2020, in America, buses have an hourly operating cost of $122, while LRT has an hourly operating cost of costs $233 per hour. What this means for riders is that transit operators can afford to run more buses than trains under a fixed operating budget. As an example, if an agency is planning to run an LRT with 15 minute frequency, they could afford to run a bus with 8 minute frequency for the same cost, providing a much more useful service.
  • Dealing with Obstacles: Because LRT is on rails, there is essentially no way for it to maneuver around obstacles or go in places where there is no rail. This is most obviously a problem if there is an accident or the rails are blocked by e.g. a parked car. But even more importantly, this is a long-term issue that can prevent full service. For example, the 2022 St. Louis floods damaged the light rail signal box at one station, causing all trains to be plagued with single-tracking and slow speeds for nearly two years! If this were a BRT, the bus could just pick an alternate road to go around without harming operations.
  • Fewer Transfers: Because LRT is limited to rails, it makes it much more difficult to extend a route once it’s created. This forces passengers from outside to the immediate vicinity of the rails to transfer from a bus. For example, in St. Louis, we currently have the #4 and #11 buses which go from the edge of the city to downtown. But when the Green Line is built, these passengers will mostly likely be forced to get off the bus and transfer to the new LRT, and then transfer again to get to downtown. On the other hand, in an open BRT system, buses can easily be extended to continue past the end of the line, reducing transfers for customers.
  • Ease of Expansion: On a related note, the high costs of construction can make it difficult to ever expand an LRT system in the future. In St. Louis, there have been plans floating to extend the Green Line north, to cover the rest of the #4 bus route. But just this week, a new report suggested that this extension might not be politically feasible. And there is essentially no discussion at all about a potential southern expansion to cover the rest of the #11’s route. On the other hand, light BRT coverage is much easier to expand, since the base road network already exists.

Differences for non-Transit Riders

How Light Rail is better than Light BRT

  • Energy Efficiency: Trains are more energy efficient than buses, because of the gains of efficiency by using rails. This difference is reduced to some degree if you consider the energy usage of a three-car light rail vs a single bus, but overall, trains are more efficient on a per-passenger basis. Unfortunately, I can’t actually find hard numbers on how much energy exactly is being saved.
  • Maintenance: Trains require less maintenance than buses, and an electric train car will last longer than an electric bus. Additionally, trains cause less damage to roads, so you don’t have to maintain the steel rails as often as you do with the concrete pavement.
  • Development: An investment of hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars into LRT signifies a huge commitment that a government has towards improving that corridor. As a result, new train lines tend to lead to more private development surrounding the stations than new bus lines. However, the magnitude of this effect is quite unclear. For instance, a report from the St. Louis Fed concluded, “The general consensus from the academic literature and the findings presented in this report is that light rail is not a catalyst for economic development, but rather light rail can help guide economic development.”
  • Rail Bias: Possibly as a result of the above intrinsic differences mentioned, because of differences in actual implementation, or some unknown psychological difference, people tend to prefer trains over an equally useful bus. This leads to both higher ridership, and more prestige for a region (e.g. “We’re not a real city until we have a few train lines”)

How Light Rail is worse than Light BRT

  • Construction Cost: This is the biggest reason that Light BRT is better than Light Rail. In America, Light Rail tends to cost $100M-200M per mile to construct (e.g. the proposed St. Louis Green Line will cost $196M per mile for the 5.6 mile route). On the other hand, Light BRT costs maybe $5M per mile (e.g. the recently built Minneapolis D Line cost $75M for an 18 mile route).

Conclusion

Finally, I will conclude this article with some of my opinions on the facts described above, going over each of the major differences between Light Rail and Light BRT.

Why LRT is not better than Light BRT

The biggest factor in favor of LRT, capacity, is not a relevant distinction for essentially any new project, as light BRT has enough capacity to operate most LRT routes. For example, the proposed Green Line LRT in St. Louis has a projected daily ridership of 5k. A hypothetical light BRT could carry nearly 9k passengers every hour, well above the needed capacity. I actually couldn’t find a single example of a light rail system in the entire United States which needs the capacity of light rail and couldn’t get by with buses. If somebody has a counterexample in the comments, I’d love to see it.
One thing to note is that the ongoing driver shortage might change this math. For example, one could imagine a corridor where an LRT with 15-minute frequency has enough capacity but a bus with 15-minute frequency doesn’t. My two comments about this is that (1) If the driver shortage is such a big deal that it’s limiting frequency, that should definitely be the priority for where to spend money, and (2) If you’re only running 15-minute headways, then this is not exactly a corridor that needs significant transit investment in the first place.
Another note is that buses generally have enough capacity for day to day operations, but occasional large events like sports games or concerts might overrun this capacity. I would suggest in these cases to run special express buses on these days to transport passengers, rather than overbuilding rail capacity for most of the year.
I ride my bike and take it onto transit often, so I understand the appeal of bringing your bike on board to a light rail. But in reality, if our goal is to help urban cyclists, we would be much better off actually building protected bike lanes for a fraction of the cost of light rail. Alternatively, if St. Louis had an effective bus network, I wouldn’t even need to take my bike onto trains; I could just use the bus system to make connections!
Every other factor for transit riders actually favors light BRT over light rail. The smoothness of trains is nice, and makes it easier to read or work or relax while on it. But if I had to decide between a smooth LRT with 15-minute frequency and a less smooth light BRT with 8-minute frequency, I would definitely prefer the light BRT. And then when you consider that LRT usually leads to additional transfers for riders (usually to buses anyways), this only makes light BRT more attractive.
In terms of non-transit factors, I agree that rail leads to more development than buses. But if development is really our goal, we have much more effective and targeted methods for actually inducing development. For example, we could subsidize private development through upzoning and tax abatements or even take the money to build public development directly.
The factor of permanence is easily overcome - you could simply take the $200 million per mile which would have been used to construct the LRT and put it in a trust which can legally only be spent on transit operations in this corridor. The consideration of maintenance and efficiency also goes away based on LRT cost, as the interest alone from saved construction costs could be used to pay for maintenance and green energy technology many times over.

What should we do instead of Light Rail?

I’ve spent this entire post talking about reasons we shouldn’t build light rail. So what should we do instead? The short answer: it depends entirely on your priorities and why you even want to build light rail in the first place. If you’re going to spend $1.1 billion on a light rail line (as St. Louis has proposed to do), here are some things you could do with it instead:
Transit: If your priority is to help transit riders, you would be much better off by building Light BRT instead, for 1/40th of the cost. (i.e. for every mile of LRT you build, you could afford to build 40 miles of Light BRT). The above image is an quick example of what a potential 100 mile Light BRT system could look like in St. Louis. It would cost $400 million to build, instead of the $1 billion, 5 mile Green Line. You could then take the remaining $600 million to place in a trust fund for guaranteeing high frequency service along all these routes for years to come.
If you consider federal matching as part of your calculation, it’s roughly the case that the FTA will cover 80% of the cost of new light rail projects, and 50% of the cost of bus projects. For St. Louis specifically, both the 5.6 mile Green Line and my proposed 100 mile light BRT network would both cost $200 million in local funding, with the federal government picking up the rest of the costs. I would definitely argue that the 100 mile BRT network provides a much higher value for $200 million than the 5 mile train line.
Long-Term Savings: If your goal is to reduce long term costs on street maintenance with LRT, you could instead take the $1 billion and put it in a fund to gain interest. The $40M you would get every year would be enough to quintuple current city street maintenance (we currently spend about $9M every year across the entire city).
Environmental Impact: I don’t have any numbers to back this up, but I imagine that the difference in emissions between an electric LRV and electric bus is not that high to begin with. On the other hand, you could just take the $1 billion and give a free 3kW solar system to every single household in the city, which would save many orders of magnitude more emissions.
Development: If your priority is to spur development, you should just take the $1 billion and use it to directly incentivize new construction. This could be done with tax abatements, paid-for without hurting school budgets. A very back-of-the-napkin estimate is that if $10 million is enough to cover this abatement, then $1.1 billion would be enough to pay for almost $16 billion in new development projects, 32,000 new housing units and 165,000 sqft of commercial space. For some context, in the last 10 years (2014-2023), St. Louis gained only gained 7,034 new housing units total. I haven’t seen any direct numbers as to how much development is expected from the Green Line, but I would expect this amount is far less than $16 billion, considering the state of the literature on LRT development referenced above. As a specific example, the Wellston station in St. Louis has been open for more than 20 years and still borders a huge undeveloped plot of grass.
Bus Network Externalities: Some may object to my previous two recommendations of using the money to build solar panels and create tax abatements, rather than building transit, since funding sources are often not transferable like this, and rail funding might only be usable for transit projects. In these cases, I would still suggest building a large 100 mile light BRT transit network instead of a 5 mile light rail line. While I don’t have numbers to support this, I would strongly expect that this 100 mile network would lead to more emission reductions and more economic development than the 5 mile LRT line.

Takeaway

In my opinion, when you consider all of the differences, there is really no reason why we should be building Light Rail or Streetcars anywhere in America. For transit riders, light BRT provides an arguably more useful service than LRT, at a fraction of the cost. For non transit-riders, LRT does have some positive effects, but in an incredibly cost-inefficient manner.
I’m sure this post has some very controversial opinions. If you disagree with me, and think I’m missing some broader point about LRT, feel free to let me know in the comments. I’m especially interested in actual case studies where the capacity of LRT was necessary over light BRT, or where LRT demonstrably led to increased development.
submitted by saumikn to StLouis [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 17:54 saumikn Why America should not build Light Rail

Note: This post was copy-pasted from my blog, but I’ve put the full text (minus images) here so it’s easier to engage with and meets the urbanplanning posting rules.

Introduction

Light rail (or LRT) is a type of transit which uses street-running, at-grade trains to transport passengers. It’s been seeing a growing surge of interest in American cities over the last few decades, and politicians across the country are proposing light rail as a solution to their cities’ transit challenges. The reason is that light rail is seen as a technology which can improve a city’s transportation network at a fraction of the cost of heavy rail (i.e. subways or elevated rail).
However, I strongly feel that we should not be pursuing the construction of new light rail (and the related mode of streetcars) systems in America. The simple reason for this is cost - new light rail lines cost anywhere between $100 million to $200 million per mile to construct. As an example, the proposed 5.6 mile St. Louis Green Line) is projected to cost $1.1 billion.
This high price tag isn’t inherently a bad thing. There have been many expensive projects over history which were well worth the cost. The problem with light rail specifically is that we get almost no value back from its construction. For transit riders, there are almost no benefits to a light rail line over a simple bus line, and in a lot of respects, light rail is even worse for riders. And for cities as a whole, light rail does lead to some improvements and increased development, but at a scale which is very out of line with its high cost.
Instead of light rail or streetcars, I propose that transit agencies invest heavily in a different mode of transit - “Light BRT”. If you haven’t heard of this term before, it’s because I invented it for the purposes of this article, as there is no single widespread term which characterizes this mode. I’m personally hoping that the phrase Light BRT catches on, as it’s a very convenient nomenclature to describe these existing transit lines and in a way which is easily distinguishable from the more traditional Gold-Standard or Heavy BRT.
So what is Light BRT? Essentially, Light BRT is a type of city bus which includes many infrastructure upgrades to increase the speed and reliability of the bus line. While not every light BRT line has all of these features, in general, light BRT lines are characterized by the following:
Each of these improvements leads to a much nicer transit experience for passengers, directly leading to faster trips and higher ridership. For example, in Minneapolis, the D Line launched in late 2022, where they implemented most of the above features on the existing #5 local bus. The D Line was a huge success, well beyond anyone’s expectations. In the first month alone, ridership on the D Line increased 50% when compared with the previous city bus. And by the end of the first year, ridership had nearly doubled! As of early 2024, the D Line has a ridership of over 13,000 daily riders, a number which is actually higher than many light rail systems, and this number is projected to hit 23,000 riders by 2030.
And the best part? This line was incredibly cheap. The 18 mile D Line cost about $75 million in total to construct, for an average cost of about $4 million per mile. Compared to light rail, which can cost $200 million per mile, light BRT is a steal. Or in other words, for the same cost it would take to build a 5 mile LRT line, we could build over 200 miles of light BRT, leading to a much better transit network for an entire city.
As a side note, I want to contrast Light BRT with the more traditional form of BRT (which I’ll denote as “Heavy BRT”) which features very prominently in the transit systems of many international cities like Istanbul, Jakarta, and Bogota. Heavy BRT is also growing in popularity in the US in cities like Albuquerque, Richmond, and Cleveland. It is characterized by a dedicated concrete guideway which separates the bus from car traffic, and often features center running operations. There is a wide range of intensity of BRT operations (hence the need for the BRT Standard rubric). But in general, heavy BRT can cost anywhere between $8 million to $50 million per mile to construct, with the lower end of this spectrum mostly resembling light BRT.
In the rest of this post, I hope to make a convincing argument on why we should stop building new light rail and streetcar lines, and instead transition to prioritizing light BRT. First, I will give a brief overview on the various forms of transit so that we have a common set of definitions to work off of. Next, I will provide an objective set of differences between light rail and light BRT, going over the benefits and drawbacks of each mode for both transit riders and non-riders. Finally, I will give my personal opinions on each of these differences, and why I believe that we should not pursue light rail in America.
In many of the examples and discussions, I will specifically reference the example of the proposed St. Louis Green Line LRT, since it’s one I’m more familiar with and I think it’s an example of an egregiously bad light rail line. But my comments are generally applicable to any new light rail or streetcar line in the US.

Overview of Transit Modes

In this section, I’ll give a brief overview of the various types of transit modes which are built with rail and buses.

Types of Rail

Types of Buses

Light Rail vs Light BRT

Next, I will go over the differences between light rail and light BRT. Because there are a lot of differences, I’m going to organize my thoughts into two sections. First, I will discuss the difference between modes in terms of the experiences that actual riders on the system will encounter. Second, I will discuss the difference between modes for everybody else - how it affects non-riders, government officials, citizens, etc. In both of these sections, I’ll describe what makes LRT better than light BRT, and vice versa, and I will do my best to make these sections as objective as possible.
Before I begin, I would like to acknowledge that many of these thoughts come from my reading on transit modes and systems around the country. In particular, Jarrett Walker’s post on Rail-Bus Differences was a very useful starting point for this post. Also, I'd like to acknowledge the discussions I’ve had with other transit enthusiasts for pointing out things I've missed (shout-out St. Louis Urbanists!)

Differences for Transit Riders

How Light Rail is better than Light BRT

How Light Rail is equal to Light BRT

How Light Rail is worse than Light BRT

Differences for non-Transit Riders

How Light Rail is better than Light BRT

How Light Rail is worse than Light BRT

Conclusion

Finally, I will conclude this article with some of my opinions on the facts described above, going over each of the major differences between Light Rail and Light BRT.

Why LRT is not better than Light BRT

The biggest factor in favor of LRT, capacity, is not a relevant distinction for essentially any new project, as light BRT has enough capacity to operate most LRT routes. For example, the proposed Green Line LRT in St. Louis has a projected daily ridership of 5k. A hypothetical light BRT could carry nearly 9k passengers every hour, well above the needed capacity. I actually couldn’t find a single example of a light rail system in the entire United States which needs the capacity of light rail and couldn’t get by with buses. If somebody has a counterexample in the comments, I’d love to see it.
One thing to note is that the ongoing driver shortage might change this math. For example, one could imagine a corridor where an LRT with 15-minute frequency has enough capacity but a bus with 15-minute frequency doesn’t. My two comments about this is that (1) If the driver shortage is such a big deal that it’s limiting frequency, that should definitely be the priority for where to spend money, and (2) If you’re only running 15-minute headways, then this is not exactly a corridor that needs significant transit investment in the first place.
Another note is that buses generally have enough capacity for day to day operations, but occasional large events like sports games or concerts might overrun this capacity. I would suggest in these cases to run special express buses on these days to transport passengers, rather than overbuilding rail capacity for most of the year.
I ride my bike and take it onto transit often, so I understand the appeal of bringing your bike on board to a light rail. But in reality, if our goal is to help urban cyclists, we would be much better off actually building protected bike lanes for a fraction of the cost of light rail. Alternatively, if St. Louis had an effective bus network, I wouldn’t even need to take my bike onto trains; I could just use the bus system to make connections!
Every other factor for transit riders actually favors light BRT over light rail. The smoothness of trains is nice, and makes it easier to read or work or relax while on it. But if I had to decide between a smooth LRT with 15-minute frequency and a less smooth light BRT with 8-minute frequency, I would definitely prefer the light BRT. And then when you consider that LRT usually leads to additional transfers for riders (usually to buses anyways), this only makes light BRT more attractive.
In terms of non-transit factors, I agree that rail leads to more development than buses. But if development is really our goal, we have much more effective and targeted methods for actually inducing development. For example, we could subsidize private development through upzoning and tax abatements or even take the money to build public development directly.
The factor of permanence is easily overcome - you could simply take the $200 million per mile which would have been used to construct the LRT and put it in a trust which can legally only be spent on transit operations in this corridor. The consideration of maintenance and efficiency also goes away based on LRT cost, as the interest alone from saved construction costs could be used to pay for maintenance and green energy technology many times over.

What should we do instead of Light Rail?

I’ve spent this entire post talking about reasons we shouldn’t build light rail. So what should we do instead? The short answer: it depends entirely on your priorities and why you even want to build light rail in the first place. If you’re going to spend $1.1 billion on a light rail line (as St. Louis has proposed to do), here are some things you could do with it instead:
Transit: If your priority is to help transit riders, you would be much better off by building Light BRT instead, for 1/40th of the cost. (i.e. for every mile of LRT you build, you could afford to build 40 miles of Light BRT). The above image is an quick example of what a potential 100 mile Light BRT system could look like in St. Louis. It would cost $400 million to build, instead of the $1 billion, 5 mile Green Line. You could then take the remaining $600 million to place in a trust fund for guaranteeing high frequency service along all these routes for years to come.
If you consider federal matching as part of your calculation, it’s roughly the case that the FTA will cover 80% of the cost of new light rail projects, and 50% of the cost of bus projects. For St. Louis specifically, both the 5.6 mile Green Line and my proposed 100 mile light BRT network would both cost $200 million in local funding, with the federal government picking up the rest of the costs. I would definitely argue that the 100 mile BRT network provides a much higher value for $200 million than the 5 mile train line.
Long-Term Savings: If your goal is to reduce long term costs on street maintenance with LRT, you could instead take the $1 billion and put it in a fund to gain interest. The $40M you would get every year would be enough to quintuple current city street maintenance (we currently spend about $9M every year across the entire city).
Environmental Impact: I don’t have any numbers to back this up, but I imagine that the difference in emissions between an electric LRV and electric bus is not that high to begin with. On the other hand, you could just take the $1 billion and give a free 3kW solar system to every single household in the city, which would save many orders of magnitude more emissions.
Development: If your priority is to spur development, you should just take the $1 billion and use it to directly incentivize new construction. This could be done with tax abatements, paid-for without hurting school budgets. A very back-of-the-napkin estimate is that if $10 million is enough to cover this abatement, then $1.1 billion would be enough to pay for almost $16 billion in new development projects, 32,000 new housing units and 165,000 sqft of commercial space. For some context, in the last 10 years (2014-2023), St. Louis gained only gained 7,034 new housing units total. I haven’t seen any direct numbers as to how much development is expected from the Green Line, but I would expect this amount is far less than $16 billion, considering the state of the literature on LRT development referenced above. As a specific example, the Wellston station in St. Louis has been open for more than 20 years and still borders a huge undeveloped plot of grass.
Bus Network Externalities: Some may object to my previous two recommendations of using the money to build solar panels and create tax abatements, rather than building transit, since funding sources are often not transferable like this, and rail funding might only be usable for transit projects. In these cases, I would still suggest building a large 100 mile light BRT transit network instead of a 5 mile light rail line. While I don’t have numbers to support this, I would strongly expect that this 100 mile network would lead to more emission reductions and more economic development than the 5 mile LRT line.

Takeaway

In my opinion, when you consider all of the differences, there is really no reason why we should be building Light Rail or Streetcars anywhere in America. For transit riders, light BRT provides an arguably more useful service than LRT, at a fraction of the cost. For non transit-riders, LRT does have some positive effects, but in an incredibly cost-inefficient manner.
I’m sure this post has some very controversial opinions. If you disagree with me, and think I’m missing some broader point about LRT, feel free to let me know in the comments. I’m especially interested in actual case studies where the capacity of LRT was necessary over light BRT, or where LRT demonstrably led to increased development.
submitted by saumikn to urbanplanning [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 16:07 MPearsonUK CW 20th Birthday Party

CW 20th Birthday Party
Last nights anniversary celebration for 20 years of ‘Christopher Ward’ was nothing short of amazing.
Around 200 guests which consisted of CW team members from England and Switzerland (plus one from America) aswell specially invited VIPs who have been a part of the brands very special story joined Mike France and Peter Ellis onboard the Silver Sturgeon which is a beautiful 61m river yacht and we took a special trip through London on the Thames.
Christopher Ward was conceptualized on a (much smaller) boat by Chris, Mike and Peter all those years ago and so it was the perfect venue to have a party!
We travelled past all of Londons grandeur and beauty and the weather was absolutely amazing.
We were treated to great food and drink but it was made even better by the mix of people who were onboard. Our partners from Everton and Team Brit were there, a few important voices in the blogging and vlogging world came along and so were the loyal members of our Forum aswell as the collectors who love to share their passion for CW on various Facebook/online groups.
The conversations were so varied because of the mix of personalities and I loved hearing their reasons about why and how they loved the brand like they do and so as Mike and Peter addressed the crowd, it felt like an important moment in our history as we look towards an exciting future.
I feel very proud to be a part of this company, especially as we continue to grow in North America … I don’t think there will be a boat trip through Dallas in our future but we will definitely raise a glass together in the coming months and years!
Happy Birthday Christopher Ward and Congrats to everyone who has been a part of its story…so far…
Mike
submitted by MPearsonUK to ChristopherWard [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 15:13 RedChipCompanies Soligenix and Sharps Technology Interviews to Air on the RedChip Small Stocks, Big Money(TM) Show on Bloomberg TV

ORLANDO, FL / ACCESSWIRE / June 7, 2024 / RedChip Companies will air interviews with Soligenix, Inc. (Nasdaq:SNGX) and Sharps Technology Inc. (Nasdaq:STSS) on the RedChip Small Stocks, Big Money™ show, a sponsored program on Bloomberg TV, this Saturday, June 8, at 7 p.m. Eastern Time (ET). Bloomberg TV is available in an estimated 73 million homes across the U.S.
Access the interviews in their entirety at:
In an exclusive interview, Christopher J. Schaber, PhD, President and Chief Executive Officer of Soligenix, appears on the RedChip Small Stocks Big Money™ show on Bloomberg TV to provide a corporate update. Soligenix, a late-stage biopharmaceutical company, showcases a strong portfolio with several products in advanced clinical stages, targeting a potential $2 billion in annual global sales. Notable among these is HyBryte™, a photodynamic therapy for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL), a rare chronic cancer, which has demonstrated positive results in a Phase 3 study published in JAMA Dermatology. The company is gearing up for a follow-up confirmatory Phase 3 study, with HyBryte's market potential estimated at $250 million. Additional promising assets include SGX302, aimed at treating psoriasis, currently in Phase 2a trials with a market potential exceeding $1 billion, and SGX203 for pediatric Crohn's disease, pending further funding for Phase 3 trials.
Robert Hayes, Chief Executive Officer of Sharps Technology, appears on the RedChip Small Stocks, Big Money™ show on Bloomberg TV to provide a corporate update. Sharps Technology recently signed a $200 million five-year Sales Agreement and enhanced its Asset Purchase Agreement to acquire Nephron Pharmaceuticals' InjectEZ facility. This acquisition will position Sharps as North America's first fully dedicated specialized polymer prefillable syringe manufacturer. The facility, set to begin product deliveries in Q2 2025, is expected to generate over $35 million in revenue in the first 12 months, with the potential to exceed $50 million by 2026 and $100 million by 2028. Recent FDA recalls and tariffs on Chinese syringes have boosted demand for Sharps' products, which are increasingly preferred over glass syringes. Sharps is engaging with major pharmaceutical companies, retail chains, and healthcare distributors to expand its market presence. With a clear path to substantial revenue growth and profitability, alongside a buy rating and $16 per share price target from Aegis Capital, Sharps represents a compelling opportunity.
About Soligenix, Inc.
Soligenix is a late-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing products to treat rare diseases where there is an unmet medical need. Our Specialized BioTherapeutics business segment is developing and moving toward potential commercialization of HyBryte (SGX301 or synthetic hypericin sodium) as a novel photodynamic therapy utilizing safe visible light for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). With successful completion of the second Phase 3 study, regulatory approvals will be sought to support potential commercialization worldwide. Development programs in this business segment also include expansion of synthetic hypericin (SGX302) into psoriasis, our first-in-class innate defense regulator (IDR) technology, dusquetide (SGX942) for the treatment of inflammatory diseases, including oral mucositis in head and neck cancer, and (SGX945) in Behçet's Disease.
Our Public Health Solutions business segment includes development programs for RiVax®, our ricin toxin vaccine candidate, as well as our vaccine programs targeting filoviruses (such as Marburg and Ebola) and CiVax, our vaccine candidate for the prevention of COVID-19 (caused by SARS-CoV-2). The development of our vaccine programs incorporates the use of our proprietary heat stabilization platform technology, known as ThermoVax®. To date, this business segment has been supported with government grant and contract funding from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA).
For further information regarding Soligenix, Inc., please visit the Company's website at https://www.soligenix.com and follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter at u/Soligenix_Inc.
About Sharps Technology
Sharps Technology is an innovative medical device and pharmaceutical packaging company offering patented, best-in-class smart-safety syringe products to the healthcare industry. The Company's product lines focus on providing ultra-low waste capabilities, that incorporate syringe technologies that use both passive and active safety features. Sharps also offers products that are designed with specialized copolymer technology to support the prefillable syringe market segment. The Company has a manufacturing facility in Hungary and has partnered with Nephron Pharmaceuticals to expand its manufacturing capacity in the U.S. For additional information, please visit www.sharpstechnology.com.
About RedChip Companies
RedChip Companies, an Inc. 5000 company, is an international investor relations, media, and research firm focused on microcap and small-cap companies. For 32 years, RedChip has delivered concrete, measurable results for its clients. Our newsletter, Small Stocks, Big Money™, is delivered online weekly to 60,000 investors. RedChip has developed the most comprehensive service platform in the industry for microcap and small-cap companies. These services include the following: a worldwide distribution network for its stock research; retail and institutional roadshows in major U.S. cities; outbound marketing to stock brokers, RIAs, institutions, and family offices; a digital media investor relations platform that has generated millions of unique investor views; investor webinars and group calls; a television show, Small Stocks, Big Money™, which airs weekly on Bloomberg US; TV commercials in local and national markets; corporate and product videos; website design; and traditional investor relation services, which include press release writing, development of investor presentations, quarterly conference call script writing, strategic consulting, capital raising, and more.
To learn more about RedChip's products and services, please visit: https://www.redchip.com/corporate/investor_relations
"Discovering Tomorrow's Blue Chips Today"™
Follow RedChip on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/redchip/ Follow RedChip on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RedChipCompanies Follow RedChip on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redchipcompanies/ Follow RedChip on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RedChip Follow RedChip on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@redchip Follow RedChip on Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-3068340 Subscribe to our Mailing List: https://www.redchip.com/newslettelatest
Contact:
Dave Gentry RedChip Companies Inc. 1-407-644-4256 [info@redchip.com](mailto:info@redchip.com)
SOURCE: RedChip Companies Inc.
View the original press release on accesswire.com
submitted by RedChipCompanies to u/RedChipCompanies [link] [comments]


2024.06.07 14:22 -Krypton-7887- Superman II The Movie (The Kryptonian Cut)

Superman II The Movie (The Kryptonian Cut)
Krypton7887s Superman II The Movie (The Kryptonian Cuts)
One Movie - 5 Alternate Endings.
Faster Fights, Faster Flights..
Superman II The Movie (The Kryptonian Cuts) a project that lasted 2 and a half years which serves as a Final Cut in my interpretation. Taking the best from Lesters cut released in 1980 and the best of Donners Cut eventually released in 2006 and should have been the only cut originally. Using Lesters Cut as the template and taking out the parody and leaving in the humour from both cuts. Minor made up powers remain but invisibility and that cellophane S is gone!
These cuts serve as a sequel too Superman The Movie the released version and not the original script. So since Superman the Movie had time travel, none of these Cuts have time travel.
My Cuts are heavily influenced by Schizopolis23s Ultimate Cut and Leeonheart22s Intergrade Cuts and both editors Vfx feature in this cut.
All 5 Editions are in MP4 and have 2 different file sizes.
Large Files average 7GB 1080p Small Files average 3GB 720p
No deleted scenes were used.
Running times with Fanediting warning against piracy!
Blue Edition 2:09:40 Green Edition 2:04:28 Red Edition 2:06:19 Yellow Edition 2:04:24 Purple Edition 2:07:52
Alternate ending Editions changes are after Blue Edition changes.
SPOILER ALERT ‼️
CHANGES
BLUE EDITION (Main Cut)
Removal of Criminals been sentenced to the Phantom Zone again, we seen it in first movie and don’t need too see it again.
Green Crystal added at start of Credits from Lester Cut.
Lester Titles removed and recap of first movie.
Donner Titles added and brightened the Credits slightly.
Christopher Reeve moved to top Billing.
Visuals behind Creative Consultant Tom Mankiewicz sped up to match the John Williams Score.
A Krypton7887 Fan Edit Title added.
Additional Vfx Leeonheart22 and Schizopolis23 titles added.
Clark enters the Daily Planet and meets a workman at the office door and he helps him get through the door. Voice over dubbing removed. Natural voice only from workman.
Clark Enters the alley way to change into Superman with flying shot replaced with a flipped shot.
Shot of Superman flying too Eiffel Tower cut as we see him 3 times.
Shot of Superman coming up the Eiffel Tower cut ever so slightly before bad Vfx becomes clear.
When the criminals break free from the phantom zone , bad visuals removed and a flash of bright light added as featured in other fan edits but recut this from scratch myself.
Zod, Non and Ursa head for earth with a shot of Zod inserted from Donner Cut shouting free.
Bad voice dubbing cut just before “Artemis, Houston calling come in please”
Lex and Miss Tessmacher scenes with Lara all removed and replaced with Jor-El (Brando)
Jor-El educational Crystal about trees. Miss Tessmacher saying she likes trees. Then Lex saying So does your average Cocker Spaniel removed.
At Niagra falls Clark says too Lois “Golly isn’t it beautiful” and Lois replies “Yeah it’s gorgeous gorgeous” This features in all cuts. Second gorgeous removed.
When boy falls into Niagra falls we see him fall 3 times , cut it down to 2.
Shot of Miss Tessmacher walking away from Lex to find toilet added while Lex listens to Jorel. This scene always annoyed me as one minute she’s there next minute she’s not. Toilet joke not included!
Ursa bitten by a snake removed. Ursa using her laser beam from alternate angle added. Vfx added by Leeonheart22. Ursa should not be able to be bitten by a snake, she’s has superpowers.
Policeman’s chat in car about food removed.
When Zod points the gun at himself then fires it , his stunt double has been removed.
When Non lifts the police car. Voice over from policeman that clearly isn’t him removed.
When Superman flys to the tropical island scene. This has been edited so there’s no wait for Superman to fly into shot.
When Soldiers attack Zod with fire , Donner footage used as Lesters footage just never sat right with me.
Ursas blinking recut and edited out.
Laser beam of criminals destroying Monuments added. Vfx by Leeonheart22.
All Superman and Clark scenes with Lara removed.
All Clark scenes with Jor-El from Donner Cut added.
White House attack , Zod firing gun added. Non throwing man through wall added.
Lois and Clarks journey to Diner with no snow removed and driving on wrong side of the road basing the movie is set in America/Canada.
Lois and Clarks journey driving to Diner in snow added.
Lesters footage of Clark transitioning to Donners footage of Clark in the Fortress of Sollitude from dark to light Vfx by Schizopolis23.
Shot of Atlas in Daily Planet from Lester footage kept in before transitioning too mostly Donner footage in the Daily Planet attack by the criminals. Tried too keep the continuity of Lois and Jimmys hair as it looks totally different in the Lester footage.
When Non lifts Perry White up and bangs his head off the ceiling you can see a crew members arm supporting the lift. Crew members arm edited out.
Voice over of Zod saying to Non and Ursa “Wait here” removed. Clearly not Terence Stamp.
Roadworkers and general public looking up clearly wrong way around as you can tell by No Entry sign. Flipped round the right way.
Zod throws construction at Superman and instead of looking away scene edited too next frame so it looks like he didn’t look away and he shouldn’t he’s Superman.
BATTLE OF METROPOLIS (Faster Fights, Faster Flights)
My most time consuming part of this cut was speeding up the fight scenes, flight scenes and adding some flying sounds but not too the point of ridiculous but where it looks as if it was filmed this way.
Flying scenes along Hudson sped up with additional flying sounds.
Zod kicking Superman into Statue of Liberty sped up.
Superman kicking Non sped up.
Ursa hitting Non with pole sped up.
Tower falling too the public sped up as was too slow.
Superman’s flight down too catch tower sped up slightly.
Superman flying down too over heating tanker sped up and his landing.
Superman’s fight with Non sped up edited slightly shorter.
Ursa throws a manhole cover at Superman throwing him against a car at great pace. My favourite edit. Check out the original scene and how slow it was back in the day.
Non and Ursa throwing bus at Superman sped up slightly.
When members of the public shout “Superman is dead”, “Let’s go get them” followed by “I know some Kung Fu”. Kung Fu talk removed as it just didn’t sit with me going up against Superhumans.
When the criminals start blowing everyone away with there Super breath most of the parody has been removed.
A shot of Superman pulling back the wreckage too reveal the S on his chest has been inserted from the Donner Cut.
Lesters footage with the final fight at the fortress of Solitude removed. No invisibility and No cellophane S
Donners footage of final fight at Fortress of Solitude inserted.
When Zod says too Lex “Activate the machine” it sounds like a Smurf! Audio lifted from Lester footage and placed over Donner footage and it was Donner that shot the scene!
Alternate shot of Superman lifting Zod reinserted from a distance.
Superman score cut short in Donner Cut after Superman lifts Zod to some action music and it didn’t sit right with me.
So Ken Thorpe score lifted from Lester Cut placed over Donner Footage until after Lois punches Ursa. Sounds more Epic and fitting.
Superman destroying Fortresss of Solitude inserted from Donner Cut
Balcony break up speech inserted from Donner Cut
Daily planet Amnesia Kiss with new transition too Superman Flying American Flag.
Diner scene removed.
Superman Flyby over Earth.
Superman II Logo inserted.
Donner Titles inserted.
Removal of Superman III coming soon as this cut does not set up Superman III.
Post Credit - Diner scene added and recut for dramatic effect.
GREEN EDITION (Alternate Ending)
Balcony break up (Last time he sees Lois)
Daily Planet scene removed.
Superman Flys American Flag (New transition from Balcony scene)
Superman Flyby over Earth.
Superman II Logo inserted.
Donner Titles inserted.
Removal of Superman III Coming soon as this movie does not set that up.
Post Credit - Diner Scene added and recut for dramatic effect.
RED EDITION (Alternate Ending)
Balcony Break up.
Daily Planet Scene - On the understanding that they have broken up and she is willing to play along like the same old Clark and the same old Lois like she said on the balcony. With a subtle reminder she’s willing too keep his secret she says too Clark “You know your really Super” (This scene is the only change out of all 4 editions as I wasn’t happy with the quality).
Diner scene
Superman Flying the American Flag.
Superman Flyby over Earth.
Superman II Logo Inserted.
Donner Titles inserted.
Removal of Superman III Coming Soon as this movie does not set that up.
YELLOW EDITION (Alternate Ending)
Balcony break up (Last time he sees Lois)
Diner Scene
Superman flys American Flag
Superman flyby over earth
Superman II Logo Inserted
Donner Credits inserted
Removal of Superman III Coming soon as this movie does not set that up.
PURPLE EDITION
Balcony break up
Daily Planet scene as featured in Malachi Parker’s Final Cut where Lois and Clark kiss but there is no Amnesia afterwards. Recut and re-edited with a different colour grading and alternate score by John Williams “The Terrace” giving Lois and Clark a happy ending to there love story.
Diner scene.
Superman flys American flag.
Superman flyby over earth.
Superman II Logo Inserted.
Donner Credits inserted.
Removal of Superman III Coming soon as this movie does not set that up.
Thanks again for your support , comments and ideas, if messaging me please have manners and don’t be abrupt or you’ll probably not get a response. I’m usually quite quick in answering.
Hopefully it won’t be another 2 and a half years for the next project!
Krypton7887 🙏
PLEASE SUPPORT THE ORIGINAL VISION OF BOTH DIRECTORS AND THE FILM COMPANY AND EVERYONE WHO WORKED HARD ON THESE MOVIES AND BUY THE ORIGINAL COPIES.
THANK YOU.
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2024.06.07 10:06 Status_Tension7332 (SELLING) MULTIPLE COPIES OF EACH TITLE . PLEASE ADD YOUR OWN TOTAL UP, THANK YOU

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2024.06.07 07:57 adulting4kids Newsletter #2 January 4, 2024

January 4, 2024
HAPPY NEW YEAR 🎊🕛🥳 I'd like to see how you all are feeling about the content that gets posted here. I sometimes post on my profile,🔥 usually longer articles from scholarly pursuits.
♈♉♊♋♌♍♎♏♐♑♒♓⛎ I have a newer subreddit based on my Tarot content, at tarotjourneys for the most recent content that I have been working on in that subject area. I'm not sure if I will have new subreddits for different subjects, or if I can keep it together here. I am going to be posting and cross posting so join both or don't, just read and connect with me here, or there!
Also next week will be the first contest in the annual anthology📒 that will be good for you guys to start getting involved in this community. Post will go up on the 8th and stay up one week. There is going to be a three week option for submitting and then we will be selecting the first winner 🏆 on February 7th. Announced on February 9th. Next month contest will be February 8th. And so on.🏆🪶🥠🥡
🌹🌹🌹Prizes for the short story and poetry is $100 cash and promotions, as well as a place in the annual anthology! Our artwork is going to be a prize of $50 and featured in materials and online, then it will be a 🌹🌹🌹Anthology chapter👀 introduction, and compete for the cover, with the monthly winners. The same dates apply to the three different contests.👀🌹
Anyone can enter, up to three submissions in each category! First entry in each category is free. Each additional entry is just $10 via PayPal or Cash App. If you don't have the ability to pay, we have a few waiver.
Our sponsors will be featured in the first post so even if you don't want to enter, read about us then!!!🕛❤️‍🔥
🔥This will be a great way to get published! I can't wait to see you guys enter!🔥
This is January 4, 2024 newsletter #2.
This is our featured subject for January. We are going to focus on getting ready for working towards sobriety, if you struggling with bad habits or are addicted to something that's causing you more harm than good - check out the resources, articles and readings that are designed to accomplish the initial assessment of getting clean 🫧🪥. No judgement, no mandatory participation, just some things that are designed to make it easier to start that process.
January 4, 2024
🏠🏡 JANUARY = CLEAN UP YOUR HOUSE MONTH You are the house!🏠🏡

Quotes from Individuals in Recovery:

  1. Russell Brand:
    • "The mentality and behavior of drug addicts and alcoholics are wholly irrational until you understand that they are completely powerless over their addiction and unless they have structured help, they have no hope."
  2. Robert Downey Jr.:
    • "Job one is get out of that cave. A lot of people do get out but don't change. So the thing is to get out and recognize the significance of that aggressive denial of your fate, come through the crucible forged into a stronger metal."
  3. Eminem (Marshall Mathers):
    • "I knew that my first thought was always negative. But now I have learned to just brush it off."
  4. Demi Lovato:
    • "I had to learn the hard way that I can’t do parties anymore. Some people can go out and not be triggered, but that’s not the case for me."

Cited Readings on Addiction and Recovery:

  1. "In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction" by Gabor Maté:
    • This book provides a compassionate and holistic understanding of addiction, exploring its biological, psychological, and societal roots.
  2. "Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction" by David Sheff:
    • A memoir that chronicles a father's struggle to understand and support his son through addiction and recovery.
  3. "Recovery: Freedom from Our Addictions" by Russell Brand:
    • Russell Brand shares his personal journey through addiction and recovery, offering insights into the 12-step program and mindfulness practices.
  4. "The Big Book" (Alcoholics Anonymous):
    • The foundational text of Alcoholics Anonymous, providing guidance, stories of recovery, and the principles of the 12-step program.
  5. "Clean: Overcoming Addiction and Ending America's Greatest Tragedy" by David Sheff:
    • David Sheff explores the science of addiction and potential solutions, examining both personal and societal perspective.
  6. Anthony Hopkins:
    • "I believe that we all have a basic need to feel safe. And when we don’t feel safe, we feel threatened, and when we feel threatened, we tend to react in various ways."
  7. Nicole Richie:
    • "I have to be careful. I have to live in balance. I can’t stay up all night but then need to be on time in the morning. But I’m finding my way."
  8. Elton John:
    • "I am a survivor. I’ve survived a lot of things. Life is full of pitfalls, even for someone like me."
  9. Jamie Lee Curtis:
    • "I was the wildly controlled drug addict and alcoholic. I never did it when I worked. I never took drugs before 5 p.m. I never, ever took painkillers until 5 p.m."
  10. "Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction" by Maia Szalavitz:
    • This book challenges traditional views on addiction, exploring the role of learning and choice in the development and treatment of addiction.
  11. "Memoirs Aren't Fairytales: A Story of Addiction" by Marni Mann:
    • A personal memoir that offers a raw and honest account of addiction, detailing the author's journey from addiction to recovery.
  12. "Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America" by Beth Macy:
    • This investigative work explores the opioid crisis in America, shedding light on the complex factors contributing to addiction.
  13. "Clean: The Journal" by Chris Niosi:
    • This interactive journal provides prompts, exercises, and reflections for individuals in recovery, helping them navigate their journey.
  14. "Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery" by Bill Clegg:
    • Bill Clegg shares his personal experiences of recovery in this memoir, offering insights into the challenges and triumphs of rebuilding one's life.
Remember that these quotes and readings reflect the experiences and perspectives of individuals in recovery, and different people find inspiration and support in various sources. Always consider seeking professional guidance and support in addition to personal insights gained from shared experiences.

More Quotes from Individuals in Recovery:

  1. Matthew Perry:
    • "I've had a lot of ups and downs in my life. I've learned a lot from my failures, but the best thing about failure is you get to learn from it."
  2. Drew Barrymore:
    • "Recovery is an acceptance that your life is in shambles and you have to change it."
  3. Rob Lowe:
    • "I'm nearly nine years sober, and there's a great quote I read about three years ago that had a huge impact on me. It's from the great Winston Churchill, who said, 'Success is never final, and failure is never fatal.'"
  4. Kristen Johnston:
    • "I’ve been sober for over 14 years now, and the way I live my life is, I don’t think of it like I stopped drinking; I think of it like I started living."
  5. "High Achiever: The Incredible True Story of One Addict's Double Life" by Tiffany Jenkins:
    • A memoir that provides a gripping account of addiction and recovery, exploring the author's journey to rebuild her life.
  6. "Recover to Live: Kick Any Habit, Manage Any Addiction" by Christopher Kennedy Lawford:
    • This book offers a comprehensive guide to various forms of addiction and provides practical strategies for recovery.
  7. "The Sober Diaries: How one woman stopped drinking and started living" by Clare Pooley:
    • A personal and humorous account of one woman's journey to sobriety, sharing insights and reflections on life without alcohol.
  8. "Guts" by Kristen Johnston:
    • Kristen Johnston's memoir delves into her experiences with addiction and recovery, providing a candid and humorous perspective.
  9. "This Naked Mind: Control Alcohol, Find Freedom, Discover Happiness, and Change Your Life" by Annie Grace:
    • Annie Grace explores the psychology of alcohol consumption and provides insights to help individuals change their relationship with alcohol.
These quotes and readings offer diverse perspectives on addiction and recovery, and they can serve as sources of inspiration, reflection, and guidance for those navigating their own journeys. Always seek professional support if needed and consider these resources as complementary to a comprehensive recovery plan.

More Quotes from Individuals in Recovery:

  1. Craig Ferguson:
    • "I had a simple perception of success as getting things that I thought I needed to be happy. I thought that happiness was success. I don’t think that anymore."
  2. Anthony Kiedis (Red Hot Chili Peppers):
    • "I've made a lot of mistakes and I don't regret any of them. Sometimes those things take you to the most amazing places."
  3. Jamie Lee Curtis:
    • "I know my limits. I know that if I drink again, I will die. Every morning I wake up, I make that choice."
  4. Steven Tyler (Aerosmith):
    • "It’s not about how much you drink. It’s about why you drink. It’s when life gets good, do you celebrate? Or when life gets tough, do you drink?"
  5. "In My Skin: A Memoir of Addiction" by Kate Holden:
    • A memoir that explores the author's experience with addiction and her journey toward recovery.
  6. "Recovery: A Guide for Adult Children of Alcoholics" by Herbert L. Gravitz and Julie D. Bowden:
    • This book addresses the specific challenges faced by adult children of alcoholics and provides guidance on healing and recovery.
  7. "The Unexpected Joy of Being Sober" by Catherine Gray:
    • A personal and practical guide to quitting alcohol, sharing the author's journey to sobriety and the positive changes it brought to her life.
  8. "The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath" by Leslie Jamison:
    • Combining memoir and research, this book explores the cultural and personal aspects of addiction and recovery.
  9. "Girl Walks Out of a Bar: A Memoir" by Lisa F. Smith:
    • Lisa Smith's memoir chronicles her journey from high-functioning addiction to recovery, shedding light on the challenges and triumphs of sobriety.
Newsletter Repeat 🔁 TL:DR These quotes and readings provide diverse perspectives on addiction and recovery, and they offer valuable insights for individuals seeking inspiration and understanding. Always consider these resources in the context of individual needs and consult with professionals for personalized support.
I'd like to see how you all are feeling about the content that gets posted here. I sometimes post on my profile,🔥 usually longer articles from scholarly pursuits. I have a newer subreddit based on my Tarot content, at tarotjourneys for the most recent content that I have been working on in that subject area. I'm not sure if I will have new subreddits for different subjects, or if I can keep it together here. I am going to be posting and cross posting so join both or don't, just read and connect with me here, or there!
Also next week will be the first contest in the annual anthology that will be good for you guys to start getting involved in this community. Post will go up on the 8th and stay up one week. There is going to be a three week option for submitting and then we will be selecting the first winner 🏆 on February 7th. Announced on February 9th. Next month contest will be February 8th. And so on.
Prizes for the short story and poetry is $100 cash and promotions, as well as a place in the annual anthology! Our artwork is going to be a prize of $50 and featured in materials and online, then it will be a Anthology chapter introduction, and compete for the cover, with the monthly winners. The same dates apply to the three different contests.
Anyone can enter, up to three submissions in each category! First entry in each category is free. Each additional entry is just $10 via PayPal or Cash App. If you don't have the ability to pay, we have a few waiver.
Our sponsors will be featured in the first post so even if you don't want to enter, read about us then!!!
This will be a great way to get published! I can't wait to see you guys enter!
This is January 4, 2024 newsletter #2.
submitted by adulting4kids to writingthruit [link] [comments]


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