How Ought We Die? – The New Inquiry
http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/how-ought-we-die/
The bit at the end about an equal distribution of good dying experiences.
Acting French – The Atlantic
Cartoonists of Color Database
The Scientific 7-Minute Workout – NYTimes.com
Get Out of Jail, Inc. – The New Yorker
New Blog Series
Kickstarting the Gentrification Movement: How Gnarcore leveraged the DTES in their search for funds
I Quit Liking Things On Facebook for Two Weeks. Here’s How It Changed My View of Humanity — Medium
Exclusive: Apple prepares Healthkit rollout amid tangled regulatory web
Hack back! A guide for wannabe whistleblowers.
Leaving Evidence | a blog by Mia Mingus
SoundCloud Mobile
A Note on Terminology: Inuit, Métis, First Nations, and Aboriginal | Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami – Canada’s National Inuit Organization
‘I can hack into airplanes’, claims security researcher – The Inquirer
The Scourge of “Relatability” – The New Yorker
We’ve dug so many tunnels, future historians will think we were mole people | Grist
The underground ghetto city of Gaza – OpinionIsrael News – Haaretz Israeli News source
Wild Harvests: Koma Kulshan: origins of the mysterious mountain moniker
Tor security advisory: “relay early” traffic confirmation attack | The Tor Blog
What Your Workout Says About Your Social Class – Pacific Standard: The Science of Society
Skepchick | Food is for White Liberals What Sex Is For The Religious Right
Skepchick | Food is for White Liberals What Sex Is For The Religious Right.
If you are not as concerned about the people handing you your food in the restaurant as you are about the pigs on the farm where it was grown, your approach is classist. If you are more concerned about the availability of food trucks in the neighboring town than whether its residents actually want them (thanks to my dear friend Tina for setting me straight on this one), or if you buy things like this (thanks to Heina for that find), your approach is imperialist. If you start telling someone all about your new trendy diet or asking them about theirs without knowing if they have an eating disorder that may be triggered by your prattle, your approach is ableist. If you tsk-tsk at people who are overweight for what they are eating and claim you’re concerned about their health, yet you’re not actively campaigning to make healthy food more accessible and affordable, your approach is sickening and I don’t want you in my activism.