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Category Archives: Transhuman News
The Cyberpunk Genre Is Broken, And The Creator Of Citizen Sleeper Agrees – Kotaku
Posted: May 21, 2022 at 6:36 pm
Cyberpunk is not a miserable little pile of references, contrary to popular belief.Image: Production I.G / Warner Bros. / Tokyo Movie Shinsha / E3 / Kotaku
Cyberpunk. When you think of the word, you likely conjure up images of a futuristic cityscape awash in neon lights, amalgams of Western-Japanese architecture, and a cybernetic hero equipped with a samurai swordor a AAA game still trying to get its bearings. But what often gets lost in the glitz and synthetic glamor of the word are the larger philosophical ideas and disruptive technology that shaped the genre and that reflect the insecurities of the world we live in. This near-constant missing of the mark in cyberpunk games has me guarded.
Todays games have interpreted the genre incorrectly. While its easy to become enveloped in the power fantasy and the magnificence of transhumanism, these games havent spent enough time reflecting on the problems that stem from our relationships with these technologies. Cyberpunk should be an inspection into and a commentary on the power structures that define our world and our places in it.
All this left me ready to stave off cyberpunk games for the foreseeable future until Citizen Sleeper, a recent entry to the genre inspired by table-top RPGs, caught my eye. More promising, Kotaku senior writer Ethan Gatch said it was one of his favorite games of the year so far. I was still wary, but I was ready to give it a go. Thinking I was alone in my tumultuous relationship with cyberpunk, I discovered that Citizen Sleepers sole developer and writer Gareth Damian Martin shares many of my concerns about the genres trajectory.
Beyond cyberpunks reduction to an aesthetic, Ive noticed the tendency to compare said games with other media. This often takes the form of what have become tired analogies on how a games theatrics harken to Blade Runner or Ghost in the Shell. But whenever I ask myself what these modern cyberpunk games are actually saying, I cant find an answer. Theyre mere carbon copy shells of aesthetics without ghosts of their own. Something Martin looked to avoid in making Citizen Sleeper.
In Citizen Sleeper, you play as a copy of a cryogenically frozen person, called a sleeper, who must work to pay off their debts before being disposed of. A dice system within the game determines the condition of your body. Each day, you must decide whether to help others by building mutual aid or to use your money to pay for the drugs that keep you alive.
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And though Martin took inspiration from William Gibson, the American-Canadian author who penned works like Neuromancer and is credited as the progenitor of the cyberpunk genre, they took umbrage with the noir power fantasy and future-centric scope thats proliferated within the genre, even by Gibson himself, much as I have.
How you choose to go about your day in Citizen Sleeper is determined by the games tabletop RPG dice mechanicScreenshot: Fellow Traveler
I compare the cyberpunk-adjacent games guilty of this to the anime Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex. Unlike newer media that have salvaged pieces of its narrative as a template for their own stories, GitS SAC characterizes every corner of its disrupted world and the citizens within it. Japan is run amok with efficient and invasive technologies.
The thing that makes cyberpunk feel kind of stagnant is the way that it can feel that we are still drawing on those same structures that were concerns for Gibson [and] Ridley Scott in the 70s and 80s. Things like this abject fear of Japanese dominance and things like this that come through in certain texts. Were now working removed from those and those are not really our concern, Martin told me.
Citizen Sleeper, however, has an overwhelmingly positive review score on Steam at the time of publication, with players calling the game a gem that hit the sweet spot for them with its narrative gameplay. Martin said they didnt approach writing Citizen Sleeper looking to hit all the checkboxes of the cyberpunk genre. They looked at it simply as an intimate game that shows people coming together and put their own experiences as a nonbinary person whos worked gigs in a city without enough money to pay rent into the heart of that story.
I modeled the structures around things in our society now like constant pressure, exposure to risk, the feeling that luck is the only thing that is keeping you with a roof over your head, or waking up in the morning and not knowing exactly how much youre gonna have to give, Martin said.
After receiving feedback from players post-launch, Martin said they think players related to the structure in Citizen Sleeper because it allows them to place their own experiences into the framework of the game and explore how the larger structures surrounding and impacting their lives can be malicious, unintentional, or just background noise.
Although cyberpunk today is regarded as a warning on the horizon for the fate of humanity and what we should do to avoid it, Martin said writers of today shouldnt rehash the prose used in the onset of the genre or take stabs at answering what life will be like in the far-off future. Instead, they said, we should focus on the now.
For [cyberpunk] to be effective, I find that it needs to draw on something about now because I dont think that Gibson and [Bruce] Sterling were writing about the future. I think they were writing about the moment they were in, Martin said. We should continue to make cyberpunk work about the moment were in, not the moment that they were in or this awesome imagined future. I think cyberpunk is about now.
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The Cyberpunk Genre Is Broken, And The Creator Of Citizen Sleeper Agrees - Kotaku
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Herbal medicines that really work – DW (English)
Posted: at 6:35 pm
Humans have been extracting the healing properties of plants for thousands of years. Although herbal remedies are often discounted as unscientific, more than one-third of modern drugs are derived either directly or indirectly from natural products, such as plants, microorganisms and animals.
Now, researchers from the Scripps Research Institute in the USstate of California have found that a chemical extracted from the bark of the Galbulimima belgraveana tree has psychotropic effects that could help treat depression and anxiety.
The tree is found only in remote rainforests of Papua New Guinea and northern Australia and has long been used by indigenous people as a healing remedy against pain and fever.
"This goes to show that Western medicine hasn't cornered the market on new therapeutics; there are traditional medicines out there still waiting to be studied, senior author Ryan Shenvi, PhD, a professor of chemistry at Scripps Research, told reporters last week.
The most well-known example of a medical drug extracted from a plant species is opium, which has been used to treat pain for over 4,000 years. Opiates like morphine and codeine are extracted from the opium poppy and have a powerful effect on the central nervous system.
Afghan farmers collect raw opium in a poppy field
But which other ancient plant-based medicines have demonstrable medical benefits, and what is the science behind them?
The velvet bean (Mucuna pruriens) has been used in ancient Indian Ayurvedic and Chinese medicine for over 3,000 years. Ancient texts tell us how healers used bean extracts to reduce tremors in patients to treat the condition we now consider Parkinson's disease.
Studies now show that the velvet bean contains a compound called levodopa, a drug used to treat Parkinson's disease today.
Levodopa helps to stop tremors by increasing dopamine signals in areas of the brain that control movement.
The modern history of levodopa began in the early 20th century when the compound was synthesized by the Polish biochemist Casimir Funk. Decades later, in the 1960s, scientists found that levodopa could be used as an effective treatment to stop tremors in patients with Parkinson's disease. The drug revolutionized the treatment of the disease and is still the gold standard for its treatment today.
Velvet beans contain chemical to help treat tremors caused by Parkinson's
The medical properties of hawthorn (Crataegus spp) were first noted by Greek physician Dioscorides in the 1st centuryand by Tang-Ben-Cao in ancient Chinese medicine in the 7th century.
Clinical trials using current research standards have found that hawthorn reduces blood pressure and may be useful to treat cardiovascular disease. Hawthorn berries contain compounds such as bioflavonoids and proanthocyanidins that appear to have significant antioxidant activity.
Hawthorn extracts aren't yet suitable for medical use in the wider public studies are ongoing, and more rigorous research is needed to assess the long-term safety of using the extracts to treat diseases.
Hawthorn berries taste a little like small apples and their extracts could help treat heart or blood diseases
Yew trees have a special place in medicine in European mythology. Most parts of the tree are very poisonous, causing associations with both death and immortality. The Third Witch in Macbeth mentions "slips of yew slivered in the moon's eclipse"(Macbeth Act 4, Scene 1).
But it's a species of yew tree in North America, the Pacific yew tree (Taxus brevifolia), that possesses the most beneficial medical properties.
Scientists in the 1960s found that the tree's bark contains compounds called taxels. One of these taxels, called Paclitaxel, has been developed into an effective cancer treatment drug. Paclitaxel can stop cancer cells from dividing, blocking further growth of the disease.
Pacific yew in the US state of Oregon
Willow bark is another traditional medicine with a long history. The bark was adopted 4,000 years ago in ancient Sumer and Egypt to treat pain and has been a staple of medicine ever since.
Willow bark contains a compound called salicin, which would later form the basis of the discovery of aspirin the world's most widely taken drug.
Aspirin has several different medical benefits, including pain relief, reduction of fever and prevention of stroke. Its first widespread use was during the 1918 flu pandemic to treat high temperatures.
Willow bark is generally found in the Northern Hemisphere
Edited by: Clare Roth
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Herbal medicines that really work - DW (English)
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Dr. Joanne Hackett Appointed Chairperson of AgeX Board of Directors – Business Wire
Posted: at 6:35 pm
ALAMEDA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--AgeX Therapeutics, Inc. (AgeX; NYSE American: AGE), a biotechnology company developing therapeutics for human aging and regeneration, announced today that Dr. Joanne Hackett has been appointed Chairperson of AgeXs Board of Directors. Dr. Hackett joined the Board of Directors in December 2021. She will serve in a non-executive capacity as AgeXs Chairperson. Dr. Greg Bailey, who served as AgeXs Chairperson since 2018, will continue to serve as a member of AgeXs Board of Directors.
Dr. Hackett is the Head of Genomic and Precision Medicine at IQVIA, a world leader in using data, technology, advanced analytics, and expertise to help customers drive healthcare forward. From 2017 to 2020, Dr. Hackett served as Chief Commercial Officer of Genomics England, owned by the Department of Health and Social Care in the United Kingdom. During 2016 and 2017, Dr. Hackett served as Chief Commercial Officer and Interim Chief Executive Officer of the Precision Medicine Catapult, which was established in the United Kingdom with the goal of developing and commercializing precision medicine. Dr. Hackett holds a PhD in Molecular Genetics from the University of New Brunswick.
About AgeX Therapeutics
AgeX Therapeutics, Inc. (NYSE American: AGE) is focused on developing and commercializing innovative therapeutics to treat human diseases to increase healthspan and combat the effects of aging. AgeXs PureStem and UniverCyte manufacturing and immunotolerance technologies are designed to work together to generate highly defined, universal, allogeneic, off-the-shelf pluripotent stem cell-derived young cells of any type for application in a variety of diseases with a high unmet medical need. AgeX has two preclinical cell therapy programs: AGEX-VASC1 (vascular progenitor cells) for tissue ischemia and AGEX-BAT1 (brown fat cells) for Type II diabetes. AgeXs revolutionary longevity platform induced Tissue Regeneration (iTR) aims to unlock cellular immortality and regenerative capacity to reverse age-related changes within tissues. HyStem is AgeXs delivery technology to stably engraft PureStem or other cell therapies in the body. AgeX is seeking opportunities to establish licensing and collaboration arrangements around its broad IP estate and proprietary technology platforms and therapy product candidates.
For more information, please visit http://www.agexinc.com or connect with the company on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and YouTube.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements contained in this release are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements that are not historical fact including, but not limited to statements that contain words such as will, believes, plans, anticipates, expects, estimates should also be considered forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from the results anticipated in these forward-looking statements and as such should be evaluated together with the many uncertainties that affect the business of AgeX Therapeutics, Inc. and its subsidiaries, particularly those mentioned in the cautionary statements found in more detail in the Risk Factors section of AgeXs most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commissions (copies of which may be obtained at http://www.sec.gov). Subsequent events and developments may cause these forward-looking statements to change. AgeX specifically disclaims any obligation or intention to update or revise these forward-looking statements as a result of changed events or circumstances that occur after the date of this release, except as required by applicable law.
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Dr. Joanne Hackett Appointed Chairperson of AgeX Board of Directors - Business Wire
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Hazel V. Carby We must burn them: Against the Origin Story LRB 26 May 2022 – London Review of Books
Posted: at 6:35 pm
Anna Julia Coopers collection of essays, A Voice from the South by a Black Woman of the South, published in 1892, identified the conflict over race as the central dilemma of her time, eleven years before W.E.B. Du Bois wrote that the problem of the 20th century is the problem of the colour line. Cooper argued that Americas domestic racial formation was intimately linked with international colonialism and that the exploitation and oppression experienced by Asian, Black and Indigenous peoples in the US were an integral part of the imperialist ideology of racial hierarchies. She questioned why dominant meant righteous, and carried with it a title to inherit the earth, and identified appeals to manifest destiny as an attempt to justify consigning to annihilation one-third of the inhabitants of the globe. Cooper also condemned the expansion of Western empires further into Asia and the Pacific. She believed, as Du Bois wrote, that the problem of the colour line was a matter of imperialism, the relation of the darker to the lighter races of men in Asia and Africa, in America and the islands of the sea.
A different strand of Black intellectual thought, focusing on racism and racist violence in the US as a product of domestic enslavement, developed almost simultaneously with the global account of imperialist and colonial exploitation proposed by Cooper and Du Bois. In 1904, Mary Church Terrell, one of the founders of the National Association of Coloured Women, published an essay which concluded that lynching is the aftermath of slavery. A year later, William A. Sinclair, who was born into enslavement, published The Aftermath of Slavery, a Study of the Condition and Environment of the American Negro. Terrell and Sinclair used the term aftermath to make the point that their own era was contiguous with the three hundred years during which people of African descent had been enslaved in America. Sinclair worked as a financial secretary at Howard University, had degrees in theology and medicine and greatly admired Queen Victoria, the British Empire and Rudyard Kipling. He believed that the blighting evils of his time, mobs that torture human beings and roast them alive without trial; mobs who shoot down women and children; mobs who take possession of the streets of cities, shooting down innocent coloured people and driving them from their homes; lynching and the reign of terror and blood perpetuated by the Ku Klux Klan, were an affliction both to the white and the coloured people. He insisted that this violence was rooted in the barbarism of US slavery, an institution which, bad and debasing as it was for the negro, was probably even worse for whites for it stupefied their conscience twisted and perverted their moral conceptions. Sinclair did not mention the sufferings of Indigenous peoples at the hands of white settlers and military forces; consideration of Native Nations was excluded from his conceptual and historical framework.
The afterlife of slavery (sometimes hyphenated and sometimes plural) has become an increasingly influential way of thinking about Americas domestic slavery and its consequences in the present. In Lose Your Mother (2006), Saidiya Hartman uses the phrase to describe the complex relation between the current inequalities and skewed life chances that imperil and threaten Black life, and the racial calculus and political arithmetic entrenched in the system of enslavement. Hartman developed the term in the sophisticated historical analysis of her subsequent work, but it has now assumed an autonomous existence, which no longer requires us to understand that the ways in which race comes to acquire meaning are contingent on particular times, places, cultures and economies. The word afterlife assumes an intergenerational existence, but it also grants immortality to racial logic; the term connotes a world without end, and even has a supernatural quality that stretches back to the Curse of Ham.
The 1619 Project, which contains essays as well as poetry and fiction, offers a new origin story for the US, one that begins with the arrival of a ship in the British colony of Virginia with a cargo of twenty enslaved African people. The book itself is the culmination of a project by the New York Times Magazine, marking four hundred years since that first slave ship arrived in America. It attempted to show that the inheritance of 1619 reaches into every part of contemporary American society, from politics, music, diet, traffic and citizenship, to capitalism, religion and our democracy itself. Though 1619 is an unconventional year in which to begin the national story, the projects aim to expose the roots of so much of what makes the country unique places it firmly within the conventional narrative of American exceptionalism.
The phrase the afterlife of slavery is often used in conjunction with antiblackness, a term that is also rarely interrogated, as if its meaning is obvious. The word has spread beyond academia in the last decade, helped by its lack of historical specificity. It can be seen everywhere on social media and in the mainstream press; it crops up in headlines in Forbes Magazine, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times. Its usefulness, however, is limited. Racialised exclusivity and national particularity (antiblackness nearly always pertains to African Americans) means relinquishing the possibility of forming alliances with other oppressed communities.
Academics in marginalised fields have made limited progress in establishing departments, programmes and centres for the study of ethnic, racialised and gendered histories. We have seen only modest increases in the number of Black, brown and gender non-conforming people among teaching staff. For the most part our intellectual existence remains siloed, with each field of knowledge having its own vocabulary and organised into a discrete ontological formation. In Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History (1995), Michel-Rolph Trouillot insisted that history is the fruit of power but power itself is never so transparent that its analysis becomes superfluous. The ultimate mark of power may be its invisibility; the ultimate challenge, the exposition of its roots. University administrations boast of diversity, equity and inclusion, while behind the scenes they hold tightly to power, continuing to privilege the Eurocentric, settler colonial forms of knowledge that secure the marginalisation of certain areas of study. Our fields are kept in constant competition for resources; as we scramble for scraps of funding, we fail to engage with, let alone expose, the roots of power. This leads me to conclude that the disciplinary borders and exclusionary concepts of contemporary academia have not only created new forms of silencing but are a betrayal of the roots of these disciplines: insurgent social movements which did not want to be incorporated into the academy as it then existed, but sought its radical transformation.
Exterminate All the Brutes, Raoul Pecks four-part film, situates the emergence of the land that would become the United States within an account of the global ambitions of European imperialism, using its ideologies and praxis of domination to organise the narrative: civilisation, colonisation and extermination. Peck takes his bearings from three works: Trouillots Silencing the Past, Sven Lindqvists Exterminate All the Brutes (1996) and An Indigenous Peoples History of the United States (2014) by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. The film has been described as essayistic, but it would be more precise to say that it enacts these authors historical analyses: their arguments are so deeply embedded in the film that it becomes an intellectual collaboration, an alternative to the intellectually segregated university departments that currently disseminate knowledge about race, ethnicities and indigeneity.
The film breaks with conventional documentary-making in its use of scripted fictional scenes and animation, drawing on a rich visual, musical, literary and scientific vocabulary taken from a vast number of sources everything from archival anthropological and scientific material to Hollywood films and Pecks own family archive. It bears witness to acts of brutality characteristic of Western European forms of conquest and Christian missionary zeal in Africa, the Americas and Europe, and traces the beliefs, dressed up as science, that produced and attempted to justify this brutality, right of conquest and dispossession. This means moving from the Crusades to the many genocidal wars against Indigenous peoples, from atrocities committed in the name of manifest destiny and the Monroe Doctrine to the rabidly anti-migrant movements of our own times. The film does not limit its examination to extremist movements or leaders, although it features Jair Bolsonaro, Recep Tayyip Erdoan, Boris Johnson, Marine Le Pen, Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump. The idea that US supremacy is seen as being ordained by divine providence is underlined by an episode showing American presidents speaking the words So help me God when reciting the Oath of Office, immediately followed by an account of the entanglement of the US arms industry with the executive branch of government.
The longue dure of what Dunbar-Ortiz calls the inherently genocidal impulse of settler colonialism is difficult to watch. Exterminate makes its audience witness many forms of colonial brutality: from the intimacies of bodily dismemberment to the technologies that allow death and war to happen at a distance. Peck refuses to conform to narrative linearity, rejecting the idea that the current resurgence of white supremacist and state violence can be traced back to a single origin. Instead, we move across time and place, between Europe, Africa, the Caribbean and the Americas. The film is as restless as the images of huge ocean waves that occasionally mark its transitions.
On 1 June 2020, a gathering of Black Lives Matter supporters in Lafayette Square, north of the White House, was attacked by heavily armed security forces from various federal agencies, including the US Park Police, the Bureau of Prisons Special Operations Response Teams and National Guardsmen. While dispersing the peaceful crowd to clear the way for a presidential photo opportunity, they committed human rights violations, including firing flash-bang shells, tear gas and rubber bullets. Seven months later, on 6 January 2021, TV stations and social media broadcast a very different police response. Rioters carrying stun guns, knives, chemical sprays, baseball bats and flagpoles easily overwhelmed a sparse contingent of Capitol police and stormed the building. The police had been told to hold back and not to use their most powerful methods of crowd control.
Amnesty International documented 125 separate incidents of state violence against peaceful protesters in forty states, plus the District of Columbia, between 26 May and 5 June 2020. These acts were committed by members of state and local police departments, as well as by National Guard troops and security personnel from several federal agencies. Among the abuses recorded are beatings, the misuse of tear gas and pepper spray and the inappropriate and, at times, indiscriminate firing of sponge rounds and rubber bullets. In November 2016, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights called on the Justice Department to investigate the treatment by law enforcement agencies of peaceful protesters against the Dakota Access pipeline near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation (Peck includes footage of this in Exterminate). They used armoured vehicles, automatic rifles, acoustic weapons, water cannon, concussion grenades, attack dogs, pepper spray and beanbag bullets.
Other rights are also being suppressed. In 2013, the US Supreme Court ruling in Shelby County v. Holder removed two of the most powerful provisions in the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which addressed entrenched racial discrimination in voting: Section 5 required certain states to obtain federal clearance before changing their voting rules, and Section 4b determined which states had to do this. The Supreme Court ruled that the government was using an outdated process to decide which states had to get their rules approved. Since the judgment there has been a wave of voting measures aimed at limiting the rights of minority voters. The Brennan Centre for Justice reported that in 2021 alone legislators in 49 states drafted more than 440 restrictive voting bills, while 19 states enacted 34 laws that made voting more difficult, for instance by introducing requirements for proof of citizenship or repealing the provision of postal votes. The Spirit Lake Nation (Mni Wakan Oyate) and the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa recently filed a federal lawsuit challenging North Dakotas new legislative map, which, by means of redistricting, dilutes Native American voting power.
In addition to this suppression of the Black and Indigenous vote and of the right to protest is a national crusade to control historical knowledge. In state legislatures and on town school boards (consisting of locally elected officials) politicians and interest groups are advocating and legislating for the banning of books and of teaching that engages with racialised and gendered injustice. The advocacy group Truth in Education claims that children need to be protected from the discussion of sexual and gender identities and from critical race theory (CRT), a misnomer for any initiatives in state schools or state-run institutions that address past and present inequities or introduce anti-racist policies. Citizens for Renewing America offers an eight-page DIY guide to school board language which promises to help those who would sanction and potentially sack teachers for violating these rules. No Left Turn in Education provides sample letters and petitions. This is a campaign of fear, targeted at teachers and administrators in public institutions. One group in particular is being called to arms: white parents of school-age children.
Mary Beeman, the campaign manager for the Truth in Education school board candidates in my town (all of them Republicans), summarised the threat: Helping kids of colour to feel they belong has a negative effect on white, Christian or conservative kids. Our local branch of No Left Turn in Education warns parents about euphemisms for CRT that show their children are being indoctrinated. These include equity, social justice initiative, systemic racism, critical race pedagogy, diversity, anti-racist, culturally responsive teaching and whiteness. One of its goals is to expose CRT as an evil, divisive, Marxist, anti-American, ideology that calls for dismantling and replacing all of our cherished American institutions including our constitution, our government, our legal system, capitalism, the nuclear family, religion, education, law enforcement, private property and individualism. Heather MacDonald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a right-wing think tank, launched a particularly vehement attack on the Art Institute of Chicago, accusing it of abandoning its mission as a guardian of Western art and deriding its director for stating that the museums building is located on the traditional unceded homelands of the Council of the Three Fires: the Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi Nations.
The criticism that might be made of statements like this, which have become common in parts of the academy, including my own university, is that they are rarely written in collaboration with the elders of Indigenous communities, and rarely make reference to the continued existence of these communities; instead, they relegate indigeneity to an eternal past while avoiding the pressing issue of Indigenous sovereignty in the present. They obscure, rather than promote, attempts to expand our intellectual, cultural and geographical horizons, and to challenge our allegiances to home, department, academic discipline and nation.
History is written by the victors, but diligent and continual silencing is required to maintain its claims on the present and future. It is a mistake to believe that white supremacy is something nurtured and reproduced by extremist organisations and bad apples in the armed forces and police. White supremacy is ubiquitous in the US. It operates in the most mundane aspects of daily life; in the economic order that decides who has what and how they get it; in the historical amnesia that makes some stories disappear; in the language we use to speak and name the past. Central here is the uncritical regurgitation of the mythologies of European settlement, the origin stories of the nation that are institutionalised at all levels of local, state and federal history and cultural memory.
In Exterminate All the Brutes, Peck discusses his own refusal to affect the pose of the restrained, moderate, balanced, judicious and neutral filmmaker. I too have broken with the conventions of intellectual neutrality in my work. His film prompted me to ask, not for the first time, how I, as a Black intellectual, could think about the terms civilisation, colonisation and extermination and use them to confront the many layers of silence in the place from which I write.
I live on the Northeastern coast of the US in an Anglophile shoreline town. It is an excellent place from which to consider the ways in which a settlement with colonialism can reproduce the injustice and violations of white supremacy. The atmosphere in the town is one of preserved time; too content and self-satisfied with its sense of liberality, it denies the history of New England while seeming to embrace it. It seeks to draw visitors into a cocoon of English colonial history, memorialising the arrival and settlement in 1639 of a band of Puritans under the leadership of the Reverend Henry Whitfield. State and local authorities have legislated for the preservation of numerous buildings, four districts and the town green: there are five museums in historic houses; an energetic preservation alliance; and societies and foundations run by generations of residents dedicated to the stewardship of a very particular vision of the past.
In June 2014, the town installed a 24-foot-long, 6-foot-wide, 14-inch-thick pink granite slab into which is carved a replica of the covenant signed by the 25 male settlers on the St John, which was carrying them to what they thought of as a new world. In stark contrast, a recent initiative by volunteers to memorialise what is known about the historical presence of enslaved people in the town has resulted in the installation of four-inch concrete cubes, each bearing a brass plate inscribed with the name given to an enslaved person by their owner or trader. The cubes are embedded in the sidewalks next to the few buildings where enslaved people are known to have lived and worked. Most people pass by without noticing these weathered, discoloured, dirt-encrusted and increasingly unreadable markers.
There is no town memorial to Indigenous peoples, no mention of the displaced Menunkatuck, Quinnipiac, Hammonasset, Niantic, Mohegan and Wangunk who lived in the town from the mid-18th century until at least the mid-19th. There is no reference to the many groups of Algonquian peoples who inhabited this part of the Atlantic coast and its interior for thousands of years before the European invasion and colonisation of the Kwinitekw river valley, or to their descendants who still live here. The only mark of Indigenous existence in the town is a plaque on a gravestone under which lie the remains of a young male with a spinal injury, age 30-34 years, who lived between five hundred and a thousand years ago. The partial skeleton was uncovered on a construction site but remained in private hands until it was surrendered to the town, examined by the state archaeologist and students at Southern Connecticut State University, and reinterred in a corner of the Alder Brook cemetery in 2009.
Visitors to the town, which describes itself as the highlight of Connecticut tourism, can create their own itinerary, delivered to their electronic devices as they browse the towns website. The promise that they will be charmed by a quaint New England village is, apparently, fulfilled. Charming and quaint are words I often overhear on the Town Green or in front of the historic houses or near the displays of colonial artefacts. The meagre paragraphs on Indigenous peoples on the website make it sound as if they were essentially wiped out by disease before the arrival of English settler colonists. Only a perfunctory reference is made to the Menunkatuck, the small group of the Quinnipiac peoples whose homeland this was, and its a reference that lends a patina of contractual legality to the English settlement: a deed, signed by Shaumpishuh, the Menunkatuck sachem, or leader, conveyed the use of the land to the towns founding fathers. The website does not include any reference to the Pequot, the most influential and powerful Indigenous community in the region until they were massacred by the English (a massacre so brutal that it must have influenced the decision of the Quinnipiac peoples to permit the use of their coastal territory).
The word quaint suggests a comforting and comfortable relation to the past; it keeps at bay any of the anxiety or misgivings that could that should arise from the history of this land. What is experienced by tourists and residents as historic is an assemblage of heritage for consumption, and what is meant by quaint is the reassuring knowledge that there will be no confrontation with the violence and brutality of European colonisation or its consequences for Indigenous peoples.
As Andrew Lipman writes in The Saltwater Frontier: Indians and the Contest for the American Coast (2017), the duelling nations of foreigners did not settle [the Atlantic shore]: they unsettled it, transforming a thriving place into what Lipman calls a nightmarish landscape of death. In 1637, two forces of English soldiers, one led by Captain John Mason and drawn from settlements in what is now Connecticut, and the other from the Massachusetts Bay Colony under Captain John Underhill, surrounded and fired on a stockaded Pequot village on the Mystic River, while their Narragansett and Mohegan auxiliaries stood at a distance. Each force entered through one of the two gates in a palisado protecting many closely pitched homes. Mason later claimed that his original intent was to destroy by the Sword and save the Plunder soldiers depended financially on the spoils of war but, frustrated at meeting fierce resistance from Pequot warriors firing arrows through loopholes, decided that We should never kill them after that manner We must burn them. He took a log from the campfire and started to set the houses ablaze. His soldiers did the same, while Captain Underhill set a fire with a trail powder at the other end of the village. The two fires met and became a conflagration.
On 29 December 1890, three hundred Lakota people were massacred by the US army near Wounded Knee Creek on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. There are photographs. At first light on 26 May 1637, around seven hundred Pequot were massacred by English troops; 150 of them were warriors sent by their sachem, Sassacus, from the village of Weinshauks, to intercept the English; most of the others were women and children. Hundreds were burned alive. English troops encircled the perimeter and shot or impaled anyone who ran from the flames. Seven Pequot escaped; seven were taken prisoner. Two Englishmen were killed and twenty wounded. Mason considered the incineration and butchering of the Pequot an act mandated by God. Underhill wrote that sometimes the Scripture declareth women and children must perish. There are no photographs.
The massacre demoralised the Pequot, and sent a shock wave through all the Indigenous communities in the region. The Pequot War of 1636-38 saw the English engage in total war. Their actions went beyond the murder and imprisonment of Indigenous peoples to the destruction of the environment that sustained them: habitations, stores of food, fields of corn. Some of the sachems sought refuge for their people with other Indigenous communities. Weinshauks was abandoned. Sassacus led the villagers west along the Mishimayagat shoreline pathway towards Quinnipiac, hoping to regroup and take a stand against the English there. Reinforced by a contingent of 120 troops from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the Connecticut force set off in pursuit. The walk I take each day follows the route of the Mishimayagat, although there are no visible signs of the complex network of pathways used by the Algonquian peoples for centuries, routes that contemporary roads retrace. Stragglers from the group travelling with Sassacus were captured and killed as they crossed the Kwinitekw, although two sachems were spared on condition that they help the English locate the remaining Pequot.
The name of the southernmost tip of my town, Sachems Head, should give one pause for thought. A promontory with beautiful coves and inlets jutting into Long Island Sound, it has become the exclusive preserve of wealthy families in large houses, governed by its own association and charter, with a members-only yacht club and stringent parking regulations that effectively deny public access to uninvited visitors. The associations website has nothing to say about a letter written by Captain Richard Davenport on 17 July 1637, describing his interrogation of Pequot prisoners whom we put to death that night and called the place Sacheme head. Instead, any historical curiosity about the name of the area is deflected by a photograph of a very different event, the performance at a local hotel in 1915 by Buffalo Bills Wild West Touring Company, shown smiling in full costume representing Indianness.
Black and Indigenous histories are closely entangled in this story. The English troops caught up with the Pequot at Sasqua, a swamp east of Quinnipiac, and surrounded them. Some escaped, but two hundred were taken prisoner. Fifty women and children were shipped to John Winthrop, governor of Massachusetts, with a note from Stoughton, the militia captain, listing the female captives he and his men wanted to enslave in their households. Those who were not domestically enslaved, including children, were taken to the West Indies under Captain Peirce on the Salem ship Desire. The ship left from Providence Island on its return voyage on 26 February 1638, loaded with cotton and tobacco and negroes. In the Bahamas, the enslaved Pequots were fungible bodies exchanged for enslaved Africans, who were shipped to what has become known as New England.
The English declared the right to settle the land they called Connecticut by right of conquest. Their pursuit of the Pequots by water and along the Mishimayagat path led directly to the colonisation of Quinnipiac and the shoreline to the east. Theophilus Eaton, the Reverend John Davenport and five hundred English Puritans sailed from Boston with pigs, sheep, cattle, goats, horses and oxen, landing at Quinnipiac, later renamed New Haven, on 24 April 1638, determined to establish a settlement. Henry Whitfields band of settler-colonists arrived in Quinnipiac before exploring the coastline to its east. They declared their right to establish the Plantation of Menunkatuck in 1639, formally named Guilford in 1643. My town.
One Indigenous response to the unsettling of the saltwater frontier by English colonisers is recorded. The Narragansett sachem Miantonomo delivered a speech to the Montauks in 1642 arguing that
For so are we all Indians as the English are, and say brother to one another; so must we be one as they are, otherwise we shall all be gone shortly, for you know our fathers had plenty of deer and skins, our plains were full of deer, as also our woods, and of turkies, and our coves full of fish and fowl. But these English, having gotten our land, they with scythes cut down the grass, and with axes fell the trees; their cows and horses eat the grass, and their hogs spoil our clam banks, and we shall be all starved. Therefore it is best for you to do as we, for we are all the Sachems from east to west, both Moquakues and Mohauks joining with us, and we are all resolved to fall on them all, at one appointed day.
Miantonomo was captured by the Mohegan leader Uncas. The Colonial Court condemned him for attempting to forge alliances against the English and asked Uncas to kill him. The Treaty of Hartford, agreed by the English, the Mohegan and the Narragansett in 1638, had declared that the Pequots could no longer speak their language, live in their former territory or even call themselves Pequots. Despite this attempt at annihilation, some Pequots survived and fought to retain their land and autonomy. Black and Indigenous histories mixed together, as they did in other Southern New England tribes.
The Black Seminole populations of Florida and Oklahoma had a similarly mixed heritage. The Second Seminole War, conducted by the US government between 1835 and 1842 under the Indian Removal Act of 1830, attempted to return the Black Seminole to enslavement and to remove the Seminole Indians from their land. Exterminate All the Brutes begins with a re-enactment of one of the battles in this conflict. The camera zooms in slowly on a headshot of Osceola, a male warrior of the Seminole Nation, played in the film by a woman. We are told that her story reaches deep into the history of this continent. The portrait is intercut with two brief glimpses of the future, in which Osceola is shot and scalped while fighting alongside her Black allies. Osceolas face dissolves into that of Pecks mother, Gisle, as a young woman in Haiti, an intertwining of resemblance and difference that tells a global story of the greed and destruction of European imperialism and a particular story of Black and Indigenous solidarity.
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Hazel V. Carby We must burn them: Against the Origin Story LRB 26 May 2022 - London Review of Books
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A new stage for Mars: Web3 colonization of Mars has begun – Digital Journal
Posted: at 6:28 pm
Prague, Czech Republic, May 16, 2022, ZEXPRWIRE, Two NFT experts from the Czech Republic founded a brand new NFT project called Martian Colony. It took 6 months to present an ecosystem with races, hierarchy, and story-telling.
How about the thought that life on Mars began a long time ago? Before earthlings started researching the soil of the Red Planet and its potential? What if some so high-evolved civilization was hiding under a magnetic shield to protect against invasion? Such a high desire to reveal the truth!
There is a fantastic opportunity! Meet the first-ever high-quality organized project about Mars the Martian Colony NFT! Minters will feel so crazy happy about the project`s mindset and uniqueness. Only 5,555 3D NFTs; it is a big fortune to buy some. Now it is possible to get acquainted with the 4 out of 8 races accessible on Stage 1 of the project. Buyers will receive unrepeatable randomly generated Martian NFTs.
Discord link was announced. It shares a chance to join the community! 13 June 2022 all WL holders will get access to mint for 0.08 ETH. A public sale will be held on 15 June 2022.
After the full sold-out, these guys will upgrade all the NFTs to animated versions. It is so rare in the NFT market that the team is so attentive to details and cares about the projects future.
Martian Colony NFT is aware of their own Metaverse as well. They have already started building a whole ecosystem on the blockchain. An NFT holder will have an opportunity to use a Martian avatar to enroll in the extraterrestrial world. Play games like Martian Battle based on the MMORPG genre, fight enemies, buy lands and real estate, explore the Colony on hovercrafts and other personal vehicles. All these activities will pump a character. It will help to aim the goals and get special bonuses in the Metaverse. Holders will also choose the further evolution of the project with the DAO establishment depending on the owned NFT quantity.
After all the NFTs are sold out on Stage 1, the Martian Colony NFT founders will announce the dates of a 5-day trip to Prague, Czech Republic (Europe). 33 lucky holders of 3 Martians will get an all-expenses-paid stay in a 5* hotel in the center of the city, enriched cultural life (like visiting the castle in Prague and sightseeing), a get-together with founders in a fabulous restaurant, and a half-day party on the boat down the river Vltava with live music and DJ!
But still, nothing can outshine the creators` fantasy for the project and dive into a Martian trip. Not only Mars but its citizens also have a remarkable story. Each race is unique and specific. They are so different in temperant, traits, and what is more appearance. Labour are hard-working with their 4 hands and have a complicated character in the desire to get a higher rank. Civilians hands touch the ground as their feet; they look extra and have constant conflicts with the mafia. Scientist advanced and evolved race, the whole amount of information they know can only fit the two heads (by the way, they have both). Governing entrusted with a supernatural power establishers of life on Mars who can levitate.
What is more there is a one-of-a-kind piece NFT, Supreme Leader on Mars a lucky holder of this rarity will get 5.555 $. This NFT doesnt match with any from the collection. It is specially created apart from the others, inimitable and unique.
NFT avatars will be the legit pass to a future Metaverse. Phobos will be the first city opened for strolling and exploring by the Martian Colony club members. Imagine buying the first flat in a skyscraper in the center of the Red Planet. Dazzling possibilities.
Follow the link to join Martian Colony NFT`s Discord. Visit Martian web-site and learn about the history of Martian Colony.
About:
Martian Colony is an NFT project. The whole project is divided into two stages. Stage 1 is going on right now. Stage 1 includes releasing 4 races of NFT Martians (5.555 units in total) for mint and the post-sale phase aiming to strengthen the community via DAO, engaging, and bonusing. Stage 2 follows after. The main goal is to create a Martian Colony Metaverse.
Media Contact: David Mirzazada,CEO[emailprotected]
PR Contact:
ZEXPRWIRE[emailprotected]
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WATCH: Apple TV Plus Releases Trailer For Season 3 Of ‘For All Mankind’ – We Got This Covered
Posted: at 6:28 pm
The Apple TV Plus streaming service now has an extensive slate of original programming and has just revealed the trailer for the third season of one of its initial offerings in the For All Mankind space series.
The footage for the next chapter of the alternate history look at the space race debuted on YouTube earlier today. In it we see the characters we know manning a mission to Mars, racing against the Soviet Union who leads the space race in the series.
The next chapter premieres June 10 and we also get looks at aspects of space exploration the public knows today but in the earlier time period of the Clinton era.
Some say private citizens have no business in space exploration. I emphatically disagree.
Later on, Joel Kinnamans Edward Baldwin hints at large-scale human colonization of the red planet, worries about his crews survival, and others at NASA discuss things they are searching for even now.
You wanna tell us where the water is?
For All Mankind also stars Shantel VanSanten as Karen Baldwin, Jodi Balfour as Ellen Wilson, Krys Marshall as Danielle Poole, Casey W. Johnson as Danny Stevens, and features Jeff Branson as Neil Armstrong. The series has been critically acclaimed during its run and has an 87 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and has included public figures like Richard Nixon, Ted Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Gary Hart, and Tom Brokaw in archive footage alongside figures like John Lennon, Jim Lovell and former astronaut Frank Borman, too.
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WATCH: Apple TV Plus Releases Trailer For Season 3 Of 'For All Mankind' - We Got This Covered
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30 Of the best fried foods around the world – KAKE
Posted: at 6:28 pm
People have never been able to resist the crunchy craving of deep-fried food.
Archaeological evidence shows we've been enjoying fried dough and other delights since ancient Mesopotamians invented frying pans, and our love for the practice has only grown in the millennia that followed.
It would take an iron stomach and a lot of time to sample every irresistible fried food around the world or even to try every variation on a theme -- funnel cakes versus jalebi, zeppole versus beignets.
So not all fried foods can be mentioned in a single story, but there's enough fried goodness to get you started at least.
Here are 30 of the best fried foods around the world to get you salivating for your next trip:
Vegetable tempura is known for its light-as-air batter, made with soft flour, eggs and very cold or sparkling water.
Though shrimp tempura is also popular, vegetable tempura encompasses a wide variety of ingredients, including mushrooms, lotus root and burdock, seaweed and leafy greens such as shiso, green beans, pumpkin and other hard squash, okra and shishito peppers.
It was introduced to Japan via Portuguese missionaries in the 16th century as a meatless option during holy fasting days.
These savory cornmeal croquettes have been a traditional accompaniment to fried fish throughout the US South since the Civil War era.
Also called "red horse bread" in South Carolina (after the species of fish with which it was served) as well as "three finger bread" or "red devils" throughout Georgia and Florida, the name "hushpuppies" was the one that stuck when tourists discovered the fritters in the early 20th century.
Churros (Spain, Portugal and Latin America)
Originally popularized in Spain and Portugal, these ridged pastry sticks are a sweet favorite for breakfast or snacking throughout Latin America as well.
The batter is piped through a star-shaped tip into hot oil to give the churro its signature shape. Churros are frequently dusted with cinnamon sugar and dipped into caf con leche, hot chocolate or dulce de leche.
Simple pillows of fried yeast dough dusted with powdered sugar, beignets are synonymous with New Orleans' French Quarter, where they're famously served with chicory coffee at Caf du Monde.
These fritters arrived in the South via French Canadian (Acadian) settlers in the 18th century, making the beignet a standard of Cajun culture and cuisine.
Like many fried delicacies, these fluffy, triangular pillows go by many names along the Swahili coast of East Africa. The yeast dough can be made with milk or coconut milk (if coconut's involved, they might be called mahamri or mamri) and flavored with spices such as cardamom or ground nuts.
In Ghana and other places in West Africa, the dough is formed into round balls, and the pastries are known as bofrot or puff puff.
Indian jalebi are cousins to the Middle Eastern fried zulbiya and zalabiya -- thin fried batter rounds that first made their way across trade routes in the medieval era. The batter is piped through a muslin cloth into the oil, then dipped in sugar syrup for a chewy-crunchy texture.
They are often eaten alongside other snacks such as samosas or with rabdi, a creamy sweetened milk.
Fried zucchini blossoms are a botanical bonus for gardeners: Squash plants produce flowers in spring, but only the female flowers will grow into zucchini by summer's end.
Gardeners in the know pick the male blossoms and turn them into a delicacy, dipping them in a light batter and frying until puffy and golden. The flowers can also be stuffed with ingredients such as cheese, prosciutto, rice and herbs.
A modern twist on the traditional doughnut, cronuts became the name on every dessert lover's lips in the United States nearly a decade ago.
This hybrid of a croissant and a doughnut was introduced by pastry chef Dominique Ansel at his New York City bakery in 2013 and has inspired many imitators. The flaky, puffy pastry is filled with flavored cream, then topped with a glaze.
Fry bread (Native Americans in the US)
Fry bread, or frybread, is a byproduct of colonial displacement that has evolved into a complicated symbol for many tribes.
When Native Americans were forced from their farmlands onto reservations by the US government in the mid-1800s, they used the ingredients provided to them -- such as flour, sugar and lard -- to create this survival staple of a large, puffy round of dough.
Today, many Native cooks tweak their family recipes with ingredients such as locally milled corn and whole wheat flour.
Fried green tomatoes (United States)
Though they're most usually associated with the South, fried green tomatoes have their origins in the Midwest. Recipes for this method of turning unripe tomatoes into a culinary confection appear in late 19th-century community cookbooks from Ohio as well as Jewish immigrant cookbooks.
However you slice them, fried green tomatoes are an American staple. They can be dunked in cornmeal batter or breaded with flour, cornmeal or cracker crumbs before frying.
French fries (Belgium and France)
The history and birthplace of french fries has been contested between Belgium and France, but the method of making pommes de terre frites has gone from haute cuisine to a fast-food icon beloved around the world.
As the lore goes, the name refers to the technique of frenching, or thinly slicing vegetables (in this case potatoes) so all the pieces cook evenly. Served alongside steak or a burger, with ketchup or mayonnaise, or topped with cheese and gravy, french fries go with just about everything.
Pakora is a catchall term for a variety of Indian vegetable fritters, which can be made with anything from potatoes and eggplant to cabbage and spinach as a base.
Traditionally made with a variety of chickpea flour known as besan flour, these fritters can vary in shape and size depending on the specific vegetables used. Bread pakora consists of slices of bread dipped in batter and deep fried, often with vegetables such as potatoes stuffed between slices.
Tostones (Caribbean and Latin America)
Fried once is great, but fried twice? Even better. Tostones are twice-fried green plantains with variations found throughout Latin American and Caribbean cuisines. Slices of plantain are fried once, then smashed and fried again to get extra crispy edges.
Like potato chips, tostones can be salted and eaten on their own, used as a vehicle for scooping up dips and sauces or as an edible vessel for other snacks such as pulled meats, cheese or ceviche.
Sicilian arancini have been delighting Italians since the 10th century with their combination of rice and savory fillings. Though these breaded fried rice balls are a traditional food during the December feast of Santa Lucia, arancini are eaten year-round.
They can be stuffed with fillings as diverse as meat ragu, mozzarella, eggplant, mushrooms and even pistachios. Arancini, also known as arancine, can be round or molded into a conical shape in honor of the Sicilian volcano Mount Etna.
Fofos de arroz (Mozambique)
The strong Portuguese influence on Mozambique's cuisine can be seen in arroz de fofo, breaded and fried rice balls that feature garlic and bay leaf-seasoned cooked rice with shrimp in the center.
Though rice, garlic and bay leaf were introduced as part of Portugal's colonization in the 1500s, shrimp are a local delicacy for this coastal country in southeastern Africa.
Inspired by Chinese egg rolls, the Chiko roll was invented in the 1950s by an Australian caterer who wanted a substantial snack for his outdoor events that could be eaten "in one hand, with a cool beer in the other," according to the official origin story.
Filled with beef and vegetables and deep fried in a pastry crust, Chiko rolls have moved beyond tailgate food for sporting events to an iconic takeaway food throughout Australia.
While there are many varieties of pakora, one special version are bhajis, or onion fritters laced with aromatic spices. Onion bhajis are a flavorful teatime snack and street food in South India. With the thinly sliced onions creating a web for the batter to hold onto, they are light and crunchy.
Though the name translates to "orange cake," there's no orange flavor in these deep-fried rice balls. Instead, these southern Vietnamese sweets are named for their visual resemblance to an orange. Made with tender glutinous rice flour and filled with mung bean paste, the balls are then rolled in sesame seeds and fried.
Banh ran is a similar variation found in northern Vietnam that is drizzled with sugar syrup and has a slightly hollow interior for the filling.
Scotch eggs (United Kingdom)
Possibly the most protein-packed bar snack in culinary history, a Scotch egg is a hard-boiled egg encased in sausage, then coated in breadcrumbs and fried until crispy.
They might be decadently rich, but they're definitely not Scottish. Some say this salty snack was invented by the British retailer Fortnum & Mason in the 1700s, while others maintain it's a British take on the Indian nargisi kofta, a curry dish that features eggs wrapped in ground lamb.
When craving crunchy fried chicken in Japan, look no further than katsu. These panko-breaded cutlets are a staple of many a meal, served over rice or with a curry. Katsu sauce, a sweet and tart fruity sauce, is also a classic accompaniment. Beyond chicken katsu, tonkatsu specifically refers to a fried pork cutlet, and gyukatsu is the beef version.
Fried calamari (Italy and Greece)
Batter-fried or breaded, served with a lemon wedge and either marinara sauce or a creamy mayonnaise-based sauce, this now-ubiquitous dish has gone from a Greek and Italian coastal specialty to high-end American restaurants to a mainstream appetizer.
First reported on by The New York Times in 1975, these simple rings of squid might not be as trendy as they were in the '90s, but the seafood sensation remains on many a menu.
Fried chicken (Korean and American)
There are many ways to cook chicken, but two of the most popular (and crunchy) are American and Korean fried chicken.
American fried chicken is known for its thick and craggy crust, a result of dredging buttermilk-marinated chicken pieces in seasoned flour to build up the coating. Korean fried chicken has a thin, crispy batter coating that's double-fried to get extra crunch, then coated in a gochujang-honey sauce.
Fried clams (New England)
Roadside clam shacks dot the New England landscape from Connecticut to Maine, selling the region's most famous fried seafood. In New England, whole clam bellies are dipped in milk and then dredged in a cornmeal-flour breading before frying.
Typically served with tartar sauce, they can be enjoyed on their own or as a clam roll in a hot dog-style bun. Clam strips have the belly removed for a thinner, crunchier fried option.
It's the national dish of Lebanon, but versions of these fried meat-and-bulgur balls can be found throughout the Middle East. Minced beef or lamb is mixed with cooked bulgur wheat, onions and spices. It's traditionally mixed and ground by hand, then shaped and fried.
Kibbeh can be formed into football-shaped balls, large discs or baked into casserole dishes. A raw version, similar to tartare, is known as kibbeh nayyeh.
Leche frita, or fried milk, is a favorite northern Spanish street food. Milk is cooked with flour and sugar into a thick custard, then chilled until firm. The custard is cut into cubes, dredged in flour and eggs and fried. Topping the leche frita cubes with cinnamon and sugar makes it a sweeter treat.
Prawn toast (or shrimp toast) is a simple savory snack consisting of shrimp paste smeared on white bread, then deep fried to a golden crisp.
It was popularized in Hong Kong -- some speculate that the bread component in this dish came from British colonization -- and has spread to dim sum menus worldwide. Sesame seeds are sprinkled on the prawn toast before frying in a British and Australian variation.
Deep-fried Mars bar (United Kingdom)
It's one of the best-known experiments of "will it fry?" The deep-fried Mars Bar is a Scottish novelty that has inspired many imitators, from fried Oreos to Twinkies.
Originally created in a Scottish chip shop -- supposedly as a dare -- a frozen Mars Bar (a chocolate, nougat and caramel candy bar) is dipped in thick batter and fried just until the chocolate is gooey and slightly melted.
Naples, Italy, is famous for its airy, thin-crusted Neapolitan pizza, but pizza fritta is the lesser-known staple of the city's pizza traditions. Long a snack in the poorer areas of Naples, this style of pizza was said to have been popularized during World War II when ingredients were scarce and bombings destroyed many of the wood-fired ovens used to make Neapolitan pizza.
These puffy rounds of dough are filling, and even more so when stuffed with ingredients such as ricotta, crushed tomatoes and pork cracklings.
Chimichangas (Southwest US)
Arizona lays claim to being the birthplace of chimichangas -- deep-fried burritos that are now a staple of Tex-Mex cuisine.
Though two restaurants in Phoenix and Tucson offer competing origin stories, as with many Tex-Mex foods, the concept has multiplied throughout the Southwest. Burritos can be filled with rice, beans, cheese and meats such as ground beef, carne asada, pork or chicken, then fried until the tortilla becomes a crispy shell.
Chicharrons (Spain, Latin America and the Philippines)
Pork rinds may be popular with the keto set, but they aren't a new creation developed by the big-name snack brands. Chicharron, or deep-fried pork skin, has been a method for making the most of every part of the pig for centuries. It's most commonly associated with Spanish and Latin American countries, as well as in the Philippines.
It can be part of a main course when stuffed into tortillas, mofongo or arepas, as a crispy topping, or on its own with seasonings.
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Crypto.com Spent Its Way to the Top. Then the Market Crashed. Now What? – GQ
Posted: at 6:28 pm
When I followed up with Cuban after the Luna debacle, his optimism was undiminished. The crypto market highly correlates to the NASDAQ, he said. Three of the most heavily invested stocksApple, Amazon, and Facebookhave lost more in market cap than the entire value of the crypto market. No one is questioning whether Apple would be a good partner after it lost $400 billion or so in market cap. This is the way markets work.
Maybe But Apple has actual products. The crypto space, after over ten years of development, has little to offer beside database entries, ugly avatars, risky trades, and a portfolio of vaporware. Plusand here I must again editorializethe DeFi sector looks to me like a ticking bomb. Last Thursday, Tether, another widely-used stablecoin that attracts users looking for yield, briefly broke its peg to the U.S. Dollar. It recovered quickly, but many observers agree that a run on stablecoins could lead to a chain of cascading failure. If things start to unravel, it could be potentially catastrophic for the industry, one analyst told CNBC. This is the way markets dont work.
I must admit that, before the crash, I enjoyed seeing my altcoin portfolio appreciate. I also accumulated a fair amount of interest, scored some Cronos kickbacks, and was comped a month of Spotify. I still didnt really understand why cryptocurrency was so expensive, or complicated, but it felt good to be a joiner. In that way, Matt Damon was right.
Looking to commune with the tribe, I visited the long-running CryptoMondays meetup in Venice Beach about a month before the crash. We met under patio lights in the parking lot of an upscale Mexican restaurant, which had been converted, during the pandemic, into an outdoor bar. Id been to a similar event, years earliera total sword fight, where feverish dweebs lectured one another about distributed ledgers. Since then, crypto had enjoyed a social upgrade: In Venice, the attendees were diverse, funny, smart, beautiful, and cool. I felt like I was in a vodka commercial.
No one I spoke to could remember who first organized the eventone attendee told me it was spontaneous, or decentralized. Some of the participants had been coasting for years on the proceeds of their swollen Bitcoin wallets; others, like me, were just getting started. I talked with a recent college grad and former javelin thrower. Jacked and bro-adjacent, he belonged to the demographic that Crypto.com refuses to admit it targets, but when I asked him about the company, he scoffed. No one I know uses it.
You know, what hes doing is smart, he said of Marszalek. Youve got blockchain companies that have been around since 2013, and they dont even have a marketing officer. Other companies are building technology, but theyre investing in glamour.
Similarly dismissive was Jackie Peters, a stylish entrepreneur who is building a blockchain--enabled dating app called Trust! (The app will use Web3 technology to restore authenticity to online dating.) Peters was still in the process of selecting which blockchain she would use, but Cronos was not a contender. Theres nothing on there, technically, that would attract me, she said. Im thinking of using a blockchain called Avalanche.
Of the dozen or so attendees I spoke with, only Apu Gomes, a Brazilian photographer, had any direct experience investing with Crypto.com. Gomes, who was looking to market NFTs of his photographs, was also a small-time speculator. In the weeks after Damons commercial first aired, Cronos had quintupled in value. The companys next commercial, which featured LeBron James, ran during the Super Bowl. It went down, Gomes said. I sold it to buy Solana.
Many of the attendees seemed to be nursing hangovers. That was thanks, in part, to Audrey Pichy, an organizer of NFT/LA, which had concluded earlier that week, and which billed itself as an epic IRL conference fused with immersive metaverse integrations and L.A.s robust nightlife scene. Pichy, who was born on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, wore a leather jacket, and bounced from side to side in excitement as she spoke. Up until a month ago, we werent even sure how many people were going to show. But 4,000 people came!
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The US And England Will Never Agree On These Foods – Mashed
Posted: at 6:28 pm
Meatballs, meatloaf, kebabs ... they all start with ground meat. In England, however, there is no mention of "meat" in any ground meat labels. Instead, mince refers to any ground protein and requires beef, lamb, or pork clarifications for savvy shopper. For example, beef mince caters to England's meatball needs, lamb mince for Greek moussaka, and pork mince to fill dumpling wrappers.
Meat mince is not to be confused with mince pie, a British dessert classic featuring a syrupy fruit filling inside a flakey pastry crust. Early mince pies did actually contain ground meat, to be fair. However, over centuries of mince pie construction, meat became less and less popular and eventually left mince pie recipes altogether.
According to Delish, Americans struggle to understand the difference between mince and mincemeat. In 2019, the site reports, The Spruce Eats blog posted an apple and mincemeat recipe, but instead of reaching for fruity jarred mincemeat, photographers used ground beef instead. The recipe was eventually corrected, but it's safe to say that the mince name can still perplex U.S. cooks.
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The US And England Will Never Agree On These Foods - Mashed
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Boeing finally docks a capsule to the space station – NPR
Posted: at 6:15 pm
The Boeing Starliner prepares to dock at the International Space Station on Friday. NASA via AP hide caption
The Boeing Starliner prepares to dock at the International Space Station on Friday.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. With only a test dummy aboard, Boeing's astronaut capsule pulled up and parked at the International Space Station for the first time Friday, a huge achievement for the company after years of false starts.
With Starliner's arrival, NASA finally realizes its longtime effort to have crew capsules from competing U.S. companies flying to the space station.
SpaceX already has a running start. Elon Musk's company pulled off the same test three years ago and has since launched 18 astronauts to the space station, as well as tourists.
"Today marks a great milestone," NASA astronaut Bob Hines radioed from the orbiting complex. "Starliner is looking beautiful on the front of the station," he added.
The only other time Boeing's Starliner flew in space, it never got anywhere near the station, ending up in the wrong orbit.
This time, the overhauled spacecraft made it to the right spot following Thursday's launch and docked at the station 25 hours later. The automated rendezvous went off without a major hitch, despite the failure of a handful of thrusters.
If the rest of Starliner's mission goes well, Boeing could be ready to launch its first crew by the end of this year. The astronauts likely to serve on the first Starliner crew joined Boeing and NASA flight controllers in Houston as the action unfolded nearly 270 miles (435 kilometers) up.
NASA wants redundancy when it comes to the Florida-based astronaut taxi service. Administrator Bill Nelson said Boeing's long road with Starliner underscores the importance of having two types of crew capsules. U.S. astronauts were stuck riding Russian rockets once the shuttle program ended, until SpaceX's first crew flight in 2020.
Boeing's first Starliner test flight in 2019 was plagued by software errors that cut the mission short and could have doomed the spacecraft. Those were corrected, but when the new capsule awaited liftoff last summer, corroded valves halted the countdown. More repairs followed, as Boeing chalked up nearly $600 million in do-over costs.
Before letting Starliner get close to the space station Friday, Boeing ground controllers practiced maneuvering the capsule and tested its robotic vision system. Everything checked out well, Boeing said, except for a cooling loop and four failed thrusters. The capsule held a steady temperature, however, and had plenty of other thrusters for steering.
Once Starliner was within 10 miles (15 kilometers) of the space station, Boeing flight controllers in Houston could see the space station through the capsule's cameras. "We're waving. Can you see us?" joked Hines.
There was only silence from Starliner. The commander's seat was occupied once again by the mannequin dubbed Rosie the Rocketeer, a space-age version of World War II's Rosie the Riveter.
The gleaming white-with-blue-trim capsule hovered 33 feet (10 meters) from the station for close to two hours considerably longer than planned as flight controllers adjusted its docking ring and ensured everything else was in order. When the green light finally came, Starliner closed the gap in four minutes, eliciting cheers in Boeing's control center. Applause erupted once the latches were tightly secured.
"These last 48 hours have just been a barnstorm, so it's going to be very good to sleep tonight," said Mark Nappi, vice president and director of Boeing's commercial crew program.
It was a double celebration for NASA's commercial crew program director Steve Stich, who turned 57 Friday. "What an incredible birthday it was," he told reporters.
The space station's seven astronauts will unload groceries and gear from Starliner and pack it up with experiments. Unlike SpaceX's Dragon capsule that splashes down off the Florida coast, Starliner will aim for a landing in New Mexico next Wednesday.
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