From Grist.org

blake kathryn

Kiana Khansmith
taylor price
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we're not kids anymore.
Misplaced Lens Cap
noise dept.
trying on a metaphor

Love Begins
Sweet Seals For You, Always
styofa doing anything

PR's Tumblrdome
Claire Keane

Discoholic 🪩
Xuebing Du
Show & Tell

roma★
NASA
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From Grist.org
From Article What does Race have to do with Feminism?
Powerful Ad Shows What A Little Girl Hears When You Tell Her She's Pretty
Check out this Verizon ad and description via Huffington Post describing the impact our words have on girls as they grow up.
Is Coding the New Literacy?
A great article via Mother Jones on the impact of women and people of color can make within computers and coding. Check it out!
RIGID PLASTIC CAN NOW BE RECYCLED IN NYC
FINALLY. As of April 25, you can now recycling all rigid plastics in New York City. This is a huge improvement compared to the old policy of "only bottle shaped plastics." According to the Department of Sanitation, this includes:
PLASTIC (rigid plastics)
plastic bottles, jugs & jars
rigid plastic caps & lids
rigid plastic food containers (yogurt, deli, hummus, dairy tubs, cookie tray inserts, "clamshell" containers, other plastic take-out containers)
rigid plastic non-food containers
rigid plastic packaging ("blister-pak" and "clamshell" consumer packaging, acetate boxes)
rigid plastic housewares (flower pots, mixing bowls, plastic appliances, etc.)
bulk rigid plastic (crates, buckets, pails, furniture, large toys, large appliances, etc.)
YES, you can even recycle bottle caps. Here is an excerpt from the Huffington Post:
CITY HALL — If it’s hard and plastic, recycle it.
That’s the message Mayor Michael Bloomberg sent Wednesday as he announced thecity’s biggest expansion of its recycling program in 25 years.
“Rigid” plastics like yogurt cups, take-out food containers, toys and CD cases that were previously unable to be recycled can now be tossed into the same bin as plastic bottles and jugs, Bloomberg said.
The new program, which began Wednesday, aims to take the guesswork out of plastics recycling and boost the city’s recycling efforts, Bloomberg said.
“Starting today, if it’s a rigid plastic — any rigid plastic — recycle it,” Bloomberg said in a statement. “There is no more worrying about confusing numbers on the bottom of the container.”
The city anticipates that 50,000 tons of plastics sent to landfills each year will now be recycled. And because it’s cheaper to recycle than to ship waste to landfills, the city will eventually save more than $600,000, the mayor said.
Picture Source
The Buildings of a Post-Revolution City
CAIRO — The telltale signs in post-revolutionary Egypt are not just the riots and rapes, the mega-traffic snarls and sectarian battles. There is also the highway ramp in Ard El Lewa.
After the revolution two years ago, working-class residents of that vast informal neighborhood, tired of having no direct access to the 45-mile-long Ring Road, took matters into their own hands. In the absence of functioning government, they built ramps from dirt, sand and trash. Then they invited the police to open a kiosk at the interchange. Read more.
Also check out the NYTimes Slideshow.
A City That Turns Garbage Into Energy Copes With a Shortage
“I’d like to take some from the United States,” said Pal Mikkelsen, in his office at a huge plant on the edge of town that turns garbage into heat and electricity. “Sea transport is cheap.”
Read the whole article.
From the NYTimes
Liberia, Papua New Guinea and the United States are among the small number of countries in the world with no policy of paid maternal leave. How does your country measure up in the map below? In The New York Times Sunday Review, Stephanie Coontz makes the case that gender equality has stalled in this country because "structural impediments prevent people from acting on their egalitarian values, forcing men and women into personal accommodations and rationalizations that do not reflect their preferences."
One Dot Per Person
This map shows the census represented as one dot per person. This simplest form of reporting is not only visually pleasing to look at, it reflects more telling information such as this image of Pennsylvania.
In this image, the thread of population density reflects Amtrak's most profitable route. You can also see where population is impacted by the ridges of the Appalachian mountains.
Map by Brandon Martin-Anderson via Atlantic Cities.
The Hideous Inequality Exposed by Hurricane Sandy
Published on Reuters.com | David Rohde | Oct 31, 2012
In Manhattan, the storm revealed a city more economically divided than it has been in a decade
A hotel bellman said he was worried about his mother uptown. A maid said she had been calling her family in Queens. A garage attendant said he hadn't been able to contact his only relative - a sister in New Jersey - since the storm hit. Asked where he weathered the hurricane, his answer was simple.
"I slept in my car," he said.
Sandy humbled every one of the 19 million people in the New York City metropolitan area. But it humbled some more than others in an increasingly economically divided city.
Hours before the storm arrived on Monday night, restaurants, corner grocery stores and hotels were open in the Union Square area of Manhattan. (My wife and I moved to a hotel there after being ordered to evacuate our apartment in lower Manhattan.) Instead of heading home to their families as the winds picked up, the city's army of cashiers, waiters and other service workers remained in place.
Divides between the rich and the poor are nothing new in New York, but the storm brought them vividly to the surface. There were residents like me who could invest all of their time and energy into protecting their families. And there were New Yorkers who could not.
Those with a car could flee. Those with wealth could move into a hotel. Those with steady jobs could decline to come into work. But the city's cooks, doormen, maintenance men, taxi drivers and maids left their loved ones at home.
New census data shows that the city is the most economically divided it has been in a decade, according to the New York Times. As has occurred across the country, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. Twenty-one percent of the city is in poverty, and the median household income decreased by $821 annually. Per the Times: “Median income for the lowest fifth was $8,844, down $463 from 2010. For the highest, it was $223,285, up $1,919.”
Manhattan, the city’s wealthiest and most gentrified borough, is an extreme example. Inequality here rivals parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Last year the wealthiest 20 percent of Manhattan residents made $391,022 a year on average, according to census data. The poorest 20 percent made $9,681.
All told, Manhattan’s richest fifth made 40 times more money than its poorest fifth, up from 38 times in 2010. Only a handful of developing countries – such as Namibia and Sierra Leone – have higher inequality rates.
In the Union Square area, New York’s privileged – including myself – could have dinner, order a food delivery and pick up supplies an hour or two before Sandy made landfall. The cooks, cashiers and hotel workers who stayed at work instead of rushing home made that possible.
They were a diverse group. Some were young people in their twenties. Others were middle-aged Americans who had never landed white-collar jobs. Most were immigrants.
On the other end of the wealth spectrum, New York’s age-old excesses emerged. Some families brought their nannies to the hotel to help care for their children through the hurricane. Others panicked when the power went off. All the while, waiters, maids and doormen continued to help them.
The storm affected the affluent as well. Tourists and business people from Boston, California, Britain and Japan were stranded in our hotel. They found themselves without power, water or transportation, and completely at the mercy of strangers.
But the city’s heroes were the tens of thousands of policemen, firefighters, utility workers and paramedics who labored all night for $40,000 to $90,000 a year. And the local politicians who focused on performance, not partisanship, such as New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Newark Mayor Corey Booker.
Twenty-four hours after the disaster, ugly political lines were already being drawn. Democrats pounced on a statement by Mitt Romney in a Republican primary debate last year that disaster response should be shifted to the states and, where possible, privatized. Michael Brown, the much criticized director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under George W. Bush, argued that the Obama administration had responded more quickly to Hurricane Sandy than it did to the terrorist attack in Benghazi.
“One thing he’s gonna be asked is, why did he jump on this so quickly and go back to D.C. so quickly when in … Benghazi, he went to Las Vegas?” Brown was quoted as saying to a Denver alternative newspaper. “This is like the inverse of Benghazi.”
Over the next few days, Obama’s and Romney’s reactions to the storm will be parsed. The role of the federal government in covering the costs of the disaster will be praised and assailed. Politicians, as always, will jockey for advantage.
The storm showed many things about New York. It exposed the city’s vulnerabilities. It also displayed its strengths. And to me, it showed New York’s growing economic divide. I’m sure that many of the people who remained at work yesterday chose to do so voluntarily. But I fear that many of them did not.
PHOTO: A general view from Exchange Place shows the skyline of lower Manhattan in darkness after a preventive power outage caused by giant storm Sandy in New York October 30, 2012. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
The Morning After
Across New York and New Jersey, people, families, homes and infrastructure are in need of our support. Aid efforts can range from financial contributions, blood donations, supply distribution, clean up and repair. If you were lucky enough that the subway closure was your major inconvenience, please consider leaving your hurrication to lend a hand to those who were more harshly impacted. Here is a list of links to organizations that are involved in relief coordination:
New York
Red Cross – General
Red Cross- Blood Donation
Red Cross- Shelter Volunteer
Red Cross- Apply to be a Spontaneous Worker
Register with NY Service or email at [email protected]
Lower East Side Recovers
New York Blood Center
Coalition for the Homeless
NY Communities for Change
NY Cares
New Jersey
United Way
Trained Volunteers can call 1-800-JERSEY-7 (1-800-537-7397) or email. Backup contact information includes 609-775-5236 or 908-303-0471 and e-mail [email protected]
Photo courtesy of Max Serota, Greenpoint.
Wind Wisps
An invisible, ancient source of energy surrounds us—energy that powered the first explorations of the world, and that may be a key to the future. This map shows you the delicate tracery of wind flowing over the US.
I think mapping is one of the most elegant ways to merge art and science. This Wind Map is an image from an absolutely stunning Real-Time Data project designed and developed by Fernanda B. Viégas and Martin Wattenberg. Stay tuned to the website for hypnotic hurricane visuals.
NASA Video of Hurricane Sandy.
Plankton for Obama
Robert Krulwich has a crazy ability in weaving together science, history and politics. In his latest blog post, he identifies a streak of democratic counties in the south as the same counties that had most nutrient rich soils, due to plankton deposits. Because these areas were lucrative for farming, more slaves were concentrated here. While many black Americans moved north after the civil war, some inevitably stayed behind, and generations later, it is their descendants who are painting the South blue.
From Krulwich Wonders:
In this 2000 census, you can see that the counties with the biggest populations of African-Americans still trace that Cretaceous shoreline.
This, says marine biologist McClain, explains that odd stretch of Obama blue; it's African-Americans sitting on old soil from ancient organisms that turned sunshine into fertilizer. So plankton remain a force in Southern elections — though not always, not continuously. After the Civil War, when the South voted solidly Democratic and Jim Crow laws ruled, many blacks couldn't vote, so the pattern disappears. Voting rights laws hadn't been passed during the Goldwater-Johnson election of 1964, so in this map, the African-American difference is invisible.
Photo from oceanworld.tamu.edu