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hizokucycles · 1 year
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Reposted from @rj_marin_ 🍄🍄🍄 Dodi! 💙 . 📸 @drnk.o #track #trackbike #ahttb #sttb #baaw #fixed #fixedgear #breakless #newbikeday #dodici #dodicisl #nplusone #rhsh #ridehardstayhumble #hizokucycles Visit Hizokucycles.com for all kinds of cycling gear 🤘 https://www.instagram.com/p/CpDkHg5PCLr/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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kewpie-girl · 1 year
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Orientalism vs Asiaticism
If the Orientalism described by Said was consolidated in the age of European, especially British, empire, then Asiaticism belonged to the American century. Within this racial form, Lye writes in America’s Asia, the distinguishing trait of East Asian peoples has been excessive economic efficiency. Certainly this belongs within the Orientalist tradition of exoticization, but the temporal assumptions stand in stark contrast to those of earlier modes. As a shorthand, we can distinguish between the traditional “Oriental,” fit for conquest by the West, and the hypermodern “Asiatic,” feared for its conquest of the West.
Whereas classic Orientalism understood the East by foregrounding its despotic rulers, the “Asiatic” is represented through a plural figure, coolies, who — from railroad workers in Utah to sweatshop workers in Guangdong — are seen as a faceless mass and personify the logic of capitalist exploitation. Whereas the “Oriental” was traditional, the “Asiatic” is postmodern; whereas the “Oriental” was irrational and superstitious, the “Asiatic” is calculating. The “Oriental” referred to a geographically contained culture; the “Asiatic” points toward a transpacific, even global, flow of goods, capital, and people. The “Oriental” was archaic and conservative; the “Asiatic” is future-oriented and progressive. If, in short, the “Oriental” meant exclusion from the march of progress of capital, then the “Asiatic” represents its full realization as well as its dark excesses.
Lab Leak Theory and the Asiatic Form (https://www.nplusonemag.com/issue-42/politics/lab-leak-theory-and-the-asiatic-form/)
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protoslacker · 7 months
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The strategic slippage at the heart of the anti-trans campaigns—from trans child to protective caretaker to adult worker—clarifies why and for what purpose the architects of the panic organized their crusade. The anti-trans panic is part of a calculated political campaign, assembling a coalition of disparate forces with overlapping interests and plans. Those plans include destabilizing bulwarks of working-class power, obliterating free and universal public education, privatizing critical elements of social life, reinforcing racial segregation, and pulverizing institutions that can and often do produce oppositional political consciousness. And, because our opponents know what they’re doing, it starts with attacks on organized workers.
Kay Gabriel in nplusone Magazine. The Anti-Trans Panic and the Crusade Against Teachers
The goal is to crumble popular support for public education.
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berniesrevolution · 6 years
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In an environmental impact study that made headlines last month, the Trump Administration argued that anthropogenic climate change is likely to lead to a 4°C increase in average temperatures by 2100. According to the memo, modest reforms, like the fuel-efficiency standards the study was aiming to overturn, will make no appreciable difference in global climate change.
That outrage greeted the release of this memo was unsurprising. Throughout his candidacy and his presidency, Trump has preferred to think of climate change as a “Chinese hoax,” and his administration, like all recent Republican regimes, has committed itself to an accelerated anti-environmentalism, overturning with ecstatic vigor its predecessor’s modest restraints and regulations. Still, in its own perverse way, the Trump study is one of the most forthright presentations on climate change to come from a Global North government in recent memory.
Trump withdrew from the 2015 Paris Agreement more than a year ago, for which he has been condemned in the US and abroad. But the unfortunate truth is that the non-binding treaty’s stated targets—to keep global temperatures to a less-than-1.5°C increase above pre-industrial levels over the next eighty years—were technically already impossible three years before it was signed. In the simplest terms, even with a reduction in the rate of carbon emissions, emissions as a whole are on track to increase by about 3 percent per year. To hold to the actual goals of the climate treaty, the actual output (not simply its rate) of carbon emissions would have to decrease in the range of 2 to 3 percent per year. Thus, in most likely scenarios, a 1.5 to 2°C increase threshold will be passed by 2050, and perhaps as early as the mid-2030s. What’s more is that the very idea embodied in the Paris Agreement—a transition to sustainability within existing political, economic, and social systems—is simply not plausible. To use the language of the administration’s study, such efforts are not currently “economically practicable.” The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report released just a week after the administration study emphatically underlines this point: at every turn, mitigation and adaptation efforts are “limited by economic, financial, human capacity and institutional constraints.”
In a much-discussed recent paper in PNAS broadly known as the “Hothouse Earth” paper, a team of noted climate scientists led by Will Steffen, Johan Rockström, and Katherine Richardson argue that unless drastic transformations were to occur, even increases of 1.5 or 2°C could lock in the “Hothouse” scenario, the result of a “cascade of feedbacks” in ecological systems. The idea of cascading effects or a series of triggered events is not new in the climate science literature, but Steffen et al were far more sanguine than is typical about how much human social and economic systems—rather than simply technological systems—play a central role in this process:
The present dominant socioeconomic system . . . is based on high-carbon economic growth and exploitative resource use. Attempts to modify this system have met with some success locally but little success globally in reducing greenhouse gas emissions or building more effective stewardship of the biosphere. Incremental linear changes to the present socioeconomic system are not enough to stabilize the Earth System.
In other words, small-bore reforms—a little cap-and-trade here, some fuel efficiency there—are not credible. For all their symbolic weight and political utility for figures like Emmanuel Macron or Angela Merkel, the Paris Climate Accords have offered little more than a fig leaf. Even the modest reductions in emissions—what Steffen et al describe as “some success locally”—deserve an asterisk. Many would argue that measuring carbon output by national boundary in a globalized world is highly misleading. Some of those local success stories are precisely that: partial transitions to clean energy or higher efficiency. But a far clearer picture can be found in the world of industrial production. Just as so much global manufacturing has shifted to places like China, so have much of the related emissions. Today, as ever, a vast number of ideologues and politicians of fundamental-system preservation like to present themselves as the adults in the room, the experts who can be trusted with the ever more complex problems of the 21st century. But nothing could be further from the truth. When it comes to centrist technocracy and the climate, it’s not that the emperor is wearing no clothes. The whole suit is on fire.
At the center of the Anthropocene lies what the PNAS scientists refer to as the “present dominant socioeconomic system.” Capitalism as we know it has not simply steered the global human ecological niche off course; it has driven us completely into a ditch. “High-carbon economic growth” and “exploitative resource use” are constitutive of this system, not incidental to it. And this resource exploitation is not limited to fossil fuels and rare-earth metals. Everything from the augmented mental health regimes of white-collar workers in the Global North to increasingly destabilized and dispossessed farmers and fishermen in the Global South are part of its extractive circuit. Its causal tendrils snake back through the history of colonization, of coal and oil, of geopolitics, and, of course, profit.
(Continue Reading)
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bikeroar · 5 years
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STOKED ABOUT BIKES!
Found a bike 🚴 and awesome cycling info at BikeRoar. ❤ Let us help you. SPEND LESS TIME LOOKING & MORE TIME RIDING! Search & Compare from over 45,000 Bikes, Parts & Accessories.
LEARN MORE: http://roa.rs/2dbHWAU
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sh0rtstories · 2 years
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youcantbuyland · 6 years
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#Repost @nplusonebikeshop ・・・ #nplusone
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jsonabrigo · 5 years
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new bike day😎 all road adventure #gravelbike #gravelgrinder #ragleybikes #ragley #ragleytrig #ragleytrigbike #ragleytrigadventure #gravelbikes #gravelrides #gravelroad #panaracergravelking #gravelking #650bgravel #steelgravelbike #adventurebike #adventurebikes #allroadcycling #biking #chainreactioncycles #nplusone #graveladventure (at Lake Needwood) https://www.instagram.com/p/ByV3ituBXxx/?igshid=77q2pnbcvwpy
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bicyclespecialties · 7 years
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Spring wildflowers. Photo by @nplusonecycle #springflowers #intothewoods #explorebybike #nplusone #mariposabikes #mariposabicycles #touringbike #brooks #randonneur #randonnee #honjo #gillesberthoud (at London, Ontario)
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nickywunder · 7 years
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New bike in the stable!! #nplusone #focusbikes #hondagrom #matchymatchy #oneforfitness #bothforfun (at Augustine Heights)
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hizokucycles · 5 years
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Reposted from @21ninjas - Portraits by @coffeeoutsideyvr 🤙🏽 Check out their Stories for some more portraits from Saturday’s @coffeeoutsideyvr ride 👌🏽🥳 . @foundinthemountains 🥳 . . . #newbikeday #coffeeoutsideyvr #maahsf #santacruzstigmata #cx #cyclocross #design #cycling #❤️ #portrait #rideHiFi #nplusone #cyclinglife #HizokuCycles HizokuCycles.com https://www.instagram.com/p/B0EX5nFn_ut/?igshid=7culw1jkmyq
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azspot · 4 years
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What lies at the heart of democratic socialism is the ethic of solidarity. The idea is that workers, and the workers’ movement, should exercise democratic control over the economy. That means that many of the things we take for granted that are ruled by markets necessarily should not be. This means the way planning and development works, the way our schools function, the way workplaces are organized, in terms of the labor process and the sharing of wealth, the way society handles punishment and liberation and the way households are organized and domestic and socially reproductive labor is divided among partners, families, and communities.
Nikil Saval
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bikeroar · 5 years
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I would do anything for love, but I won't do that 🤘❤️🚲
RELATED: 5 reasons it's cheaper to buy new than second-hand → http://roa.rs/1pe642W
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theskorupiegg · 4 years
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April
(1 o’ clock) The weight of an empty afternoon tumbles onto him like a cascading bookshelf.
(2 o’ clock) The weightlifter of an empty aftertaste tunes onto him like a cascading bookshop.
(3 o’ clock) The weir of an empty afterthought tunnels onto him like a cascading bookstall.
(4 o’ clock) The weirdness of an empty age turbocharges onto him like a cascading bookstore.
(5 o’ clock) The welcome of…
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youcantbuyland · 7 years
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#Repost @nplusonebikeshop ・・・ @antagrey rocking the #nplusone kit whilst smashing out the #walesinaday sportive! 💥
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derrickb-atl · 5 years
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Early birthday present to myself!!! #newbike #nplusone #teamzoot #cycling #cervelos3 https://www.instagram.com/p/BzcHE1shBRQ/?igshid=1tkm4fy7hs07v
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