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http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/the-social-and-legal-arguments-for-allowing-women-to-go-topless-in-public/279755/The valid thinking behind Topfree Equality movements. I’d add my own two cents: women can be turned on by a well-ton
theatlantic: Read more:And Then There Was OneAcross China, where new developments are keeping pace with the rapidly growing economy, reports continue to surface so-called “nail houses.” These properties, standing alone amid the ruins of other buildings,
theatlantic: Why Can’t We Tickle Ourselves? Neuroscientist David Eagleman explains: Because your brain is always predicting your own actions, and how your body will feel as a result, you cannot tickle yourself. Other people can tickle you because
theatlantic: This Is a Flash Mob Playing ‘Here Comes the Sun’ In a Spanish Unemployment Office Greatest flash mob of all time!
theatlantic: Why Parents Need to Let Their Children Fail You see, teachers don’t just teach reading, writing, and arithmetic. We teach responsibility, organization, manners, restraint, and foresight. These skills may not get assessed on standardized
theatlantic: On Getting Naked In Antarctica Antarctica, as my colleague Olga Khazan explained in 2013, is basically outer space on earth. Scientists who hole up at Antarctic research stations during the continent’s eight-month-long winter deal with
theatlantic: What’s Closer To Texas Than Texas Is To Itself? This map shows (roughly) how large the Lone Star State is. Points in the map’s red section are closer to somewhere in Texas than the opposite sides of Texas are to each other. That’s
theatlantic: BREAKING: Explosion at the Boston Marathon Finish Line Reuters is reporting that the headquarters at the Boston Marathon have been locked down after two explosions were reported near the finish line Monday afternoon, near the Boston
team-joebama: lord-kitschener: theatlantic: ‘America Needs Romney’ Blimp Crash Lands in Florida Nobody was injured, so you can feel better about laughing at this. i swear to everything that this feels like something out of an Arrested Development
creewillow: emilyqualey: theatlantic: These vintage Halloween costumes are terrifying. [via Flavorpill] So awesome. Now want to be a pair of eyes.
theatlantic: Racial Bias in Death Penalty Cases: A North Carolina Test If we still want to have a sound and sober national conversation about race and justice, if we still are eager to use a single case as a totem for what we perceive to be wrong or
theatlantic: In the June issue of The Atlantic: David H. Freedman on the return of B.F. Skinner’s ‘creepy’ science of behavior modification, Robert D. Kaplan on Vietnam’s place in U.S.-China relations, a profile of Olympic women’s boxer Marlen
theatlantic: sandykatrina: John’s home never lost power during Katrina, but a block down they did - he was lucky. But he did evacuate to just north of Baton Rouge for the storm. When he came back, he said all the leaves off the Oak in his front
theatlantic: Which New York Tabloid Had the Better Petraeus Pun?
theatlantic: When Schools Literally Take Food Out of the Hands of Children There are lots of tricky situations when it comes to educating children. But whether or not to take food out of a hungry child’s hands and throw it out should be one of the
theatlantic: The Lego Movie: Further Evidence of Will Ferrell’s Subversive Genius Who knew that The Lego Movie would create political controversy? Audiences have embraced the movie to the tune of a ๕-million opening weekend. But its plot—in
The Women of the Afghanistan War. Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2013/09/the-women-of-the-afghanistan-war/100585/
theatlantic: What Kind of ‘Justice System’ Refuses to Test DNA Evidence? Outrage rippled across the web earlier this week as Americans heard the story of Sharon Snyder, “a 70-year-old great-grandmother who was fired nine months before she was
theatlantic: Study: No News is Better Than Fox News A survey by Farleigh Dickinson University asked 1,185 random people about their news consumption and also random questions about domestic and current events like whether Bashar al-Assad was still
theatlantic: In Focus: Tough Guy 2012 Billed as “the toughest race in the world,” the Tough Guy 2012 competition took place yesterday in Perton, England. Every year, thousands of men and women tackle the course, which is described on the Tough
theatlantic: Five-Year-Olds Can Learn Calculus Why playing with algebraic and calculus concepts—rather than doing arithmetic drills—may be a better way to introduce children to math Read more. [Image: Alexander F. Yuan/AP Images] agileadventures
theatlantic: Indisputable Evidence That Millennials Have It Worse Than Any Generation in 50 Years Every generation likes to believe that it came of age at an especially trying moment in history. Millennials have the Great Recession to lament. Gen X
theatlantic: The Data Economy Is Much, Much Bigger Than You (and the Government) Think The official statistics are wrong about the App Economy Read more. [Image: Reuters]
theatlantic: This Is Big: Scientists Just Found Earth’s First-Cousin Right now, 500 light years away from Earth, there’s a planet that looks a lot like our own. It is bathed in dim orangeish light, which at high noon is only as bright as the golden
theatlantic: How Humans Are Changing the Planet—in 7 Dramatic GIFs “Much like the iconic image of Earth from the Apollo 17 mission—which had a profound effect on many of us—this time-lapse map is not only fascinating to explore,” Google
theatlantic: What John Glenn Saw When He Became the First American to Orbit Earth Five minutes and four seconds into the flight of the Friendship 7, as John Glenn prepared to become the first American to orbit Earth, he radioed to NASA, his capsule
theatlantic: Picture of the Day: Messier 9 Star Cluster NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has taken this incredible picture of Messier 9, a globular star cluster located near the center of our galaxy. The cluster, located some 25,000 light years away,
theatlantic: Newly Un-Flooded New York Subway Still Looking Pretty Horrible [Images: MTA]
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theatlantic:In Focus: World War I In Photos - Technology When Europe’s armies first marched to war in 1914, some were still carrying lances on horseback. By the end of the war, rapid-fire guns, aerial bombardment, armored vehicle attacks, and chemical
theatlantic: The Quiet Radicalism of All That The ’90s were golden years for Nickelodeon. The children’s cable television network was home to now cult-classic shows like Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1991-2000), Clarissa Explains It All (1991-’94),
theatlantic: In Focus: Protests Spread Across Brazil Starting late last week, with several small protests denouncing a hike in public transport fares, demonstrations flared up yesterday, encompassing larger public anger at poor public services, police
theatlantic: This Man Took 445 Photobooth Portraits of Himself Over 30 Years, and Nobody Knows Why For three decades, starting in the 1930s, he did the same thing. He’d sit inside a photo booth. He’d smile. He’d pose. And then—pop! pop! pop!—out
theatlantic: kateoplis: The winner of the 2011 Pritzker Architecture Prize: Eduardo Souto de Moura Wow.
theatlantic: What a Hot Mobile Device from the 16th Century Tells Us About 2014 This miniature book was meant to be worn like a holstered Blackberry. Those two holes across the top were for the string that would attach to one’s girdle or belt. The
theatlantic: Down With Textbooks When it comes to teaching history, nothing destroys student interest faster and more completely than a heavy reliance on textbooks. During my first three years of teaching high-school history I would see students’
theatlantic:The Power of Seeing Earth From Space
theatlantic: Mapping How Emotions Manifest in the Body Across cultures, people feel increased activity in different parts of the body as their mental state changes. Read more. [Image: Proceedings of the National Academies of Science]
theatlantic: In Focus: Icy Days and Nights The first week of 2014 has brought frigid conditions to much of the Northern Hemisphere, including a phenomenon called a polar vortex, which pulled Arctic weather deep into Canada and the U.S. In Harbin, China,
theatlantic: Illinois Rep. Bobby Rush took the symbol of the Trayvon Martin protests from the street to the Capitol on Wednesday, getting ejected from the House floor for wearing a hoodie. Read more at The Atlantic Wire.
theatlantic: Winners of the National Geographic Photo Contest 2011 “Splashing”, Grand Prize Winner and winner of the Nature category. This photo was taken when I was taking photos of other insects, as I normally did during macro photo hunting. I
theatlantic: When Memorization Gets in the Way of Learning I once caught an 11th-grader who snuck a cheat sheet into the final exam. At first, he tried to shuffle it under some scratch paper. When I cornered him, he shifted tactics. “It’s my page
theatlantic: In Focus: Hubble’s Hidden Treasures Last March, the operators of the Hubble Space Telescope launched a competition, inviting amateur astronomers to dig into hundreds of thousands of images of outer space, helping discover hidden treasures
theatlantic: A Martian Dream: Here’s What the Red Planet Would Look Like With Earth-Like Oceans and Life [Images: Kevin Gill]
theatlantic: In Focus: Violent Protests in India Over Rape Case Last week, in New Delhi, India, news stories of a horrific gang rape spread quickly, igniting widespread outrage. A 23 year old woman was attacked by six men on a moving bus and brutalized
theatlantic: SFW: When Big Data Met Porn In his 1987 book The Secret Museum, Walter Kendrick explored the many ways that technology transforms pornography. Technological innovations—the advent of the printing press, the rise of the home video camera,
theatlantic: Scenes From Europe’s Frozen Cities A dog wrapped up against the cold walks on a snow sprinkled pavement in an air temperature around minus 18 degree Celsius (minus 4 Fahrenheit) in central Kiev, February 3, 2012. See more. [Image: Gleb
theatlantic: 6 Writing Tips From John Steinbeck 1. Abandon the idea that you are ever going to finish. Lose track of the 400 pages and write just one page for each day, it helps. Then when it gets finished, you are always surprised. 2. Write freely
theatlantic: This Is How Doctors Treated ‘The Menopause’ in 1953 It’s nothing that a little explanation, reassurance, and mild sedation can’t fix. Read more.
theatlantic: In Focus: The Golden Gate Bridge Turns 75 Sunday marked the 75th anniversary of the opening of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. Before 1937, the city’s growth was hampered by a reliance on ferry traffic. The 8,981 ft (2,737 m)
theatlantic: Inside the Gay-Marriage Proposal at the White House Over the weekend, U.S. Marine Corps captain Matthew Phelps proposed to the love of his life, Ben Schock, at the White House. And that bended knee is now certifiably viral: their pictures
theatlantic: Why Bonnie and Clyde Won’t Die The duo lives on in film after film because the ordinary couple’s desire for fame, not riches, resonates through the decades. Read more. [Image: A&E/Joseph Viles]
theatlantic: In Focus: Images of Earth From Above Yesterday was Earth Day, a time set aside to increase awareness of the natural environment and the impact of our collective actions. In honor of Earth Day, gathered here is a collection of scenes of
theatlantic: A Visual Guide to the Gender Diversity of the Senate’s Hearing on Sexual Assault in the Military [Image: C-SPAN]