To commemorate the tenth anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, New York magazine has created the 9/11 Encyclopedia. This site memorializes September 11 in a creative and respectful way. [NY Magazine]
To commemorate the tenth anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, New York magazine has created the 9/11 Encyclopedia. This site memorializes September 11 in a creative and respectful way. [NY Magazine]
Mad Money’s Jim Cramer says President Obama “doesn’t understand capital formation.” [The Street] Is SAAB going the way of the Studebaker? [Fortune] Companies that are hiring despite the current economy. [Forbes] The Federal Reserve can still help, if necessary says Bernanke. [CNBC] Monica Lewinsky: how her life has been going since…well, you know. [The Daily Mail] Amidst hurricane season a wildfire is ravaging Central Texas.[yahoo.com] Obama must make a difficult decision about the future of US energy. Opening more land to drilling will create jobs and energy but will anger environmentalists. [cnn.com] Soon the controversial ‘shark fin soup’ may be banned in California over concerns of dwindling numbers of sharks. [latimes.com] A South African plant evolved a perch, in order for birds to aid in its fertilization. [bbc.com] Talking to your children about 9/11 is never easy. Here’s some tips to make the conversation a little easier. [Time] Read about one woman’s quest to avoid mirrors… for an entire year. [Mirror Mirror Off The Wall] In a weak economy, one sector of food production is actually booming: local vegetable gardens. [NY Times] New research shows that fewer Americans are smoking, and those who do actually smoke less. [Wall Street Journal] Can we define a generation? If so, how should we? Personally, I tend to be skeptical of labels. We see it all the time in politics, when a candidate campaigns under one banner, but goes to sleep under the cover of another. We place so much trust in the label that it colors our perception of the fuller picture and prevents us from accepting future developments in character or content. While we still need to answer those first two questions, the related question on my mind is this: Are we the 9/11 Generation? To help me reach an answer, I asked my grandfathers to help me consider the question from a different historical perspective. On December 7, 1941, my father’s father was eight years old. He remembers hearing about the attacks on Pearl Harbor. He remembers seeing the headlines in the extra edition newspaper. In the weeks and months that followed, he saw Atlantic City hotels turn into barracks, and watched his father return home from his dentist’s office to help as an Air Raid Warden in Trenton, New Jersey. But he does not carry with him lasting images of the USS Arizona in flames. On December 7, 1941, my mother’s father was ten years old. He remembers when news from Hawaii first came over the radio. He also remembers the newspaper articles. He recalls having no idea where Hawaii was, let alone Pearl Harbor. So, he went next door where one of the local teachers outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania pulled out a map and pointed out the islands 2,500 miles off the coast of California. But images of the actual attack escape him, too. In some ways, my experience on September 11, 2001 parallels my grandfathers’ experiences nearly sixty years prior. I lived outside Los Angeles, nearly 3,000 miles away from the four hijackings. I was only thirteen years old, had never heard of Al Qaeda, and could not find Afghanistan on any map. Yet, the images of the falling Towers, burning Pentagon, and smoldering Shanksville field remain seared in my memory. And they will remain with me forever. I think it is that difference – that real-time connection to the day’s tragic events – that moistened the adhesive on the “9/11 Generation” label. We take for granted the technological advances in information communication, but our grandfathers did not have those luxuries seventy years ago. And because we have been so diligent in our remembrance, so reflective in our recollection, today’s twenty-somethings have accepted that label and stuck it right on our chests. But, why define ourselves by tragedy? Why let nineteen terrorists dictate the label of our generation? Read the rest of… “Killing the Nissan Leaf’s battery” – How to do it and what happens when you do. [Cars.com] Do you like driving? I thought so. Well, good news for you: Pres. Obama’s to-be-unveiled spending bill will focus heavily on infrastructure and rebuilding roads and bridges. [Bloomberg] General Motors is making money, but they aren’t sharing it just yet. [Detroit Free Press] Top Gear’s guide to doing donuts. [Top Gear] Saab may not be dead yet at a Chinese firm is looking to invest around $352 million. [Detroit News] Google Correlate – search by drawing a correlation. How fantastic! [Google] This past week the U.S. filed an antitrust lawsuit to prevent AT&T’s $39 billion acquisition of T-Mobile. That merger would combine the 2nd- and 4th-largest mobile carriers in the country. [Bloomberg] “Web-blocking and Illegal Sites” – Do minutes obtained from a secret meeting reveal plans to implement measures to block parts of the Internet? Check it out. [Pirate Party UK] The hacker group Anonymous hasn’t shown up in the news for a while. Probably because the group’s leader was arrested. However, they came back with vengeance last week with big leak of Texas Police e-mails and documents. There are a few examples in the link. [Gizmodo] You will probably recall the Raspberry Pi that I have written about before. It’s that amazing $25 PC that fits on a USB stick. Well here is a video of it running Quake III! [Geek]
Should Uncle Omar be deported? Senator Scott Brown of Massachusetts believes so. [The Hill] The latest poll numbers on President Obama. [Politico] 7 White House economic speeches from the past that flopped. [MSNBC] The 9/11 Decade: How Washington D.C. has changed since that fateful day. [New York Times] Reporters in their young twenties are cheap labor, and they’re taking over presidential election coverage. [NY Times] Here’s what reporters should be asking politicians about religion… and what’s just taking up space in the news cycle. [Time] Sunday was the fourth anniversary of the death of Steve Irwin, also known as The Crocodile Hunter. [The Examiner] The Church of Scientology fights back against the New Yorker for a supposedly damaging feature the magazine ran on the group… by handing out a fake New Yorker? [NY Magazine] One organization that isn’t doubting the power of print media: The Onion. Keep on investing, folks! [The Onion] |
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