Selasa, 03 Juni 2014

Better Doesn't Mean Good

I Confronted Donald Trump In Dubai, Democrats Have A Problem With Science, Too, D-Day Landing Scenes: Then And Now, Modern-Day Slavery In America's Prison Workforce, Why Solar Roadways Won't Work
The Daily Digg
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
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TRUMP IS A DICKHEAD (SORRY, NO JOKE HERE)
I Confronted Donald Trump In Dubai
vice.com
Westerners misrepresent Dubai as tacky. This is wounded pride. Dubai is Versailles, not Vegas. It is frozen money. At night, when even the palms twinkle, the city has a heart-soaring grandeur. It looks like the sound of Daisy Buchanan's voice.
ACROSS DEN-AISLE
Democrats Have A Problem With Science, Too
politico.com
We shouldn't let them off the hook just because Republicans are worse.
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REVISITING OPERATION OVERLORD
D-Day Landing Scenes: Then And Now
theguardian.com
Peter Macdiarmid has taken photographs of locations in France and England to match with archive images taken before, during and after the D-Day landings.
THE GREAT AMERICAN CHAIN GANG
Modern-Day Slavery In America's Prison Workforce
prospect.org
Why can't we embrace the idea that prisoners have labor rights?
ASPHALT ISN'T GOING ANYWHERE
Why Solar Roadways Won't Work
digg.com
Solar roadways seem like an incredible idea at first blush, but would they actually work?
Read more on Digg.com →
SORRY FOR THE REALLY LONG CAPTION
Image: Ninety-four-year-old World War II veteran Sherwin Callander, center, recites the Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony with U.S. Army Spc. Gulam Ali, left, originally from India, and U.S. Army Spc. Iddrisu Ibrahim, originally from Ghana, right, Monday, June 2, 2014, in Atlanta. The World War II veteran from Alabama is headed to France for D-Day ceremonies, a trip that seemed unlikely just last week. Callander read about ceremonies for the 70th anniversary of D-Day and thought it would be meaningful to go. He hadn't been back to France since landing on Utah Beach during the Battle of Normandy, but he hit a snag when he went to get a passport. Callander was born in Canada to an American mother, and his family moved to the U.S. when he was 3. But he didn't have documentation proving his U.S. citizenship. Federal officials heard his story and on Monday gave him a proof of citizenship certificate so he could get a passport in time to leave for France just hours later.
Ninety-four-year-old World War II veteran Sherwin Callander, center, recites the Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony with U.S. Army Spc. Gulam Ali, left, originally from India, and U.S. Army Spc. Iddrisu Ibrahim, originally from Ghana, right, Monday, June 2, 2014, in Atlanta. The World War II veteran from Alabama is headed to France for D-Day ceremonies, a trip that seemed unlikely just last week. Callander read about ceremonies for the 70th anniversary of D-Day and thought it would be meaningful to go. He hadn't been back to France since landing on Utah Beach during the Battle of Normandy, but he hit a snag when he went to get a passport. Callander was born in Canada to an American mother, and his family moved to the U.S. when he was 3. But he didn't have documentation proving his U.S. citizenship. Federal officials heard his story and on Monday gave him a proof of citizenship certificate so he could get a passport in time to leave for France just hours later. Credit: AP Photo/David Goldman
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