I love conspiracy theories. I generally don鈥檛 believe them but they do make excellent reads. Cascading through page after page of poorly cited Wikipedia entries on the true meaning of The Shining (Stanley Kubrick helped fake the moon landing) or Lincoln鈥檚 real assassin (hint: his dog) is nothing if not wildly entertaining. Still, it seems statistically unlikely that they鈥檙e all wrong. Some wild speculator somewhere has to have gotten one right at least once, right? So just to play it safe, I file all conspiracy theories under 鈥淧robably Not, But I Wouldn鈥檛 Be Surprised.鈥
Lately my lackadaisical defense of insane ideas has become a problem. It鈥檚 the Mayans. I can鈥檛 definitively say they were right about the end of the world, commonly interpreted by loons as December 21, but there is an awful lot of weird stuff happening. An increased frequency in Bigfoot sightings, hyper-intelligent , , anything at all to do with John McAfee, and now, right on cue, there鈥檚 a , one course-altering gas pocket explosion away from careening into Earth. The best part? It鈥檚 shaped like a peanut. Could there be a more fitting end for us than to be crushed by a giant replica of a popular snack food?
It鈥檚 just all coming together too well for me to comfortably dismiss everything with 100 percent confidence. Sure, the asteroid is a week or so early, but even getting the month of the apocalypse right is still pretty impressive, I think.
I keep thinking about Robert Heinlein鈥檚 1952 short story, , about a middle-aged statistician that correctly predicts the end of the world. The hero, Potiphar Breen, works for an insurance company but studies cycles in his spare time; geographic, cosmic, social, the works. When too many weird things start happening at once, he decides its 鈥渢ime to jump鈥 and flees into the wilderness with his lady friend. Of course, Heinlein was kind of a lunatic (you kind of have to be to write a lifetime鈥檚 worth of original science fiction I think), but he had a way of making everything sound totally reasonable. I鈥檓 not advocating that everyone run off into the woods, I鈥檓 just saying it can鈥檛 hurt to keep an eye out these next few weeks and know that as a reader of 国产吃瓜黑料, your chances of survival out there are that much higher.
Anyway, having officially stated my position on the end of the world, here鈥檚 your Weekend Reading! The winners of last week’s quiz will be honored as kings in the next age of man.
Can we ever truly appreciate nature, or are we just trying to realize impossible ideals from centuries past? James Somers investigates our modern relationship with the great outdoors. 国产吃瓜黑料.
“That鈥檚 the paradox. In a culture pervaded by artifice, by self-awareness and advertising, the grand gesture away from it all鈥’Fuck it, I鈥檓 going into the wild’鈥攊s just another trope. We鈥檝e seen that movie. In fact it was called Into the Wild and for the parties involved it was sort of a pathetic catastrophe. This is the bind I鈥檓 in: I feel small in urban life鈥’tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized,’ as Muir put it. I want to get away for a bit. I鈥檓 inspired by Thoreau and company to get really away. But in the very breath of my demand for the 鈥渁uthentic鈥 wild, the un-guided tour, I鈥檓 cringing at how flaccid and disgracefully naive I probably sound鈥攈ow much like one of Krakauer鈥檚 goons, the kind of person who will either gentrify the woods or get myself killed in them. This reaching toward the outdoors, far from clearing my head, confounds it further. This deep-seeming thing I crave may well not exist. Or worse, it does鈥攁nd I鈥檓 too bound up by ego to seize it.”
Natural gas is plentiful and burns cleaner than coal, but our search for it may alter the planet in ways we never imagined. .
“These days tank trucks, sand haulers, flatbeds stacked with pipe, and cement mixers rumble continually over the winding two-lane roads. Here and there in patches cut from forest or farm are flattened, four-acre mounds of fresh dirt. For a few weeks at a time tall derricks rise from these drill pads, and the trucks and trailers congregate around them. Contaminated water from the new wells pours into tank trucks or into lagoons lined with dark plastic. The derricks soon disappear, but the wells stay, connected by clusters of green pipes and valves to permanent new pipelines, condensate tanks, and compressor stations. Much of Pennsylvania has been transformed since 2008.”
The story of an 18-year-old FBI informant who infiltrated an ecoterrorist cell and may have ended up incriminating innocent people. Dean Kuipers, 国产吃瓜黑料.
“Anna had a sharp tongue and was quick to laugh, and McDavid was both attracted and intimidated. She dropped names of activists she knew and had obvious experience, while he was a newbie who hadn鈥檛 done anything. McDavid was an occasional student at Sierra College, in his hometown of Auburn, California, a gentle, athletic redhead who鈥檇 played high-school football, had worked as a carpenter, and was interested in political protest and anarchist theory. He came from a loving family and had never experienced any particular radicalizing event other than a few sobering moments when he grasped the effects of construction sprawl on his beloved Sierra Nevada. The wildest thing he鈥檇 ever done was march against the war in Iraq.”
Gun control advocates have no idea how to regulate the 300 million weapons in American hands. Maybe it’s time for an entirely different approach. .
“These gun-control efforts, while noble, would only have a modest impact on the rate of gun violence in America. Why? Because it鈥檚 too late. There are an estimated 280聽million to 300聽million guns in private hands in America鈥攎any legally owned, many not. Each year, more than four million new guns enter the market. This level of gun saturation has occurred not because the anti-gun lobby has been consistently outflanked by its adversaries in the National Rifle Association, though it has been. The NRA is quite obviously a powerful organization, but like many effective pressure groups, it is powerful in good part because so many Americans are predisposed to agree with its basic message. America鈥檚 level of gun ownership means that even if the Supreme Court鈥攚hich ruled in 2008 that the Second Amendment gives citizens the individual right to own firearms, as gun advocates have long insisted鈥攕uddenly reversed itself and ruled that the individual ownership of handguns was illegal, there would be no practical way for a democratic country to locate and seize those guns.”
How Anne Kelley Knowles is using geography and technology to reshape the way we look a pieces of history. .
“Scholars have long debated Lee鈥檚 decision to press a frontal assault at Gettysburg. How could such an exceptional commander, expert in reading terrain, fail to recognize the attack would be a disaster? The traditional explanation, favored in particular by Lee admirers, is that his underling, Gen. James Longstreet, failed to properly execute Lee鈥檚 orders and marched his men sideways while Union forces massed to repel a major Confederate assault. ‘Lee鈥檚 wondering, ‘Where is Longstreet and why is he dithering?” Knowles says. Her careful translation of contours into a digital representation of the battlefield gives new context to both men鈥檚 behavior. The sight lines show Lee couldn鈥檛 see what Longstreet was doing. Nor did he have a clear view of Union maneuvers.