Human History - Tumblr Posts

Sean bienvenidos, japonistasarqueológicos al yacimiento arqueológico del toro, os presento a los dos últimos, estudiantes de la arqueología de posguerra, al final haré una pequeña conclusión personal, una vez dicho esto pónganse cómodos que empezamos. - Yoshie inaba Nacida en 1932 ¿Qué aportaciones hizo en el yacimiento? Anotó todos los datos que pudo, eso facilitó mucho las futuras investigaciones, además ayudó a la gente para que no fueran muy cargadas. Os pondré una foto del Uniforme de escuela secundaria Fuji - Girls. Sr. Wan Kikawa:Nacido en 1928, le contrató uno de ingeniería civil, en lo que es ahora Hinamigo, Prefectura de Nagasaki. Él encontró los siguientes objetos: dos brazaletes de cobre superpuestos y una espada de madera, que os pondré a continuación. - Conclusión personal: Estimada audiencia, no solo veáis a los yacimientos solo por los restos, también hay personas que ayudan a preservar los restos para próximas generaciones, además si no fueran por estas personas mencionadas, anteriormente seguramente sus aportaciones al yacimiento y a la historia de Japón no hubieran facilitado las cosas todos tenemos que poner nuestro grano de arena para crear la historia humana del pasado y del futuro. Además en aquella época dada persona con lo poco tenía aportan lo que podrían al yacimiento, sobre todo los agricultores de las cercanías, por ejemplo, las dificultades son la que hacen que prosperen las cosas. Espero que os haya gustado y nos vemos en próximas publicaciones que pasen una buena semana. 日本の考古学者の皆さん、エル・トロ遺跡へようこそ。戦後考古学の学生の皆さん、最後のお二人に私は最後に小さな個人的な結論を述べます。そうは言っても、気を楽にしてから始めましょう。 - Yoshie inaba 1932 年生まれ 彼女はこのサイトにどのような貢献をしましたか? 彼はできる限りすべてのデータを書き留めたので、今後の調査がはるかに容易になり、人々が過度の負担にならないようにも助けられました。 富士高校の制服の写真を載せます - 女の子たち。 木川湾氏:1928年生まれ、現在の長崎県日並郷で土木技師に就職。 彼は次の物体を発見しました: 2 つの重なり合った銅製のブレスレットと 1 つの木の剣です。これらを以下に示します。 - 個人的な結論: 親愛なる聴衆の皆さん、遺跡の現場を訪れるだけでなく、後世のために遺跡を保存するのに協力する人々もいます。もし上記の人々がいなかったら、遺跡と歴史への彼らの貢献は間違いなくあります。私たちは皆、過去と未来の人類の歴史を創造するために自分の役割を果たさなければなりません。 さらに、当時は、ある人がなけなしの努力で現場、特に近隣の農家にできる限りの貢献をし、困難こそが繁栄を生むのです。 気に入っていただければ幸いです。今後の投稿でお会いしましょう。良い一週間をお過ごしください。
Welcome, Japanesearchaeologicalists to the archaeological site of El Toro, I present to you the last two, students of post-war archaeology, at the end I will make a small personal conclusion, having said that, make yourself comfortable and let's begin.
Yoshie inaba Born in 1932 What contributions did she make to the site? She wrote down all the data she could, which made future investigations much easier, and also helped people so that they were not burdened too much. I will post a photo of the Fuji High School Uniform
Girls. Mr. Wan Kikawa: Born in 1928, he hired him as a civil engineer, in what is now Hinamigo, Nagasaki Prefecture. He found the following objects: two overlapping copper bracelets and a wooden sword, which I will show you below. - Personal conclusion: Dear audience, do not only see the sites for the remains, there are also people who help preserve the remains for future generations, and if it were not for these people mentioned above, surely their contributions to the site and the history of Japan They would not have made things easier. We all have to do our part to create the human history of the past and the future. Furthermore, at that time, a given person with what little they had contributed what they could to the site, especially the nearby farmers, for example, difficulties are what make things prosper.
I hope you liked it and see you in future posts, have a good week.
for more information/詳細については:https://www.shizuoka-toromuseum.jp/toro-site/people/people-intervew01/

helen “trans people are perpetuating gender steriotypes” joyce is now upset that the scientific american is writing about how women were hunters too back in the day, not just mothers and caretakers. feminist win!


the cultural heritage of mankind
As long as humans have populated this planet, drugs of various kinds have been used. Cultural history bears witness to this in many places: Mead and beer, hemp and opium, peyote and mescaline, tobacco, myrrh, frankincense, coffee, tea, betel, khat, herb or coca leaves - to name but a few - have fascinated people ever since they have been attached to some concept of pleasure. Sometimes drugs are a sacred medium of religious awakening, sometimes a means of a carnivalesque revaluation of all values. Sometimes they provide a collective ecstatic sense of purpose, sometimes they serve to make the hardships of everyday life more bearable: substances that do more than satisfy hunger and dispel thirst are firmly embedded in the cultural heritage of mankind.
Today, however, this diversity of means and motives for consumption is often minimised and instead a link between drug use and danger is suggested. The political problematisation of psychotropic substances began in the early modern period: at the beginning of the 17th century, the Ottoman Sultan Murad IV found it intolerable that tobacco and coffee houses had not only become places of consumption, but also centres of public discussion and thus places of criticism and opposition. He therefore had all tobacco houses torn down in 1633 and made smoking tobacco punishable by death. He used modern methods in the manhunt, such as undercover investigations and bogus purchases. The assets of those executed went to the sultan. Obviously, it was less about the drug itself; rather, the smoking ban fulfilled several useful functions: The criminalisation of a behaviour that was widespread on a mass scale and a sanction as part of - or under the guise of - drug control.
Until the 19th century, however, bans on drinking or smoking were rare. Since then, however, drugs and danger have become ever more closely linked, for example by the idea that all drugs inevitably lead to addiction and thus to ruin. Whenever there is talk of drugs or even "narcotics", the danger does not seem far away. The scientifically untenable but long-lasting talk of gateway drugs is proof of this - in fact, there is no reliable empirical evidence to show that the use of one drug often leads to another and thus deeper into the drug problem. Anyone who argues in this way has the slippery slope in mind, the fall that - for all those who have started - can only be avoided with great effort or not at all. Drug education in schools may have taken new, sensible paths at times. However, the actual and urgent reason for its necessity usually remains central: the danger.
However, the history of drug use is diverse and its widespread practices are only mediated, sequential or partially related to addiction and social decline. In addition, whenever people fall out of the social order, drugs were at worst a catalyst, but rarely or never the actual cause. The reluctant reference to drugs as the cause of social imbalances therefore has more the character of a handy and long-practised diversionary manoeuvre: those who hold drugs responsible do not have to talk about structural social imbalances.
It may therefore be time to turn our gaze round and look at the many and wide-ranging motives for drug use. After all, the matter of drugs is a kind of never-ending story, despite all the crusades and horrendous efforts in the so-called war on drugs. The following lines bring together - without claiming to be exhaustive, of course - a number of different reasons why people take or have taken drugs. In the process, a kaleidoscope of different episodes unfolds, the collection of which alone could illustrate how abbreviated the direct link between drugs, addiction and danger is in its contemporary form. Viewed from this perspective, i.e. detached from the overlapping perception of the problem, a different connection or at least an initial suspicion may emerge: which drugs are fashionable and how states and societies deal with them could be an expression of the respective social conditions.
Of course, this is not to say that drugs cannot tear chasms, that certain patterns of consumption sometimes lead to habits and damage health in the medium to long term. However, this is only one way among many, only one possible pattern, which also has to do with the constant social and economic marginalisation and political repression of youth cultures. The drug is only one factor. However, the almost exclusive focus on the practice of addiction and the social figure of the junkie has brought the whole subject of drugs and intoxication into disrepute and led to a sometimes bizarre practice of prohibition.
For the good!
The illustrious journey through the thicket of different reasons for drug use has countless possible beginnings and stops. The following passages of intoxicated transgression are not representative of anything, they merely show that different interpretations are possible. An arbitrary but interesting starting point is provided by a circular from the Faculty of Theology in Paris from 1444, which from today's perspective provides an irritating motivation for occasional but copious drinking. It states that "folly" is man's innate "second nature" and that "wine barrels burst if you don't open the lid from time to time and let air in. We, human beings, are poorly made wine barrels that burst from the wine of wisdom if it is left in uninterrupted fermentation of devotion and the fear of God. Therefore, on certain days we allow the folly (foolishness) in us to return to worship with all the greater fervour afterwards. "To resolve the footnote[2]
The regular drinking bouts were therefore doubly necessary: On the one hand, they were in keeping with human nature and, on the other, they were essential in order to live in a godly manner and pursue wisdom. The drunken feast, which thwarted all contemplation and fear of God, was thus part of the religious order. The culturally significant tradition of the festival, i.e. a "time between the times", has its last offshoots in today's carnival. However, there is little to suggest that much remains of the radical nature of the revaluation, of the character of the substantial time-out.
Just over a century later, the court marshal Hans von Schweinichen, whose diary entries have survived, was probably similarly drunk, albeit for completely different reasons. He was also fond of the "Tears of God" (Lacrimae Christi). He was so drunk that he "slept for two nights and two days in a row that people thought I would die". However, this did not cause him to turn away from wine. Quite the opposite: "And since then I have learnt to drink wine and have continued to do so to such an extent that I might well say it would be impossible for anyone to drink me full. But whether it brings me bliss and health, I leave to his place."
Of course, we can only speculate about Schweinichen's motives. It hardly sounds like a necessity of nature, a ritualised festivity or even a condition for religious wisdom. Rather, a kind of sporting competition without deeper meaning dominates, as is still often the case today.
Without any harm
While von Schweinichen described a social structure that apparently demanded his adaptation to alcohol, similar processes have also been passed down with regard to health aspects. Zedler's Universal Lexicon, for example, a kind of 18th century storehouse of knowledge, revealed that "opium can be used in fairly large quantities without any harm and with great benefit". It is well known that opium users "cannot refrain from it", i.e. that they cannot stop using it and, according to modern diction, become addicted. However, this is not a problem, just the opposite: "For if one is accustomed to poisonous things for a long time, they do no harm to nature. "5 The purpose of consuming opium here is to develop a habit in order to henceforth be able to enjoy the medical and psychological benefits of the substance without harm. Modern addiction research is no doubt throwing up its hands in horror. However, from a medical point of view, it is also known that opiates, appropriately dosed and consumed cleanly, trigger what we today call addiction, but cause hardly any physiological or psychological damage, provided that the social life around them functions.
At this point, however, the boundary between medication and drug becomes blurred. Strictly speaking, this boundary is only outlined either way on the basis of different consumption motives. Almost all drugs were or are also medicines - so it depends on the area of use and the reason for taking them. Opiates, for example, which include heroin, have been important substances in medicine for a very long time and still are today.
A letter to the editor that an elderly woman sent to the specialist journal "The Chemist and Druggist" in 1888 also shows how historically different the motives, practices and their categorisation as a (drug) problem are. It reads: "I have used morphine regularly for 30 years. (...) This medicine, so injurious in most cases, has done no harm whatever to my vitality. Nor has it in any degree reduced my vigour, which is very similar to that of young women, although I am now 67 years old. My zest for life is excellent, I am neither as emaciated nor as emaciated as most others who have undergone this treatment. (...) The only problem that probably stems from this medicine is that I am constantly putting on body fat. I would be extremely grateful if one of your experts would be so kind as to inform me whether my increase in adipose tissue is a natural consequence of morphine consumption. "
For medical reasons, the author of these lines had fallen into an opium habit that today would be labelled a severe addiction. At the same time, there are indications that the image of the typical addict ("neither as emaciated nor emaciated as most others") was (and is) more of a media spectre than a real experience or observation. What the woman is referring to is ultimately unclear. But the debate on addiction that emerged at the end of the 19th century was fuelled by stereotypes and exaggerated figures that correspond pretty much exactly to the typical image of the woman as a junkie. And finally, if there is an undisputed connection between the effects of opiates, then it is that they curb the appetite and can hardly be responsible for obese tendencies.
The letter to the editor shows two things quite vividly: on the one hand, it is recognisable how a modern addiction narrative creeps in and begins to re-evaluate things. The author was still very much a part of Victorian England, which had few reservations about opium. At the same time, however, she was already aware of the new era of rampant problematisation of drugs - if only to distance herself from it. On the other hand, the source also shows that debates on addiction, with their typical generalisation and focus on the compulsive nature of consumption, are to a certain extent blind to the motives, or at least less receptive to them. The same consumption practice, i.e. regular and high doses, can have many different reasons.
Between enlightenment and rebellion
A different spectrum of motives for drug use unfolds around attempts to help enlightenment with psychotropic substances. While the medieval circulars emphasised that wine-fuelled folly only provided the balance to strive for wisdom at all other times, the direct link between drugs and knowledge has a long history. The ancient Greek symposion (Latin: symposium) stands for social drinking in company, resulting in profound and perhaps philosophical conversations that lead to knowledge. The term has survived in the world of science, even if today's editions tend to shine with sobriety. The fact that there are always "symposia" on alcohol addiction is probably an unintentional punchline.
Newer versions of the link between drug and cognition focus less on social situations and more on individual experiences. To a large extent, we have the Romantic conquest of drugs in the first half of the 19th century to thank for this. Thomas De Quincey, for example - one of the first modern writers to deal with the insights and abysses of the effects of intoxication in literature - spoke in the mid-19th century of memory as a "palimpsest", i.e. a rewritable parchment that still bears all the older traces. Opium exposes these traces and therefore allows deep, otherwise hidden memories: "Life had spread a shroud of oblivion over every detail of experience. And now, on a silent command, on a rocket signal that our brain releases, this shroud is abruptly removed and the whole theatre lies bare to its depths before our eyes. This was the greatest mystery. And it is a mystery that excludes doubt - for to the martyrs of opium it repeats itself, it repeats itself ten thousand times in intoxication.
Since then, there have been many variations of profound, comprehensive, absolute, paradisiacal and constantly world-shaking insights in intoxication. The writer Charles Baudelaire stepped completely out of a purely subjective position and became a pipe smoker, only to subsequently become acquainted with the false paradise. His colleague Fitz Hugh Ludlow could "look into himself and, thanks to this appalling ability, perceive very vividly and clearly all the processes of life that take place unconsciously in the normal state". The philosopher William James did not experience his childhood as De Quincey did, but he experienced the truth quite directly: "For me, as for every other person I have heard of, the fundamental of the experience [of intoxication] consists in the tremendously thrilling sensation of a haunting metaphysical illumination." On nitrous oxide, "all the logical relations of being" were revealed.
The journey continues via the philosopher of life Ludwig Klages, who, intoxicated, experiences eternity in an instant, to the philosopher Walter Benjamin, who turns the tables differently - and more cleverly than the others - and recognises the emptiness or absence of truth in intoxication, via the writer Carlos Castaneda and on to the self-proclaimed leader of the psychedelic movement of the 1960s, Timothy Leary, who wanted to give LSD to as many people as possible. The motive for drug use is always the realisation, the hope of unravelling the mystery of life, the world or even the universe once and for all. Cultural history is full of attempts to enter into a Faustian pact with the devil in order to finally understand.
Sometimes realisation should be followed by action. Some who had seen or believed they had seen "the truth" wanted to use it in a revolutionary way and kiss a different society awake with the help of fabrics. Leary, for example, was of the opinion that the cybernetic-biological evidence, i.e. the unmediated truth of DNA, which LSD supposedly inevitably and undeniably calls to consciousness, must inevitably lead to people shedding the ridiculous mask called subject and inevitably overcoming capitalism. "Turn on, tune in, drop out" was the corresponding motto of the psychedelic revolution - which, however, failed to materialise. And the poet Allen Ginsberg, a Beat - i.e. hipster - of the first hour, declared to his Beat colleague Jack Kerouac on the phone: "I'm high and naked, and I'm the king of the universe", in order to then want to instigate the psychedelic revolution.
The drunken rebellion was not always preceded by total realisation. Sometimes drug use was and is a more or less rebellious rejection of the norms of society, of the status quo, combined with an attempt to expand the scope of freedom, even without a deeper layer. The writer William S. Burroughs and the aforementioned Beats, for example, used drugs as a provocation, as an antithesis and a means of breaking out of the puritanical straitjacket of the homophobic McCarthy era of the 1950s. And after the intoxicated euphoria of the 1960s, the motif of enlightenment faded into the background anyway. Punk became the new antithesis: a rebellion without revolution - but with drugs. Drug consumption can therefore also be motivated simply by the desire to set oneself apart from one's parents' generation and to emphasise one's own "No!" to the boredom of bourgeois life with a thick bag. Even the rave and techno movement of the 1990s had such elements of rebellion, if only because older generations didn't want to understand what this "endlessly booming music" was all about. Once again, a youth culture was spreading that wanted to cheat its parents and be different, including drug use.
Optimise yourselves!
Intoxicated realisations were booming - at present they have tended to retreat into scattered esoteric circles. And since the "new spirit of capitalism" has made rebellion the mode of accumulation, i.e. the creative class the driving force of capital, it is no longer so easy to drive parents up the wall with drug consumption. Instead, a whole spectrum of adapted consumption motives has become established; optimisation is the new trend.
In late modernity, a different place or rather a different, functional contour emerged for drug use, which nevertheless remained controversial. Since the 1990s, "avant-garde perspectives have been developing that deal with completely new types and dynamics of controlled pleasure production and functional enjoyment". In keeping with the neoliberal zeitgeist, in the context of which the individual and sometimes their intoxication became a resource, a pragmatic and purpose-orientated use of drugs shines through. As a result, consumption motives are also shifting. Drugs, which as alcohol, coffee, cigarettes or medicines are an everyday part of society, could - so the faint hope - be de-ideologised. This is primarily fuelled by the aforementioned "spirit of capitalism", which elevates flexibility and creativity to the highest economic good. The distinction between medicine and drug is becoming completely fragile, and the motives for consumption are becoming as diverse as they are customised with the new commodity form of the drug. In the foreseeable future, the flexibility of the norms will move drug consumption and intoxication out of the patterns of deviant behaviour and into a space of flexible normality. The flexible person has to learn new rules for dealing with themselves and the world and, not least, in dealing with their self-control: they only have to be careful to maintain a "reflexive distance".
Subject, substance, society
The multifaceted picture of motives or reasons for drug use presented here is truly incomplete. Other topics include Drugs for the purpose of martial disinhibition - such as Pervitin, a metamphetamine that was used en masse by Wehrmacht soldiers during the Second World War to reduce feelings of anxiety and increase performance - drugs to suppress socio-psychological baggage, drugs to speed up in order to keep up with the pace of the present and the beat, or drugs to combat the boredom of dull everyday life. On closer inspection, the different categories become blurred: Leisure and work, controlled consumption and addiction, hard and soft drugs or medication and drug. None of these pairs remains a real contradiction in the long term.
The triangle of subject, substance and society, with the help of which the Swiss historian Jakob Tanner attempts to capture the history of knowledge of the concept of addiction in the 20th century and free it from the clutches of medical self-certainty, also contributes to the dissolution. when it comes to the motives for drug consumption and its analysis. Subjective dispositions and constellations are always involved, as are the stimuli of the drug. Society always plays a decisive role, even if there is less talk of it at present, and on several levels: What is the legal status and moral connotation of drugs at what time? Are opiates regarded as a household remedy for free disposal or as the stuff of hell that inevitably leads to addiction and a crash? Or does drug use fall into the clutches of political aspirations or even movements? Is it labelled as rebellious, or does it have the reputation of holding irrefutable and earth-shattering truths? Is smoking weed a good way to start an adolescent row with the parents, or do the parents themselves like to grab a bag?
There is no doubt that motives are often mixed, and the reality of drug use makes it almost impossible to decipher things clearly. And often enough, users themselves don't know exactly why they take what. And yet it should have become clear that the link between drugs, danger and addiction does not stand up to historical scrutiny. The strong focus on the problem of drugs sometimes leaves the impression of a diversionary or evasive manoeuvre. From time to time, drugs did become dangerous to the general order, for example in the context of the counterculture of the 1960s. In each case, this led to a frenzy of lurid anti-drug propaganda, which pushed the dangers to the fore with all its might and had no inhibitions about spreading lies (for example regarding alleged chromosomal damage caused by LSD).
A kind of phenomenology of different motives and practices is therefore an important thing. Especially when the role of society in the triangle of subject and substance is taken into account. The whole subject area of drugs and drug use could ultimately serve as a kind of seismograph for different social conditions. According to a somewhat hackneyed saying, every society has the fashionable drug it deserves. This perspective could provide a whole panorama of interpretations. While the usual focus is on the influence of drugs on society (for example: "What does crystal meth do to people?"), it would be interesting to ask what influence society has on drugs, i.e. which drugs are used when, for what purpose and for what social or political reasons. The much-discussed opioid crisis in the USA might then appear to be an expression of a violently depressing time that is better tolerated with sedatives. Fast coke for top performance or weed for more creativity are then no longer the drugs of choice, but rather the painkilling opioid oxycodone or the anxiety-reducing benzodiazepine Xanax to endure the madness of late capitalism or at least the pains of transformation of a society in transition that can be felt everywhere.
Intoxicated by history
For thousands of years, humans have relied on the intoxicating effects of nature: a brief history of herbal drugs
Arno Frank
Prehistory: mushrooms in the desert
The history of plant-based drugs is almost as old as mankind. Their earliest depiction dates back to a time when even the Sahara was still a flourishing Garden of Eden and can be found in a sandstone mountain range in southern Algeria. There, prehistoric cave paintings show people with ritual headdresses dancing happily. They are holding mushrooms in their hands, from which dotted lines lead to the head - not only the oldest depiction of a drug ever, but also an artistic realisation of its effects. 10,000 years old and refer to the use of psilocybin-containing mushrooms in early advanced civilisations. The psilocyn or psilocybin they contain has a similar mind-expanding effect to LSD. It leads to a change in the state of consciousness, to waking dreams and visions, but can also cause mental disorders. Among the Aztecs, the mushrooms were known as "Teonanacatl", "flesh of the gods". The oldest surviving word for drug is also of divine origin, first written down in Sanskrit in the oldest religious texts of ancient India, the Vedas. It speaks of "soma" - at once god, plant and intoxicating juice. Scientists still puzzle over the composition of this juice to this day. It is assumed that the basis was the fly agaric.
Early times: liquid bread for the pharaoh
The mushroom went out of fashion when the first civilisations cultivated agriculture. As a result, they almost inevitably discovered alcohol, almost simultaneously in the Middle East and East Asia. The oldest recipe is Chinese, but there is also evidence of breweries in Mesopotamia and Sudan. In Egyptian mythology, it was Osiris who taught people how to brew. Although there wasn't much to teach. Barley mash, stored in a damp place, begins to ferment. The wages of the labourers on the pyramids included not only bread, but also beer. Because of its effects, beer quickly became the subject of both draconian prohibitions and festive rituals. Anyone caught drinking beer among the Sumerians could be drowned in their barrels, and on high Egyptian holidays, getting drunk together was a social event. Anyone conceived during these excesses was considered a lucky child. The Greeks were more inclined towards fermenting grapes and even had a god in Dionysus who was responsible for states of intoxication. But even in Athens, alcohol served higher purposes. In the "Symposium", people drank, but also practised philosophy with their loosened tongues.
The Middle Ages:
Good humour with the herb witchIn dark times, it was very useful to know what "an herb had grown against" - and where you could find it. Little helpers grew by the wayside, from belladonna to "fool's mushrooms" and datura. In the wrong hands, they could cause a lot of mischief. In skilful hands, the soothing substances were used for healing. A mixture of mandrake, henbane and poppy was commonly used as a "sleeping sponge" for anaesthesia. In the Middle Ages, a powerful drug was extracted from the scarified seed capsules of the poppy: opium. The juice had a healing effect, as Hildegard von Bingen noted: "And this is what you heal with." As a thickened paste with honey (called latwerge), the opium poppy was used for anaesthetic purposes and was often used under the suspicious eye of the church, which considered illness to be a punishment from God. Anyone who knew too much could quickly end up at the stake as a "herbal witch".
Early modern times: leaves for the conquerors
The leaves of the coca bush have always been chewed in South America. They helped against hunger, tiredness, cold and helped the blood to absorb oxygen. A property that also helped the coca bush to enjoy a flourishing career in the Andes. Coca was also drunk as tea and always chewed with the addition of lime or plant ash. When applied with saliva, it even had a pain-relieving effect and the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors was the first turning point. It is known that many of them not only took a liking to gold, silver and tobacco, but also conquered their new empires with coca leaves in their saddle and cheek pouches. The effects of the coca plant helped the exploiters in their plunder. As early as the 16th century, a royal accountant in Peru rejoiced: "The Indians in the mines can stay 36 hours a day without sleeping or eating." Later, the stimulant even made it into the original recipe for a world-famous US lemonade, and a second turning point was the successful isolation of cocaine from coca leaves in 1859. But that's another story and has little to do with the plant.
Today: Marijuana for the masses
Cannabis, also known as marijuana, grass, weed, pot or ganja, is something of a classic in the garden of speciality plants. Cannabis was used for medicinal or spiritual purposes in ancient China and India. Although hemp was cultivated in the West, the active ingredient - tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC for short - was not valued for a long time. In Christian tradition, it was considered exotic and dangerous. Crusaders feared the assassins of the Syrian Assassins, "hash machines", which translates as "hashish people" - the Assassins allegedly used the drug to make their followers compliant. Which is probably a legend. The consumption of weed makes most people listless. Cannabis first made a career in the West in Paris in the exclusive "club of hashish eaters". Artists and intellectuals from Victor Hugo to Charles Baudelaire and the painter Eugène Delacroix met to consume "hashish" processed into a paste with cinnamon, cloves, pistachios and butter. Their aim was to expand consciousness and heighten sensory impressions - all motives that still tempt people to smoke weed today.
Cannabis is banned in most countries, while in others a rethink is underway that is not only enabling the legalisation of cannabis (for example in the USA or Uruguay), but is also bringing the medicinal benefits of the plant into focus. THC-free CBD drops have been freely available in Germany for some time now. Their active ingredient, cannabidiol, is also relaxing - but not intoxicating.
Bakku-shan
The woman who is only beautiful from behind.
In a male-dominated world, this is sure to manifest itself in language. So with this word, whether it is contempt for women should remain unassessed here, they can decide that for themselves. First of all, it is a statement according to cultural circumstances and therefore exceptional or rather unique.
mod
We'll never know if it applied to her, and if it did, it wouldn't matter with a hairstyle like that.

Brief cultural history
The Japanese islands were colonised in at least two waves: In the Jōmon period, people probably migrated to Japan from north-east Siberia, and in a second phase, the Yayoi period, via the Korean peninsula. The first agricultural techniques (dry farming) have also been documented from this period.
In the 7th century, Korean Buddhist monks brought not only religion but also Chinese writing, the Chinese classics and Confucianism to Japan.
The Heian period saw the first flourishing of the Chinese aristocracy, who developed their own poetry and literature under Chinese influence.
In the following eras, the country was repeatedly devastated by civil wars, as a result of which the sword nobility, the bushi, later known as samurai, rose to become the most important class. In addition to the art of warfare and swordsmithing, a new form of Buddhism, Zen, emerged, which appealed to the warriors.
It was not until the Edo period in the 17th century, under the Tokugawa, that the country came to rest again. The samurai became a civil servant class who preserved their warrior virtues in the martial arts, bujutsu or budō. The influence of Zen was now also reflected in poetry, garden art and music. Peace and economic prosperity also brought wealth to the fourth class, the merchants. As they were denied social advancement, the merchants sought a way to outdo the samurai in the arts. They promoted teahouses where the geisha practised the tea ceremony, flower arranging, music and dance. They also promoted kabuki theatre. Special entertainment districts were formed in the cities, especially in Edo, where the daimyō had to spend half the year under the direct control of the Shōgun.
Japan experienced a third cultural heyday in the post-war period, during which Japan produced a vibrant pop culture that combined Western influences and Japanese tradition.
Wikipedia more or less


Then they're sure to like it too .
3,000 dollar tent for Cybertruck causes little enthusiasm
The Basecamp attachment looks completely different to the originally advertised design, and the ‘tent mode’ in the instructions doesn't even exist yet.

Our recommendation: sewing it yourself is cheaper.
Or...... old concept.

Why is the Cybertruck not authorised in Germany?
According to a TÜV expert, Tesla's Cybertruck would not be authorised in Germany. Occupants are therefore not safe in the electric pick-up - ‘even airbags won't help’
Why does the Cybertruck rust?
Causes of rust formation on the Cybertruck
One theory is that so-called ‘rail dust’, metallic particles that get onto the vehicle during transport by train and later start to rust, could be responsible for the rust spots.
Yes, of course my Audi also came by train, but this rail-dust probably doesn't exist here as it's complete rubbish.
Please investigate scientifically why other car manufacturers have totally solved the problem.
Since mid-April, Greek ferries no longer take electric cars with a battery that is too full. That must be because of the weight, right?
Question: Belongs to Elon Musk - letter X can only be used for a fee?
The Financial Times has reported that @xAI is seeking investment of up to $6bn at a valuation of $20bn. Note: Elon has basically denied the numerous recent reports that xAI is raising money.
Tesla the inventor was a genius, the Tesla brand is just the toy of a hasardeur with a maker myth.
Everything he does is as sustainable as trying to put out a big fire with a bucket.
It's all about generating money, that's ok, but he's not the man for a new utopia. He's just the man who can make money from the future.
mod
When a man's ego is so big that everyone gives him money because he makes even more money out of it. It's probably just greed.... At some point, he does charity work to improve his image. So this is a mafia boss taking care of the children of the lawyer he killed. A complete joke. I love it when they think they are benefactors of mankind, first driving up grain prices on the commodity exchange and making fat money. While the world food organisation can't help people because of the high costs. But then they open a poor kitchen in Chicago. The example can be applied to anything and is called exploitation.

Apocalypse Now is a 1979 anti-war film by director Francis Ford Coppola set during the Vietnam War. It is loosely based on Joseph Conrad's story Heart of Darkness and Michael Herr's Vietnam War report Dispatches.






Heart of Darkness (original title: Heart of Darkness) is a story by Joseph Conrad that was first published in three installments in Blackwood's Magazine in 1899 and was also published in book form in November 1902. In this story, the sailor Charlie Marlow tells friends about his journey in Central Africa as captain of a river steamer. There he witnessed unprecedented cruelty towards the natives and increasingly doubted the justifications for exploitation, but his influential London friends involved in the exploitation of colonies were unimpressed by Marlow's shock.
Conrad's narrative is a contribution to the discussion of English colonialism and racism at the end of Queen Victoria's reign. The story, too short for a novel and too long for a novella, is now considered one of the most important works of prose in the English language.

Plato's words, “Only the dead have seen the end of war”, convey a profound insight into the nature of war and its ongoing devastation. For many, war means loss, trauma and despair.




The film impressed me so much because of the images about the truthfulness of the absolute disappearance of the thin layer of our human civilization in the transition to darkness.
mod
For this reason, I am a pacifist because any means of violence shows the failure of human civilization.
You have to understand pacifism in an absolutely new form, you don't hold out the other hand when you are beaten! Instead, you do everything in advance to avoid being hit. Should all this fail, one considers oneself a defensive pacifist and defends oneself by all means.
If you don't show the street thugs a red line, you are just a victim. Unconditional pacifism only works with civilized people, but not with power-abusing, egotistical, self-absorbed beings who think they belong to the human species.
We as humanity are constantly proving that we learn nothing from history, and that across generations.

The Magdeburg Wedding (also known as the Blood Wedding, Magdeburg's Sacrifice or, more generally, Magdeburgization) refers to the conquest and complete devastation of the city of Magdeburg by imperial troops under Tilly and Pappenheim on 10 May / 20 May 1631greg. in the course of the Thirty Years' War.
Magdeburgizing
A term for the destruction of a city, a completely barbaric arbitrary targeted violence against normal people of a city by an army has created this word. Long forgotten but still highly current.
The devastation went so far that Magdeburg went down in the history of the Thirty Years' War as a symbol of destruction and cruelty with the term “Magdeburgizing”.


There is no place here for racism, homophobia, misogyny, agitation, propaganda and intolerance.
We are and will always stand for equality regardless of gender, skin color, creed, sexual orientation, age, handicap.
We are equal under equal all other categories we do not need.
Talk to us and then you will realize that we are only interested in the single human being without restrictions.
We don't care who you fuck or what you believe if you believe in equality.
Freedom is the freedom of others!
A true philanthropist is someone who loves people in all their diversity.
mod
Let's be clear: we are sick and tired of the cliché of the old white man, because it's not the form that counts, but the content. Analysis yes, cancel no. You can't simply cancel human history, you have to put it into context. Stalin already did that and then you are in the same tradition as him. Sad.
The world, or rather the societies of this world, are undergoing a shift to the right.
Why? Somehow easy to understand without considering the consequences and these will follow in inevitable ways and effects. But back to the simple, yes this world and by that I mean the world of man and his perception is too complicated, too complex with all its dependencies. There are all the facts, the science and the effects that cry out for change.
However, this is the inertia of knowledge and the comfort of everyone, why change when things are somehow not really bad.
You can maintain your status, can't you?
And that's exactly what the right-wing parties understand and somehow say that everything should stay as it is. Or best to bring out the concepts of the good old days. With the manslaughter argument (which ultimately says nothing) everything wasn't bad.
OFFER SIMPLY SOLUTIONS TO COMPLEX PROBLEMS.
PLUS DIVIDE SOCIETY SOMEHOW SOMEONE HAS TO BE TO BLAME FOR THE MISERY.
Hate as an ideology
You really think that a strong hand can fix everything.
Because they just don't want to take responsibility for their lives. That means they would have to think and deal with all the real facts.
The consumer wants to consume and have a job so that he is well off. What do they care about others from whom they have been torn apart by all the propaganda.
All the others are to blame for the loss of prosperity, but not those who are at the top of the food chain in your country.
People who are so rich that you can't even imagine it. The rich and big companies will be fine with the right wing, they will come to terms with them as they have so often in history. Even benefit themselves.
The only problem is that when the spit is over and social development is in ruins, it really wasn't anyone again.

They will all have run away and confess, as so often in history: we didn't see this coming and if we had known, we would have decided differently.

Eat dust you hypocrites.
mod
Have no backbone, take no responsibility and think you're just a nice fellow human being who only meant well.
How did the general brutalisation come about in the present time?
Are we humans really incapable of learning from history?
Is our fate the eternal repetition of the same mistakes based on ignorance and territorial claims to power or social claims to exclusive power?
Just posting pictures and liking something for a better world may make you feel good, but it is pointless and ineffective.
You like the great beach with the super cool sunshine but you're not interested in the ocean conservation or sea level rise.
You love the images of a supposedly perfect world and are happy about this perception even though there is not a single area that is not affected by the effects of climate change.
You can all just like and watch but don't complain when the effects show you that the reality is different. As the nice pictures with the dreamlike locations.
Privatisation is an option but not an alternative.
mod
The realisation that we really have to change all areas of life is a difficult cost to bear.
So keep it up! And always remember not to cry when things get really fucked up.
When you wear a T-Shirt or make one that questions the state of the world. In the end, it's just a T-Shirt as an expression of fashion!
Sad....and meaningless
The whole thing can only be improved through individual participation.
So, to paraphrase Monty Python: be nice to your neighbours and don't hit your children.


Empires rise and fall.... as long as human civilisation exists.
What exists today will be history tomorrow.
mod
You first become aware of this when you have lived in a phase of civilisation upheaval. Rarely does this happen without a sound, but usually after massive preliminary events that herald the upheaval.
May you live in a quiet time and even that is in your hands because those who remain silent agree.
Let's look at the concept of hell. It is a concept that is easy for humans to grasp, and yet there are other elements that are diametrically opposed to the concept of heaven.
Black and white are perceived as the opposite. One might wonder why sulphur is seen as the opposite of clouds.
If there is no religion, one could theorise that the earth is the hell of a pangalactic dimension.
This could be considered an evil string theory.
It could be argued that those who have committed truly heinous acts in other universes end up on Earth.
One might wonder why Earth is assumed to be a hell.
In fact, it can be observed that patterns of behaviour have been repeated since time immemorial. Perhaps most disturbing is the tendency to fight each other over issues such as land, ideology, religion, power, influence and money.
When it's not war, it's peace, and when it's peace, it's war. One step forward, one step back.
Alliances are made, alliances are broken, power and influence are sought, spheres of power and influence are established, greed, arrogance, pride, vanity and Nazism are accepted. Personal gain is sought.
Everything that has happened in the course of history has been part of a larger, cyclical pattern.
The rise and fall of empires is an example of this eternal pattern. Hatred, lies, envy, marginalisation and other negative feelings are also part of this cycle.
It can be argued that there is love and goodness in the world, and therefore both heaven and hell are likely to exist.
It is an eternal battle between light and shadow.
If we observe the world around us, it is obvious that it is not a hell in certain parts. It is not bound to places. Rather, it is a matter of time, place and circumstance. When these elements come together, evil manifests itself.
The existence of hell depends on the actions and intentions of those who create it and is not a pre-existing entity.
mod
Hell is just another word when humanity is absent.

On “Jared Diamond in Conversation: Opportunity in Crisis”
In the article on July 13th, “Jared Diamond in Conversation: Opportunity in Crisis”, He claimed the COVID-19 crisis can be a good opportunity for humans to global problems.
One of his famous books, “Guns, germs, and steel” shows the microbe shaped human history. For example, germs brought by Europeans unwittingly became a major factor in conquering the American continent.
Even though he admitted the COVID problem is a disaster, it is not forever and the economy will be recover. Rather, he paid attention to other big problems like climate change, the exhaustion of essential world resources, or inequality around the world.
For him, this crisis can be a good opportunity because this crisis will give us world identity. The world has long suffered from a lack of world identity.
“There are grounds for optimism. COVID, for the first time, will have mobilized the world to face a global crisis, because COVID faces everybody. No country alone can protect itself against COVID, so for the first time in world history, the world is mobilized to solve, at a global level, a global problem.”
Because this problem cannot be solved on their own (nation), corporations are necessary.
if they just control COVID within their own frontiers, they are going to get re-infected, as has already happened with China, as has already happened with New Zealand. Not all of us have learned the lessons that COVID is teaching us, but COVID is a determined teacher and will keep at us until we have learned all that.
And he also emphasized the importance of leadership to make differences. He gave examples of Churchill and Lincoln. Both mobilized everybody by trying to unify their constituents.
“Abraham Lincoln was another good leader, who spoke to all Americans. In his Gettysburg Address, Lincoln did not use the words north or south; (instead) he spoke to all Americans.”
I agree with the importance of corporation and leadership.
However, I think he is going too fast to form “us”. People in the world are rather competitive for this crisis, nation by nation. Actually, media and the Internet are showing not only that the COVID crisis is global, but also that it has been differently dealt within each nation. The numbers of victims, infection rates, and government policies have been compared. It is very visible that some are very successful to deal with it, others not. This competition can cause good results to the crisis, still. Certain ethnic groups and the infected people are blamed and hated as if they were the same as viruses.
And his every successful example of solving problems is humans versus humans within limited places. Decisions makers can learn lessons from Churchill in the wartime, but not easily in the pandemic.
One of the difficulties of “world identity” is conceptual, ontological. Even in his writings, He wrote global threads as “common enemies” against humans in another article, described COVID as a “determined teacher” which in this article. This is not just a matter of a metaphor.
Obviously, he wittingly urges humans to shape a better future in this opportunity. I agree with his opinion as suggestions to create opportunities, not as an analysis of the ongoing situations. “We” need international corporations and good leadership. And other concepts and expressions to make them possible.
Quote about the modern transformation of Jesus by Rin Wilson.