Saturday, July 30, 2016

Any German Experts Out there?

KINO
Das Gespenst des Feminismus
Die Komödie „Ghostbusters“ mit Melissa McCarthy ist der teuerste Frauenfilm in der Geschichte Hollywoods – und löst eine Welle des Hasses aus.
„Ghost­bus­ters“-Dar­stel­le­rin­nen Mc­Car­thy, McKin­non, Wiig, Jo­nes: Kampf­an­sa­ge an das Pa­tri­ar­chat
Als der ers­te Trai­ler ins Kino kam, brach im In­ter­net ein Shits­torm los, wie ihn Hol­ly­wood noch nicht er­lebt hat­te. Dies sei „ein Ter­ror­an­griff“, hieß es, „Fe­mi­na­zis“ hät­ten die­sen Film ge­dreht, in den so­zia­len Netz­wer­ken herrsch­te Hass. Do­nald Trump hat­te den Ton vor­ge­ge­ben. „Was ist bloß in Hol­ly­wood los?“, pol­ter­te er. „Jetzt ma­chen die ,Ghost­bus­ter­s' noch ein­mal, nur mit Frau­en!!“
SIE LESEN DIE VORSCHAU

Any German Language experts out there?
THEN PLEASE TRANSLATE , IF YOU  SO  DARE
WITHOUT TOO MUCH HESITATION 
OR UNNECESSARY PREVARICATION 
is ein wort like 'Shitstorm'
(in Der Spiegel)  considered the norm
in a respectable publication?
HzL
7/30/16
PS: The lady on the left is Melissa McCarthy
who  looks quite clean and continent  to me. 

News about Melissa McCarthy In Ghostb

bing.com/news
Melissa McCarthy loves jumpsuits with zippers

Melissa McCarthy loves jumpsuits with zippers

Times of India · 5 days ago
Ghostbusters' star Melissa McCarthy feels going to washroom in a jumpsuit can be troublesome but she has an answ

Britain Taxes Plastic Bags






Britain banishes plastic bags as 5p 'tax' sees usage plummet by 6 billion




Britain Taxes Plastic Bags


As conservation measures grew lax
it was time to resort to a tax


since those  millions of bags of plastic
in oceans required this action drastic



to prevent further  environmental harm
and it has  worked like a charm.


And even If impatient  shoppers now find this hateful
they should think of the blue whales who are  grateful. 

PS: 
This kind of consumption tax to reduce the pig in you
is actually named for the economist  Arthur Cecil  Pigou.

PPS:  It is apparently controversial in its intricacies
but I'll that that learned  discussion for PhD's. 

Hzl
7/30/16

Arthur Cecil Pigou: The Concise Encyclopedia of …

www.econlib.org › CEE › 2nd edition › Biographies
Pigou’s analysis was accepted until 1960, when ronald coase showed that taxes and subsidies are not necessary if the people affected by the externality and the ...




Carrier bag use is rapidly dying out in the UK as people opt for re-usable bags instead  CREDIT: ALAMY



Britain has virtually banished plastic bags just six months after the Government introduced a 5pc charge to discourage shoppers from using them, official data has revealed.
According to figures released today by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, shoppers are on track to use around six billion fewer single-use plastic bags this year.
Since the policy came into force in England in October 2015, the total number of carrier bags used at the UK's biggest retailers has fallen by an estimated 85 per cent.

  • Silent Killers: The Danger of Plastic Bags to Marine Life ...

    www.ecowatch.com/2013/08/06/the-danger-of-plastic...
    Video embedded · Silent Killers: The Danger of Plastic Bags toMarine Life Laura Beans; Get our newsletter. By ... One in three leatherback sea turtles have plastic in their stomach, ...
  • South Carolina considering law to block bans on plastic bags

    www.thestate.com/latest-news/article72545937.html
    South Carolina considering law to block bans ... store are an increasing menace to marine life and a general ... of plastic bags also threaten sea life, ...
  • Britain has virtually banished plastic bags just six months after the Government introduced a ...

    Friday, July 29, 2016

    Human Evolution,...including Political Conventions?

    We Went From Hunter-Gatherers To Space Explorers, But Are We Happier?

    Sapiens cover
    Sapiens
    A Brief History of Humankind
    Hardcover, 443 pages
    purchase
    In his book, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, scientist Yuval Noah Harari attempts a seemingly impossible task — packing the entirety of human history into 400 pages.
    Harari, an Israeli historian, is interested in tackling big-picture questions and puncturing some of our dearly held beliefs about human progress.
    "In some areas we've done amazingly well; in other areas we've done amazingly bad," he tells NPR's Arun Rath. "Humans are extremely good in acquiring new power, but they are not very good in translating this power into greater happiness, which is why we are far more powerful than ever before but we don't seem to be much happier."
    The book charts humankind's journey from hunter-gatherer origins to a vision of the "superhumans" of the future.

    Interview Highlights

    On the various species of humanity
    Until about 30,000 years ago there were at least five other species of humans on the planet. Homo Sapiens, our ancestors, lived mainly in East Africa, and you had the Neanderthal in Europe, Homo Erectus in part of Asia and so forth.
    Just, I think, four or five years ago scientists completed the mapping of the Neanderthal genome and the most amazing discovery was that people of European origins today ... have up to 4 percent of their unique human genes from Neanderthal ancestors, which means there was some interbreeding. And this should make us realize that the gap between us and other animals is not as big as we tend to think.
    Yuval Noah Harari teaches history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.i
    Yuval Noah Harari teaches history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
    Ilya Malnikov/Courtesy of Harper
    On the concepts that separate humanity from other species
    We control the world basically because we are the only animals that can cooperate flexibly in very large numbers. And if you examine any large-scale human cooperation, you will always find that it is based on some fiction like the nation, like money, like human rights. These are all things that do not exist objectively, but they exist only in the stories that we tell and that we spread around. This is something very unique to us, perhaps the most unique feature of our species.

    You can never, for example, convince a chimpanzee to do something for you by promising that, "Look, after you die, you will go to chimpanzee heaven and there you will receive lots and lots of bananas for your good deeds here on earth, so now do what I tell you to do."
    But humans do believe such stories and this is the basic reason why we control the world whereas chimpanzees are locked up in zoos and research laboratories.



    from

    Interview: Yuval Noah Harari, Author Of 'Sapiens: A Brief History Of ...

    www.npr.org/.../from-hunter-gatherers-to-space-explorers-a-70-000...
    NPR
    Feb 7, 2015 - In his book Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari packs the history of humanity into 400 pages. "In some ... Harari, an Israeli historian, is interested in tackling big-picture questions and ... Did Climate Change Drive Human Evolution? ... Not only in the mere technological field, but also in the field of ethics and morality, ...



    EvoltionYuval Noah Harari - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuval_Noah_Harari
    Wikipedia
    Yuval Noah Harari is an Israeli professor of history and the author of the international bestseller Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. He teaches at the Department of History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Contents. [hide]. 1 Life; 2 Books; 3 Writings; 4 References; 5 External links ... The booksurveys the entire length of human history, from the evolution of ...