Lemmy - todayilearned (25)
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TIL why Palpatine loves democracy
submitted by KumoYumeMiru to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/the-math-behind-democracy-is-broken-and-everyone-pretends-it-s-fine/vi-AA1Rkv77?pc=HCTS&ei=19 -
TIL about the 2018 US Prison Strike, an attempt by prisoners to end US Prison Slavery
submitted by anoriginalthought to todayilearned
2 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_U.S._prison_strikeStrike participants, their families, and advocacy groups reported that the leaders and organizers of the strike were punished with solitary confinement, loss of communication privileges, and prison transfers.[4][5][6]
Critics of solitary confinement regard the practice as a form of psychological torture with measurable physiological effects, particularly when the period of confinement is longer than a few weeks or is continued indefinitely.[92][93][94][75]
The United Nations Committee Against Torture cited use of solitary confinement in the United States as excessive and a violation of the Convention Against Torture in 2014.[95]
It followed the little-reported 2016 US Prison Strike
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TIL about the Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF), an anti-communist organization created by the CIA to sway Intellectual opinion against communism
submitted by anoriginalthought to todayilearned
2 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_for_Cultural_FreedomVideo: lemmy.ml/post/39416509
In the early 1960s, the CCF mounted a campaign against the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, an ardent communist.
At its height, the CCF had offices in 35 countries, employed dozens of personnel, and published over 20 prestigious magazines. It held art exhibitions, owned a news and features service, organized high-profile international conferences, and rewarded musicians and artists with prizes and public performances.[1][3]
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TIL about abogen. A tool to generate audiobooks from EPUBs, PDFs and text with synchronized captions.
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TIL The ability to count is universal in the animal kingdom. Birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it.
submitted by LillyPip to todayilearned
2 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_sense_in_animals -
TIL about The Lobby, a 2017 Docuseries about AIPAC, whose second series was blocked
submitted by anoriginalthought to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lobby_(TV_series)Film also claims that Adam Milstein funds Canary Mission
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TIL that there was a man named William Patrick Hitler, a man who could have been a Nazi prince yet instead became an American veteran who helped defeat his uncle's empire.
submitted by Substance_P to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
TIL that there was a man named William Patrick Hitler, a man who could have been a Nazi prince yet instead became an American veteran who helped defeat his uncle’s empire.
“His uncle was Adolf Hitler. The US Navy rejected him twice. Then he wrote directly to FDR—and ended up earning a Purple Heart fighting Nazis. This is the wildest family betrayal in history.”
March 6, 1944. Brooklyn Navy Yard, New York.
An induction officer sits at his desk, processing new recruits. He looks up at the next young man in line. “Name?” “Hitler.” The officer smirks. “Very funny. What’s your real name?” “Hitler. William Patrick Hitler.” The officer’s smile vanishes. He stares at the recruit. “Well then, glad to meet you, Hitler,” he finally says. “My name’s Hess.” The coincidence was almost too perfect—Rudolf Hess was Adolf Hitler’s Deputy Führer. But unlike Officer Hess, this Hitler was the real deal.
William Patrick Hitler was about to join the US Navy to fight his own uncle.
William Patrick Hitler was born March 12, 1911, in Liverpool, England—in a house that would later be destroyed by German bombs ordered, indirectly, by his uncle.
His father was Alois Hitler Jr., Adolf’s half-brother. His mother was Bridget Dowling, an Irish girl who’d met Alois in Dublin when he was working as a waiter. They eloped to London, married, and moved to Liverpool.
Then Alois abandoned them. When William was 3, his father left on what he called a “gambling tour of Europe.” He never came back. He moved to Germany, remarried bigamously, and started a new family.
William grew up in England with his mother, carrying the Hitler surname but disconnected from his German family. Until 1929.
At 18, William traveled to Germany to reconnect with his father. Alois took him to a Nazi rally—where William saw his uncle Adolf for the first time. Adolf Hitler was rising in German politics, and the rally was electric with nationalist fervor. William was both fascinated and disturbed.
He returned to England and wrote articles about his flamboyant uncle for British newspapers. Adolf wasn’t pleased. He summoned William back to Berlin and ordered him to stop writing.
William complied. For a while. By 1932, Adolf’s political star had risen dramatically. William, unemployed in Britain and struggling with his surname, saw an opportunity. He returned to Germany in 1933—right after Adolf became Chancellor—and asked his uncle for a job.
Adolf reluctantly agreed. He got William a position at the Reichsbank in Berlin.
But William wanted more. He tried working at the Opel automobile factory. Then as a car salesman. Nothing satisfied him. He kept pestering his uncle for a better position, a higher title, more money. Adolf was furious. “I didn’t become Chancellor for the benefit of my family,” he reportedly said. “No one is going to climb on my back.” William, desperate and resentful, made a catastrophic decision: he tried to blackmail Adolf Hitler. He threatened to tell newspapers that Adolf’s paternal grandfather was allegedly a Jewish merchant named Leopold Frankenberger—a rumor that would destroy Hitler’s credibility with his antisemitic base.
Adolf’s response was swift: “My loathsome nephew.” The relationship imploded. Adolf began having William watched. In 1938, Hitler made William an offer: renounce his British citizenship, become a German citizen, and he’d give him a high-ranking job.
William suspected a trap. If he gave up British citizenship, he’d be stuck in Germany with war approaching—and an uncle who now despised him.
He fled Germany in a hurry. Back in England in 1939, William did something extraordinary: he wrote an article for Look magazine titled “Why I Hate My Uncle.” In it, he warned the world about Adolf Hitler’s true nature. He described the paranoia, the violence, the “sexual perverts” surrounding his uncle. He predicted catastrophe.
“I believe he has created a Frankenstein which even he perhaps cannot stop,” William told The Times. “I think he has it in his power to destroy European civilization and perhaps that of the entire world.”
But having the Hitler surname in England as war broke out was impossible. Nobody would hire him. Nobody wanted anything to do with him.
In January 1939, newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst brought William and his mother to America for a lecture tour. William traveled the country speaking about his uncle, warning Americans about the Nazi threat. Then World War II broke out. William and his mother were stranded in the United States. William tried to join the British military. Rejected—because of his surname.
He tried to join the US military. Rejected again—because of his surname.
In 1942, desperate to fight, William did the unthinkable: he wrote directly to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
“I am the nephew of Adolf Hitler,” he wrote. “I want to fight against everything my uncle represents. Please allow me to enlist.” Roosevelt handed the letter to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover investigated William’s background thoroughly. Interviewed him. Scrutinized his loyalties. Finally, Hoover cleared him. On March 6, 1944—two years after his initial request—William Patrick Hitler officially enlisted in the United States Navy.
He became a Pharmacist’s Mate (now called Hospital Corpsman)—a medic who would treat wounded sailors and Marines. He was assigned to the Pacific Theater. For three years, William served. While his uncle commanded the Wehrmacht, William treated American casualties. While Adolf waged genocide, William saved lives.
At some point during the war, William was wounded by shrapnel. The injury earned him the Purple Heart.
When the war ended in 1945, Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker. His empire collapsed.
William Patrick Hitler—the “loathsome nephew”—had survived. And he’d fought on the winning side. In 1947, William was honorably discharged from the Navy. He immediately changed his name to William Patrick Stuart-Houston, severing himself from the Hitler legacy forever.
He married Phyllis Jean-Jacques (ironically, German-born) and settled in Patchogue, Long Island, New York. He opened a blood analysis laboratory called Brookhaven Laboratories and ran it from his modest two-story clapboard house.
William and Phyllis had four sons: Alexander Adolf (born 1949), Louis, Howard Ronald, and Brian William. None of them ever had children. Some speculate the brothers made a pact to end the Hitler bloodline. Alexander later denied this, but the result was the same.
William Stuart-Houston died on July 14, 1987, at age 76, and was buried next to his mother in Coram, New York.
His story remained largely unknown for decades. His neighbors in Patchogue knew him as a quiet medical lab owner—though some noted he bore a resemblance to someone famous they couldn’t quite place.
William Patrick Hitler—the man who could have been a Nazi prince—instead became an American veteran who helped defeat his uncle’s empire. He chose the right side of history. And paid for it with a lifetime of hiding.
William Patrick Stuart-Houston (née Hitler) March 12, 1911 – July 14, 1987 Nephew of Adolf Hitler. US Navy Pharmacist’s Mate. Purple Heart recipient. The man who rejected his uncle’s evil— And fought to destroy it.
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TIL humans are using 1.8 Earths worth of resources
submitted by RedBear to todayilearned
3 points | 0 comments
https://www.footprintnetwork.org/The Ecological Footprint metric shows how much nature we use compared to how much nature we have.
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Today I learned that the top 10% of earners in the US account for almost 50% of consumption
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TIL why the USA is borked in terms of rare earths
submitted by fort_burp to todayilearned
4 points | 0 comments
https://www.counterpunch.org/2006/04/07/the-saga-of-magnequench/Spoiler: it was American private equity, as usual.
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TIL About the 1985 MOVE bombing, where the Philadelphia Police Department bombed and burned 61 houses, murdering 11 and leaving 250 homeless
submitted by anoriginalthought to todayilearned
7 points | 1 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985_MOVE_bombing -
TIL About the Jeju Massacre, where South Korean forces wiped out 10 percent of the island of Jeju for the crime of organizing a General Strike
submitted by anoriginalthought to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeju_uprising -
TIL that Sacramento CA hosts a heavy metal and rock festival every year.
submitted by jason_is_back to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aftershock_Festival2023 looked like a killer year to go.
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A group of Irish grocery workers banning grapefruit led to Ireland being the first county to pass BDS against Apartheid South Africa
submitted by Coopr8 to todayilearned
3 points | 2 comments
https://youtube.com/shorts/O5yK7XiYQvU?si=HNXxCEHJ3WwRRCEzTIL Karen and her cohort of white Irish women took a stand to boycott South African grapefruit, and went on to be visited by Nelson Mandela and others as their small act inspired their nation to be the first Most Developed Nation to fully Boycott and pass Sanctions against South Africa in the struggle against Apartheid.
Video by David Nihill
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TIL there are extensions to automatically expand abbreviations in Firefox
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TIL Girls of the Kayan tribe start wearing neck rings at around 5 years old. The rings can stretch their necks to a length of about 15 inches (38 cm).
submitted by Omer_Ash to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayan_people_(Myanmar) -
Stainless steel can self-heal a bit
submitted by frightful_hobgoblin to todayilearned
2 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stainless_steel -
TIL of the Battle of Athens (1946)
submitted by UltraGiGaGigantic to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Athens_(1946) -
TIL the famous Socrates quote about children being disrespectful and having bad manners was actually a fabrication written by a Canadian college student in 1907
submitted by Preventer79 to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://quoteinvestigator.com/2010/05/01/misbehave/ -
Today I learned that Bhutan is a very communal society. They even get together and build houses for each other! Oh, and they decorate them with cocks.
submitted by Gates9 to todayilearned
2 points | 0 comments
https://web.stanford.edu/~siegelr/bhutan/penispage.html -
TIL: In 1979 Park Chung Hee, the third president of South Korea, was assassinated during a dinner, the gun jammed at the 3rd shot.
submitted by glowing_hans to todayilearned
1 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_of_Park_Chung_Hee#Rivalry_between_Kim_Jae-gyu_and_Cha_Ji-chulUsed for the assassination: Small handguns; Smith & Wesson Model 36 and Walther PPK
Kim Jae-gyu fired the gun twice at Park’s chest from a distance of two to three meters, but the PPK jammed on a third shot.
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Fascism was founded by an illegal immigrant
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TIL In 1975, the US overthrew the democratically elected leader of Australia for his opposition to the war on Vietnam.
submitted by dessalines to todayilearned
4 points | 2 comments
https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/remembering-november-11-1975-pine-gap-cia-and-coup-remove-whitlamA few more articles on this:
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Today I learned: Epstein Island had an area of 28 ha
submitted by glowing_hans to todayilearned
3 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epstein_islandThe island was Epstein’s primary residence,[4][14] and he called the island “Little St. Jeff”.
In April 1998, a company called L.S.J. LLC purchased the island for $7.95 million, and documents showed that Jeffrey Epstein was the sole member of L.S.J
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TIL the United States has 94 nuclear power plants.
submitted by crozilla to todayilearned
3 points | 0 comments
https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=65104In 2024, U.S. utilities operated 94 nuclear reactors with a total net generating capacity of nearly 97 gigawatts (GW), the largest commercial nuclear power generation fleet in the world.
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TIL zombo.com still exists, and no longer requires flash
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TiL that only seven countries make up more than half of the world's human population
submitted by medem to todayilearned
39 points | 7 comments
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_dependencies_by_populationTL;DR: India, China, US, Indonesia, Pakistan, Nigeria, Brazil. Aggregated percent of total: 50.4
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TIL that Chile, Argentina, Malaysia, Indonesia, Cambodia, Taiwan, Greenland, and the Phillipines are the only countries that you can tunnel through to hit another land mass. All others lead to water.
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Today I learned that the "KNIGHTS" scene from Shrek 2, the scene parodying the 'COPS' TV show, was based off of the car chase with OJ Simpson in 1994, where he fled the scene in a white Ford Bronco.
submitted by HotWheelsVroom to todayilearned
32 points | 2 commentsThey made Donkey a stallion and made him white, and during the episode of ‘KNIGHTS’ showcasing the chase with Shrek, Donkey, Puss in Boots, and the others, they call Donkey a ‘white bronco’ on the police radio while the chase unfolds.
I can’t believe I never noticed this detail until now. Now I’ll never unsee it.
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TIL that India used 5 year plans for most of it's post-colonial history.
submitted by psychoplantkiller to todayilearned
6 points | 0 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five-Year_Plans_of_IndiaInspired by the Soviet Union, India used economic planning to manage its development. Their last and final plan ended in 2017.
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Today I learned that Barilla created Spotify playlists that are the length of time needed to cook pasta to al dente
submitted by paranoid to todayilearned
83 points | 6 comments
https://open.spotify.com/user/w2p1oq867ns7jele6g3lw66fkDrop the pasta, start the playlist, when the music is over, you’ve got perfectly cooked pasta
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Today I learned about the "village homosexual" in Tahitian culture who is always available when there are no women.
submitted by Kathrin to todayilearned
156 points | 12 comments
@todayilearned Today I learned about the “village homosexual” in Tahitian culture who is always available when there are no women.
Screenshot is from David Gilmore’s* “Manhood in the Making”.
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* No, not that David Gilmore. -
TIL that Taiwan isn't the only Chinese province controlled by the Republic of China
submitted by Flax_vert to todayilearned
2 points | 4 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuchien_Province,_Republic_of_ChinaIt seems that the Republic of China also control a few islands in the Fuchien/Fujian province as well, which are quite close to the People’s Republic of China
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The worlds largest Super-bulldozer was never used
submitted by glowing_hans to todayilearned
36 points | 13 comments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acco_super_bulldozerThe Italian maker wanted to export to Libya. But it never happened, and it stands around in storage 🚧.
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TIL there are "libraries" in London where you can borrow gadgets
submitted by i_am_not_a_robot to todayilearned
77 points | 7 comments
https://secretldn.com/library-of-things/The Library of Things offers Londoners the chance to get their hands on the random tools, gadgets, and household items they need, in a far more sustainable way than buying them brand new. From camping gear and carpet cleaners to party supplies and pressure washers; the Library of Things is packed full with handy items to borrow at affordable prices. And with 19 libraries now scattered across the city; it’s never been more convenient to borrow rather than buy.
