SentientRock209
The video above features Aba and Preach as they review a tiktok by a trans man on his experience in being treated as constant possible threat due to now being perceived as a man. There's some jokes here and there but some decent discussion of the differences in how men and women are perceived in everyday life.
The video above dives into some of the challenges in developing and administering experimental drugs that can be used as birth control options for men as the main ones available to men are condoms and vasectomies which isn't a lot. From the video summary on youtube:
"Condoms and vasectomies remain pretty much the extent of birth control options for people who produce sperm, and both have problems. So why is almost all hormonal birth control aimed at those with ovaries? There have been some successes targeting the biological feedback process for hormones that regulate new sperm production, but progress is slow."
The video above is an interview with a researcher named William Costello who's part of a wider team of researchers taking an empirical approach to understanding incels and the problems they face. Whereas the usual pop-sci understanding of incels starts and stops with the misogyny in their communities. The empirical focus gives us better results as it reveals the mental status and situations incels themselves are dealing with and why modern upbringings are failing them.
You can find their research here and I highly recommend giving it it a look: http://www.psychstudies.co.uk/sisnet.php
The video above is a documentary highlighting the story of a man whose untreated mental health problem and a punitive justice system resulted in him getting life with no parole in prison after getting rejected and turned down from programs that would have helped him recover.
I'm hoping manga counts as I'm reading 2 graphic novels and one manga, hbu?:
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Home after Dark by David Small
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Kuusama by Elisa Macellari
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The Climber by Shinichi Sakamoto
I edited the name of the post to better reflect the content of the video as the original video title is just "Don't waste it", the host talks about the stats relating to how many people in the modern world in first world countries are still counted as illiterate and how those stats made him reflect on how lucky he was in being encouraged to read and still does to this day. I like this video as a decent summation of what makes reading wonderful in and of itself.
Lots of graphic novels and manga, once done with that I have a nice gardening book to look forward to:
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Home after Dark by David Small
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Kuusama by Elisa Macellari
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The Climber by Shinichi Sakamoto
Small criticism, I think your first article on "The redditor's guide to how Kbin works" is the one packed with the most useful information for any newbie migrating from reddit or any social media so it deserves a sticky or some kind of mechanism to make it the first thing that pops up imho. Otherwise, awesome work. I thought the Artemis app was still in exclusive beta so it's good to hear it's available on the app store now.
The video above is a discussion between Louis Rossmann, a philanthropist and a programmer who use and advocate for the usage of open source software. The connection between all three of them is that the philanthropist heads an organization called FUTO that gives grants to people developing useful open source projects and Louis Rossmann (I believe) is an employee of that organization and the programmer Aiden is a recipient of that grant. The conversation goes over the complication in trying to monetize and fund open source software that's typically expected to be free all around.
For those curious about the FUTO organization, you can find some of their links below.
FUTO - https://futo.org/FUTO
Twitter - https://twitter.com/FUTO_Tech
FUTO Youtube channel - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIBNAd4nO5rk6G8YaEudqNw