Wikipedia:Reference desk/Humanities: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Pages automatically checked for accidental language links]] |
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[[Category:Wikipedia resources for researchers]] |
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[[Category:Wikipedia help forums]] |
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[[Category:Wikipedia reference desk|Humanities]] |
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[[Category:Wikipedia help pages with dated sections]] |
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= December 1 = |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2013 August 31}} |
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== Who designed the flag of the American Indian Movement and when? == |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2013 September 1}} |
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The flag of the [[American Indian Movement]] is fairly iconic and featured in the article about the movement. However I haven't been able to find any sources about who made the flag and when. Does anybody have any information on when it was first flown, who made it, etc? Thanks! [[User:Intervex|Intervex]] ([[User talk:Intervex|talk]]) 00:09, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2013 September 2}} |
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:Googling "who designed american indian movement flag" yields an AI item that says it was designed by someone named Jon Lurie. More about it here,[https://www.mnopedia.org/group/american-indian-movement-aim#:~:text=Creator:,Tripodero%2C%20January%206%2C%202018.] though it doesn't say when. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 00:45, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Looks like Lurie was the author of the encyclopedia entry, I'm afraid: [https://www.mnopedia.org/creator/jon-lurie]. [[User:Intervex|Intervex]] ([[User talk:Intervex|talk]]) 00:51, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::I found a similar flag that has the same central symbol [https://www.grunge.com/222999/the-true-story-of-the-american-indian-movement/] which is attributed to the first Longest Walk in 1978 ([[:File:Longest Walk at Washington, 1978.jpg]]). This is the earliest version of the flag I've been able to find. [[User:Intervex|Intervex]] ([[User talk:Intervex|talk]]) 04:15, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Editing a Wikipedia subtitle (?) seen in Android but not Windows == |
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= September 3 = |
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When I open [[Charles-Émile Trudeau]] on my Android phone I see in what I will call a subtitle below his name that he was a "French Businessman (1887-1935)". (Charles-Émile Trudeau was father of Canadian Prime Minister [[Pierre Trudeau]] and grandfather of current Canadian Prime Minister [[Justin Trudeau]].) But he was French-Canadian (born in Quebec), not French, and I would like to correct this. |
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== Earliest British queen consort to have worn a crown == |
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[[File:Maud of Scotland.jpg|thumb|upright|The seal of Matilda]] |
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Wo was the earliest known queen consort in the British Isles to have worn a crown (either through historical inventories or depictions, etc.)? ''-- 04:52, 3 September 2013 The Emperor's New Spy'' |
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But I prefer to edit on my computer in Windows, where I don't see "French Businessman..." at all. |
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:Medieval depictions are unrealiable as the illustrators were never present.<br>[[User:Sleigh|Sleigh]] ([[User talk:Sleigh|talk]]) 11:49, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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What Wikipedia 'element' is the (visible only on Android) subtitle "French Businessman (1887-1935)", and how can I edit it in Windows? [[User:Hayttom|Hayttom]] ([[User talk:Hayttom|talk]]) 00:14, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Sure, but Spy is asking about depictions, right? [[Matilda of Scotland]] (Queen of England as wife of Henry I 1100-1118) wears a crown on her seal (shown). I can't find a contemporary image of [[Matilda of Flanders]]. The Bayeux tapestry (c. 1070) does not put a crown on Harold's wife Edith. [http://www.bayeuxtapestry.org.uk/BayeuxPeople.htm] And the image you have above of Canute and Ælfgifu is dated 1031 and shows the queen without a crown. [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 17:05, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:It's in the "Short description" ([[WP:SHORTDESC]])... -- [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 00:27, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::P.S. As for known physical crowns, we know of a crown belonging to Edward the Confessor's wife [[Edith of Wessex]] (which Oliver Cromwell destroyed) [http://www.englishmonarchs.co.uk/crown_jewels.htm]. [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 17:16, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:I'm in Windows, so it doesn't show up on the normal article page, but if you EDIT, it's the first line of the article. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 00:38, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Can plastic surgery substantially alter someone's appearance? == |
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::Thank you both, @[[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] and @[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] for your quick supportive responses. The "[[Wikipedia:Short description#How to edit|how to edit]]" did not work for me - I don't see it the way it is described - but I do indeed see the Short Description when editing as @[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] explained. [[User:Hayttom|Hayttom]] ([[User talk:Hayttom|talk]]) 00:43, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::If you go into your Preferences on desktop, in the Gadgets section there's a tick box under Editing which allows you to see and edit the short description. --[[User:Viennese Waltz|Viennese Waltz]] 06:56, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== What can I cite about Tommy Lasorda pitching during batting practice? == |
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A standard trope in espionage thrillers is for someone to have extensive plastic surgery so that they are no longer recognizable. I had always thought this was just fiction, but our article on [[Sammy_the_bull]] notes that he had plastic surgery while in the Witness Protection Program to change his appearance. Is this type of thing common, and does it work (he doesn't really look all that different to me)? Thanks! [[User:OldTimeNESter|OldTimeNESter]] ([[User talk:OldTimeNESter|talk]]) 12:58, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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This is obviously for [[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]]... Our [[Charles-Émile Trudeau]] article leads to the [[Montreal Royals]] article which leads to our [[Tommy Lasorda]] article which does NOT mention him often (?) throwing pitches during [[Los Angeles Dodgers|Dodgers]] batting practice, which I think I saw him do (before an [[Montreal Expos|Expos]] game) but possibly only on TV. I Googled "tommy lasorda pitching batting practice" but I don't think that provided any good enough information source. [[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]], can you find one? (Do you remember seeing Tommy throwing pitches at batting practice?) [[User:Hayttom|Hayttom]] ([[User talk:Hayttom|talk]]) 01:07, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Yes, it can substantially alter your appearance, to the point where somebody who knows you may not recognize you (then again, dyeing your hair, changing your hairstyle, growing a beard, and wearing sunglasses can do that, too). However, the trope of one person having their appearance altered to match another is less likely to work. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] ([[User talk:StuRat|talk]]) 07:14, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:That sounds familiar. I would have to look in Newspapers.com. There might be something in his obituary, if nothing else. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 01:15, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::There were a couple of anecdotes in the wake of Lasorda's death which mentioned him throwing batting practice, at least during the time he was a coach for the Dodgers. Don't know if he still did that once he became the Dodgers' manager. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 04:06, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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= December 2 = |
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::Any Australian [[cricket]] fan would nominate [[Shane Warne]] as a perfect example of this. It's a shame our article on him doesn't contain any early photos. Maybe comparing the one at the start of his article with something from [https://www.google.com.au/search?q=shane+warne&safe=active&rlz=1C1GGGE_enAU394AU394&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=M-ImUr7DEpHMlAW9p4GgDA&ved=0CAkQ_AUoAQ&biw=1280&bih=685 here] might give the idea. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 07:35, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== East Pakistan minorities == |
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:Compare the person on the right in [[:File:The Jacksons 1977.JPG|this picture from 1977]] with the person on the right in [[:File:Al Walser and Michael jackson.jpg|this picture from many years later]]. Repeated plastic surgeries radically altered [[Michael Jackson]]'s appearance over 30 years or so. More about this in the [[Michael Jackson's health and appearance]] article. [[User:Astronaut|Astronaut]] ([[User talk:Astronaut|talk]]) 17:41, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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An editor named pigsonwing removed my question as trolling. Don't know why he thinks like that. |
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== Greetings == |
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Above it is written that "We don't conduct original research or provide a free source of ideas, '''but we'll help you find information you need.'''" |
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I have a doubt. In Spain, Cuba, Brazil and other countries, people usually give kisses on other people's cheeks as a way to say hello, but then I've noticed that people form UK or USA usually doesn't do the same, but they just shake hands. Why? <span style="font-family:'Arial',cursive"> [[User:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#000;"><small>'''Miss Bono'''</small></span>]][[User talk:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#c30000;"><small><sup> [zootalk]</sup></small></span>]]</span> 14:02, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:It's a cultural thing. Latins (southern European origin) are generally more demonstrative than northern Europeans. And East Asians are even less demonstrative, hence the stereotypical bowing rather than handshaking. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 14:47, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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I read two Wikipedia articles [[1950 East Pakistan riots]] and [[1964 East Pakistan riots]] and thought how media reported it at that time when it happened. |
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:We have an article [[Cheek kissing]] that may be helpful. Kissing has become more widespread as a greeting here in the UK in recent years, particularly among younger people and metropolitan society. However, "to kiss or not to kiss" can still provide a moment of awkwardness in many greeting situations, with people we don't know well; we are a quite a formal bunch here compared to some nations - as Bugs says, it's a cultural thing. I am female and can mentally divide my acquaintance list into people I kiss when I meet them, and people I don't. The latter list is much bigger than the former. |
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:May I ask you a question in return? I believe you're a native Spanish speaker and I was very interested to see how you phrased your question. On the Language desk we've discussed the well-established use of "doubt" as a synonym for "question" by Indian English speakers, but I just wanted to ask whether you're translating the Spanish phrase ''tengo una duda'' when you say "I have a doubt". Many thanks! - [[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]] 14:52, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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I am trying to find more old newspaper archives like this: |
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:Hi, [[User:Karenjc|Karen]] and [[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]], thank you both for your answers. I'm afraid I don't understand your question. Are you asking how do I ask when I have a doubt (''I have a question'' or ''I have a doubt''?) <span style="font-family:'Arial',cursive"> [[User:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#000;"><small>'''Miss Bono'''</small></span>]][[User talk:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#c30000;"><small><sup> [zootalk]</sup></small></span>]]</span> 16:34, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::To put it simply, if you had written the first sentence in Spanish, how would you have said it? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 17:57, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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1- https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/131860850?searchTerm=1950%20east%20pakistan%20hindu |
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::Sorry, I expressed myself poorly. I meant that, to a standard British or American English speaker, ''I have a doubt'' and ''I have a question'' mean slightly different things, although in Indian English they are interchangeable and there is good etymological reason for this. [[Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Language/2012_October_19#Doubt_.3C-.3E_Question|Here's]] an old RefDesk discussion about it. I was interested to see you, as a Spanish speaker, using this construction, and I wondered whether it is because of the similarity between ''doubt'' and ''duda''. But I don't want to distract attention from your question about cheek-kissing, which is the point of this thread, and I was not criticising your English in any way - just hoping you might help me understand a usage that I find interesting. -[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]] 18:24, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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2- https://www.nytimes.com/1950/02/24/archives/pakistan-incited-riots-says-nehru-india-leader-says-antihindu.html |
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:::Ohhh [[User:Karenjc|Karen]], I didn't know it wasn't correct to say ''I have a doubt''. I don't use that word so often, I prefer saying I have a question. <span style="font-family:'Arial',cursive"> [[User:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#000;"><small>'''Miss Bono'''</small></span>]][[User talk:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#c30000;"><small><sup> [zootalk]</sup></small></span>]]</span> 19:03, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::So your preferred way would be ''Yo tengo una pregunta'', right? And about "I have a doubt", it's something I've often heard Indian colleagues say, so it's not massively incorrect, it just kind of labels someone as an "Indian English" speaker - like this funny word "prepone", the opposite of "postpone", which we don't say in America. Also, "I have a doubt" may be deliberately ambiguous - a cultural device for challenging something without challenging it - saying "I don't understand" rather than "I think you've got it wrong." ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 21:09, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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3- https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/24/archives/riots-arouse-moslem-shame.html |
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:::::In addition, "people" is plural, exactly the opposite of ''la gente''. People do. People don't. But people never ''doesn't''. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 00:47, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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4- https://www.nytimes.com/1964/02/23/archives/hindus-and-christians-fleeing-east-pakistan-throngs-of-refugees.html [[User:Sistersofchappel|Sistersofchappel]] ([[User talk:Sistersofchappel|talk]]) 03:41, 30 November 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::: I found [https://www.google.com.au/#psj=1&q=%22This+people+doesn't%22 940,000] ghits for "this people doesn't". If you look through them all, I'm sure you'll find one or even two that would sound natural to a native speaker. -- [[User:JackofOz|<font face="Papyrus">Jack of Oz</font>]] [[User talk:JackofOz#top|<span style="font-size:85%"><font face="Verdana" ><sup>[pleasantries]</sup></font></span>]] 03:49, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:Pinging @[[User:Pigsonthewing]]. [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 16:03, 1 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::"People" can be singular, as in "They are a proud people, proud mainly of the volume of their farts." [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] ([[User talk:StuRat|talk]]) 07:08, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::You could try [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request]], especially if you have a particular publication in mind. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 20:31, 2 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::I've heard both '''U2 are a band''' and '''U2 is a band''' <span style="font-family:'Arial',cursive"> [[User:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#000;"><small>'''Miss Bono'''</small></span>]][[User talk:Miss Bono|<span style="color:#c30000;"><small><sup> [zootalk]</sup></small></span>]]</span> 15:22, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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Not any particular publication but any newspaper report(scanned or archived) during that period which mentions violence against minorities, like you posted few hours ago and then changed. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Sistersofchappel|Sistersofchappel]] ([[User talk:Sistersofchappel#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Sistersofchappel|contribs]]) 02:23, 3 December 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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::::::::Whatever Jack's perverse need to be contrary here, the first 100 hits for "[http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=%22this+people+doesn't%22&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 this people doesn't]" appear to be illiterate ranting. But hey, who doesn't want to teach Miss Bono how to be a ghetto chick as a grand international bad joke? [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 22:10, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::Apologies, it wasn't intentional. Here it is again: https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/digitised/issue/indiandailymail19500316-14 |
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== Do [[Spartacus (TV series)]] represents the reality? == |
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::That's all I could find. Somebody with a newspaper archive account might do better. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:09, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Behaviour of a monkey in this painting == |
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Hello |
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I watched the the TV series [[Spartacus (TV series)|Spartacus]] and I wonder if it presents really the story of Spartacus. There many sex scenes and violence. Is true that romaines live like that (They like violence, nobles people organize parties with slaves fucking around, Strap-on really exists? ...etc and others many things I forget). Do the expression ''By Jupiter Cock'' really exists? I searched the net and I have found nothing. The story between Spartacus and his wife and Crixus and Neveia are really true?. Thanks. |
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What would you say the monkey dressed in yellow and red, in the foreground, is doing in this painting? |
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::<small>When in Rome, lettuce spell "Romans" as the Romans did. :-) [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] ([[User talk:StuRat|talk]]) 07:05, 4 September 2013 (UTC) </small> |
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:::<small>''How'' many Romans? --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 03:41, 5 September 2013 (UTC) </small> |
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:(Please sign your posts by hitting the tilde key four times. Thank you.) For some clues as to the reality of everyday life in the Roman Empire, please see our article [[Erotic art in Pompeii and Herculaneum]]. --[[User:TammyMoet|TammyMoet]] ([[User talk:TammyMoet|talk]]) 15:00, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:David_Teniers_(II)_-_Smoking_and_drinking_monkeys.jpg [[Special:Contributions/194.120.133.17|194.120.133.17]] ([[User talk:194.120.133.17|talk]]) 23:17, 2 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Speaking of Jupiter's bits, [[Juglans]] seems to be a rather old name; make of that what you will. [[User:SemanticMantis|SemanticMantis]] ([[User talk:SemanticMantis|talk]]) 15:45, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:Preparing to grind more tobacco for his friends to smoke? [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 01:13, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Our article on [[Spartacus]] (the historical figure) covers what the ancient sources say happened pretty well, with links to translations of those sources in the footnotes. The TV series is obviously going to be fictionalised. The setting and background are hopefully going to be based on historical and archaeological research, but if specific events depicted go beyond what the sources say, that's just [[dramatic licence]]. The sources only go into so much detail, and to write a dramatically satisfying screenplay the writer is going to have to invent scenes and dialogue to convey information that's conveyed in a different way in the sources, fill in gaps from his or her imagination, and invent stuff to make the characters and action more interesting. [[User:Nicknack009|Nicknack009]] ([[User talk:Nicknack009|talk]]) 16:17, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::Or is collecting the ground tobacco in a paper? Tobacco was supplied as whole dried and pressed leaves that had to be prepared at home. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:38, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Based on the attire and attitude, the foreground monkey is not a member of the jolly company but a servant or perhaps the innkeeper. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 10:23, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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: BTW, this wikicode: <br> <code><nowiki>[[:File:David Teniers (II) - Smoking and drinking monkeys.jpg]]</nowiki></code> <br> makes a nice wikilink to the image: <br> [[:File:David Teniers (II) - Smoking and drinking monkeys.jpg]] <br>--[[User:CiaPan|CiaPan]] ([[User talk:CiaPan|talk]]) 19:16, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:The [https://pipemuseum.nl/en/vuurmaken-aansteken Amsterdam Pipe Museum] states "we can hardly imagine how difficult it was to get your pipe lit. Our seventeenth-century ancestors used a coal, removed from the open fire with a fire tong and handed it in a brazier. With the fireplace tongs or a smaller one you could put a glowing coal on the pipe bowl." I think the monkey is crouched over a brazier, and the two little sticks propped up in the brazier are [https://pipemuseum.nl/en/collection/apm-20-754 a tiny pair of tongs], another pair being in use by the monkey at the table. The monkey of interest certainly appears to be doing something with tobacco and paper, over the hot brazier. I don't know what. |
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:In fact I'm not even right about the tongs: in [[:File:2011-03-26 Aschaffenburg 023 Schloss Johannisburg, Staatsgalerie, David Teniers der Jüngere - Gesellschaft kostümierter Affen (6091291642).jpg|this similar painting]] the same objects are clearly stick-like. But I think they hold embers somehow. There's a lot of them, I count 10, so presumably they're consumable, something like a [[Splint (laboratory equipment)]]? |
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:Looking through Teniers's many paintings of smokers (there's a commons category), I see many figures doing the exact same thing over a little pottery brazier. [[:File:David Teniers (II) - Smokers in a tavern.jpg|#1]], [[:File:David Teniers d. J. - Drei Bauern - 1846 - Bavarian State Painting Collections.jpg|#2]], [[:File:Painting in Museu Nacional de arte Antiga (8).JPG|#3]], [[:File:Adriaen Brouwer & David Teniers II - Rokers (KMSKA).jpg|#4]], [[:File:Two monkeys in feathered caps smoking tobacco. Engraving Wellcome V0021451.jpg|#5]], [[:File:David Teniers - Woman smoking a pipe.jpg|#6]]. Some are apparently rubbing the tobacco (what's meant by "ready-rubbed"?) but some are just heating it and placidly staring at it. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 09:25, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Drying it, perhaps? [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 16:28, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::Perhaps, but why do they all have wet tobacco? Perhaps the idea is to make the fragments shrivel up so they pack more densely into the pipe. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 16:32, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::It might be much fresher than we get it, pre-dried, today. Also at this period Netherlandish smokers of the rougher sort typically mixed their (expensive) tobacco with rather dangerous local plants like [[deadly nightshade]], in English going under the rather non-specific term [[Dwale (anaesthetic)|dwale]] (which we cover very poorly). That might need drying. [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 16:56, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::Wow, that sounds very dangerous (especially the lettuce). I thought [[Curing of tobacco]] was always done, and since it involve weeks of drying, sometimes up a chimney, five minutes extra drying seems confusingly futile. But maybe they cut corners on the curing in the early days? [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 17:41, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Yes, "[[Tobacco pipe#Tobacco|ready rubbed]]" means you don't have to rub it with your fingers/ in your palms to break it up into strands. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 16:49, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:{{small|Is it [[Rishi Sunak|our erstwhile leader]] preparing a White Paper for the [[Tobacco and Vapes Bill]]? [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 15:31, 4 December 2024 (UTC)}} |
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= December 3 = |
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:::I was really hoping Julius Caesar's comeuppance was based in history, but alas, I found no evidence for it... [[User:Wnt|Wnt]] ([[User talk:Wnt|talk]]) 22:32, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::They did stick it to him, though. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 23:46, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::I don't know what happens to Caesar in the show, but as far as I know there's no evidence that he had anything to do with Spartacus' rebellion at all. He would have been elected military tribune around that time, but if he played any part in the campaigns against Spartacus, it's not recorded. [[User:Nicknack009|Nicknack009]] ([[User talk:Nicknack009|talk]]) 10:48, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::You might want to watch ''[[I, Claudius (BBC)|I, Claudius]]''. Nay, in fact, you ''must'' watch ''I, Claudius.'' [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 00:43, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::I did, when it first ran. They got their points across to Caligula pretty well too. He bloated so badly afterward that they starting calling him the Elephant Man. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 02:56, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::{{small|And for anyone who didn't get the point, John Hurt played both of those roles. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:15, 4 September 2013 (UTC)}} |
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:::::::Spartacus died almost 30 years before Julie was gang-knifed, and Claudius was born about 30 years after that. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:14, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::In the ''Spartacus'' series [[Todd Lasance]], much improved by what one blogger called a "Point-Break-Patrick-Swayze-Julius-Caesar" look, is stabbed with a far more appropriate implement than a knife. :) [[User:Wnt|Wnt]] ([[User talk:Wnt|talk]]) 01:26, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Duchess Marie's adopted child. == |
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== Do schoolchildren in the developed world, 21st century, learn how to write letters or send e-mail or both? == |
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According to {{cite book|first=Gillian |last=Gill | author-link = Gillian Gill |title=We Two: Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals |publisher=Ballatine Books |location=New York |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-345-52001-2 | p = 408}} "By 1843, [[Duchess Marie of Württemberg|Duchess Marie]] had adopted a child of humble parentage and was bringing him or her up as her own." Do we know anything more about this child? Thank you, [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 20:51, 3 December 2024 (UTC) |
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Do '''school'''children in the developed world learn how to write letters or send e-mail or both? Are they taught how to type out or write out a formal/business letter and a casual/friendly letter at a young age, adding a postage stamp, finding a mail box, checking the address to make sure that the mail gets to the right place, looking for typographical errors in the e-mail, etc.? How often would the average schoolchild use electronics to send a message to another person? [[Special:Contributions/164.107.102.38|164.107.102.38]] ([[User talk:164.107.102.38|talk]]) 15:15, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:My son is 10 and goes to school in a "developed" country. He's certainly never been taught how to write a letter in the way you describe and somehow I doubt he ever will now. --[[User:Viennese Waltz|Viennese Waltz]] 15:36, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:: Fine. Then, can you be a little specific in how he writes the letter? [[Special:Contributions/164.107.102.38|164.107.102.38]] ([[User talk:164.107.102.38|talk]]) 15:42, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:My daughters, now 22 and 16 and schooled in the UK, were both taught the elements of letter writing at primary school (layout, content, register, etc.) It wa a required part of the National Curriculum. [http://www.readingrockets.org/article/22319/ This] article from 2007 confirms that children were taught this skill in or around Year 3, Term 3, ie at the age of about 8. Central diktats on what is in the curriculum change with every administration, but I doubt very much that this requirement has been abandoned. Primary age children also learn to write and send email as part of their Information Technology education. They have logins and email addresses within the school's [[learning platform]] and learn to compose and send emails to teachers and each other within a safe [[Closed platform|walled garden]] environment. -[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]] 18:43, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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= December 4 = |
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::In England, "The Primary [[National Curriculum (England, Wales and Northern Ireland)|National Curriculum]] until 2014" [http://www.education.gov.uk/schools/teachingandlearning/curriculum/primary/b00198874/english/ks2/en3 National English: En3 Writing] doesn't specify letter writing as such, but children do have to "learn the main rules and conventions of written English" and specifically "choose form and content to suit a particular purpose" (1a). [http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/teachers/ks2_lessonplans/english/letters.shtml This BBC lesson plan] suggests that letter writing is an obvious means of fulfilling the requirement. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 19:39, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Subnational laws == |
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:::In the early days of "Computer Studies", I taught children how to send an e-mail, but these days they all seem to learn to e-mail and text without needing to be taught. (<small>E-mail is now considered old-fashioned, of course, for casual communication. It's all texting, and writing on ''walls'', and the past tense of "to text" seems to be "tex'd" rather than "texted". </rant>)</small> [[User:Dbfirs|''<font face="verdana"><font color="blue">D</font><font color="#00ccff">b</font><font color="#44ffcc">f</font><font color="66ff66">i</font><font color="44ee44">r</font><font color="44aa44">s</font></font>'']] 21:49, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::<small>I think I prefer what I call the "good old days" of e-mailing and letter-writing. Letter-writing and e-mail, especially in formal situations, take some time to think, plan, and write out, minimizing thoughtless comments. I'm not saying that people cannot show bad manners in letter-writing and e-mailing; they can, but I would think that being impolite or hurtful would be intentional. [[Special:Contributions/140.254.213.99|140.254.213.99]] ([[User talk:140.254.213.99|talk]]) 13:50, 4 September 2013 (UTC)</small> |
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:My daughter is 11 and we live in Ontario. She was taught last year how to write a semi-formal style letter (salutations, stuff like that) and practiced a few between classmates. I don't think they talked about stuff like where to get stamps, etc. [[User:Matt Deres|Matt Deres]] ([[User talk:Matt Deres|talk]]) 16:24, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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In all [[federations]], are there laws that differ between subdivisions, such as states, provinces, cantons or parts of countries like Bosnia-Hertzegovina or Belgium? Are there any laws that are dedicated to [[provinces of Argentina]], [[states of Brazil|Brazil]], [[States of India|India]], [[States of Mexico|Mexico]], [[States of Germany|Germany]] or [[States of Austria|Austria]], or [[cantons of Switzerland]]? And in countries like US, Canada or Australia, are there any local laws that differ between local governments? --[[User:40bus|40bus]] ([[User talk:40bus|talk]]) 20:16, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Viking boat launching == |
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:Links to a number of relevant articles at [[State law]]... -- [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 21:17, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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[[File:CantiereOlandese.jpg|thumb|old boat launching]] |
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::Hmm, not sure I'm a big fan of that page. It has one blue link, to US state law. All the other links are red, and many are to titles that would not naturally exist at all, unless maybe as redirects-from-misnomers or something. For example [[state law (Germany)]]? What's that? The German ''Länder'' are not called "states". --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:56, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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When the Vikings built their ships in medieval times, how did they launch them into the sea after construction? Is it similar to this picture? In other words, how did they get the big ship off the launch structure and into the sea?--[[User:Christie the puppy lover|Christie the puppy lover]] ([[User talk:Christie the puppy lover|talk]]) 18:56, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::(I went ahead and searched, and to my bemusement our article on the ''Länder'' is at [[states of Germany]]. Hmm. I don't think that's a good title. I've always heard them called ''Länder'', untranslated. They're broadly analogous to US states, I suppose, but not really the same thing.) --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 22:13, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Viking [[longship]]s were much smaller than the ship in your picture. It was quite possible to manhandle a longship in and out of the sea; [[Scapa Flow]] in [[Orkney]] gets it's name from the Norse word ''"Skálpeiðflói, ''(which)'' was given to it by the Vikings and means ‘the bay of the ship isthmus’, as longships were dragged the short distance overland from Kirkwall Bay to Scapa to avoid the long sea journey."''[http://www.orkneycommunities.co.uk/scapaflow/index.asp?pageid=2182] [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 19:19, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::I've been looking at [[Law of Texas]] in order to verify if its specifical statutes visibly differ from the German cases where the concept of [[Succession of states]] comes into question: following analyses exposed in [[:de:Land (Deutschland)]] in German Wikipedia. "Succession of states" as discussed in that last article has a focus probably more highly contrasted in matter of "rights and obligations" than would apply to U.S. States. In the case of Texas law for example I note the importance of Common law as a defining influence, whereas in German law the same unifying level is rooted very differently. I imagine that the american [https://www.usconstitution.net/english-as-official-language linguistic pluralism] at root also implies some repercussions in classes of problems turning to the inside rather than to abroad. Consequently perhaps the specific problems that appear and were shown in the idea of Secession. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 00:16, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::[http://www.digitalnorseman.com/bcvsp/lprogram.html This page] has a pic of a life size Viking ship replica being launched. [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 19:40, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::{{ping|Askedonty}} I'm really having trouble following that. What are you trying to figure out here? Is it about whether ''Land'' is reasonably translated as "state" in the sense that it's used in "US state"? If it is, I don't really follow the argument; I'm not even sure whether you're arguing for or against. If it's not then I'm even more confused. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 01:06, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::German Wikipedia define the U.S.A. as a "föderal aufgebaute Republik" which is absolutely similar to the German "Bundesrepublik". To anybody there is a strange feeling at equating "State" with "Land" so I do not see what reluctance there has to be seeing there is an explanation for it. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 01:19, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::<s>No reluctance;</s> I just wanted to understand better the structure of your argument. It was a little hard to figure out what you were getting at. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 01:22, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::(Actually now I'm not sure about the "no reluctance" part, because on re-reading "I do not see what reluctance there has to be", I don't actually understand what that means either.) --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 01:28, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::Ok, no problem. "Länder" means that Germans living there might be have their families rooted there for ages. I do not think that aspect can be translated without some circumlocutions. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 01:44, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::In several languages, the usual term for a ''Land'' of the FRG uses a part that is cognate to ''state''. For example: Basque ''[[:eu:Alemaniako estatuak|Alemaniako estatuak]]'' (pl), Danish ''[[:de:Tysklands delstater|Tysklands delstater]]'' (pl), Italian ''[[:it:Stati federati della Germania|Stati federati della Germania]]'' (pl); Spanish ''[[:es:Estado federado (Alemania)|Estado federado (Alemania)]]''. When used for a specific ''Land'' and no confusion with the sense of "federal state" can occur, this is often simplified, as in Italian ''lo stato di Baden-Württemberg''.<sup>[https://motori.fanpage.it/autostrade-senza-limiti-di-velocita-la-germania-cambia-politica-test-a-120-km-h/][https://nuovavenezia.gelocal.it/regione/2023/01/28/news/jesolo_international_club_camping_migliore_europa_turismo-12610562/][https://europa.today.it/attualita/germania-bimba-accoltellata-supermercato.html]</sup> --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 08:21, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:If the subdivisions have separate [[legislature]]s, there are bound to be differences. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 22:33, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:{{br}} The original question asks ''in countries like US...are there any local laws that differ...''. In the US, "local" usually means city or county level. This will vary from state to state, but typically city and county laws are called "ordinances" and regulate comparatively lesser matters than state law (state law handles almost all one-on-one violent crime, for example). City ordinances tend to be about things like how often you have to mow your lawn or whether you can drink alcohol in public. Violations are usually "[[infraction]]s" with relatively light penalties (though fines can be fairly heavy in some cases, like for removing a tree that you're not supposed to remove in [[Woodside, California]]). --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 23:02, 4 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Like the USA, Australia is a federation of states, so it has federal (national) laws, state level laws, and municipality based laws. The latter are like city laws in the US, but not all our towns are called cities. Unlike the USA, our constitution is primarily about what states are responsible for and what the federal government is responsible for. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 03:33, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::As with most things in the US, the distinction (if any) between "town" and "city" varies state-to-state. I'm most familiar with California, which has no official legal distinction, but the municipality in question can call itself "town" or "city" as it pleases, usually depending on whether it wants to give the suggestion that it's semi-rural (see [[Town of Los Altos Hills]]). Completely different are the [[New England town]]s, which I don't know much about except what I've read in Wikipedia. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 03:56, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::The US Constitution does, in fact, delineate the powers of states and of the federal government. American states are not "subdivisions", they are separate entities which joined the USA. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 07:14, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::: Thank you for the answers.--[[User:Christie the puppy lover|Christie the puppy lover]] ([[User talk:Christie the puppy lover|talk]]) 10:21, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::Many subdivisions of current sovereign states, all over the world, were at some time themselves independent sovereign states that later gave up their sovereignty, sometimes not entirely voluntarily, and joined a larger entity. The USA is not exceptional. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 09:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::The American states have not given up their sovereignty. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:08, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::Then why don't they apply for UN membership? Too much effort? --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 03:40, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::It's a different concept of sovereignty. The theory of sovereignty in much of the world is that it has to be unique; there is only one sovereign at a given place and time. The US, at least historically, explicitly rejects that idea, embracing [[divided sovereignty]] instead. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 03:49, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::: For that matter, recognized Indian tribes in the U.S. also have partial sovereignty, their own courts, etc. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 05:12, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::::: Yes. Readers who want to know more about this can check out our article on [[tribal sovereignty in the United States]]. Lots of interesting complications if you like that sort of thing. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 19:44, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::Lambiam -- In the second half of the 1940s, when Stalin was arranging things so that the Byelorussian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR had separate memberships in the United Nations (distinct from the Soviet Union's overall membership), he offered to agree to several U.S. states being admitted to the U.N. but the U.S. didn't take him up on it. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 00:03, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{clear}} |
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:::::::: I did not know that. Wow. Which states in particular were OK with Uncle Joe? Or was it just a number, let the states play musical chairs for it? --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 20:01, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::::{{small|Texas, Texas, Texas, Texas and Texas. [[User:Tamfang|—Tamfang]] ([[User talk:Tamfang|talk]]) 20:42, 10 December 2024 (UTC)}} |
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:::::::::I'm pretty sure it didn't get that far (probably stayed within the Truman White House and State Department), since it would have been a violation of the U.S. Constitution ("No State shall, without the Consent of Congress...enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power"). [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 00:12, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Viking ship gargoyle == |
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I suspect that the U.S. is at the extreme of how much laws about rather important matters vary from one jurisdiction to another: at the state level, differences include: whether or not there is a death penalty and (if so) under what circumstances it can be applied; whether cannabis is legal, and almost everything about its regulation (and more or less the same about alcohol, though no state currently has an outright ban); what is the minimum wage (defaulting to the federal minimum wage if the state does not pass its own); almost everything to do with education; almost everything about how elections are run. Also, since ''Dobbs'', pretty much everything about abortion. In some areas, federal law reliably trumps state law, but not in everything (there is relatively little the federal government can do to prevent a state from passing a criminal law, other than either challenge it as unconstitutional or threaten to withhold funds unless they change it). |
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[[File:Viking ship stylized gray sky narrow.gif|thumb|Viking ship figure]] |
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[[File:Aarhus mask stone.jpg|thumb|left|The Aarhus Mask stone]] |
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U.S. states usually have more ability to limit what smaller jurisdictions can do, so they can preempt local ordinances (usually the term, rather than "laws", at the city/town/etc. level, but just as enforceable). Still, often they don't do that, even in ways where you'd think they would. Where I live in Washington state, the minimum wage varies from county to county and city to city, with the state setting only a "minimum minimum". And it gets even more confusing because, for example, King County sets a minimum wage for unincorporated areas of the county, with incorporated communities able to go higher or lower. In Texas, the legality of selling alcohol is a "local option" patchwork. And sovereignty gets trickier in terms of Indian reservations, hence the "Indian casinos" even in states where gambling is otherwise illegal. |
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I notice on a lot of Viking ships there is a gargoyle on the front. What purpose did it serve?--[[User:Christie the puppy lover|Christie the puppy lover]] ([[User talk:Christie the puppy lover|talk]]) 21:32, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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And, yeah, that's just more about the U.S., but I think people from elsewhere have trouble imagining what a patchwork it is here. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 05:12, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:According to our article [[Figurehead (object)]], the theory is that ''"[t]he menacing appearance of toothy and bug-eyed figureheads on Viking ships also had the protective function of warding off evil spirits"''. The statement is sourced to the [[British Museum]] website. - [[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]] 22:37, 3 September 2013 (UTC) |
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In Mexico: I know Mexico City legalized gay marriage years before the rest of the country. But if we have a decent article on federalism in Mexico, I haven't seen it. |
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::Even more details in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea#In_culture Sea]; perhaps we should add to that figurehead article. ''"James Hornell studied traditional, indigenous watercraft and considered the significance of the "oculi" or eyes painted on the prows of boats which may have represented the watchful gaze of a god or goddess protecting the vessel. The Vikings portrayed fierce heads with open jaws and bulging eyes at bow and stern of their longships to ward off evil spirits, and the figureheads on the prows of sailing ships were regarded with affection my mariners and represented the belief that the vessel needed to find its way. The Egyptians placed figures of holy birds on the prow while the Phoenicians used horses representing speed. The Ancient Greeks used boars' heads to symbolise acute vision and ferocity while Roman boats often mounted a carving of a centurion representing valour in battle. In northern Europe, serpents, bulls, dolphins and dragons were customary and by the 13th Century, the swan was used representing grace and mobility."'' [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 00:17, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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In Spain, Catalonia semi-legalized cannabis (allowing "cannabis clubs"); there has been a bit of a fight back and forth with the central government over whether they can do that. And, of course, in Spain each autonomous community makes its own decisions about much of the educational system (which often involves laws) and most have opted to have responsibility for a health system devolved to them, though some have chosen not to take that on. For more on Spain, you can look at [[Autonomous communities of Spain#Constitutional and statutory framework]]. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 05:23, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:The word "gargoyle" is unfortunate, though it is understandable why you made the connection. In Denmark, they are referred to commonly as "dragehoveder" (dragons' heads), but interestingly, a "dragon" only appeared on few ships. The Ladby Ship from Funen is one example of a ship that featured an actual "dragon", but we should probably see the figures as (sea) serpents. A famous Norwegian Viking ship was called "[[Ormen Lange (longship)|Ormen Lange]]" (The Long Serpent) and in Viking Scandinavia, an "ormr" could refer to a serpent, notably related to the sea, e.g. [[Jörmungandr|Midgarðsormr]], [[Níðhöggr]] and the [[lindorm]]. Both the option that they should scare off evil or that they simply should look intimidating seem possible. Interestingly, Denmark has a number of runestones with so-called "[[Danish Runic Inscription 66|masks]]", which are believed to be repellents of evil spirits, so it is not impossible that the "dragon heads" were believed to have the same function. |
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= December 5 = |
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:The Ladby Museum in Denmark has a bit more on the topic (my translation, quote) "Many people expect that the bow of a Viking ship must feature a dragon's head. But in fact only a few contemporary examples are known of dragon or animal heads in ship bows. The Ladby ship, with its iron curls found in the front part of the bow, belongs to a small and exclusive group, as long as we refer to actual Viking ship finds where the ship featured both a dragon's head and tail. In Normandy, at Ile de Groix, a ship's grave has been found with a similar bow ornament, and boat graves of smaller boats are known from Sweden from the 9th century; apparently they also show "curls" near the bow. In addition, we have a few images of dragon's heads from the Viking ear. On the Gotland image stones dated to the 8th-10th centuries, a number of ships are displayed featuring dragon heds, some of these with an open mouth. Often the ships have a curled tail. Some ships have heads both at bow and stern. An image stone from Sweden shows a ship's stern with indications of tail spikes. Some examples exist of graffitti inscribed on pieces of bone or similar, where a ship's stern features an animal head. Finally, the famous Bayeux tapestry features ships with dragon's heads in their sterns. The dragon that appears during the pre-Christian time in the Nordic countries is rather a serpent or a giant worm. It has no legs or wings, both are common for the Christian dragons. The [Viking] dragon's poison is lethal, and it is often associated with the collection and guarding of gold. Its role is always evil. It is filled with magic - toxic blood and enchanted organs. But at the same time, it is a cosmic being, which like an eternal orbit forms a circle around the world. If the circle is broken, the balance between chaos and cosmos collapses. This happens at [[Ragnarök]]." (unquote)[http://www.vikingemuseetladby.dk/planlaeg-besoeg/kalender/2013/ladbydragen/] [[User:Valentinian|Valentinian]] <sup>[[User_talk:Valentinian|T]] / [[Special:Contributions/Valentinian|C]]</sup> 01:04, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== BAA == |
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::The nose on the mask to the left looks like the ancestor of [[Kilroy was here|Kilroy]]. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 02:49, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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BAA ambiguous meaning in context of aviation in UK, could you please check the discussion [[:n:Talk:Airport_security_tightened_worldwide|here]] 🙏 [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 07:30, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::: Thank you gentlemen for the answers.--[[User:Christie the puppy lover|Christie the puppy lover]] ([[User talk:Christie the puppy lover|talk]]) 10:22, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:@[[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] This is the humanities reference desk. Do you have a question on humanities? [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 10:15, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{clear}} |
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::Yes [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 10:20, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== UK politics/senate == |
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= September 4 = |
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Hi, is this factually accurate [[:n:Talk:Former_Scottish_Conservatives_leader_Annabel_Goldie_to_stand_down_as_MSP|link]] Thanks. [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 07:59, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== home prices in the us == |
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:See above. [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 10:15, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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are houses right on the shoreline generally more expensive than inland homes in the united states? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/149.152.105.6|149.152.105.6]] ([[User talk:149.152.105.6|talk]]) 00:08, 4 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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::Yes [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 10:21, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:: Having a career as a real estate agent for many years, I can say that ''houses right on the shoreline'' in the United states (especially California) are '''considerably''' more expensive than inland homes. --[[User:LordGorval|LordGorval]] ([[User talk:LordGorval|talk]]) 11:46, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::: According to [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/02/the-most-expensive-cities_n_2220188.html this website] '' there are at least ten U.S. cities where the average listing price for a home in the first six months of this year exceeded $1.2 million. The majority of these are located on or near the California Coast. '' --[[User:LordGorval|LordGorval]] ([[User talk:LordGorval|talk]]) 11:52, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Scipion-Virginie Hébert (1793-1830) == |
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::::When you compare similar houses, the shoreline is considerably more expensive. When you compare average shoreline houses versus average inland houses, the difference becomes bigger. Shoreline lots are expensive and tend to get expensive homes. People who can afford an expensive lot usually don't want a cheap house on it. [[User:PrimeHunter|PrimeHunter]] ([[User talk:PrimeHunter|talk]]) 00:41, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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{{hat|Block evasion}} |
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The only daughter of Jacques-René Hébert was a repubblican, bonapartist, or royalist? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/82.56.174.231|82.56.174.231]] ([[User talk:82.56.174.231#top|talk]]) 11:06, 5 December 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:[https://www.croirepublications.com/blog/un-jour-dans-l-histoire/13-juillet-1830-la-fille-d-hebert-et-la-premiere-bible-de-mariage This brief biography in French] says that she was adopted as a one-year-old by an old associate of her father called Jacques Marquet who educated her with the aim of her becoming a schoolmistress. She maried a Protestant pastor called Léon Née (1784-1856) and both became leading figures in the ''pré-Réveil'' (we have an article on the ''[[Réveil]]'' which was an 1814 Protestant revival in France and Switzerland). They had five children, three of whom died early. She was later the vice-president of a society that gave Bibles to newly married couples. No mention of politics, but it seems that her interests were on a higher plane. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 18:02, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Lietchenstein == |
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::can you if there are sources about her political ideas? [[Special:Contributions/193.207.166.191|193.207.166.191]] ([[User talk:193.207.166.191|talk]]) 18:20, 5 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::There are none. You can build hypotheses based on the facts that '''''a''''') her father, Jacques-René Hébert was a promoter of the [[Cult of Reason]], yet considering [[Jesus Christ]] a [[Sans-culotte]] ([[Jacques Hébert#Dechristianization]], [https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/O89BAAAAcAAJ?hl=fr&gbpv=1&pg=PA449 ''une religion sans base, fille d'aucune foi, ne procédant d'aucune révélation''] ) '''''b''''') it is known that when she was two years old around her beside Jacques Marquet: ''"The child is surrounded by his uncle, Jacques Goupil, an invalid officer, Pierre Theuvenot, a ironmonger of the rue du Temple (section of Reunion), by Jean-Baptiste Gaignot, employed in the national domains, of the Guillaume Tell section, of Pierre-François Coignard, employee of the National Treasury, living in rue Denis, of his neighbour Joseph Barat, of Pierre François Joseph Guérin, printer in the rue du Temple, all sans-culottes friends of the family – the Revolution visibly offered many places in the New administrations, social advancement"'', '''''c''''') she became an assistant teacher. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 01:13, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::Note that the Sans-culottes were not keen on any branch of Christianity, see [[Dechristianization of France during the French Revolution]], so it seems unlikely that she would have followed her parents' political path. [[Protestantism in France|Protestants in France]] were a small minority that had been persecuted under successive monarchs before the Revolution. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 10:23, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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How did Lietchenstein survive [[German mediatization]]? It was smaller than many of the secular states which were mediatized. Was it because of their connection with Austria?--[[User:The Emperor's New Spy|The Emperor's New Spy]] ([[User talk:The Emperor's New Spy|talk]]) 00:47, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:Liechtenstein was elevated to a Reichsfürstentum by the Holy Roman Emperor in 1719, and was thus a fief of the Holy Roman Empire. When the empire dissolved in 1806, it no longer had any imperial overlord. Liechtenstein stayed on friendly terms with the Habsburgs both when they were Holy Roman Emperors, and when they ruled as emperors of Austria, and Liechtenstein is only accessible from Austria and Switzerland. At the end of the day, it is probably the isolatedness that saved its independence. [[User:Valentinian|Valentinian]] <sup>[[User_talk:Valentinian|T]] / [[Special:Contributions/Valentinian|C]]</sup> 01:18, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::The author of [http://le-blog-de-jean-yves-carluer.fr/2015/08/28/fonder-une-societe-biblique-auxiliaire-3/ this related blog] is the opinion that Jacques Marquet himself might have been, at least, leaning toward protestantism. And the circumstances that are related are certainly convincing. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 14:16, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::The Germans probably had a hard time finding Lietchenstein on the map. As for Liechtenstein, it didn't border Germany proper, just Austria and Switzerland. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 02:45, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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{{hab}} |
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= December 6 = |
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== Discrimination against people on the basis of how they smell == |
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== Provenance of some sculptures == |
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Is there a term for it or even research? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/111.65.29.23|111.65.29.23]] ([[User talk:111.65.29.23|talk]]) 03:34, 4 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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There are a bunch of reliefs worked into the wall of the garden (rear) side of the former Casa Storck, now Frederic Storck and Cecilia Cuțescu-Storck Museum, in Bucharest. I can't tell whether they are older pieces collected by Frederic Storck (he certainly collected a number of such pieces; some are in the museum) or his own work, or a mix of the two. Clearly for some of these, if they are his own work they would have been imitative of older styles, but he was enough of a chameleon at times that I would not rule that out. (I had originally presumed they were all his, but I'm having second thoughts.) Wondering if anyone might know something more solid than I do; there is nothing in particular about this I've been easily able to find, except that they seem to date back at least very close to the origin of the building (1910s). |
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: in general most [[protected classes]] in discrimination are becuase it's not something a person really has that much control over: that would seem to me to mean that you can usually discriminate based on smell. (This is not legal advice). For example, if someone smells due to their refusing to shower, you can probably discriminate. However, I can imagine a situation where their "natural" smell, could just be an excuse or a proxy for really discriminating on a different basis; e.g. 'smelling like a woman'. (i.e. based on whatever moisterizer, shampoo, or whatever else a person uses - women's products can probably be differentiated by smell from men's products, for example.) I would imagine it's definitely illegal for an employer to state "I'm firing you because I don't like the way you smell" when in fact this is a basis for discriminating on an actual protected basis like being a woman. Otherwise anyone could decide they don't like the smell of women's products and successfully fire all their female staff on this basis, without actually firing anyone 'for being a woman'. [[Special:Contributions/178.48.114.143|178.48.114.143]] ([[User talk:178.48.114.143|talk]]) 04:11, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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<gallery> |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 01.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 02.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 03.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 03.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 05.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 06.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 07.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 08.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 09.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - relief on exterior of Casa Storck - 10.jpg |
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File:Frederic Storck - miscellaneous reliefs on exterior of Casa Storck - 01.jpg|Several more here |
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</gallery> [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 04:20, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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Given my uncertainty, I've put these in a new [[:commons:Category:Unidentified works in the Frederic and Cecilia Cuțescu Storck Museum]] that does not imply authorship by Frederic Storck. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 04:28, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::The question is not coherent. Does the OP mean discrimination against individuals based on their actual individual body odor? Does he mean discrimination against groups of people on their collective ability to distinguish odors? If this is a serious question, it needs to be stated clearly. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 22:03, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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: No one with an idea on any of these? - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 19:13, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Georges Jacques Danton == |
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:::One relatively recent example of your first interpretation which also made into a number of news media was the [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/smelly-family-kicked-out-of-musee-dorsay_n_2576328.html "'Smelly' Family Kicked Out Of Paris' Musée D'Orsay"]. ---[[User:Sluzzelin|Sluzzelin]] [[User talk:Sluzzelin|<small>talk</small>]] 22:08, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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{{hat|Block evasion.}} |
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Are there any sites with the full biographies of their two sons Antoine (1790-1858) and François Georges (1792-1848)? |
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:An article in French can be found [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41920566 here]. You'll need to access it through a library. Their basic biographical details are also available on various genealogy sites, but I expect you're looking for more than just that. [[User:Xuxl|Xuxl]] ([[User talk:Xuxl|talk]]) 16:02, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== financial projections == |
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:Can you search for others? Thank you. [[Special:Contributions/87.5.237.18|87.5.237.18]] ([[User talk:87.5.237.18|talk]]) 16:08, 6 December 2024 (UTC) |
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If for whatever reason we historically subtracted from each U.S. state budget the same proportion of that state's GDP, that the CIA and NSA have as a proportion of the national budget today, and we replayed history with this subtraction in place (no other chnage), from the founding of the United States until today, would America still have been able to grow 1) to its continental size, 2) a global superpower? |
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{{hab}} |
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= December 7 = |
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What I mean is that imagine that all the 13 colonies and then the states, each had to have the financial burden (no other change) of that extra cost. |
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== Why did [[Pippi Longstocking]] end up never getting married in her adulthood? == |
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That is the text of my question, for context I am thinking about all the stupid spying, intelligence, counterintelligence, coups d'etat (assassinating each other's congressmen and replacing them etc, protecting against same) etc etc etc that America saved by not having its 50 states have to have a budget toward each other the way it does today versus foreign powers. |
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AKA her actress, [[Inger Nilsson]]. A lot of suitors would admire famous actresses and trample on each other to have a chance to court them, so a lot of actors and actresses end up getting married, but how come Pippi's actress never got married nor had kids after growing into an adult? --[[Special:Contributions/2600:100A:B032:25F0:1D7A:CC5D:1FC2:21E2|2600:100A:B032:25F0:1D7A:CC5D:1FC2:21E2]] ([[User talk:2600:100A:B032:25F0:1D7A:CC5D:1FC2:21E2|talk]]) 06:17, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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This seems to me (along with border stuff) a HUGE savings!!! But how big...just a few percentage faster growth or America, or could America have risen as a power under that baggage? |
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:Do you know for certain that she wasn't/isn't married and/or has children? If so, from what source? |
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Note: I am ONLY interested in the financial part. i.e. I'm not asking about actually creating those interstate departments; rather, what happens if that money disappeared from states' budgets |
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:Some actors do not choose to make their private life public, so perhaps she was/is and does, and if not, many people (including my elderly single self) are simply not interested in getting married and/or having children. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.211.243|94.1.211.243]] ([[User talk:94.1.211.243|talk]]) 11:37, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:She's still among the living, so maybe you could find a way to contact her, and ask her that nosy question. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 12:24, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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That's why I narrowly titled my post about financial projections. [[Special:Contributions/178.48.114.143|178.48.114.143]] ([[User talk:178.48.114.143|talk]]) 04:08, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:China, Brazil, Canada and other countries with multiple sub-national governments (states or provinces) don’t spend vast sums on one province spying on another or seeking to overthrow a rival governor. Hence, the basic premise needs to be rethought. On your implication that the activities of the US intelligence agencies are ‘stupid,’ I suspect that it is extremely unlikely that ''successful'' intelligence operations would be selected by those who revel such activities for the purpose of making ALL such operations appear counterproductive.[[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 05:53, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:If she really could "lift her horse one-handed", I suspect even male fellow equestrians would be very wary suitors. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 12:35, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:: Right, neither China nor the US states spend money spying on provinces/states within themselves. I am asking about if they did... Ho wmuch would this have slowed their development as nations? [[Special:Contributions/178.48.114.143|178.48.114.143]] ([[User talk:178.48.114.143|talk]]) 06:45, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::So you're asking... if, somehow, the individual states of the Union were paranoid enough toward each other that they would spy on each other, but '''not''' enough to levy funds to install border controls, interstate tarriffs, substantially larger state militias, and all the other baggage and costs they saved by subsuming those functions to the federal government as prescribed in the Constitution? So, pretend that the states have an interest in clandestine surveillance or even occasional wet operations here and there amongst each other, but that they nevertheless still have open commerce and migration and never need to fear war with each other? It's pretty hard to imagine a set of circumstances which would give rise to such a situation; the fears that would lead to spending money on intelligence would first lead to spending money on border protection and military capabilities. Be that as it may, we don't actually know what the true budgets of these departments are: a lot of it is hidden in extra incidental costs for other appropriations, [[black budget]]s, and the like (to say nothing of their [[Gary Webb#Dark Alliance|extracurricular activities]]...). <span style="font-family:Garamond;">[[User:Zenswashbuckler|<font color="#000">☯.'''Zen'''</font>]][[User_talk:Zenswashbuckler|<font color="#a00">'''Swashbuckler'''</font>]][[Special:Contributions/Zenswashbuckler|<font color="#000">.☠]]</font></span> 14:49, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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: As an adult, she has chosen to keep her private life private.<sup>[https://www.whosdatedwho.com/dating/inger-nilsson]</sup> So be it. --[[Special:Contributions/136.56.165.118|136.56.165.118]] ([[User talk:136.56.165.118|talk]]) 19:48, 7 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::: Not really - I'd like you to imagine the things you describe and come up with a number - then simply subtract that number from the states' coffers, without any actual change. (i.e. no actual paranoia, spying, etc.) Let me make an analogy. Obviously if every year one penny disappeared from each state's coffers, that would not have had a material affect on History. Now instead of one penny, I'm asking you to imagine the amount of funds disappearing that is the same percentage of each state's budget at that time, as the NSA and CIA are a percentage of the national GDP today. In other words, the only thing that interests me is the financial consequences of removing that amount of money. No ACTUAL policy consequences interest me. It would be as if I considered the NSA and CIA doing nothing but draining money and doing zero with it. If we multiply that for 50 (and one for each state historically) and replay history, would that 'drain' (without any benefit) have affected the state's capacities materially? (Due to their budgets being that much smaller with that money disappearing.) [[Special:Contributions/178.48.114.143|178.48.114.143]] ([[User talk:178.48.114.143|talk]]) 22:37, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:I suspect that famous actresses actually try to avoid suitors that admire famous actresses. They don't want to marry someone who is in love with a fake public persona created by the PR department of a studio. Not only actors and actresses, but also a lot of bakers, chemists, dentists, engineers and so on do end up getting married. Being famous does not help. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:05, 8 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::I imagine she particularly would not welcome suitors who admired her as a preteen. [[User:Tamfang|—Tamfang]] ([[User talk:Tamfang|talk]]) 20:47, 10 December 2024 (UTC) |
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= December 8 = |
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:Have you postulated a reason why the individual states would feel the need to conduct (counter-) intelligence operations against each other? States, national or otherwise, tend to avoid spending money on nonexistent threats.[[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 07:49, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== |
== Petosiris of Arabia == |
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I want to know the approximate death numbers during the French revolution, not just those who were executed (not a guess but a number from a good source). All the deaths that were not natural must be included.[[Special:Contributions/184.97.201.174|184.97.201.174]] ([[User talk:184.97.201.174|talk]]) 06:17, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:According to Charles Issawi, ''The Costs of the French Revolution'', 58 American Scholar 371 (Summer 1989), the number of victims was well over 100,000, perhaps close to twice that number. Issawi suggests that to this should be added the casualties of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, which were probably over one million Frenchmen, with the combined casualties of France's enemies probably of a comparable order of magnitude. René Sédillot, ''Le Coût de la Révolution Française'' (Paris 1987), which I have not seen personally, apparently put the human losses at about two million. [[User:John M Baker|John M Baker]] ([[User talk:John M Baker|talk]]) 15:00, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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The rendering of [[Tayma stones|פטסרי]] as Petosiris seems to take inspiration from the [[commons:Category:Tomb_of_Petosiris|far-flung]]. Is this the same name? If ''osiris'' is Osiris, what's the ''pt'' pt? |
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== red baiting/lavender baiting == |
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[[User:Temerarius|Temerarius]] ([[User talk:Temerarius|talk]]) 22:49, 8 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:The [https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010120341 source to which this is cited] has throughout ''Peṭos<u>'''r'''</u>iris''. However, the transcription of [[Françoise Briquel-Chatonnet|Briquel-Chatonnet]] has ''pṭsry''. Roche states the name means {{nowrap|''« qu’Osiris a donné »''}}.<sup>[https://poj.peeters-leuven.be/content.php?id=3288857&url=article]</sup> --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 18:33, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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You have listings on red baiting and lavender baiting, but you don't actually say what the baiting consisted of - how it was done. Has anyone more information on this topic? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/31.25.4.14|31.25.4.14]] ([[User talk:31.25.4.14|talk]]) 12:51, 4 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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::I may be mistaken, but wouldn't « qu’Osiris a donné » require פת? |
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::[[User:Temerarius|Temerarius]] ([[User talk:Temerarius|talk]]) 03:39, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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= December 9 = |
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: The [[red baiting]] article describes it perfectly well. It's nothing more than the hyperbolic partisan trash-talking; whenever you hear some talking head on TV who claims there's no difference between Obama and Stalin, that's red baiting. [[Special:Contributions/87.115.114.201|87.115.114.201]] ([[User talk:87.115.114.201|talk]]) 15:16, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::Or equating Bush to Hitler, which could be called blue-baiting, if there is such a term. But what's lavender-baiting? |
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:::Oh, I see - [[lavender scare]]. And having found that article just now, there's a bit of editorializing there: "Because the psychiatric community regarded homosexuality as a mental illness..." No, it's because there was a social and legal stigma that could lead to blackmail. What the psych community may have thought was only a part of that. And there's still a social stigma, despite the progress made in the last 40 years or so. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:27, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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==Tribes and inceldom== |
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== German or American insignia == |
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One common saying in [[incel]] subcultures is that women are "programmed" to only have relationships with the 20% top men. This appears to be consistent (o at least not contradicted by) this phrase in the [[polygamy]] article: "More recent genetic data has clarified that, in most regions throughout history, a smaller proportion of men contributed to human genetic history compared to women." |
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Then again, while I've heard of modern tribes with weird marriage practices (for example the [[Wodaabe]] or the [[Trobriand people]]) I've never heard of tribes where 70% of men die virgins. Is there any tribe/society where something like that happens? (I realize that modern tribes are by definition different to Paleolithic tribes)[[Special:Contributions/90.77.114.87|90.77.114.87]] ([[User talk:90.77.114.87|talk]]) 13:51, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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I have a picture from 1995 showing [[Lee H. Hamilton]] meeting with [[Volker Rühe]] in his capacity as minister of defence. In the background stands a man wearing what appears to be a military dress uniform (he has stripes at the ends of his sleeves), but other than these stripes and his buttons, the only distinctive element is an insignium, and '''that's what I'm trying to identify'''. There's an anchor with "arms" (or whatever you call the broad parts at the bottom) that are placed at a rather shallow angle: if the point of the anchor were placed in the middle of the clock, the arms would point between 9 and 10 o'clock and 2 and 3 o'clock respectively. The anchor is [[Inscribed figure|inscribed]] in a circle, and three short horizontal lines come out from the bottom of the circle; it's basically the following ASCII drawing, with an anchor included: |
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:From what I've read in the past, it seems that hunter-gatherer cultures over the last 50,000 years ago probably tended to be mildly polygynous -- that is, certain men, due to their personalities and demonstrated skills, managed to attract more than one woman at a time into a relationship with them. (Usually a small number -- some men having large numbers of wives is associated more with agricultural civilizations, and women there could often have less freedom of choice than women in hunter-gatherer groups.) Everybody of both sexes is likely to be most attracted to high-status individuals, but under hunter-gatherer conditions, women also need help with child-rearing, which factors into their mating strategies. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 14:19, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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X X X |
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::P.S. Under the classic anthropological band-tribe-chiefdom-state classification system (on Wikipedia, covered in the vaguely named [[Sociopolitical typology]] article), most historical hunter-gatherer cultures were "bands", while the Wodaabe and Trobriand people sound more like "tribes". [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 14:26, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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X | X |
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X | X |
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X | X |
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=========Xq | qX========= |
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===========X | X=========== |
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===============X X X=============== |
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:: Worth remembering, though: who has "sanctioned" relationships is not necessarily equivalent to who actually has sex. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 19:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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The pipe characters are the vertical part of the anchor, while the arms go from the bottom of the vertical part to the spots where the "q" characters are located; they're only there for the illustration, since I can't draw the arms with ASCII. |
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:::It has been said (in mammals at least) that each 5% difference in mass for males means that their [[harem (zoology)]] has one more female. The [[sexual dimorphism#Humans]] article says that human males are 15% heavier that the females (previously I had heard 20%), suggesting that the harem-holder has three mates (or 4, if the 20% is correct). But this does not mean that 75% of human males never had sex. Firstly, holding a harem is a dangerous, short term job if other animals are any guide, with the harem master regularly killed or overthrown. Secondly, in current polygynous human cultures and in polygynous animals, there is a huge amount of cheating. Evidence from animals shows that when females cheat, they are statistically more likely to produce offspring from that mating than from a mating with their main male. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 11:09, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::It's doubtful that there were commonly "harems" at any stage of human evolution which is very relevant to modern human behavior. Gorillas have moderate harems of often around 3 or 4 females (as opposed to elephant seals, which commonly have a harem size in the thirties). [[Paranthropus|Robust Australopithecines]] may have been similar, but modern humans are not descended from them. What we know about attested hunter-gatherer societies strongly suggests that during the last 50,000 years or so (since [[Behavioral modernity]]) the majority of men who had wives had one wife, but some exceptional men were able to attract 2 or 3 women at a time into relationships. Men having large numbers of wives (real harems) wasn't too feasible until the rise of social stratification which occurred with the development of agriculture. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 16:50, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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All this being said, can anyone identify the insignium in question? As I noted above, it's a meeting of German and American leaders, so the guy could be from either country. He wears the insignium on his right breast. His sleeve stripes are a group of five stripes adjacent to each other, with two larger stripes above and separate from each other; it's basically like what you'd get if you mixed the two top stripes from [[:File:US Navy O9 insignia.svg]] with the stripes of [[:File:19 - kpt zs.GIF]]. I couldn't find anything relevant when looking through sources on American insignia (either military or otherwise), and ''everything'' on German insignia from Google talks about World War II, as if 1945 were the last time that Germany had any military or diplomatic ranks whatsoever. [[Special:Contributions/2001:18E8:2:1020:E930:DADC:A843:594D|2001:18E8:2:1020:E930:DADC:A843:594D]] ([[User talk:2001:18E8:2:1020:E930:DADC:A843:594D|talk]]) 14:39, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:Did it look anything like the [[:de:Seefahrerabzeichen|Seefahrerabzeichen]] pictured in the article on German Wikipedia (see link)? --[[User:Sluzzelin|Sluzzelin]] [[User talk:Sluzzelin|<small>talk</small>]] 15:29, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::That's definitely it! It's a slightly flatter form of [[:File:Seefahrerabzeichen der Deutschen Marine in Silber.jpg]]. Thanks a lot for the help; I asked for help at my library's reference desk, but they couldn't help. [[Special:Contributions/2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F|2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F]] ([[User talk:2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F|talk]]) 20:25, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::How do we know that? Because the same evidence is that prior to 50,000 years ago, humans ''did'' have harems. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Off-topic remark: I notice that you used the word ''insignium'' as the singular of ''insignia''. Not a bad guess, but not correct — the actual singular is ''insigne''. Third-declension neuter, I think, after a brief search to refresh my Latin declensions. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 19:17, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::Where can we find this evidence? --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 08:31, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Didn't know that. I can't remember ''ever'' seeing "insigne" before, but the OED agrees with you. [[Special:Contributions/2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F|2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F]] ([[User talk:2001:18E8:2:1020:7DD1:77A7:107C:D07F|talk]]) 20:27, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::::[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00239-003-2458-x A Recent Shift from Polygyny to Monogamy in Humans Is Suggested by the Analysis of Worldwide Y-Chromosome Diversity]. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 14:53, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Scattering in US elections == |
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:::BTW the "arms" at the bottom of an [[anchor]] are actually called "arms", the blades at the end are called "flukes".[http://visual.merriam-webster.com/images/transport-machinery/maritime-transport/anchor/ships-anchor.jpg] The device of an anchor with a rope snaking around it is called a "[http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/xf-anch.html fouled anchor]". [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 07:43, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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What does scattering mean in the context of US elections? Examples: [[1944 United_States presidential election in California#Results]] [[1886 United States House of Representatives elections#Mississippi]]. Searching mostly produces [[Electron scattering]], which is not the same thing at all! Is there (or should there be) an article or section that could be linked? [[User:Cavrdg|Cavrdg]] ([[User talk:Cavrdg|talk]]) 14:32, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Are Catholic priests allowed to consume delicacies, sweets, and spicy foods? == |
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:If you click on the source for Frederick G. Berry in the 1886 election, then on Scattering on the following page, it says it's for those with "No Party Affiliation". [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 14:44, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Presumably from the phrase "a scattering of votes" (i.e. for other candidates than those listed)... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 15:52, 9 December 2024 (UTC) |
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Are Catholic priests allowed to consume delicacies, sweets, or spicy foods, or are these types of food too luxurious for clergymen? [[Special:Contributions/164.107.102.228|164.107.102.228]] ([[User talk:164.107.102.228|talk]]) 17:21, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:I've known several priests and I've never seen them pass up food just because it's too luxurious. In fact one priest I knew loved cooking and was pretty much the only one that cooked for all the other priests in the parish. <span style="font-family:monospace;">[[User:Dismas|Dismas]]</span>|[[User talk:Dismas|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 17:27, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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= December 11 = |
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:I do not believe there is a blanket prohibition of any food item in Catholicism. Rather, food prohibitions in Catholicism tend to take the form of time-specific things. At least historically, there were a number of [[fasting|fast]] days in the Catholic calendar, where all Catholics were told to abstain from luxuries, particularly food luxuries. [[Lent]] was one of the big ones. With [[Vatican II]] most of those restrictions were lifted, at least for the laity. I would not be surprised, though, if there various fast days still in place specifically for priests. I'm guessing also that a fair number of older priests, who were ordained prior to Vatican II, still adhere to the old prohibitions even though they technically don't have to. (I know a few catholic non-priests who still do the whole-year no-meat-on-Friday thing.) Even younger priests may voluntarily fast for spiritual reasons. ("I will voluntarily give up sweets, using my small sacrifice to reflect on the greater sacrifice Jesus made.") - "To luxurious for the clergy at any time of the year" isn't really at thing in Catholic theology, though. -- [[Special:Contributions/205.175.124.72|205.175.124.72]] ([[User talk:205.175.124.72|talk]]) 18:56, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Shopping carts == |
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:Add me to the "I never heard of such a thing, in general" list. Priests take a vow of poverty, but that doesn't generally seem to mean they're not allowed physical comforts. There might be some ascetic orders that would require abstinence from such foods, but I'm speculating there. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 19:09, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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Where were the first shopping carts introduced? |
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*There are a number of monastic orders such as the Benedictines, Carthusians, and Cistercians for whom austerity is part of the vow, but the rules often tended to relax over time. Mendicants groups such as the Dominicans and Franciscans were also supposed to live a simple life, but became notorious for abuses. There is no rule of austerity that applies to Catholic priests in general, though. [[User:Looie496|Looie496]] ([[User talk:Looie496|talk]]) 19:48, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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*[[shopping cart]] and [[Sylvan Goldman]] say the Humpty Dumpty chain |
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*[[Piggly Wiggly]] says the Piggly Wiggly chain and quotes the Harvard Business Review |
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Both articles agree it was in 1937 in Oklaholma. I believe that Humpty Dumpty is more likely, but some high quality sources would be useful. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 11:55, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:It seems to be a matter of some dispute, but [https://sova.si.edu/record/nmah.ac.0739 ''Guide to the Telescoping Shopping Cart Collection, 1946-1983, 2000''] by the Smithsonian Institution has the complex details of the dispute between Sylvan Goldman [of Humpty Dumpty] and [[Orla Watson]]. No mention of Piggly Wiggly, but our article on Watson notes that in 1946, he donated the first models of his cart to 10 grocery stores in Kansas City. |
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:All this while keeping in mind that [[gluttony]] is one of the [[seven deadly sins]]. --[[User:Xuxl|Xuxl]] ([[User talk:Xuxl|talk]]) 09:34, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WBH3rhiWsm4C&pg=PA205 ''The Illustrated History of American Military Commissaries'' (p. 205)] has both Watson and Goldman introducing their carts in 1947 (this may refer to carts that telescope into each other for storage, a feature apparently lacking in Goldman's first model). |
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:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JCUwEQAAQBAJ&pg=PT17 ''Scalable Innovation: A Guide for Inventors, Entrepreneurs, and IP Professionals''] says that Goldman's first cart was introduced to Humpty Dumty in 1937. |
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:Make of that what you will. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 13:30, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Absolutely. I remember that the power lift arrangement mentioned in the Smithsonian's link was still an object of analysis for would-be inventors in the mid-sixties, and possibly later, even though the soon to be ubiquituous checkout counter conveyor belt was very much ready making it unnecessary. Couldn't help curiously but think about those when learning about [[Bredt's rule]] at school later, see my user page, but it's true "Bredt" sounded rather like "Bread" in my imagination. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 15:33, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:On Newspapers.com (pay site), I'm seeing shopping carts referenced in Portland, Oregon in 1935 or earlier, and occasionally illustrated, at a store called the Public Market; and as far as the term itself is concerned, it goes back to at least the 1850s. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::But perhaps referring to a cart brought by the shopper to carry goods home with, rather than one provided by the storekeeper for use in-store? [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{ping|Alansplodge|Askedonty|Baseball Bugs}} thank you for your help, it seems that the Harvard Business Review is mistaken and the Piggly Wiggly chain did not introduce the first shopping baskets, which answers my question. The shopping cart article references a [https://www.csi.minesparis.psl.eu/working-papers/WP/WP_CSI_006.pdf paper by Catherine Grandclément], which shows that several companies were selling early shopping carts in 1937, so crediting Sylvan Goldman alone is not the whole story. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 17:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Charles II of Navarre == |
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== Lilacs/flowers re: Allies in Europe WWII == |
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Where was [[Charles II of Navarre]] buried? Did his remains survived the fire that killed him? How true it is the story of his death? Was the servant girl punished for killing the king?--[[User:The Emperor's New Spy|The Emperor's New Spy]] ([[User talk:The Emperor's New Spy|talk]]) 18:46, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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At 53:20 in [[Dunkirk (1958 film)]], British soldiers talk about [paraphrasing] 'flowers on the way into Belgium, raspberries on the way out', and specifically reference lilacs. I imagine this was very clear to 1958 audiences, but what is the significance of lilacs? Is it/was it a symbol of Belgium? [[User:Valereee|Valereee]] ([[User talk:Valereee|talk]]) 21:40, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Cutting in movies and literature == |
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:I think it's just that the BEF [[Operation David|entered Belgium]] in the Spring, which is lilac time. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 22:04, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:There are contemporary reports of the streets being strewn with lilac blossom. See [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75930659/7411364 here] "Today the troops crossed the frontier along roads strewn with flowers. Belgian girls, wildly enthusiastic, plucked lilac from the wayside and scattered it along the road to be torn and twisted by the mighty wheels of the mechanised forces." [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 22:26, 11 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Ah! That would explain it, thanks! [[User:Valereee|Valereee]] ([[User talk:Valereee|talk]]) 16:14, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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= December 12 = |
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What was the first movie and book to depict [[self-harm]] as it is known today. Religious self-flagellation and actual suicide attempts don't count. I'm talking about straightforward cutting. |
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== The USA adding a new state == |
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One possible candidate I can think of is [[The Brothers Karamazov]], which has a scene where a troubled girl deliberately slams a door on her fingers until her fingers bleed. But that's not exactly cutting.--[[Special:Contributions/24.228.82.34|24.228.82.34]] ([[User talk:24.228.82.34|talk]]) 19:28, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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If my understanding is correct, the following numbers are valid at present: (a) number of Senators = 100; (b) number of Representatives = 435; (c) number of electors in the Electoral College = 538. If the USA were to add a new state, what would happen to these numbers? Thank you. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 06:30, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Your distinction is arbitrary. "Cutting" is what they call it nowadays. There's no reason to think the psycho-physiological cause is different in things like wearing [[hair shirt]]s or beating oneself with straps. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 21:57, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:The number of senators would increase by 2, and the number of representatives would probably increase by at least 1. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 09:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Thus, to answer the final question, the minimum number of Electors would be 3… more if the new state has more Representatives (based on population). [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 13:54, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:In the short term, there would be extra people in congress. The [[86th United States Congress]] had 437 representatives, because Alaska and Hawaii were granted one upon entry regardless of the apportionment rules. Things were smoothed down to 435 at the next census, two congresses later. --[[User:Golbez|Golbez]] ([[User talk:Golbez|talk]]) 14:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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Thanks. Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Let me re-phrase my question. (a) The number of Senators is always 2 per State, correct? (b) The number of Representatives is what? Is it "capped" at 435 ... or does it increase a little bit? (c) The number of Electors (per State) is simply a function of "a" + "b" (per State), correct? Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 21:12, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:As I understand it, it is indeed capped at 435, though Golbez brings up a point I hadn't taken into account -- apparently it can go up temporarily when states are added, until the next reapportionment. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:{{br}}I suggest that (b) would probably depend on whether the hypothetical new state was made up of territory previously part of one or more existing states, or territory not previously part of any existing state. And I suspect that the eventual result would not depend on any pre-calculable formula, but on cut-throat horsetrading between the two main parties and other interested bodies. {The poster formerly nown as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.211.243|94.1.211.243]] ([[User talk:94.1.211.243|talk]]) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Nope, it's capped at 435. See [[Reapportionment Act of 1929]]. (I had thought it was fixed in the Constitution itself, but apparently not.) --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Oh, one other refinement. The formula you've given for number of electors is correct, for states. But it leaves out the [[District of Columbia]], which gets as many electors as it would get if it were a state, but never <s>less</s> <u>more</u> than those apportioned to the smallest state. In practice that means DC gets three electors. That's why the total is 538 instead of 535. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC) <small>Oops; I remembered the bit about the smallest state wrong. It's actually never ''more'' than the smallest state. Doesn't matter in practice; still works out to 3 electors for the foreseeable future, either way, because DC would get 3 electors if it were a state, and the least populous state gets 3. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 23:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC) </small> |
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= December 13 = |
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:::You're entitled to draw your own arbitrary lines in the sand, but accounts of self harm are documented from [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Leviticus%2019:28&version=NKJV Leviticus 19:28 "You shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead"] through [[Hieronymus Bosch]] and early insane asylums. The fact that a source like Leviticus is a religious source doesn't mean it depicts a sacrament rather than a mental condition. I don't know what your interest is (you can explain), but my lack of knowledge of your context doesn't justify your making bodily noises. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 01:47, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== economics: coffee prices question == |
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::::I cannot find a precise definition, but I believe our OP is looking for the cutting behavior that I will describe as so: ''A person, typically a teenager or young adult, cutting him/herself, on the upper arms or legs where the wounds may be hidden, not in an attempt to commit suicide, but as a way to deal with stress or depression. The person may report that he/she cuts him/herself "So I would feel something - feel anything".'' The OP is suggesting that this is distinct from people who are cutting themselves or religious reasons, or because they are so insane they do not know what they are doing. It is often associated with [[emo]] culture. [[User:Someguy1221|Someguy1221]] ([[User talk:Someguy1221|talk]]) 02:11, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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in news report "On Tuesday, the price for Arabica beans, which account for most global production, topped $3.44 a pound (0.45kg), having jumped more than 80% this year. " [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c36pgrrjllyo] how do they measure it? some other report mention it is a commodity price set for trading like gold silver etc. what is the original data source for this report? i checked a few other news stories and did not find any clarification about this point, they just know something that i don't. thank you in advance for your help. [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 01:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::I am not unfamiliar with that depiction of it in the press, even though it occurred and was known publicly a few millennia before there was such a thing as goths, let alone emos. Even birds and mammals in distress will engage in this behavior in captivity. (Presumably animals not in captivity do so also, but get eaten by predators before being noticed by naturalists.) If the IP OP is not interested in this phenomenon before the 90's (or maybe 80's) when it became a topic under the name "cutting" in the modern press, that's fine. But it would be a disservice to let him think the phenomenon didn't exist before the ''name'' he gives it existed, any less than it would be intellectual fraud to pretend homosexuality didn't exist before the term ''gay'' did. [[User:Medeis|μηδείς]] ([[User talk:Medeis|talk]]) 02:52, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:[[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]], they seem to be talking about the "Coffee C" contract in the [[List of traded commodities]]. The price seems to have peaked and then fallen a day later |
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: The book [http://books.google.com/books?id=PtIB0rrUVGsC&dq=%22cutting+in+literature%22&source=gbs_navlinks_s Cutting and the Pedagogy of Self-disclosure], discusses cutting in literature. In the page I can read in preview, it mentions five novels, the earliest of which is [[Girl, Interrupted]] (1993), but presumably there is more in the actual book. It was based on a 2004 master's thesis at the University of Albany called "Contagion in Cutting" by Patricia Hatch Vallace. [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 23:45, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:*explanation [https://www.ice.com/products/15/Coffee-C-Futures here] |
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:*I googled "coffee c futures price chart" and the first link was uk.investing.com which I can't link here |
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:*if you have detailed questions about [[futures contract]]s they will probably go over my head. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 01:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::thanks. i see the chart which you cannot link here. why did it peak and then drop shortly after? [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 04:08, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::Financial markets tend to have periods of increase followed by periods of decrease (bull and bear markets), see [[market trend]] for background. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 04:55, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== source for an order of precedence for abbotts == |
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: Addtion: ''[http://educatorsandselfinjury.com/literature-review/ References to self-injurious behavior can be found as far back as the writings of Herodotus. He describes a Spartan leader as publicly mutilating himself over most of his body (Favazza, 1998). In the bible, a man is described as crying aloud among the tombs and was said to “cut himself with stones.” (Mark 5:5)]''[[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 01:27, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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Hi friends. The article for [[Ramsey Abbey]] in the UK refers to an "order of precedence for abbots in Parliament". (Sourced to an encyclopedia, which uses the wording "The abbot had a seat in Parliament and ranked next after Glastonbury and St. Alban's"). Did a ranking/order of precedence exist and if yes where can it be found? Presumably this would predate the dissolution of monasteries in england. Thanks.[[Special:Contributions/70.67.193.176|70.67.193.176]] ([[User talk:70.67.193.176|talk]]) 06:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== Where do Catholic priests live? == |
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== Are the proposed Trump tariffs a regressive tax in disguise? == |
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I know that Catholic monks and nuns live in monasteries. The monasteries become their home, where they work and eat in simplicity and frugality. However, Catholic priests do not appear to be so confined to the spiritual retreats and would regularly interact with laypersons. So, do they live in the cathedral, and if so, what part of the cathedral? Is it possible for an orphan child to be raised in the monastery and grow up to be a monk or nun, working as a scribe and illuminating manuscipts all day long in fancy calligraphy? [[Special:Contributions/164.107.103.94|164.107.103.94]] ([[User talk:164.107.103.94|talk]]) 20:32, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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I'm wondering if there has been analysis of this. The US government gets the tariff money(?) and biggest chunk will be on manufactured goods from China. Those in turn are primarily consumer goods, which means that the tariff is something like a sales tax, a type of tax well known to be regressive. Obviously there are leaks in the description above, so one would have to crunch a bunch of numbers to find out for sure. But that's what economists do, right? Has anyone weighed in on this issue? Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E]] ([[User talk:2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|talk]]) 08:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:They can just live in a normal house like everyone else, but they usually live in a [[rectory]] attached to (or close to) the church (not inside of it). A bishop with a cathedral would have a larger house, although it's not inside the cathedral either. The richer and more powerful bishops typically used to live in a large manor, and we have several articles about [[Bishop's Palace]]s. As for orphan children, I don't know if that's possible now (monks do not usually copy out manuscripts all day anymore), but yes, that certainly would have been possible in the Middle Ages. [[User:Adam Bishop|Adam Bishop]] ([[User talk:Adam Bishop|talk]]) 21:05, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:There have been many public comments about how this is a tax on American consumers. It's only "in disguise" to those who don't understand how tariffs work. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 11:34, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:: Can they, and do they, live with their families? You know, mothers and fathers, siblings, cousins, nieces, and nephews? [[Special:Contributions/164.107.103.94|164.107.103.94]] ([[User talk:164.107.103.94|talk]]) 21:24, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::Thanks, I'll see what I can find. Do you remember if the revenue collected is supposed to be enough for the government to care about? I.e. enough to supposedly offset the inevitable tax cuts for people like Elon Musk? [[Special:Contributions/2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E]] ([[User talk:2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|talk]]) 22:36, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Some Catholic priests are [[parish priests]], who typically live in a [[presbytery]] or similar house near their parish church(es). Some Catholic priests are "religious" priests, who join religious communities and hence are [[choir monks]]. [[Special:Contributions/86.163.2.116|86.163.2.116]] ([[User talk:86.163.2.116|talk]]) 21:09, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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Import duties are extremely recessive in that (a) they are charged at the same rate for any given level of income; and (b) those with less income tend to purchase far more imported goods than those with more income (define “more” and “less” any way you wish). Fiscally, they border on insignificant, running an average of 1.4% of federal revenue since 1962 (or, 0.2% of GDP), compared to 47.1% (8.0%) for individual income tax and 9.9% (1.7%) for corporate tax receipts.[[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 22:52, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:: Here is an interesting article that discusses the proper age of entering the monastery throughout the ages: [http://www.academia.edu/506171/The_proper_age_to_enter_monastic_life_from_Basil_to_modern_time here]. [[Special:Contributions/164.107.103.94|164.107.103.94]] ([[User talk:164.107.103.94|talk]]) 21:24, 4 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:Curious about your point (b); why would this be? It seems to me that as my income has risen I have probably bought more stuff from abroad, at least directly. It could well be that I've bought less indirectly, but I'm not sure why that would be. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 00:02, 14 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== |
== Ron A. Dunn: Australian arachnologist == |
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For {{q|Q109827858}} I have given names of "Ron. A.", an address in 1958 of 60 Mimosa Road, Carnegie, {{nowrap|Victoria, Australia S.E. 9}} (he was also in Carnegie in 1948) and an ''uncited'' death date of 25 June 1972. |
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Which is the method of socio-economic inquiry based upon a idealist interpretation of economic development, an empirical view of social change, and an analysis of ethnic/race-relations and conflict within a society? Thank You. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/187.252.216.220|187.252.216.220]] ([[User talk:187.252.216.220|talk]]) 23:14, 4 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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He was an Australian arachnologist with the honorifics AAA AAIS. |
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= September 5 = |
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Can anyone find the full given names, and a source or the death date, please? What did the honorifics stand for? Do we know how he earned his living? <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 12:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== "Collectivism" == |
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:[[User:Pigsonthewing|Pigsonthewing]] Have you tried ancestry.com? For a start |
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I'm having trouble understanding what the word "[[Collectivism|collectivism]]" entails. What does it mean for a society to be "collectivist" or for someone to be a "collectivist"? How does this juxtapose with "individualism" exactly? It's meaning appears sort of dodgy. I've been reading some classical liberal/libertarian material (or rants) lately, and it seems like their use more or less means "authority". — [[User:Melab-1|Melab±1]] [[User_talk:Melab-1|☎]] 03:24, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:A scan of the 1954 Carnegie electoral roll has |
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:*Dunn, Ronald Albert, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, accountant |
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:*Dunn, Gladys Harriet I, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, home duties |
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:I can't check newspapers.com, but The Age apparently had a report about Ronald Albert Dunn on 27 Jun 1972 [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 14:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Thank you. I don't have access to the former, but that's great. AAA seems to be (member of the) Association of Accountants of Australia: [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/206190746]. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 16:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::I accessed Ancestry.com via the Wikipedia Library, so you should have access. Newspapers.com is also available via the library if you register, which I haven't. An editor with a Newspapers.com account would be able to make a clipping which anyone could access online. |
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:::I agree AAA is probably the Australian Society of Accountants, a predecessor of [[CPA Australia]]. They merged in 1953 ([https://trove.nla.gov.au/people/458467 source]) so the information would have been outdated in 1958. AAIS could be Associate [of the] Amalgamated Institute of Secretaries (source [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vxQ6AQAAIAAJ Who's Who in Australia, Volume 16, 1959] Abbreviations page 9). [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 16:48, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::Last time I tried, Ancestry wasn't working for WP-Lib users. Thank you again. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 20:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::There is a phabricator problem about loading a second page of results. My workaround is to try to add more information to the search to get more relevant results on the first page of results. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 21:03, 13 December 2024 (UTC) |
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= December 14 = |
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:I'm not sure what "dodginess" you're talking about. Collectivism is just simply the opposite of individualism. A collectivist society or person values the group over the individual. What else do you want to know? --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 03:33, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::I suppose there's a wide variability in whether the people are that way culturally, due to their religion, or are forced to act that way by laws. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] ([[User talk:StuRat|talk]]) 08:02, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:The [[Kibbutz]] in Israel is a "collective," an economic entity organized among citizens in their place of residence with an entirely shared economy: ownership of the means of production and distribution of income. Internal policies are set by direct representation (a vote by all members on proposals presented by officeholders or committees). There are laws in the State of Israel pertaining to kibbutz members, e.g. prohibiting ownership of other land, the community covers the individual's tax obligation's, etc. The article here is largely historical, though, and may not offer much of an explanation. ''-- [[User:Deborahjay|Deborahjay]] ([[User talk:Deborahjay|talk]]) 11:30, 5 September 2013 (UTC)'' |
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== Comparison of loyalism and republicanism in British Isles & North America == |
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Is there anywhere I can find a comparison of Irish Unionists with Canadian Loyalists, vis a vis Irish Republicans and American Patriots? Or, is there a written comparison of Cromwellianism in England with the American Revolution, the British Empire a spawn of the Stewarts and the American Republic a spawn of Cromwell? Has anybody done a study of Franco-Scottish political relations in Canada (New France and Nova Scotia) stemming from the Auld Alliance, and Jacobitism in the context of the Seven Years' War? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/184.43.133.231|184.43.133.231]] ([[User talk:184.43.133.231|talk]]) 04:05, 5 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:The OP seems to have his timelines crossed. The Irish did not arrive in Canada in significant mumbers until the early to mid 19th century, well after U.S. Independence; indeed, the population of Canada was still largely French before the [[American Revolution]], in spite of the British conquest in 1763. Large movements of English colonists began with the [[United Empire Loyalist]]s post-Revolution. Many of the first Irish to arrive, who settled in present-day Quebec, became absorbed by the local French population because the two groups shared a religion and opposition to the British. As for the Scots, important Scottish immigration to Nova Scotia took place after the mass [[Expulsion of the Acadians|deportation]] of the (French-speaking) Acadian population from the area; The two populations had little interaction and, in any case historical affinities between France and Scotland would have little weight compared to the Acadians' sentiment that the (British and Scottish) settlers had dispossessed them of their land. --[[User:Xuxl|Xuxl]] ([[User talk:Xuxl|talk]]) 09:48, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::Both Irish and French troops fought in the [[1745 Rebellion]] (against the Hanoverian government forces). Note that the [[Jacobite]]s were mainly supported by Catholics (or at least [[High Church]] Anglicans); the Catholic leaning Stuarts having been deposed in the [[Glorious Revolution]], whereas the Hanoverians were installed to prevent a Catholic succession. In Ireland, the Jacobites were opposed by the [[Williamite]]s at the [[Siege of Derry]]; the present day [[Ulster loyalism|Ulster Loyalists]] strongly associate themselves with the Williamists. So in a British context, the House of Stewart and the Loyalists were in direct opposition to each other. |
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:::However, at least some of the [[Founding Fathers of the United States]] were descendants of those who had supported the Puritan Cromwell and had fled to America after his regime collapsed, so you may have a point on that, albeit maybe a little tenuous. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 12:39, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Society Islands == |
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Did the Society Islands use to referred to only the [[Leeward Islands (Society Islands)]] while the [[Windward Islands (Society Islands)]] were called the Georgian Islands? Please don't cite Wikipedia articles I have read the related ones. Old maps like [http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/EllPol-fig-EllPol2-003.html this one] seem to depict the islands as two seperate groups as I have suggested. When and why did Georgrian Islands become called the Society Islands too?--[[User:KAVEBEAR|KAVEBEAR]] ([[User talk:KAVEBEAR|talk]]) 05:20, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Biography of Prince Al Waleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Bin Saud == |
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The wikipedia page mentions the Prince's birth year as 1955 and claims that he was a finance minister in the early 1960s. Is this true?? Can the same be verified and corrected if the same is not true?? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/80.95.214.13|80.95.214.13]] ([[User talk:80.95.214.13|talk]]) 08:35, 5 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:It was his father, Prince Talal, who was finance minister. [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Al-Waleed_bin_Talal&diff=prev&oldid=571618322 I have amended the article], with a citation. Thank you for spotting this error - [[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]] 08:46, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Most powerful governor in the U.S. == |
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Which state governor in the US has the strongest position? I mean the position within the state government and accross the USA itsself. The most influencal within the USA is likely the Governor of California or New York, because those states are very populous. But within the state government?--[[Special:Contributions/84.160.170.227|84.160.170.227]] ([[User talk:84.160.170.227|talk]]) 09:17, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:According to Thad Beyle, a political scientist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, it's the Governor of Massachusetts[http://www.davedenison.net/archives/2007/03/the_most_powerf.html]. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 09:54, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::See [http://books.google.dk/books?id=uvZCP54KLgIC&q=page+225#v=onepage&q=Governor%27s%20Institutional%20Powers%20Massachusetts&f=false] for the 2010 ranking of institutional powers. Massachusetts is still at top. [[User:PrimeHunter|PrimeHunter]] ([[User talk:PrimeHunter|talk]]) 12:54, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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==Le Figaro== |
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Is there a place where to consult old editions of [[Le Figaro]] online (at least the front page)? I expecially need the ones from the year 1945 to 1949. --[[Special:Contributions/151.41.140.58|151.41.140.58]] ([[User talk:151.41.140.58|talk]]) 10:32, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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== Question about Mr. Ernest E. Evans == |
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I recently went through my Mom's papers and came across her immigration card from Italy. She came to America on the Steamship Auguotus on 7/5/30. When she arrived in the USA a man by the name Ernest E. Evans signed as Counsul of the USA. He is already part of your history but no mention is stated about this position. Is he the same person who won the medal of Honor? Thank you. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Mrsismath|Mrsismath]] ([[User talk:Mrsismath|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Mrsismath|contribs]]) 13:00, 5 September 2013 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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: I don't think he can be. The subject of our article [[Ernest E. Evans]] (and the medal recipient) was a student in the US Naval Academy in 1930. We don't seem to have an article on your Ernest Evans.[[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 13:10, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::Aha, found your Evans. [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/evans3.html#943.39.57 See here]. It says: ''"Evans, Ernest Edwin (b. 1891) — also known as Ernest E. Evans — Born in Rochester, Monroe County, N.Y., April 18, 1891. Stenographer; U.S. Vice Consul in Madrid, 1917-18; Tangier, 1919-21; Mexico City, 1924; Ceiba, 1926; '''U.S. Consul in Naples, 1929-32;''' Bradford, 1938. Burial location unknown."'' [[Special:Contributions/184.147.119.141|184.147.119.141]] ([[User talk:184.147.119.141|talk]]) 13:13, 5 September 2013 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 00:05, 14 December 2024
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December 1
[edit]Who designed the flag of the American Indian Movement and when?
[edit]The flag of the American Indian Movement is fairly iconic and featured in the article about the movement. However I haven't been able to find any sources about who made the flag and when. Does anybody have any information on when it was first flown, who made it, etc? Thanks! Intervex (talk) 00:09, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Googling "who designed american indian movement flag" yields an AI item that says it was designed by someone named Jon Lurie. More about it here,[1] though it doesn't say when. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 00:45, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Looks like Lurie was the author of the encyclopedia entry, I'm afraid: [2]. Intervex (talk) 00:51, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I found a similar flag that has the same central symbol [3] which is attributed to the first Longest Walk in 1978 (File:Longest Walk at Washington, 1978.jpg). This is the earliest version of the flag I've been able to find. Intervex (talk) 04:15, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
- Looks like Lurie was the author of the encyclopedia entry, I'm afraid: [2]. Intervex (talk) 00:51, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
Editing a Wikipedia subtitle (?) seen in Android but not Windows
[edit]When I open Charles-Émile Trudeau on my Android phone I see in what I will call a subtitle below his name that he was a "French Businessman (1887-1935)". (Charles-Émile Trudeau was father of Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and grandfather of current Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.) But he was French-Canadian (born in Quebec), not French, and I would like to correct this.
But I prefer to edit on my computer in Windows, where I don't see "French Businessman..." at all.
What Wikipedia 'element' is the (visible only on Android) subtitle "French Businessman (1887-1935)", and how can I edit it in Windows? Hayttom (talk) 00:14, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's in the "Short description" (WP:SHORTDESC)... -- AnonMoos (talk) 00:27, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I'm in Windows, so it doesn't show up on the normal article page, but if you EDIT, it's the first line of the article. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 00:38, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you both, @AnonMoos and @Baseball Bugs for your quick supportive responses. The "how to edit" did not work for me - I don't see it the way it is described - but I do indeed see the Short Description when editing as @Baseball Bugs explained. Hayttom (talk) 00:43, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- If you go into your Preferences on desktop, in the Gadgets section there's a tick box under Editing which allows you to see and edit the short description. --Viennese Waltz 06:56, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you both, @AnonMoos and @Baseball Bugs for your quick supportive responses. The "how to edit" did not work for me - I don't see it the way it is described - but I do indeed see the Short Description when editing as @Baseball Bugs explained. Hayttom (talk) 00:43, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
What can I cite about Tommy Lasorda pitching during batting practice?
[edit]This is obviously for Baseball Bugs... Our Charles-Émile Trudeau article leads to the Montreal Royals article which leads to our Tommy Lasorda article which does NOT mention him often (?) throwing pitches during Dodgers batting practice, which I think I saw him do (before an Expos game) but possibly only on TV. I Googled "tommy lasorda pitching batting practice" but I don't think that provided any good enough information source. Baseball Bugs, can you find one? (Do you remember seeing Tommy throwing pitches at batting practice?) Hayttom (talk) 01:07, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- That sounds familiar. I would have to look in Newspapers.com. There might be something in his obituary, if nothing else. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 01:15, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- There were a couple of anecdotes in the wake of Lasorda's death which mentioned him throwing batting practice, at least during the time he was a coach for the Dodgers. Don't know if he still did that once he became the Dodgers' manager. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 04:06, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
December 2
[edit]East Pakistan minorities
[edit]An editor named pigsonwing removed my question as trolling. Don't know why he thinks like that.
Above it is written that "We don't conduct original research or provide a free source of ideas, but we'll help you find information you need."
I read two Wikipedia articles 1950 East Pakistan riots and 1964 East Pakistan riots and thought how media reported it at that time when it happened.
I am trying to find more old newspaper archives like this:
1- https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/131860850?searchTerm=1950%20east%20pakistan%20hindu
3- https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/24/archives/riots-arouse-moslem-shame.html
4- https://www.nytimes.com/1964/02/23/archives/hindus-and-christians-fleeing-east-pakistan-throngs-of-refugees.html Sistersofchappel (talk) 03:41, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- You could try Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request, especially if you have a particular publication in mind. Alansplodge (talk) 20:31, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
Not any particular publication but any newspaper report(scanned or archived) during that period which mentions violence against minorities, like you posted few hours ago and then changed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sistersofchappel (talk • contribs) 02:23, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
- Apologies, it wasn't intentional. Here it is again: https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/digitised/issue/indiandailymail19500316-14
- That's all I could find. Somebody with a newspaper archive account might do better. Alansplodge (talk) 16:09, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
Behaviour of a monkey in this painting
[edit]What would you say the monkey dressed in yellow and red, in the foreground, is doing in this painting?
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:David_Teniers_(II)_-_Smoking_and_drinking_monkeys.jpg 194.120.133.17 (talk) 23:17, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- Preparing to grind more tobacco for his friends to smoke? Clarityfiend (talk) 01:13, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
- Or is collecting the ground tobacco in a paper? Tobacco was supplied as whole dried and pressed leaves that had to be prepared at home. Alansplodge (talk) 16:38, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
- Based on the attire and attitude, the foreground monkey is not a member of the jolly company but a servant or perhaps the innkeeper. --Lambiam 10:23, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- BTW, this wikicode:
[[:File:David Teniers (II) - Smoking and drinking monkeys.jpg]]
makes a nice wikilink to the image:
File:David Teniers (II) - Smoking and drinking monkeys.jpg
--CiaPan (talk) 19:16, 3 December 2024 (UTC) - The Amsterdam Pipe Museum states "we can hardly imagine how difficult it was to get your pipe lit. Our seventeenth-century ancestors used a coal, removed from the open fire with a fire tong and handed it in a brazier. With the fireplace tongs or a smaller one you could put a glowing coal on the pipe bowl." I think the monkey is crouched over a brazier, and the two little sticks propped up in the brazier are a tiny pair of tongs, another pair being in use by the monkey at the table. The monkey of interest certainly appears to be doing something with tobacco and paper, over the hot brazier. I don't know what.
- In fact I'm not even right about the tongs: in this similar painting the same objects are clearly stick-like. But I think they hold embers somehow. There's a lot of them, I count 10, so presumably they're consumable, something like a Splint (laboratory equipment)?
- Looking through Teniers's many paintings of smokers (there's a commons category), I see many figures doing the exact same thing over a little pottery brazier. #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6. Some are apparently rubbing the tobacco (what's meant by "ready-rubbed"?) but some are just heating it and placidly staring at it. Card Zero (talk) 09:25, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Drying it, perhaps? Johnbod (talk) 16:28, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Perhaps, but why do they all have wet tobacco? Perhaps the idea is to make the fragments shrivel up so they pack more densely into the pipe. Card Zero (talk) 16:32, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- It might be much fresher than we get it, pre-dried, today. Also at this period Netherlandish smokers of the rougher sort typically mixed their (expensive) tobacco with rather dangerous local plants like deadly nightshade, in English going under the rather non-specific term dwale (which we cover very poorly). That might need drying. Johnbod (talk) 16:56, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Wow, that sounds very dangerous (especially the lettuce). I thought Curing of tobacco was always done, and since it involve weeks of drying, sometimes up a chimney, five minutes extra drying seems confusingly futile. But maybe they cut corners on the curing in the early days? Card Zero (talk) 17:41, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- It might be much fresher than we get it, pre-dried, today. Also at this period Netherlandish smokers of the rougher sort typically mixed their (expensive) tobacco with rather dangerous local plants like deadly nightshade, in English going under the rather non-specific term dwale (which we cover very poorly). That might need drying. Johnbod (talk) 16:56, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Perhaps, but why do they all have wet tobacco? Perhaps the idea is to make the fragments shrivel up so they pack more densely into the pipe. Card Zero (talk) 16:32, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, "ready rubbed" means you don't have to rub it with your fingers/ in your palms to break it up into strands. Martinevans123 (talk) 16:49, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Drying it, perhaps? Johnbod (talk) 16:28, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Is it our erstwhile leader preparing a White Paper for the Tobacco and Vapes Bill? Martinevans123 (talk) 15:31, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
December 3
[edit]Duchess Marie's adopted child.
[edit]According to Gill, Gillian (2009). We Two: Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals. New York: Ballatine Books. p. 408. ISBN 978-0-345-52001-2. "By 1843, Duchess Marie had adopted a child of humble parentage and was bringing him or her up as her own." Do we know anything more about this child? Thank you, DuncanHill (talk) 20:51, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
December 4
[edit]Subnational laws
[edit]In all federations, are there laws that differ between subdivisions, such as states, provinces, cantons or parts of countries like Bosnia-Hertzegovina or Belgium? Are there any laws that are dedicated to provinces of Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Germany or Austria, or cantons of Switzerland? And in countries like US, Canada or Australia, are there any local laws that differ between local governments? --40bus (talk) 20:16, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Links to a number of relevant articles at State law... -- AnonMoos (talk) 21:17, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Hmm, not sure I'm a big fan of that page. It has one blue link, to US state law. All the other links are red, and many are to titles that would not naturally exist at all, unless maybe as redirects-from-misnomers or something. For example state law (Germany)? What's that? The German Länder are not called "states". --Trovatore (talk) 21:56, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- (I went ahead and searched, and to my bemusement our article on the Länder is at states of Germany. Hmm. I don't think that's a good title. I've always heard them called Länder, untranslated. They're broadly analogous to US states, I suppose, but not really the same thing.) --Trovatore (talk) 22:13, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- I've been looking at Law of Texas in order to verify if its specifical statutes visibly differ from the German cases where the concept of Succession of states comes into question: following analyses exposed in de:Land (Deutschland) in German Wikipedia. "Succession of states" as discussed in that last article has a focus probably more highly contrasted in matter of "rights and obligations" than would apply to U.S. States. In the case of Texas law for example I note the importance of Common law as a defining influence, whereas in German law the same unifying level is rooted very differently. I imagine that the american linguistic pluralism at root also implies some repercussions in classes of problems turning to the inside rather than to abroad. Consequently perhaps the specific problems that appear and were shown in the idea of Secession. --Askedonty (talk) 00:16, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Askedonty: I'm really having trouble following that. What are you trying to figure out here? Is it about whether Land is reasonably translated as "state" in the sense that it's used in "US state"? If it is, I don't really follow the argument; I'm not even sure whether you're arguing for or against. If it's not then I'm even more confused. --Trovatore (talk) 01:06, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- German Wikipedia define the U.S.A. as a "föderal aufgebaute Republik" which is absolutely similar to the German "Bundesrepublik". To anybody there is a strange feeling at equating "State" with "Land" so I do not see what reluctance there has to be seeing there is an explanation for it. --Askedonty (talk) 01:19, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
No reluctance;I just wanted to understand better the structure of your argument. It was a little hard to figure out what you were getting at. --Trovatore (talk) 01:22, 5 December 2024 (UTC)- (Actually now I'm not sure about the "no reluctance" part, because on re-reading "I do not see what reluctance there has to be", I don't actually understand what that means either.) --Trovatore (talk) 01:28, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Ok, no problem. "Länder" means that Germans living there might be have their families rooted there for ages. I do not think that aspect can be translated without some circumlocutions. --Askedonty (talk) 01:44, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- In several languages, the usual term for a Land of the FRG uses a part that is cognate to state. For example: Basque Alemaniako estatuak (pl), Danish Tysklands delstater (pl), Italian Stati federati della Germania (pl); Spanish Estado federado (Alemania). When used for a specific Land and no confusion with the sense of "federal state" can occur, this is often simplified, as in Italian lo stato di Baden-Württemberg.[4][5][6] --Lambiam 08:21, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- German Wikipedia define the U.S.A. as a "föderal aufgebaute Republik" which is absolutely similar to the German "Bundesrepublik". To anybody there is a strange feeling at equating "State" with "Land" so I do not see what reluctance there has to be seeing there is an explanation for it. --Askedonty (talk) 01:19, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Askedonty: I'm really having trouble following that. What are you trying to figure out here? Is it about whether Land is reasonably translated as "state" in the sense that it's used in "US state"? If it is, I don't really follow the argument; I'm not even sure whether you're arguing for or against. If it's not then I'm even more confused. --Trovatore (talk) 01:06, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- I've been looking at Law of Texas in order to verify if its specifical statutes visibly differ from the German cases where the concept of Succession of states comes into question: following analyses exposed in de:Land (Deutschland) in German Wikipedia. "Succession of states" as discussed in that last article has a focus probably more highly contrasted in matter of "rights and obligations" than would apply to U.S. States. In the case of Texas law for example I note the importance of Common law as a defining influence, whereas in German law the same unifying level is rooted very differently. I imagine that the american linguistic pluralism at root also implies some repercussions in classes of problems turning to the inside rather than to abroad. Consequently perhaps the specific problems that appear and were shown in the idea of Secession. --Askedonty (talk) 00:16, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- If the subdivisions have separate legislatures, there are bound to be differences. --Lambiam 22:33, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
The original question asks in countries like US...are there any local laws that differ.... In the US, "local" usually means city or county level. This will vary from state to state, but typically city and county laws are called "ordinances" and regulate comparatively lesser matters than state law (state law handles almost all one-on-one violent crime, for example). City ordinances tend to be about things like how often you have to mow your lawn or whether you can drink alcohol in public. Violations are usually "infractions" with relatively light penalties (though fines can be fairly heavy in some cases, like for removing a tree that you're not supposed to remove in Woodside, California). --Trovatore (talk) 23:02, 4 December 2024 (UTC)- Like the USA, Australia is a federation of states, so it has federal (national) laws, state level laws, and municipality based laws. The latter are like city laws in the US, but not all our towns are called cities. Unlike the USA, our constitution is primarily about what states are responsible for and what the federal government is responsible for. HiLo48 (talk) 03:33, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- As with most things in the US, the distinction (if any) between "town" and "city" varies state-to-state. I'm most familiar with California, which has no official legal distinction, but the municipality in question can call itself "town" or "city" as it pleases, usually depending on whether it wants to give the suggestion that it's semi-rural (see Town of Los Altos Hills). Completely different are the New England towns, which I don't know much about except what I've read in Wikipedia. --Trovatore (talk) 03:56, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Like the USA, Australia is a federation of states, so it has federal (national) laws, state level laws, and municipality based laws. The latter are like city laws in the US, but not all our towns are called cities. Unlike the USA, our constitution is primarily about what states are responsible for and what the federal government is responsible for. HiLo48 (talk) 03:33, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- The US Constitution does, in fact, delineate the powers of states and of the federal government. American states are not "subdivisions", they are separate entities which joined the USA. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 07:14, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Many subdivisions of current sovereign states, all over the world, were at some time themselves independent sovereign states that later gave up their sovereignty, sometimes not entirely voluntarily, and joined a larger entity. The USA is not exceptional. --Lambiam 09:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- The American states have not given up their sovereignty. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 15:08, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then why don't they apply for UN membership? Too much effort? --Lambiam 03:40, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's a different concept of sovereignty. The theory of sovereignty in much of the world is that it has to be unique; there is only one sovereign at a given place and time. The US, at least historically, explicitly rejects that idea, embracing divided sovereignty instead. --Trovatore (talk) 03:49, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- For that matter, recognized Indian tribes in the U.S. also have partial sovereignty, their own courts, etc. - Jmabel | Talk 05:12, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- Yes. Readers who want to know more about this can check out our article on tribal sovereignty in the United States. Lots of interesting complications if you like that sort of thing. --Trovatore (talk) 19:44, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- For that matter, recognized Indian tribes in the U.S. also have partial sovereignty, their own courts, etc. - Jmabel | Talk 05:12, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's a different concept of sovereignty. The theory of sovereignty in much of the world is that it has to be unique; there is only one sovereign at a given place and time. The US, at least historically, explicitly rejects that idea, embracing divided sovereignty instead. --Trovatore (talk) 03:49, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then why don't they apply for UN membership? Too much effort? --Lambiam 03:40, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- The American states have not given up their sovereignty. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 15:08, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Many subdivisions of current sovereign states, all over the world, were at some time themselves independent sovereign states that later gave up their sovereignty, sometimes not entirely voluntarily, and joined a larger entity. The USA is not exceptional. --Lambiam 09:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- The US Constitution does, in fact, delineate the powers of states and of the federal government. American states are not "subdivisions", they are separate entities which joined the USA. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 07:14, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Lambiam -- In the second half of the 1940s, when Stalin was arranging things so that the Byelorussian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR had separate memberships in the United Nations (distinct from the Soviet Union's overall membership), he offered to agree to several U.S. states being admitted to the U.N. but the U.S. didn't take him up on it. AnonMoos (talk) 00:03, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- I did not know that. Wow. Which states in particular were OK with Uncle Joe? Or was it just a number, let the states play musical chairs for it? --Trovatore (talk) 20:01, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- Texas, Texas, Texas, Texas and Texas. —Tamfang (talk) 20:42, 10 December 2024 (UTC)
- I did not know that. Wow. Which states in particular were OK with Uncle Joe? Or was it just a number, let the states play musical chairs for it? --Trovatore (talk) 20:01, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- Lambiam -- In the second half of the 1940s, when Stalin was arranging things so that the Byelorussian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR had separate memberships in the United Nations (distinct from the Soviet Union's overall membership), he offered to agree to several U.S. states being admitted to the U.N. but the U.S. didn't take him up on it. AnonMoos (talk) 00:03, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- I'm pretty sure it didn't get that far (probably stayed within the Truman White House and State Department), since it would have been a violation of the U.S. Constitution ("No State shall, without the Consent of Congress...enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power"). AnonMoos (talk) 00:12, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
I suspect that the U.S. is at the extreme of how much laws about rather important matters vary from one jurisdiction to another: at the state level, differences include: whether or not there is a death penalty and (if so) under what circumstances it can be applied; whether cannabis is legal, and almost everything about its regulation (and more or less the same about alcohol, though no state currently has an outright ban); what is the minimum wage (defaulting to the federal minimum wage if the state does not pass its own); almost everything to do with education; almost everything about how elections are run. Also, since Dobbs, pretty much everything about abortion. In some areas, federal law reliably trumps state law, but not in everything (there is relatively little the federal government can do to prevent a state from passing a criminal law, other than either challenge it as unconstitutional or threaten to withhold funds unless they change it).
U.S. states usually have more ability to limit what smaller jurisdictions can do, so they can preempt local ordinances (usually the term, rather than "laws", at the city/town/etc. level, but just as enforceable). Still, often they don't do that, even in ways where you'd think they would. Where I live in Washington state, the minimum wage varies from county to county and city to city, with the state setting only a "minimum minimum". And it gets even more confusing because, for example, King County sets a minimum wage for unincorporated areas of the county, with incorporated communities able to go higher or lower. In Texas, the legality of selling alcohol is a "local option" patchwork. And sovereignty gets trickier in terms of Indian reservations, hence the "Indian casinos" even in states where gambling is otherwise illegal.
And, yeah, that's just more about the U.S., but I think people from elsewhere have trouble imagining what a patchwork it is here. - Jmabel | Talk 05:12, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
In Mexico: I know Mexico City legalized gay marriage years before the rest of the country. But if we have a decent article on federalism in Mexico, I haven't seen it.
In Spain, Catalonia semi-legalized cannabis (allowing "cannabis clubs"); there has been a bit of a fight back and forth with the central government over whether they can do that. And, of course, in Spain each autonomous community makes its own decisions about much of the educational system (which often involves laws) and most have opted to have responsibility for a health system devolved to them, though some have chosen not to take that on. For more on Spain, you can look at Autonomous communities of Spain#Constitutional and statutory framework. - Jmabel | Talk 05:23, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
December 5
[edit]BAA
[edit]BAA ambiguous meaning in context of aviation in UK, could you please check the discussion here 🙏 Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 07:30, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Gryllida This is the humanities reference desk. Do you have a question on humanities? Shantavira|feed me 10:15, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
UK politics/senate
[edit]Hi, is this factually accurate link Thanks. Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 07:59, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- See above. Shantavira|feed me 10:15, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
Scipion-Virginie Hébert (1793-1830)
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The only daughter of Jacques-René Hébert was a repubblican, bonapartist, or royalist? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.56.174.231 (talk) 11:06, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
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December 6
[edit]Provenance of some sculptures
[edit]There are a bunch of reliefs worked into the wall of the garden (rear) side of the former Casa Storck, now Frederic Storck and Cecilia Cuțescu-Storck Museum, in Bucharest. I can't tell whether they are older pieces collected by Frederic Storck (he certainly collected a number of such pieces; some are in the museum) or his own work, or a mix of the two. Clearly for some of these, if they are his own work they would have been imitative of older styles, but he was enough of a chameleon at times that I would not rule that out. (I had originally presumed they were all his, but I'm having second thoughts.) Wondering if anyone might know something more solid than I do; there is nothing in particular about this I've been easily able to find, except that they seem to date back at least very close to the origin of the building (1910s).
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Several more here
Jmabel | Talk 04:20, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
Given my uncertainty, I've put these in a new commons:Category:Unidentified works in the Frederic and Cecilia Cuțescu Storck Museum that does not imply authorship by Frederic Storck. - Jmabel | Talk 04:28, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- No one with an idea on any of these? - Jmabel | Talk 19:13, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
Georges Jacques Danton
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Are there any sites with the full biographies of their two sons Antoine (1790-1858) and François Georges (1792-1848)?
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December 7
[edit]Why did Pippi Longstocking end up never getting married in her adulthood?
[edit]AKA her actress, Inger Nilsson. A lot of suitors would admire famous actresses and trample on each other to have a chance to court them, so a lot of actors and actresses end up getting married, but how come Pippi's actress never got married nor had kids after growing into an adult? --2600:100A:B032:25F0:1D7A:CC5D:1FC2:21E2 (talk) 06:17, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- Do you know for certain that she wasn't/isn't married and/or has children? If so, from what source?
- Some actors do not choose to make their private life public, so perhaps she was/is and does, and if not, many people (including my elderly single self) are simply not interested in getting married and/or having children. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.211.243 (talk) 11:37, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- She's still among the living, so maybe you could find a way to contact her, and ask her that nosy question. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 12:24, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- If she really could "lift her horse one-handed", I suspect even male fellow equestrians would be very wary suitors. Martinevans123 (talk) 12:35, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- As an adult, she has chosen to keep her private life private.[7] So be it. --136.56.165.118 (talk) 19:48, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- I suspect that famous actresses actually try to avoid suitors that admire famous actresses. They don't want to marry someone who is in love with a fake public persona created by the PR department of a studio. Not only actors and actresses, but also a lot of bakers, chemists, dentists, engineers and so on do end up getting married. Being famous does not help. --Lambiam 13:05, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
- I imagine she particularly would not welcome suitors who admired her as a preteen. —Tamfang (talk) 20:47, 10 December 2024 (UTC)
December 8
[edit]Petosiris of Arabia
[edit]The rendering of פטסרי as Petosiris seems to take inspiration from the far-flung. Is this the same name? If osiris is Osiris, what's the pt pt? Temerarius (talk) 22:49, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
- The source to which this is cited has throughout Peṭosriris. However, the transcription of Briquel-Chatonnet has pṭsry. Roche states the name means « qu’Osiris a donné ».[8] --Lambiam 18:33, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- I may be mistaken, but wouldn't « qu’Osiris a donné » require פת?
- Temerarius (talk) 03:39, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
December 9
[edit]Tribes and inceldom
[edit]One common saying in incel subcultures is that women are "programmed" to only have relationships with the 20% top men. This appears to be consistent (o at least not contradicted by) this phrase in the polygamy article: "More recent genetic data has clarified that, in most regions throughout history, a smaller proportion of men contributed to human genetic history compared to women."
Then again, while I've heard of modern tribes with weird marriage practices (for example the Wodaabe or the Trobriand people) I've never heard of tribes where 70% of men die virgins. Is there any tribe/society where something like that happens? (I realize that modern tribes are by definition different to Paleolithic tribes)90.77.114.87 (talk) 13:51, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- From what I've read in the past, it seems that hunter-gatherer cultures over the last 50,000 years ago probably tended to be mildly polygynous -- that is, certain men, due to their personalities and demonstrated skills, managed to attract more than one woman at a time into a relationship with them. (Usually a small number -- some men having large numbers of wives is associated more with agricultural civilizations, and women there could often have less freedom of choice than women in hunter-gatherer groups.) Everybody of both sexes is likely to be most attracted to high-status individuals, but under hunter-gatherer conditions, women also need help with child-rearing, which factors into their mating strategies. AnonMoos (talk) 14:19, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- P.S. Under the classic anthropological band-tribe-chiefdom-state classification system (on Wikipedia, covered in the vaguely named Sociopolitical typology article), most historical hunter-gatherer cultures were "bands", while the Wodaabe and Trobriand people sound more like "tribes". AnonMoos (talk) 14:26, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- Worth remembering, though: who has "sanctioned" relationships is not necessarily equivalent to who actually has sex. - Jmabel | Talk 19:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- It has been said (in mammals at least) that each 5% difference in mass for males means that their harem (zoology) has one more female. The sexual dimorphism#Humans article says that human males are 15% heavier that the females (previously I had heard 20%), suggesting that the harem-holder has three mates (or 4, if the 20% is correct). But this does not mean that 75% of human males never had sex. Firstly, holding a harem is a dangerous, short term job if other animals are any guide, with the harem master regularly killed or overthrown. Secondly, in current polygynous human cultures and in polygynous animals, there is a huge amount of cheating. Evidence from animals shows that when females cheat, they are statistically more likely to produce offspring from that mating than from a mating with their main male. Abductive (reasoning) 11:09, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- Worth remembering, though: who has "sanctioned" relationships is not necessarily equivalent to who actually has sex. - Jmabel | Talk 19:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's doubtful that there were commonly "harems" at any stage of human evolution which is very relevant to modern human behavior. Gorillas have moderate harems of often around 3 or 4 females (as opposed to elephant seals, which commonly have a harem size in the thirties). Robust Australopithecines may have been similar, but modern humans are not descended from them. What we know about attested hunter-gatherer societies strongly suggests that during the last 50,000 years or so (since Behavioral modernity) the majority of men who had wives had one wife, but some exceptional men were able to attract 2 or 3 women at a time into relationships. Men having large numbers of wives (real harems) wasn't too feasible until the rise of social stratification which occurred with the development of agriculture. AnonMoos (talk) 16:50, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- How do we know that? Because the same evidence is that prior to 50,000 years ago, humans did have harems. Abductive (reasoning) 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Scattering in US elections
[edit]What does scattering mean in the context of US elections? Examples: 1944 United_States presidential election in California#Results 1886 United States House of Representatives elections#Mississippi. Searching mostly produces Electron scattering, which is not the same thing at all! Is there (or should there be) an article or section that could be linked? Cavrdg (talk) 14:32, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- If you click on the source for Frederick G. Berry in the 1886 election, then on Scattering on the following page, it says it's for those with "No Party Affiliation". Clarityfiend (talk) 14:44, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- Presumably from the phrase "a scattering of votes" (i.e. for other candidates than those listed)... AnonMoos (talk) 15:52, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
December 11
[edit]Shopping carts
[edit]Where were the first shopping carts introduced?
- shopping cart and Sylvan Goldman say the Humpty Dumpty chain
- Piggly Wiggly says the Piggly Wiggly chain and quotes the Harvard Business Review
Both articles agree it was in 1937 in Oklaholma. I believe that Humpty Dumpty is more likely, but some high quality sources would be useful. TSventon (talk) 11:55, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- It seems to be a matter of some dispute, but Guide to the Telescoping Shopping Cart Collection, 1946-1983, 2000 by the Smithsonian Institution has the complex details of the dispute between Sylvan Goldman [of Humpty Dumpty] and Orla Watson. No mention of Piggly Wiggly, but our article on Watson notes that in 1946, he donated the first models of his cart to 10 grocery stores in Kansas City.
- The Illustrated History of American Military Commissaries (p. 205) has both Watson and Goldman introducing their carts in 1947 (this may refer to carts that telescope into each other for storage, a feature apparently lacking in Goldman's first model).
- Scalable Innovation: A Guide for Inventors, Entrepreneurs, and IP Professionals says that Goldman's first cart was introduced to Humpty Dumty in 1937.
- Make of that what you will. Alansplodge (talk) 13:30, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- Absolutely. I remember that the power lift arrangement mentioned in the Smithsonian's link was still an object of analysis for would-be inventors in the mid-sixties, and possibly later, even though the soon to be ubiquituous checkout counter conveyor belt was very much ready making it unnecessary. Couldn't help curiously but think about those when learning about Bredt's rule at school later, see my user page, but it's true "Bredt" sounded rather like "Bread" in my imagination. --Askedonty (talk) 15:33, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- On Newspapers.com (pay site), I'm seeing shopping carts referenced in Portland, Oregon in 1935 or earlier, and occasionally illustrated, at a store called the Public Market; and as far as the term itself is concerned, it goes back to at least the 1850s. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 15:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- But perhaps referring to a cart brought by the shopper to carry goods home with, rather than one provided by the storekeeper for use in-store? Alansplodge (talk) 16:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
@Alansplodge, Askedonty, and Baseball Bugs: thank you for your help, it seems that the Harvard Business Review is mistaken and the Piggly Wiggly chain did not introduce the first shopping baskets, which answers my question. The shopping cart article references a paper by Catherine Grandclément, which shows that several companies were selling early shopping carts in 1937, so crediting Sylvan Goldman alone is not the whole story. TSventon (talk) 17:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Lilacs/flowers re: Allies in Europe WWII
[edit]At 53:20 in Dunkirk (1958 film), British soldiers talk about [paraphrasing] 'flowers on the way into Belgium, raspberries on the way out', and specifically reference lilacs. I imagine this was very clear to 1958 audiences, but what is the significance of lilacs? Is it/was it a symbol of Belgium? Valereee (talk) 21:40, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- I think it's just that the BEF entered Belgium in the Spring, which is lilac time. DuncanHill (talk) 22:04, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- There are contemporary reports of the streets being strewn with lilac blossom. See here "Today the troops crossed the frontier along roads strewn with flowers. Belgian girls, wildly enthusiastic, plucked lilac from the wayside and scattered it along the road to be torn and twisted by the mighty wheels of the mechanised forces." DuncanHill (talk) 22:26, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- Ah! That would explain it, thanks! Valereee (talk) 16:14, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
December 12
[edit]The USA adding a new state
[edit]If my understanding is correct, the following numbers are valid at present: (a) number of Senators = 100; (b) number of Representatives = 435; (c) number of electors in the Electoral College = 538. If the USA were to add a new state, what would happen to these numbers? Thank you. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 06:30, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
- The number of senators would increase by 2, and the number of representatives would probably increase by at least 1. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 09:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thus, to answer the final question, the minimum number of Electors would be 3… more if the new state has more Representatives (based on population). Blueboar (talk) 13:54, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
- In the short term, there would be extra people in congress. The 86th United States Congress had 437 representatives, because Alaska and Hawaii were granted one upon entry regardless of the apportionment rules. Things were smoothed down to 435 at the next census, two congresses later. --Golbez (talk) 14:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks. Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Let me re-phrase my question. (a) The number of Senators is always 2 per State, correct? (b) The number of Representatives is what? Is it "capped" at 435 ... or does it increase a little bit? (c) The number of Electors (per State) is simply a function of "a" + "b" (per State), correct? Thanks. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 21:12, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
- As I understand it, it is indeed capped at 435, though Golbez brings up a point I hadn't taken into account -- apparently it can go up temporarily when states are added, until the next reapportionment. --Trovatore (talk) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
I suggest that (b) would probably depend on whether the hypothetical new state was made up of territory previously part of one or more existing states, or territory not previously part of any existing state. And I suspect that the eventual result would not depend on any pre-calculable formula, but on cut-throat horsetrading between the two main parties and other interested bodies. {The poster formerly nown as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.211.243 (talk) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)- Nope, it's capped at 435. See Reapportionment Act of 1929. (I had thought it was fixed in the Constitution itself, but apparently not.) --Trovatore (talk) 21:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
- Oh, one other refinement. The formula you've given for number of electors is correct, for states. But it leaves out the District of Columbia, which gets as many electors as it would get if it were a state, but never
lessmore than those apportioned to the smallest state. In practice that means DC gets three electors. That's why the total is 538 instead of 535. --Trovatore (talk) 21:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC) Oops; I remembered the bit about the smallest state wrong. It's actually never more than the smallest state. Doesn't matter in practice; still works out to 3 electors for the foreseeable future, either way, because DC would get 3 electors if it were a state, and the least populous state gets 3. --Trovatore (talk) 23:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
December 13
[edit]economics: coffee prices question
[edit]in news report "On Tuesday, the price for Arabica beans, which account for most global production, topped $3.44 a pound (0.45kg), having jumped more than 80% this year. " [9] how do they measure it? some other report mention it is a commodity price set for trading like gold silver etc. what is the original data source for this report? i checked a few other news stories and did not find any clarification about this point, they just know something that i don't. thank you in advance for your help. Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 01:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Gryllida, they seem to be talking about the "Coffee C" contract in the List of traded commodities. The price seems to have peaked and then fallen a day later
- explanation here
- I googled "coffee c futures price chart" and the first link was uk.investing.com which I can't link here
- if you have detailed questions about futures contracts they will probably go over my head. TSventon (talk) 01:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- thanks. i see the chart which you cannot link here. why did it peak and then drop shortly after? Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 04:08, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Financial markets tend to have periods of increase followed by periods of decrease (bull and bear markets), see market trend for background. TSventon (talk) 04:55, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
source for an order of precedence for abbotts
[edit]Hi friends. The article for Ramsey Abbey in the UK refers to an "order of precedence for abbots in Parliament". (Sourced to an encyclopedia, which uses the wording "The abbot had a seat in Parliament and ranked next after Glastonbury and St. Alban's"). Did a ranking/order of precedence exist and if yes where can it be found? Presumably this would predate the dissolution of monasteries in england. Thanks.70.67.193.176 (talk) 06:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
Are the proposed Trump tariffs a regressive tax in disguise?
[edit]I'm wondering if there has been analysis of this. The US government gets the tariff money(?) and biggest chunk will be on manufactured goods from China. Those in turn are primarily consumer goods, which means that the tariff is something like a sales tax, a type of tax well known to be regressive. Obviously there are leaks in the description above, so one would have to crunch a bunch of numbers to find out for sure. But that's what economists do, right? Has anyone weighed in on this issue? Thanks. 2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E (talk) 08:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- There have been many public comments about how this is a tax on American consumers. It's only "in disguise" to those who don't understand how tariffs work. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 11:34, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks, I'll see what I can find. Do you remember if the revenue collected is supposed to be enough for the government to care about? I.e. enough to supposedly offset the inevitable tax cuts for people like Elon Musk? 2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E (talk) 22:36, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
Import duties are extremely recessive in that (a) they are charged at the same rate for any given level of income; and (b) those with less income tend to purchase far more imported goods than those with more income (define “more” and “less” any way you wish). Fiscally, they border on insignificant, running an average of 1.4% of federal revenue since 1962 (or, 0.2% of GDP), compared to 47.1% (8.0%) for individual income tax and 9.9% (1.7%) for corporate tax receipts.DOR (ex-HK) (talk) 22:52, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Curious about your point (b); why would this be? It seems to me that as my income has risen I have probably bought more stuff from abroad, at least directly. It could well be that I've bought less indirectly, but I'm not sure why that would be. --Trovatore (talk) 00:02, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
Ron A. Dunn: Australian arachnologist
[edit]For R. A. Dunn (Q109827858) I have given names of "Ron. A.", an address in 1958 of 60 Mimosa Road, Carnegie, Victoria, Australia S.E. 9 (he was also in Carnegie in 1948) and an uncited death date of 25 June 1972.
He was an Australian arachnologist with the honorifics AAA AAIS.
Can anyone find the full given names, and a source or the death date, please? What did the honorifics stand for? Do we know how he earned his living? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 12:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Pigsonthewing Have you tried ancestry.com? For a start
- A scan of the 1954 Carnegie electoral roll has
- Dunn, Ronald Albert, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, accountant
- Dunn, Gladys Harriet I, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, home duties
- I can't check newspapers.com, but The Age apparently had a report about Ronald Albert Dunn on 27 Jun 1972 TSventon (talk) 14:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you. I don't have access to the former, but that's great. AAA seems to be (member of the) Association of Accountants of Australia: [10]. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- I accessed Ancestry.com via the Wikipedia Library, so you should have access. Newspapers.com is also available via the library if you register, which I haven't. An editor with a Newspapers.com account would be able to make a clipping which anyone could access online.
- I agree AAA is probably the Australian Society of Accountants, a predecessor of CPA Australia. They merged in 1953 (source) so the information would have been outdated in 1958. AAIS could be Associate [of the] Amalgamated Institute of Secretaries (source Who's Who in Australia, Volume 16, 1959 Abbreviations page 9). TSventon (talk) 16:48, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Last time I tried, Ancestry wasn't working for WP-Lib users. Thank you again. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- There is a phabricator problem about loading a second page of results. My workaround is to try to add more information to the search to get more relevant results on the first page of results. TSventon (talk) 21:03, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Last time I tried, Ancestry wasn't working for WP-Lib users. Thank you again. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you. I don't have access to the former, but that's great. AAA seems to be (member of the) Association of Accountants of Australia: [10]. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)