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#reading tracker 2023
rustandruin · 1 year
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Teen Titans: Robin by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo
Thursday, 23 March 2023
I didn’t think I could love Dick Grayson any more than I could, but then I encountered Garcia and Picolo’s version of him and oh boy am I back in my feelings.
I fucking love that DC has decided to do a YA take on so many of its characters, but the Teen Titans series lends itself to this best — maybe because they are teenagers themselves and because their story lends itself best to a certain kind of serialisation.
Garcia’s writing has been most confident while unpacking each of these characters’ backstory and exploring their conflicts and emotions. But the real star of all of these is Gabriel Picolo’s absolutely dynamic art which captures their many facets and personalities and makes them feel like flawed but winsome teens just doing their best in the situations they find themselves in.
Their clothes are cool. The colouring is lush. Their poses constantly exemplify how full of life and energy they are and it only propels their stories forward.
The conflict for this story was interesting as it was Damian feeling jealous of Dick, the son Bruce seemingly wanted and actively “chose” in contrast to his own situation. To their credit, Dick was more than eager to form a relationship, while Damian was understandably stubborn about the whole thing. In any case it was a ton of fun and felt like an adventure and has me rooting for Starfire to join the crew and for her future romance with Dick — especially since all the other relationships in the series are so sweet.
Ugh. Waiting is going to be torture.
⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
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My 2023 wrapped: books edition!
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wreckitremy · 7 months
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so since I am now in THREE book clubs, I have been externally motivated to keep track of what books I'm reading.
And since I am a sucker for brightly colored statistics, the app introduced to me at the newest of these book clubs, is a game changer.
I mean look at it
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Anyways it's called storygraph and I've been playing with it since last night.
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Please show this to every bookworm with memory problems!
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we-artemis-atenea · 4 months
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Books read in 2023
Book tracker by @jasmineandviolet
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books-in-a-storm · 10 months
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Currently Reading 💛
Grizzy, Tracker & Shade
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sophiecountsclouds · 1 year
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how I track my reading
here are the methods, apps and resources I use to track everything I'm reading (and yes, it's usually colour coded) -
Hello! As someone who loves planning, tracking and statistics, it will come as no surprise that I have plenty of ways of keeping track of what I’m reading, how many books I’m reading and the amount of books I have. It’s definitely not a necessity – when I was at school I went from one book to the next with no concept of how many books I read in a year or what I ratings I gave them (other than…
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stuckinapril · 6 months
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please take everything you read with a grain of salt. misinformation spreads everywhere like wildfire, and i've been having major trouble wading through false journalism to get actual updates on everything. some resources i've compiled for myself and anyone who's interested:
fact sheet: israel and palestine conflict (october 2023)
live updates - intense israeli bombardments strike gaza as the war rages on
live updates - israel plans to step up attacks on the gaza strip
little light, no beds, not enough anesthesia: a view from the 'nightmare' of gaza's hospitals
what international law has to say about the israel-hamas war
a dangerous new phase in the israeli-palestinian conflict - expert commentary by the foreign policy research institute (FPRI)
the global conflict tracker (israeli-palestinian conflict)
the arab-israeli war of 1948
the 1967 arab-israeli war
the 1973 arab-israeli war
dr. ghassan abu sitta is a doctor on-site who's also been reporting about the atrocities transpiring in gaza.
also some palestinian aid orgs to donate to. if you have some money to spare/know anyone who does, please consider donating/spreading the word:
palestine children's relief fund
palestine red crescent society
medical aid for palestine
gaza emergency appeal
donate to arab.org with one click
the middle east children's alliance gaza emergency fund
help UNRWA USA reach their palestinian aid fundraiser goal
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bookishluna · 1 year
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February 2023 Bullet Journal
Hello and welcome to a little peak of my bullet journal. Last month I did not share my bullet journal because I decided to try something new and if I am being honest, I loved how it worked out. I was in a way worried about sharing because I am not using my bullet journal in a typical mannor, but blending two things together. I decided to make my bullet journal a hybrid with a commonplace book as…
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So long, 2022
Like many other people, I use the new year to think back on the months before and try to start some things afresh. I know that I will not be perfect in being consistent, but it does give me some parameters as to what I’d like to achieve. 2022 was a difficult year for me, mostly professionally as the weight of a new position and more responsibilities set in. Though I am slowly getting better at…
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Company that makes millions spying on students will get to sue a whistleblower
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Yesterday, the Court of Appeal for British Columbia handed down a jaw-droppingly stupid and terrible decision, rejecting the whistleblower Ian Linkletter’s claim that he was engaged in legitimate criticism when he linked to freely available materials from the ed-tech surveillance company Proctorio:
https://www.bccourts.ca/jdb-txt/ca/23/01/2023BCCA0160.htm
If you’d like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here’s a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/20/links-arent-performances/#free-ian-linkletter
It’s been a minute since Linkletter’s case arose, so I’ll give you a little recap here. Proctorio is a massive, wildly profitable ed-tech company that sells a surveillance tool to monitor students while they take high-stakes tests from home. The tool monitors the student’s computer and the student’s face, especially their eye-movements. It also allows instructors and other personnel to watch the students and even take control of their computer. This is called “remote invigilation.”
This is ghastly in just about every way. For starters, Proctorio’s facial monitoring software embeds the usual racist problems with machine-learning stuff, and struggles to recognize Black and brown faces. Black children sitting exams under Proctorio’s gimlet eye have reported that the only way to satisfy Proctorio’s digital phrenology system is to work with multiple high-powered lights shining directly in their faces.
A Proctorio session typically begins with a student being forced to pan a webcam around their test-taking room. During lockdown, this meant that students who shared a room — for example, with a parent who worked night-shifts — would have to invade their family’s privacy, and might be disqualified because they couldn’t afford a place large enough to have private room in which to take their tests.
Proctorio’s tools also punish students for engaging in normal test-taking activity. Do you stare off into space when you’re trying through a problem? Bzzzt. Do you read questions aloud to yourself under your breath when you’re trying to understand their meanings? Bzzzt. Do you have IBS and need to go to the toilet? Bzzzt. The canon of remote invigilation horror stories is filled with accounts of students being forced to defecate themselves, or vomit down their shirts without turning their heads (because looking away is an automatically flagged offense).
The tragedy is that all of this is in service to the pedagogically bankrupt practice of high-stakes testing. Few pedagogists believe that the kind of exam that Proctorio seeks to recreate in students’ homes has real assessment merit. As the old saying goes, “Tests measure your ability to take tests.” But Proctorio doesn’t even measure your ability to take a test — it measures your ability to take a test with three bright lights shining directly on your face. Or while you are covered in your own feces and vomit. While you stare rigidly at a screen. While your tired mother who just worked 16 hours in a covid ward stands outside the door to your apartment.
The lockdown could have been an opportunity to improve educational assessment. There is a rich panoply of techniques that educators can adopt that deliver a far better picture of students’ learning, and work well for remote as well as in-person education. Instead, companies like Proctorio made vast fortunes, most of it from publicly funded institutions, by encouraging a worse-than-useless, discriminatory practice:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/24/proctor-ology/#miseducation
Proctorio clearly knows that its racket is brittle. Like any disaster profiteer, Proctorio will struggle to survive after the crisis passes and we awaken from our collective nightmare and ask ourselves why we were stampeded into using its terrible products. The company went to war against its critics.
In 2020, Proctorio CEO Mike Olsen doxed a child who complained about his company’s software in a Reddit forum:
https://pluralistic.net/2020/07/01/bossware/#moral-exemplar
In 2021, the reviews for Proctorio’s Chrome plugin all mysteriously vanished. Needless to say, these reviews — from students forced to use Proctorio’s spyware — were brutal:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/09/04/hypervigilance/#radical-transparency
Proctorio claims that it protects “educational integrity,” but its actions suggest a company far more concerned about the integrity of its own profits:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/16/unauthorized-paper/#cheating-anticheat
One of the critics that Proctorio attacked is Ian Linkletter. In 2020, Linkletter was a Learning Technology Specialist at UBC’s Faculty of Education. His job was to assess and support ed-tech tools, including Proctorio. In the course of that work, Linkletter reviewed Proctorio’s training material for educators, which are a bonanza of mask-off materials that are palpably contemptuous of students, who are presumed to be cheaters.
At the time, a debate over remote invigilation tools was raging through Canadian education circles, with students, teachers and parents fiercely arguing the merits and downsides of making surveillance the linchpin of assessment. Linkletter waded into this debate, tweeting a series of sharp criticisms of Proctorio. In these tweets, Linkletter linked to Proctorio’s unlisted, but publicly available, Youtube videos.
A note of explanation: Youtube videos can be flagged as “unlisted,” which means they don’t show up in searches. They can also be flagged as “private,” which means you have to be on a list of authorized users to see them. Proctorio made its training videos unlisted, but they weren’t private — they were visible to anyone who had a link to them.
Proctorio sued Linkletter for this. They argued that he had breached a duty of confidentiality, and that linking to these videos was a copyright violation:
https://pluralistic.net/2020/10/17/proctorio-v-linkletter/#proctorio
This is a classic SLAPP — a “strategic litigation against public participation.” That’s when a deep-pocketed, thin-skinned bully, like Proctorio, uses the threat of a long court battle to force their critics into silence. They know they can’t win their case, but that’s not the victory they’re seeking. They don’t want to win the case, they want to win the argument, by silencing a critic who would otherwise be bankrupted by legal fees.
Getting SLAPPed is no fun. I’ve been there. Just this year, a billionaire financier tried to force me into silence by threatening me with a lawsuit. Thankfully, Ken “Popehat” White was on the case, and he reminded this billionaire’s counsel that California has a strong anti-SLAPP law, and if Ken had to defend me in court, he could get a fortune in fees from the bully after he prevailed:
https://twitter.com/doctorow/status/1531684572479377409
British Columbia also has an anti-SLAPP law, but unlike California’s anti-SLAPP, the law is relatively new and untested. Still, Proctorio’s suit against Linkletter was such an obvious SLAPP that for many of us, it seemed likely that Linkletter would be able to defend himself from this American bully and its attempt to use Canada’s courts to silence a Canadian educator.
For Linkletter to use BC’s anti-SLAPP law, he would have to prove that he was weighing in on a matter of public interest, and that Proctorio’s copyright and confidentiality claims were nonsense, unlikely to prevail on their merits. If he could do that, he’d be able to get the case thrown out, without having to go through a lengthy, brutally expensive trial.
Incredibly, though, the lower court found against Linkletter. Naturally, Linkletter appealed. His “factotum” is a crystal clear document that sets out the serious errors of law and fact the lower court made:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aB1ztWDFr3MU6BsAMt6rWXOiXJ8sT3MY/view
But yesterday, the Court of Appeal upheld the lower court, repeating all of these gross errors and finding for Proctorio:
https://www.bccourts.ca/jdb-txt/ca/23/01/2023BCCA0160.htm
This judgment is grotesque. It makes a mockery of BC’s anti-SLAPP statute, to say nothing of Canadian copyright and confidentiality law. For starters, it finds that publishing a link can be a “performance” of a copyrighted work, which meant that when Linkletter linked to the world-viewable Youtube files that Proctorio had posted, he infringed on copyright.
This is a perverse, even surreal take on copyright. The court rejects Linkletter’s argument that even Youtube’s terms of service warned Proctorio that publishing world-viewable material on its site constituted permission for people to link to and watch that material.
But what about “fair dealing” (similar to fair use)? Linkletter argued that linking to a video that shows that Proctorio’s assurances to parents and students about its products’ benign nature were contradicted by the way it talked to educators was fair dealing. Fair dealing is a broad suite of limitations and exceptions to copyright for the purposes of commentary, criticism, study, satire, etc.
So even if linking is a copyright infringement (ugh, seriously?!), surely it’s fair dealing in this case. Proctorio was selling millions of dollars in software to public institutions, inflicting it on kids whose parents weren’t getting the whole story. Linkletter used Proctorio’s own words to rebut its assurances. What could be more fair dealing than that?
Not so fast, the appeals panel says: they say that Linkletter could have made his case just as well without linking to Proctorio’s materials. This is…bad. I mean, it’s also wrong, but it’s very bad, too. It’s wrong because an argument about what a company intends necessarily has to draw upon the company’s own statements. It’s absurd to say that Linkletter’s point would have been made equally well if he said “I disbelieve Proctorio’s public assurances because I’ve seen seekrit documents” as it was when he was able to link to those documents so that people could see them for themselves.
But it’s bad because it rips the heart out of the fair dealing exception for criticism. Publishing a link to a copyrighted work is the most minimal way to quote from it in a debate — Linkletter literally didn’t reproduce a single word, not a single letter, from Proctorio’s copyrighted works. If the court says, “Sure, you can quote from a work to criticize it, but only so much as you need to make your argument,” and then says, “But also, simply referencing a work without quoting it at all is taking too much,” then what reasonable person would ever try to rely on a fair dealing exemption for criticism?
Then there’s the confidentiality claim: in his submissions to the lower court and the appeals court, Linkletter pointed out that the “confidential” materials he’d linked to were available in many places online, and could be easily located with a Google search. Proctorio had uploaded these “confidential” materials to many sites — without flagging them as “unlisted” or “private.”
What’s more, the videos that Linkletter linked to were in found a “Help Center” that didn’t even have a terms-of-service condition that required confidentiality. How on Earth can materials that are publicly available all over the web be “confidential?”
Here, the court takes yet another bizarre turn in logic. They find that because a member of the public would have to “gather” the videos from “many sources,” that the collection of links was confidential, even if none of the links in the collection were confidential. Again, this is both wrong and bad.
Every investigator, every journalist, every critic, starts by looking in different places for information that can be combined to paint a coherent picture of what’s going on. This is the heart of “open source intelligence,” combing different sources for data points that shed light on one another.
The idea that “gathering” public information can breach confidentiality strikes directly at all investigative activity. Every day, every newspaper and news broadcast in Canada engages in this conduct. The appeals court has put them all in jeopardy with this terrible finding.
Finally, there’s the question of Proctorio’s security. Proctorio argued that by publishing links to its educator materials, Linkletter weakened the security of its products. That is, they claim that if students know how the invigilation tool works, it stops working. This is the very definition of “security through obscurity,” and it’s a practice that every serious infosec professional rejects. If Proctorio is telling the truth when it says that describing how its products work makes them stop working, then they make bad products that no one should pay money for.
The court absolutely flubs this one, too, accepting the claim of security through obscurity at face value. That’s a finding that flies in the face of all security research.
So what happens now? Well, Linkletter has lost his SLAPP claim, so nominally the case can proceed. Linkletter could appeal his case to Canada’s Supreme Court (about 7% of Supreme Court appeals of BC appeals court judgments get heard). Or Proctorio could drop the case. Or it could go to a full trial, where these outlandish ideas about copyright, confidentiality and information security would get a thorough — and blisteringly expensive — examination.
In Linkletter’s statement, he remains defiant and unwilling to give in to bullying, but says he’ll have to “carefully consider” his next step. That’s fair enough: there’s a lot on the line here:
https://linkletter.opened.ca/stand-against-proctorios-slapp-update-30/
Linkletter answers his supporters’ questions about how they can help with some excellent advice: “What I ask is for you to do what you can to protect students. Academic surveillance technology companies would like nothing more but for us all to shut up. Don’t let them silence you. Don’t let anyone or anything take away your human right to freedom of expression.”
Today (Apr 21), I’m speaking in Chicago at the Stigler Center’s Antitrust and Competition Conference. This weekend (Apr 22/23), I’m at the LA Times Festival of Books.
[Image ID: A girl working on a laptop. Her mouth has been taped shut. Glaring out of the laptop screen is the hostile red eye of HAL9000 from '2001: A Space Odyssey.' Behind them is a tattered, filthy, burned Canadian flag.]
Image: Ingo Bernhardt https://www.flickr.com/photos/spree2010/4930763550/
CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
Eleanor Vladinsky (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Canadian_flag_against_grey_sky.jpg
CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en
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rustandruin · 1 year
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A Guest in the House by Emily Carroll
Sunday, 23 April, 2023
I’m fortunate to have been able to read an advanced reader copy of this graphic novel.
There is something deliciously dreamlike about the worlds Carroll sometimes creates, a kind of surrealism that is both grounded and haunting. A Guest in the House is no different.
The story begins with Abby, a cashier in a small lakeside town, who recently married the dentist who moved there with his young daughter, Crystal. Of course, in classic fashion, there are strange circumstances surrounding the passing of her husband’s first wife, Sheila, and the spectre of it begins to loom large in their relationship. It doesn’t help that Crystal admits to seeing her mother in the lake they live on the edge of, and that sometimes she even speaks to her. But as Abby begins to delve deeper into the events that led them all here, things are not quite as they seem. Especially now that Abby’s begun to see and speak to Sheila herself.
Carroll’s storytelling skill is on display throughout the book, but her artistic prowess is just incredible as she easily moves between different art styles, each evoking a specific feeling, that when brought together creates a kind of discordant tension that only ratchets up as the story progresses.
There’s the washed out greys of Abby’s day-to-day life, versus the brilliant reds and blues of Sheila’s manifestation; a gory sort of stripped back brutality to the blood, guts, and bone, tinged with a sensuality that feels almost tender. The grotesque can be almost seductive, in Carroll’s hands it’s almost guaranteed to be. But this gifts us with some truly memorable visuals. The kind that stay with you after.
My favourite of the styles is that in the beginning sequence that most eager readers will have seen in previews, with the almost midcentury style illustration of a knight evoking the concept art for the animated Sleeping Beauty movie, thus making it even more fantastical and dreamlike, when set against everything else when it does pop up.
A Guest in the House effectively plays with the themes and tropes of all good psychological thrillers, ramping up towards the conclusion as it goes on, Carroll’s visuals tightening the noose that is a growing sense of horror. And like always, she is the master.
I cannot wait for more people to be able to read this so we can finally discuss that ending.
RELEASE DATE: 15 August, 2023
⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
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paperprincessinspo · 1 year
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2023 Reading and Books Spreadsheet for Tracking
Home | Etsy Store| Template Gallery| Portfolio| Mailing List| YouTube| Ko-fi Etsy Patreon YouTube Instagram Pinterest I have loved tracking my reading and books with this spreadsheet this year. I discovered the tracker on Smart Bitches, Trashy Books near the end of 2020 and fell in love with it! It suited my needs better than most of the trackers I’ve come across and their post was so…
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csuitebitches · 5 months
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2024 Planning
I started planning for 2024 today. I’ve learned a lot this year, made mistakes, had some successes and now it’s time to take all my learnings, good or bad, and go to the next level.
I prefer starting next year’s routine from 2023’s November and December so that by the time January rolls around, I’m settled into the routine. If there’s any revisions necessary, I can do them without starting my new year on the wrong foot.
I maintain my goals on mostly short and medium term basis. This includes daily, weekly and quarterly planning (I don’t do monthly because it doesn’t work for me).
This may seem complicated (actually, it looks more complicated than it is but it’s just what helps me) but let me show you how exactly I do things.
I keep two diaries. One for daily and weekly and one for quarterly. I have a habit tracker on my phone for my daily non-Negotiables (exercise, meditation, reading and language).
The quarterly diary is my big big diary. Every quarter, it lists out all the big plans, what i want to do and who i want to be. It’s all the messy thoughts I have, all my dreams, my weaknesses, my strengths, etc etc. The only “practical” part of the diary is that there is one general plan made at the end of my mad scribbling. It has the general idea, feedback I’ve received from other people and compilation of all the advice I’ve gotten from my mentors.
2. The daily - weekly diary breaks the plan into manageable bits. I write out the week’s plan (who do i need to meet, who do i need to follow up with, any major presentation coming up, any assignment, what am i reading this week) and write a one sentence daily update on it.
I can’t use a habit tracker for this because i’m not tracking meditation or exercise on here. I’m tracking my career goals, my ambitious goals, into smaller goals. A habit tracker wouldnt cut it because I would have to elaborate more on certain things.
For example:
“20-27th Nov: Weekly list
budget presentation on Monday
1 event to attend on Tuesday. Topic: XYZ
Reading: the inheritors
reach out to mentor, schedule a meeting
7 language essays and 7 videos
Monday, 20th Nov.
work presentation: complete.
Feedback received: i need to work on XYZ.
points they raised that didnt cross my mind: XYZ
follow ups required and if yes, with who: XYZ
reading: complete. Interesting point they brought up: XYZ
essay for the day: complete.
Video complete:
Tuesday, 21st Nov
mentor meeting scheduled
event went well. Met: A, B, C who work in XYZ companies. Follow up with them next week for coffee/ drinks.
essay: complete
video: complete”
Having two diaries helps me because i can find my bigger goals without having to go through the daily entry mess. I like having the two separate.
Nov ‘23 + Dec ‘23 + Q1 2024’s goals include:
Social (meeting new people, maintaining networks)
Intellectual (biographies, documentaries, industry reports)
Personal (soft skills, language studies)
Work (presentations, courses, conferences)
A major change I’ve making this year is actively working on every single weakness I have that I know is a potential strength. I’m ignoring weaknesses that I know are 100% weaknesses like coding because there’s just no way I can sit in front of a computer and learn all that, it’s absolutely not my cup of tea and does not make me happy.
I made a list of every single weakness i have and I’m embarrassed about and ashamed of. 2024 is the year of NO shame. I’m not letting my intrusive thoughts win.
Next to each weakness I wrote out a potential solution.
Ex: not picking up the language i’m studying as fast as i want to -> write 1 short essay and a 1-2 minute video of me talking about anything in that language every single day
I’m not allowing any unnecessary negative self doubt or self talk happen. Constructive criticism is one thing, being a bitch to yourself is another. I plan to learn a lot next year.
I’ve created a manageable exposure therapy plan for myself - I aim to meet 3 new people every month and follow up with 5 new connections every month, whether it’s over chat or irl.
I’ve made a list of business biographies I’m going to read. This year I reached my reading target earlier than anticipated which I’m very happy about. Next year I’m focusing on books that are solely about business, technology and psychology.
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CONGO
https://cfr.org/global-conflict-tracker/conflict/violence-democratic-republic-congo
https://reporting.unhcr.org/operational/situations/democratic-republic-congo-situation
https://freetheslaves.net/our-work/where-we-work/dr_congo/
https://x.com/silvergrassleaf/status/1758832748649685247?s=20
https://www.amnesty.org/en/location/africa/east-africa-the-horn-and-great-lakes/democratic-republic-of-the-congo/report-democratic-republic-of-the-congo/
Congo Genocide Explained: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW. (youtube.com)
CONGRESS: Do Not Allow Our Tax Dollars To Fund Conflict In The Congo! - Action Network
Congo Campaigns - Friends of the Congo
AeonThespain on Tumblr: Congo Action 3
healafrica.org
(1) Elbit Systems,... - Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement | Facebook
SUDAN
https://eyesonsudan.net/ & https://eyesonsudan.net/reading
https://ushmm.org/genocide-prevention/countries/sudan
https://salesianmissions.org/salesian_country/sudan/
https://twitter.com/longlivemireia/status/1721105158736658897?s=46&t=03WDSopg10j_4l7ZJXSPZQ
https://twitter.com/hkzuk/status/1722122606453661940?s=46&t=03WDSopg10j_4l7ZJXSPZQ
from the river to the sea 🍉🕊 on Tumblr: sudanese-led causes to donate to!
NasAlSudan on X: "The War in Sudan - A Thread. (1/5) #KeepEyesOnSudan #SudanActionWeek https://t.co/4B7BGgaAUk" / X (twitter.com)
HAITI
https://theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/12/haiti-crisis-jovenel-moise-gangs-water-way-out
https://reliefweb.int/report/haiti/abyss-despair-need-act-haiti-and-its-children-november-7-2023
https://aljazeera.com/where/haiti/
https://rescue.org/article/crisis-haiti-gang-violences-vice-grip-amidst-political-turmoil
https://nacla.org/guns-gangs-and-neocolonialism-hait
YEMEN
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LWER5czCh8xqWDe32f1XqU843t4dkwYNMyvm8OkYVNc/mobilebasic
https://launchgood.com/campaign/water_4_yemen_1#!/
https://thepetitionsite.com/1/endhungerinYemen/
https://linktr.ee/helpsaveyemen
https://arabcenterdc.org/resource/a-timeline-of-the-yemen-crisis-from-the-1990s-to-the-present/
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvP9M_2fl-eN5-GOOFSqKcCAmbD4sF0Ep
https://x.com/absolutelacunae/status/1760728489102332215?s=20
https://theworld.org/stories/2017-11-29/heres-how-you-can-send-help-people-trapped-worlds-worst-humanitarian-crisis
https://news.un.org/en/story/2019/02/1032811
A Timeline of the Yemen Crisis, from the 1990s to the Present (arabcenterdc.org)
TIGRAY
Ways to help Tigray: https://x.com/shimmeringolds/status/1719186653187613101?s=20
Urgent Petition to Save Lives: Resume Food Aid in Tigray, Ethiopia
Text SIGN PDPAKY to 50409 to send this to your officials.
RESISTBOT
Resources: https://x.com/GLITCHDXCTORTTV/status/1759580042877599986?s=20
Ethiopia’s Invisible Ethnic Cleansing | Human Rights Watch (hrw.org)
Ethiopia’s New Year’s ledger: A controversial new port and domestic challenges | Brookings
Ethiopia in Troubled Waters | Council on Foreign Relations (cfr.org)
Ethiopia Humanitarian Crisis - Center for Disaster Philanthropy
Conflict in Ethiopia | Global Conflict Tracker (cfr.org)
X (twitter.com)
Free Tigray Movement
- (tigrayactioncommittee.com)
Tigray Genocide: Everything you need to know. (youtube.com)
United Tegaru Resource Carrd (stopthewarontigray.carrd.co)
Tigray needs YOUR help! | Linktree
WEST PAUPA
What's going on in Papua?: https://x.com/shimmeringolds/status/1761073053880942781?s=20
https://freewestpapua.org/Resources & info: https://x.com/folkoftheshelf/status/1746154482009018614?s=20
https://www.freewestpapua.org/documents/the-neglected-genocide-human-rights-abuses-against-papuans-in-the-central-highlands-1977-1978/ https://news.un.org/en/audio/2014/05/589082
sof’s library ✧˖°. 🥄 on X: "‘what’s happening in West Papua?’ — resources + info + how you can help: a thread https://t.co/4hWOTY6lFA" / X (twitter.com)
PUERTO RICO
𝐫𝐚𝐛𝐢𝐝𝐠𝐮𝐭𝐬 🫐🐾 on X: "since not enough people are talking about puerto rico heres a master 🧵 on information about the genocide going on, how the us is trying to make puerto rico an "american state", and how you can help !! https://t.co/NBJDIQiesi" / X (twitter.com)
‘Cultural Genocide’ in Puerto Rico Displaces Population, Destroys Heritage (sputnikglobe.com)
Puerto Rico | Genocide Studies Program (yale.edu)
Puerto Rico — 500 Years Of Oppression on JSTOR
Puerto Rico faces genocide – Workers World
2020 Plan Means Genocide for Puerto Rico! - Puerto Rican Cultural Center (prcc-chgo.org)
X (twitter.com)
X (twitter.com)
HAWAII
X (twitter.com)
Decolonizing genocide in Brazil: challenges to defending Indigenous collective life - IWGIA - International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs
2023 Point in Time Counts – Hawai'i Health Data Warehouse (hhdw.org)
Tourism's Negative Impact on Native Hawaiians (tripod.com)
Hawaii Tourism: Opposite of a Paradise for Locals (irreview.org)
X (twitter.com)
YANOMAMI
Decolonizing genocide in Brazil: challenges to defending Indigenous collective life - IWGIA - International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs
Yanomami (survivalinternational.org)
thread
KASHMIR
Profile / X (twitter.com)
X (twitter.com)
Template for arms sales email - Google Docs
MYANMAR
Future Bleak for Rohingya in Bangladesh, Myanmar | Human Rights Watch (hrw.org)
Myanmar’s Troubled History: Coups, Military Rule, and Ethnic Conflict | Council on Foreign Relations (cfr.org)
BETTER BURMA
PAKISTAN
Pakistan dispatch: violent crackdown on peaceful Baloch protesters in Islamabad highlights ongoing injustices in Balochistan region - JURIST - News
EAST TURKISTAN
Camp Album Project – Art to Fight Xinjiang Abuse (camp-album.com)
IHH releases new report on East Turkestan | İHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation
Elderly Uyghurs die alone in jail, detained on trumped-up charges – The China Project
N 🖋️ on X: "A 🧵 about East Turkistan. What's going on and what can you do? From an Uyghur Girl: https://t.co/XPLS19T7fh" / X (twitter.com)
thread
ARMENIA
Learn for Artsakh
RESOURCES_COMP.xlsx - Google Sheets
Artsakh Genocide Action Toolkit
GOOGLE DOCS
TIBET
International Campaign for Tibet (savetibet.org)
Free Tibet - Take Action, Donate, Learn. - Our vision is a free Tibet in which Tibetans are able to determine their own future and the human rights of all are respected.
International Tibet Network
PAVIA MAIN 🐺🍬🔪 on X: "🧵from a 🇲🇳 person on some ways to help Tibet and Inner Mongolia - SPREAD THE WORD!! https://t.co/jtRrYtQsKY" / X (twitter.com)
PLACES IVE MISSED
Cheaper & Deeper!! on Tumblr: People & countries mentioned in the thread: DR Congo - M23, Cobalt Darfur, Sudan - International Criminal Court, CNN, BBC...
a𓂆sa on Tumblr: IMPORTANT CRISES THAT ARE BEING IGNORED BY THE WORLD
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sophiecountsclouds · 1 year
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First Quarter Reading Stats 2023
Hello! I’m really not sure if the title of this blog post sounds too formal, when realistically I just wanted to share some of the cool pie charts from my Storygraph account of everything I’ve been reading so far this year. And I love being nosy with this sort of thing on other people’s reading habits, so I might as well share my own! In the first three months of 2023, I have read 17 books –…
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haly-reads · 4 months
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✨ a few books i hope to read in 2024 ✨
last year, i read 57 books. thanks to master's, i read a diverse range of works. i usually switch between mindful reading and planned reading every year. last year, i had a set reading goal and a monthly reading tracker. this year, i would be reading books, minus any fixed number.
I had started the brothers karamazov, another complex work by dosto, but sadly couldn't finish in 2023. so this year, i will finish reading it. and this year, i also hope to finish reading all of austen's novels.
what's your reading resolutions for the year?
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