development: social, urban, spiritual, media, kebab

good morning, i am neysan. i am learning. 

Applying for a U.S. visa | the Nazi question

I was just applying for a visa into the American homeland, when i came upon this curious question [translation below]:


It reads: "Were you ever or are you currently involved in acts of espionage or sabotage, in terrorist activities, in genocide, or were you in any way involved in persecutions perpetrated by the Nazi regime or their allies?"

Do they ask because i'm German?

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Islamic Headwear for Women [infographic]

I've heard these terms thrown around and finally someone draws up a satisfying explanation. Thank you "Stern" magazine.

Burqa: Covers every single part of a woman; traditionally worn in parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Niqab: Leaves only the eyes visible; worn in Arabic Gulf region.
Chador: Cloak covering everything but the face; mostly worn in Iran.
Hijab: Combination of head scarf and a coat; leaves only the face visible.
Head scarf: Simplest form of the hijab, swung around the neck; quite popular.

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Worldwide Rise in Natural Disasters

This fascinating infographic by Michael Paukner depicts two data values. One [the lighter white] shows the number of people reported killed in natural disasters. The drop in number is understandable, given increased development and human facilities. The other number however [the lighter grey shade] shows an incredibly dramatic rise in the number of natural disasters, starting mostly in the middle of the 20th century. I believe God is trying to tell us something here... [click image to enlarge]

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Because every country is best at something

Iran is No1 in Pistachios, Rwanda in amount of farmers, Ecuador in Bananas. Learnjoy.

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GAPMINDER World Data Visualizations

This right here is just one example of incredible visualization of trends in our world. I need to study these, you too.

From: http://www.gapminder.org/world/

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Europe's Web of Debt / finally understood

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FRESH DYNAMICS / 2010

1 Hour + 1 Camera and we give you FUNK w/ KM.

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Revolutionize your sleep pattern / go Polyphasic

If you’ve gone 24 hours without sleep, you might notice that you drift away into dreams straight from being awake. This because your body goes instantly into REM sleep as a protection mechanism. The way to hack yourself into entering REM sleep without being exhausted is to trick your body into thinking you’re going to get a tiny amount of sleep. You can train it to enter REM for short periods of time throughout the day in 20-minute naps rather than in one lump at night. This is how polyphasic sleep works.

Thank you Dustin Curtis | Read more into Polyphasic Sleep

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"Change will lead to insight far more often than insight will lead to change" - Milton Erickson

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The Power of Diversity

Linda Zhou, Alice Wei Zhao, Lori Ying, Angela Yu-Yun Yeung, Lynnelle Lin Ye, Kevin Young Xu, Benjamin Chang Sun, Jane Yoonhae Suh, Katheryn Cheng Shi, Sunanda Sharma, Sarine Gayaneh Shahmirian, Arjun Ranganath Puranik, Raman Venkat Nelakant, Akhil Mathew, Paul Masih Das, David Chienyun Liu, Elisa Bisi Lin, Yifan Li, Lanair Amaad Lett, Ruoyi Jiang, Otana Agape Jakpor, Peter Danming Hu, Yale Wang Fan, Yuval Yaacov Calev, Levent Alpoge, John Vincenzo Capodilupo and Namrata Anand.

All these kids are American high school students. They were the majority of the 40 finalists in the 2010 Intel Science Talent Search, which, through a national contest, identifies and honors the top math and science high school students in America, based on their solutions to scientific problems.

Indeed, if you need any more convincing about the virtues of immigration, just come to the Intel science finals. I am a pro-immigration fanatic. I think keeping a constant flow of legal immigrants into our country — whether they wear blue collars or lab coats — is the key to keeping us ahead of China. Because when you mix all of these energetic, high-aspiring people with a democratic system and free markets, magic happens. If we hope to keep that magic, we need immigration reform that guarantees that we will always attract and retain, in an orderly fashion, the world’s first-round aspirational and intellectual draft choices.

Read Friedman's entire Op-Ed Column at NYTimes.com

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