Aramaic is in a splintered and tenuous state. Yet it was the English of its time—a language that united a large number of distinct peoples across a vast region, a key to accessing life beyond one’s village, and a mark of sophistication to many. The Aramaeans themselves were in Babylon only temporarily: The Assyrians, who spoke a language called Akkadian, ousted them. But the Assyrians unwittingly helped the Aramaeans’ language extinguish their own. Namely, the Assyrians deported Aramaic-speakers far and wide, to Egypt and elsewhere. The Assyrians may have thought they were clearing their new territory, but this was like blowing on a fluffy milkweed and thinking of it as destruction rather than dissemination: The little seeds take root elsewhere. At this point, I am supposed to write that English’s preeminence could end as easily as Aramaic’s. Actually, however, I doubt it: I suspect that English will hold on harder and longer than any language in history. It happened to rise to its current position at a time when 3 things had happened, profoundly transformative enough to stop the music, as it were: print, widespread literacy, and an omnipresent media. Together, these things can drill a language into international consciousness in a historically unprecedented way, creating a sense of what is normal, cosmopolitan, cool even—arbitrary but possibly impregnable. If the Chinese, for example, rule the world someday, I suspect they will do it in English, just as King Darius ruled in Aramaic and Kublai Khan, despite speaking Mongolian, ruled China through Chinese translators 0.7 ka BP. Aramaic held sway at a time when a lingua franca was more fragile than it is today.
Month: September 2015
Parenting

McAfee runs for president
Can this election season get any more entertaining?
McAfee has received 1000s of emails from people encouraging him to run. But just hours before the FEC filing went up, he was “still in a quandary about whether to run myself or find someone else for my party.”
2015-09-23: Sorry for the “business” “insider” link but this is kinda intriguing. His platform: Switch the us to metric, abolish TSA, abolish border controls:
We’re in a cyber war and we’re losing. The Chinese are invading and we don’t even see it. We are in a world that depends upon a science that demands metrics and we have 5280 feet in a length. And we have 212 degrees as the boiling point of water. What madness!
Hell Club
That looks like a fun night out
Hell’s Club is the nightspot where famous film characters go to relax. Or to start a gunfight. It’s an imaginary dance hall where the most unlikely heroes run into each other – from Blade to the T-800.
Is decluttering a disorder?
No. But, here’s the concern trolling anyway.
Unlike hoarding, which was officially reclassified as a disorder in 2013, compulsive decluttering doesn’t appear as its own entry in the DSM; instead, it’s typically considered a manifestation of obsessive-compulsive disorder. “I see it all the time. People rarely come into my office because they have a problem with being too efficient or wanting to declutter. They’re not sleeping at night and they’re feeling jittery and irritable … they’ll sit in my office and straighten my pillows. They’re not comfortable until everything is in order.”
Socality Barbie

Socality Barbie is a fantastic Instagram account satirizing the great millennial adventurer trend in photography. It’s an endless barrage of pensive selfies in exotic locales, arty snapshots of coffee, and just the right filter on everything.
Overparenting creates incompetents
Have you ever done your children’s homework for them? Have you driven to school to drop off an assignment that they forgot? Have you done a college student’s laundry? What about coming along to Junior’s first job interview?
Swole Babies
apparently tiny 5 year old bodybuilders is a thing.
Human Self-Driving Cars
The reason Uber [is] expensive is because you’re not just paying for the car, you’re paying for the [driver] in the car.” In other words, from Uber’s perspective, a self-driving car is a car where they don’t have to pay for a driver; the implementation details don’t matter.
With that in mind, think again about the commute problem: right now 75% of Americans drive alone to work. Every one of those solo commuters is a potential UberPool driver, and not just that: because they are making the trip whether they are an UberPool driver or not, they are, from Uber’s perspective, self-driving cars. They are drivers Uber would not need to pay for. This, I believe, will be Uber 2.0: human-powered self-driving cars primarily focused on commutes.
Brooklyn Bar Menu Generator
Have you recently purchased a bar in Brooklyn, but are completely bereft of original ideas? Firstly, congratulations on joining the thriving Brooklyn bar scene! Secondly, relax! You can use this handy tool to generate a name and menu for your fine establishment – absolutely no imagination necessary!