Friday, September 4, 2015

Real Eyes Realize SEAL Lies

Seal Clubbing Still Exists, And Other Facts, What Happens To Former ISIS Fighters?, WATCH: What It Looks Like To Leave Our Solar System At The Speed Of Light, What a Kanye Presidency Would Look Like, Fostering Black Tech, Why Are People At Festivals So Happy?
The Daily Digg
Friday, September 4, 2015
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WHAT WE LEARNED THIS WEEK
Seal Clubbing Still Exists, And Other Facts
digg.com
This week we learned that seals still get whacked, one man's life mission is to track down phony Navy SEALs and Swiss golf is really hard.
CEASE AND ISIS
What Happens To Former ISIS Fighters?
newyorker.com
Thousands of Europeans have left for the jihadi battlefields of Syria and Iraq, but what consequences await them when they return to the EU?
RIDE THE LIGHT
WATCH: What It Looks Like To Leave Our Solar System At The Speed Of Light
digg.com
There is no better way to grasp the enormity of space than hitching a ride on a photon from the Sun. Take an hour, and just let the sheer vastness of our universe sink in. And this video stops at Jupiter.
A BEAUTIFUL DARK TWISTED FANTASY
What a Kanye Presidency Would Look Like
motherboard.vice.com
"The President takes a seat at the head of a long conference table. Kendrick Lamar sits at the other end. The President holds out his hand, and a member of Secret Services steps forward, and places a Snickers in his outstretched palm. "You're the guy with all the money," he says down the table."
HIDDEN GENIUSES
Fostering Black Tech
nytimes.com
The acute underrepresentation of blacks in the technology industry has given rise to a flurry of initiatives in Silicon Valley to improve the situation.
THE DRUGS HELP
Why Are People At Festivals So Happy?
vice.com
"There's the feeling of missing out on an eternal summer: photos of beautiful people in their flower crowns, crop tops and fringe, evoking feelings of first times and the wonder that comes from new makeouts with other beautiful people, new drugs and seeing your favorite band live."
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DONKEY MOM
Image: Anju, a Western Lowland Gorilla, holds her week-old newborn in the Gorilla World habitat at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden, Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015, in Cincinnati. The baby, who has yet to be named, is the 50th gorilla born at the zoo since 1970.​
Anju, a Western Lowland Gorilla, holds her week-old newborn in the Gorilla World habitat at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden, Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015, in Cincinnati. The baby, who has yet to be named, is the 50th gorilla born at the zoo since 1970.​ Credit: AP Photo/John Minchillo
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