YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #police #astronomy #florida #law #racism
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode toggle
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Go LIVE! Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Offers
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

Caitlin Clark’s Teammate Sophie Cunningham Vaults To Superstardom After Finally Standing Up For Her
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Caitlin Clark’s Teammate Sophie Cunningham Vaults To Superstardom After Finally Standing Up For Her

I've gotta get me a Sophie Cunningham jersey
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

Whoopi Goldberg Believes Black People In America Suffer The ‘Same’ Abuses As Women, Gay People In Iran
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Whoopi Goldberg Believes Black People In America Suffer The ‘Same’ Abuses As Women, Gay People In Iran

'Used to just keep hanging black people'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

Trump Admin Sues Kentucky Over In-State Tuition For Illegals
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Trump Admin Sues Kentucky Over In-State Tuition For Illegals

'This unequal treatment of Americans is squarely prohibited'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

‘Cracked My Sternum’: REO Speedwagon Singer Terry Luttrell Hospitalized After Car Crash
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

‘Cracked My Sternum’: REO Speedwagon Singer Terry Luttrell Hospitalized After Car Crash

'I woke up and I was in a cocoon (the airbags)'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

HART: ICE, ICE Baby
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

HART: ICE, ICE Baby

'Not exactly Rosa Parks and Dr. King-like.'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

The Terminator Drops Pro-America TRUTH BOMB on Flustered Joy Behar
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

The Terminator Drops Pro-America TRUTH BOMB on Flustered Joy Behar

The Daily Caller's Natalie Sandoval breaks down this moment on Media Madness.
Like
Comment
Share
SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
4 w

Here Is the Shortlist for the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction
Favicon 
reactormag.com

Here Is the Shortlist for the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction

News Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction Here Is the Shortlist for the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction Congratulations to all those selected! By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on June 18, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share The Ursula K. Le Guin Foundation announced its shortlist today for its 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction: a $25,000 cash award given each year to a work of fiction that best reflects the concepts and ideas central to Le Guin’s work. Here are the eight finalists selected by the foundation after a public nomination process: Rakesfall by Vajra Chandrasekera (Tordotcom Publishing) Archangels of Funk by Andrea Hairston (Tordotcom Publishing) Blackheart Man by Nalo Hopkinson (Saga Press) The Sapling Cage by Margaret Killjoy (Feminist Press) The West Passage by Jared Pechaček (Tordotcom Publishing) The City in Glass by Nghi Vo (Tordotcom Publishing) North Continent Ribbon by Ursula Whitcher (Neon Hemlock) Remember You Will Die by Eden Robins (Sourcebooks Landmark) The winner will be selected by the following authors on the prize’s selection panel: Matt Bell, Indra Das, Kelly Link, Sequoia Nagamatsu, and Rebecca Roanhorse.   The prize’s first year was in 2022, where the foundation sought to recognize “realists of a larger reality, who can imagine real grounds for hope and see alternatives to how we live now.” Last year, Anne de Marcken’s It Lasts Forever and Then It’s Over won the prize, with Rebecca Campbell’s Arboreality winning in 2023. The 2025 recipient will be announced on October 21, 2025, which is also Le Guin’s birthday. Congratulations to those on the shortlist![end-mark] The post Here Is the Shortlist for the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction appeared first on Reactor.
Like
Comment
Share
SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
4 w

Time and Tide: The Book of Records by Madeleine Thien
Favicon 
reactormag.com

Time and Tide: The Book of Records by Madeleine Thien

Books book reviews Time and Tide: The Book of Records by Madeleine Thien A novel that leaps across centuries past and future, as if different eras were separated by only a door. By Mahvesh Murad | Published on June 18, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share Madeleine Thien’s last book, Booker and Women’s Prize shortlisted 2016 novel Do Not Say We Have Nothing, refers to a manuscript that the characters share amongst each other in secret. This manuscript is called The Book of Records, which Thien later explained was a narrative in which her characters saw mirror versions of themselves in an alternative China. This idea of mirror selves existing in alternative worlds continues in her new novel The Book of Records, in which a woman looks back at her time in a surreal transient space called the Sea.  Lina and her father leave their home Foshan in southern China very suddenly, partly because of climate change, partly for reasons that become apparent later in the novel, that have to do with Lina’s father’s work. In Foshan, Lina’s father Wei Shen had worked as a systems engineer “managing the structures of cyberspace.” Looking back at her life, Lina explains that her father had worked “for the government and, later, against it.” He refers to their sudden departure from Foshan as an exile that was a “blessing because [they] had freed [themselves] from an empire in ruins, a hall of mirrors in which good people could betray themselves and never even know it.” When they reach the Sea, Lina is just seven, and Wui Shen attempts to explain the strange space to her as buildings “made of time.” “Everyone passes through the Sea,” he says. “After these buildings, histories break apart… The Sea is a length of string crossing over itself. The Sea is made of time.” It is a sort of transit lounge, a half-way house almost, a labyrinthian structure of enclaves rambling by a nameless sea, a place where people only arrive in order to move on, usually quite fast. But Lina and her father do not leave for many, many years. He is too sick to move; she is unwilling to leave him. He is also adamant that her mother and brother will find them there. And so Lina grows up in the Sea, reading and rereading the same three books her father grabbed off their shelves when they left Foshan, as she watches other migrants come and go.  Lina wanders through the enclaves, finding new rooms and spaces often filled with things left behind by both time and tide, with only a handful of people around who seem as stalled in that strange limbo world as she and her father are. These three neighbours bear a great similarity to the three people Lina’s only books are about. The books are biographies of Baruch Spinoza, the 17th Century philosopher; Hannah Arendt, the German philosopher; and Du Fu, the Tang Dynasty Chinese poet. Each of them was forced to move out of their home by circumstances out of their control; migration forced by war is a central theme of the novel, as is being cast out of society for being perceived as the “other.” Lina discovers the existence of neighbours Bento, Blucher, and Jupiter one day while wandering the halls of the abandoned building she lives in, and is surprised to find that they seem to have been there forever, living together, accepting her entry into their lives as perfectly natural. Who are her neighbours, if not versions of the historic figures in her books, avatars echoing through time? The Book of Records examines how no matter how different lives may be, shared experiences resonate through decades, centuries, continuing through time and creating a sense of community via empathy.  Buy the Book The Book of Records Madeleine Thien Buy Book The Book of Records Madeleine Thien Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget Thien has spoken in interviews of being left with books a lot as a child. Lina too is often alone, and is essentially raised by the three books she has, by the people those books are about, and then their real life versions who live alongside her. “How much can a child learn from just three books?” says Wui Shen to Lina. “Maybe you and I should set our sights on the world that emerges between each and every person. Maybe imagination is a way to find that place.” The story shifts between Lina and the three historic characters’ lives, so there is a lot of jumping back and forth along various time lines, geographical locations, and complex political situations. It is not easy to keep up with, because while the language is consistently elegant, it can also be at times languorous and monotone; regardless of whose story is being told, there isn’t much of a distinction in voice. There is a lot of highbrow philosophical discussion. There is not a lot of plot; there may not be a plot at all, in fact. Thien is clearly more interested in lyricism and texture and large philosophical concepts than in plot and story, but The Book of Records often makes you feel as if you’re drowning.  Lina’s voice stands out perhaps a little more among the rest at first, but very quickly fades into the background. Which is a shame, since she is more interesting. The parts of the novel that document her life in the Sea are the ones that really sing, though the worldbuilding of a post climate change environment is sparse. The stories of the historical figures are fictionalised history, and delve into the philosophies of each person as well as into their personal and professional lives, often leaving the reader feeling uncertain as to how they connect with Lina’s story, and why. Why this, why them, why these ideas? It takes a fair bit of time to realise that this is not a new story or an old story. It is a story that exists constantly—one that is always being written, rewritten, evolving—but at its core, it remains the same. Who are we when we are not where we thought we belonged? Does where we are define who we are? We talk of migrants, of third culture kids, of climate change and of war refugees or economic migrants—but how do we define our identity? Culturally, ethnically, geographically? Questions arise about belonging, community, finding refuge, making a home for yourself. Nebulous trails connect the characters with themes of escape from totalitarian regimes and coercion; it is only much later in her life that Lina is able to understand why her father fled, and that her father’s life was “a weight [she] should never have been made to carry.”  If one is to say that this book is Madeleine Thien at her best, then it would be prudent to remember what she’s best at. Those looking for a strong plot will be disappointed. Those looking for large scale philosophical vibes and beauty and heartache and love and loss and a search for belonging will sigh at the pleasure of reading all this in some very sophisticated prose. As Wui Shen says, “You’ll never be content if you can’t separate what you want from what really is. This world isn’t what you wish it to be, this world is more than we can begin to imagine, and sometimes I think it’s more than we deserve.” Lina, as an adult, thinks back to her father’s words and finds that they approach her like warning, “a map and a caution.” As they should do Thien’s readers, too.[end-mark] The Book of Records is published by W. W. Norton & Company. The post Time and Tide: <i>The Book of Records</i> by Madeleine Thien appeared first on Reactor.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
4 w

Education Secretary Vows She Won’t Let Illegal Gender Ideology ‘Slip Through the Cracks’
Favicon 
www.dailysignal.com

Education Secretary Vows She Won’t Let Illegal Gender Ideology ‘Slip Through the Cracks’

Education Secretary Linda McMahon says she is on guard against vestiges of Pride Month that could lead to violations of President Donald Trump’s order banning gender ideology instruction. “We’re not letting any of these things just slip through the cracks,” McMahon told The Daily Signal on Wednesday. Title IX was enacted into law on June 23, 1972, so President Donald Trump’s Department of Education is celebrating June as Title IX Month in honor of the federal law protecting women’s spaces and sports. To mark the 53rd anniversary of Title IX, the Department of Education announced investigations into two apparent violations of the federal law protecting women’s spaces and sports. McMahon said the case of an 11-year-old girl in Colorado who was forced to share a bed on an overnight school field trip with a transgender-identifying male is the kind of incident the department will be investigating this month. “That’s just not right for the child,” McMahon told The Daily Signal. “It’s not right for the parents to [not] learn about those things in advance, too.” When McMahon was a young girl, female-only sports teams didn’t exist, she told a group of reporters at a Wednesday breakfast. “What we’ve done in our country to establish Title IX is just so important, but we really laid down the ground rules and the work that we needed to do,” McMahon said, “and that is that we want to give women and girls access to equal sports-playing and equal opportunities.” The Education Department is working with the Justice Department on a Title IX Special Investigation Team to investigate Title IX violations as they surface. “We’ve taken a very strong effort here at the Department of Education now to investigate and to look at these issues as they come to our attention, because I think it’s just so important,” McMahon said. The post Education Secretary Vows She Won’t Let Illegal Gender Ideology ‘Slip Through the Cracks’ appeared first on The Daily Signal.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
4 w

AIPAC Calls on Trump, Congress for US Aid to Israel in Its Clash With Iran
Favicon 
www.dailysignal.com

AIPAC Calls on Trump, Congress for US Aid to Israel in Its Clash With Iran

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee is calling on Congress and the Trump administration to provide aid to Israel in its military conflict with Iran. “Israel is taking decisive action tonight against the Iranian nuclear program, which has been a growing threat not only to Israel, but to America and our other regional allies,” AIPAC wrote in a statement released Wednesday. AIPAC, a pro-Israel lobbying group, was founded in 1954 and has since advocated for matériel support for the Jewish state.  In 2021, it established its own political action committee, allowing it to raise money for political candidates in the United States. In its statement, AIPAC calls on the White House and Congress to assist Israel in its conflict. “Members of Congress must speak out and stand unequivocally with our ally at this critical moment as it takes action to protect its families and the world from a nuclear-capable Iran,” it reads.  “The Administration and Congress should ensure that Israel has the resources and support needed to defend itself from any Iranian response.” Iran is a complicated issue for President Donald Trump, who has tended to oppose regime-change wars, but has also pledged to keep Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon for his entire political career. President Trump declined to say whether the US plans to join Israel’s military offensive on Iran, and said Tehran had reached out about the possibility of negotiations.“I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I’m going to do" https://t.co/zhATq6Xdwb pic.twitter.com/V3vAQwx0ZR— Bloomberg (@business) June 18, 2025 The president’s next move remains unclear, but he has posted “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” on social media, calling on Tehran to give up its nuclear ambitions. “I may do it, I may not do it, nobody knows what I’m going to do,” Trump said Wednesday when asked by reporters if he would strike Iran. “Nothing’s too late,” he replied, when asked if Iran could come back to negotiations. The post AIPAC Calls on Trump, Congress for US Aid to Israel in Its Clash With Iran appeared first on The Daily Signal.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 3546 out of 85641
  • 3542
  • 3543
  • 3544
  • 3545
  • 3546
  • 3547
  • 3548
  • 3549
  • 3550
  • 3551
  • 3552
  • 3553
  • 3554
  • 3555
  • 3556
  • 3557
  • 3558
  • 3559
  • 3560
  • 3561
Stop Seeing These Ads

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund