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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Recipe of the Week: Cassie’s Cucumber Salad
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prepping.com

Recipe of the Week: Cassie’s Cucumber Salad

The following recipe for Cassie’s Cucumber Salad is from SurvivalBlog reader Cassandra H. Ingredients 2 Long English cucumbers (about 2 pounds) 1 small red onion 1 1/2 tablespoons salt 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon of white wine vinegar or substitute a sherry vinegar 1 teaspoon of granulated sugar 2 tablespoons of fresh dill (or 2 teaspoons of dried dill.) Directions Wash the cucumbers thoroughly. Take Note: These days a lot of store-bought cukes are coated with wax. (I use equal parts water and vinegar together in a baking dish. I soak cukes for a minute, turning them often, and then … The post Recipe of the Week: Cassie’s Cucumber Salad appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Fiskars Pro Folding Utility Knife, by Thomas Christianson
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prepping.com

Fiskars Pro Folding Utility Knife, by Thomas Christianson

With a hefty, ergonomically-shaped, rubber-coated handle approximately 0.88 inches thick and a well-engineered, all-metal blade holder, the Fiskars Pro Folding Utility Knife provides a rugged tool for serious cutting. It is roughly 4.5 inches in length folded and 6.5 inches open. The supplied Carbon Max blade provides superior edge retention in comparison with standard utility knife blades. The chunky handle is comfortable to grip, but also takes up quite a bit of room when clipped into a pants pocket. With a manufacturer suggested retail price of $26.99 at www.fiskars.com at the time of this writing, and widely available elsewhere online … The post Fiskars Pro Folding Utility Knife, by Thomas Christianson appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Preparedness Notes for Monday — May 20, 2024
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prepping.com

Preparedness Notes for Monday — May 20, 2024

Today, some sad news of the passing of a famed fighter ace: Bud Anderson, the last World War II ‘triple ace,’ dies at 102. — On May 20, 1927, Charles Lindbergh took off on the first solo non-stop transatlantic flight. He departed from Long Island in the United States and arrived in Paris, France at 22:22 on the next day. — On May 20, 1862, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, which provided 160 acres of public land virtually free of charge to those who had lived on and cultivated the land for at least five years. — … The post Preparedness Notes for Monday — May 20, 2024 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

9 Terrifying Truths About Long-Term Economic Crises
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prepping.com

9 Terrifying Truths About Long-Term Economic Crises

Preparing for a long-term economic crisis is about more than ensuring you’ve got your food stocks and a way to protect yourself at home. Major economic downturns in history, such as the Panic of 1873 and the Great Depression of the 1930s, posed challenges that evolved challenges over time. With past prolonged financial crises as […] The post 9 Terrifying Truths About Long-Term Economic Crises appeared first on Ask a Prepper.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

⚡EMERGENCY UPDATE: IRANIAN PRESIDENT IS DEAD! RUSSIA, CHINA AND IRAN MILITARY ON HIGHEST ALERT
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prepping.com

⚡EMERGENCY UPDATE: IRANIAN PRESIDENT IS DEAD! RUSSIA, CHINA AND IRAN MILITARY ON HIGHEST ALERT

Time is running out. Gear up here Use discount code SURVIVALPREPPER for 10% off / Premium Survival/ Emergency Equipment https://canadianpreparedness.com/ GET EMERGENCY PRESCRIPTION MEDS AND ANTIBIOTICS (affiliate link) https://jasemedical.com/canadianprepper GET WHOLESALE FREEZEDRIED FOOD (World reknown quality) USE DISCOUNT CODE 'CanadianPrepper' https://tinyurl.com/nhhtddh6 GET GOLD AND SILVER FROM A VETTED REPUTABLE COMPANY (affiliate links) IN CANADA https://www.dpbolvw.net/click-100810984-13658063 IN USA https://www.dpbolvw.net/click-100810984-10959597 Gasmasks and Protective Equipment https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/first-aid Emergency Food Supplies https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/food Survival Tools https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/all-tools Shelter and Sleep Systems https://www.canadianpreparedness.com/product-categories/shelter/ Water Filtration https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/water-filtration Cooking Systems https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/cookware Silky Saws https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/silky-saws-canadian-prepper Flashlights & Navigation https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/electronics Survival Gear/ Misc https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/protection-hunting Fire Starting https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/fatrope-firestarter-canadian-prepper Hygiene https://canadianpreparedness.com/collections/towels
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Abiogenic Deep Origin of Hydrocarbons Disputes the Climate Change Cult
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www.sgtreport.com

Abiogenic Deep Origin of Hydrocarbons Disputes the Climate Change Cult

by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News: Today I am publishing a guest post by my Australian friend Dr. John Gideon Hartnett about the Abiogenic Deep Origin of Hydrocarbons. I have briefly summarized this kind of research in the past (see: The Myth of “Fossil Fuels” and the Myth that the U.S. is Transitioning Away from Oil to […]
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Needs-Based Salaries Are Upending Workplace Norms
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reasonstobecheerful.world

Needs-Based Salaries Are Upending Workplace Norms

Anthony Jarrett has worked for Public Interest Research Centre (PIRC), a Wales-based charity where he oversees finance, governance and IT, since 2009. He is also, despite his 30 years of experience, the lowest-paid member of staff.  That’s because of PIRC’s “socially just pay policy,” designed to “recognize different needs and backgrounds.” Every employee gets the same core salary, with additional “uplifts” available to those who have financial dependents or live in a city (since the Covid-19 pandemic, staff can work remotely). Even more unusually, PIRC offers uplifts to staff members who have experienced marginalization, discrimination or oppression — no requirement to explain specifics, they simply make the request. Money is also available to help cover housing or health care emergencies.  PIRC is among a growing number of organizations challenging conventional ways of paying workers. Implementing such changes requires unusual levels of trust, patience and wholehearted commitment from all involved. But many of those calling for a more equal society see it as a no-brainer — and some mainstream employers may soon be following their lead. Reversed norms For many years every worker at PIRC, which helps social, environmental and climate justice movements, got the same salary. But, as issues of racial, gender and other inequalities became more apparent, that flat structure no longer felt right.  PIRC is based in Machynlleth, mid-Wales, but since the Covid-19 pandemic, staff have been able to work remotely. Credit: Reading Tom / Flickr The new policy, implemented in 2022, has “totally reversed” gender pay norms, Jarrett says. He’s fine with that, as long as his pay doesn’t decrease — in fact, it has gone up, as the charity has been gradually increasing core rates. He also gets a little extra because he has a young daughter.  PIRC did want to reward experience, but not if it caused significant age disparity. Under initial plans, Jarrett — as “a straight, white male,” he notes, “I’m not marginalized in any way” — would have been the best-paid by far. “This was not what this was about,” he says. That uplift has been reduced, for now, to just one percent a year, capped after five years.  PIRC’s policy is based on one used for many years by another charity, Platform, but with simplifications. For example, rather than calculating a reduction for employees with inherited wealth, PIRC simply expects that they would decline any increments available. (The aim is to “uplift, not penalize.”)  Crushed by negative news? Sign up for the Reasons to be Cheerful newsletter. [contact-form-7] With just six staff currently, PIRC’s policy hasn’t been fully tested. It doesn’t yet address disability justice, and other elements may be revisited in future, says Jarrett. In the meantime he faces one practical challenge when budgeting for a new position: a candidate’s pay could end up, say, 30 percent higher for someone living in London, with children and facing marginalization. That complicates budget forecasts.  Overall the policy has been good for individuals, he says. It also sends a strong signal to potential employees, and it may have contributed to a more diverse workforce. A few years ago applicants tended to be middle-class graduates. “That’s definitely changed,” Jarrett says. Now, more people with experience of marginalization are applying for jobs. Happiness Greaterthan, a collective of around 20 independent facilitators, consultants, coaches and others, also has an unconventional approach to pay. At the end of a joint project, fees are not distributed solely on hours worked or value produced — even if looking beyond those felt “really uncomfortable” at first, says Francesca Pick, a Spain-based founding partner of Greaterthan. Francesca Pick. Credit: Andi Crown Instead, they use the “Happy Money Story” method, adapted from an idea developed by the coach Charles Davies. First, each person shares reflections on the project and on their and others’ contributions and needs. Then they go away and individually set out how they would split the money. Proposals are shared and discussed until the group agrees on one that makes everyone happy. The whole process might take several meetings, or, when people are more used to it, just 10 minutes. Factors considered might include personal needs, such as temporary upheavals at home, or individual experiences of the project — one may have found it energizing, while another found it draining. But it completely depends on the situation and those involved, says Pick, and a group could also decide to distribute fees in a more conventional way. That flexibility is “really liberating,” says Pick, who has been through at least 40 Happy Money Stories, making up her entire income, over the past two years. Another benefit: It’s “a powerful tool” for a healthy team relationship — any tensions arising during the project are surfaced, and participants must consider everyone, not just themselves. Someone who tends to undervalue themselves might even be encouraged by co-workers to ask for more money.  Perhaps surprisingly, Pick says this payment model makes her feel more, not less, secure. It’s a relief, she says, to know that “whatever happens, we will have a conversation, and we will figure out what’s going to work. All I need to do is trust the capacity we built as a group. That’s something no one can take away from us.”  Pick acknowledges that a Happy Money Story is “pretty out there.” It wouldn’t work for salaried positions — although Greaterthan, whose work focuses on supporting other “purpose-driven” organizations, has helped one client to test it for allocating bonuses. What’s important, she says, is not necessarily that everyone adopts a similar approach, but that workers can design a model that meets their needs.  Unlearning harmful ways Employers often keep salary information confidential, paying one person more than another for the same job simply because they negotiate better. Pick argues that this favors people “who already have high self-worth,” while those who see themselves as less worthy — “a signal that society gives to a lot of people,” like women or ethnic minorities — lose out.  Lisa Jaspers. Credit: Lena Scherer Berlin-based social entrepreneur Lisa Jaspers agrees. “The way we compensate now usually means that the people who are most privileged earn the most money,” she says. That happens even among organizations that exist to tackle social problems.  To address this, Jaspers and four co-workers within the Unlearn Business Lab, a group that aims to “prototype a just economy that is regenerative, redistributive and collective,” undertook a year-long experiment. Through this “compensation lab,” they developed a framework that factors in an individual’s privilege, the number of hours they can comfortably work (accounting for health issues or caring responsibilities, for example), wealth and other needs. The framework is now used for distributing pay for projects undertaken by Unlearn Business Lab. For Jaspers it is a question of values — she finds it “really important” to know that she is not contributing to higher inequality. More pragmatically, pay that meets individuals’ needs also means that Unlearn Business Lab can retain team members from less privileged backgrounds, whose insights, she notes, are “super-essential to what we do,” and who may otherwise need to find more stable and lucrative work elsewhere.  Not so radical Doing pay differently isn’t confined to the fringes. In 2015, credit card processing company Gravity Payments set a $70,000 minimum salary for all 120 staff. Social media firm Buffer is among those to adopt transparent salaries. Other companies allow employees to set their own salaries. But many feel these efforts don’t go far enough. Self-set salaries often come from a more libertarian worldview and can end up reinforcing existing inequality unless there’s also “deeper work on power — who has what kinds of it, and who doesn’t,” says Liam Barrington-Bush, co-founder of UK-based RadHR, which helps organizations to implement “radical” HR processes and policies.  Privilege or needs-based compensation may yet enter the mainstream. In the last couple of years, Pick says, “new pay” has emerged as a term that people are writing and talking about. Germany’s New Pay Collective was formed in 2021 to bring together interested organizations and academics, and more recently a New Pay Community was formed in Switzerland. Significantly, one well-known German commercial company has recently approached Unlearn Business Lab and is considering elements of privilege-based compensation, says Jaspers. She will soon host a “compensation lab” for other interested organizations. Become a sustaining member today! Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can. Join Considering employee needs isn’t actually controversial, Jarrett suggests. A business won’t do well if staff are preoccupied by money worries. And few would disagree that raising children adds financial pressure. Many would argue childcare and health care support are a government’s responsibility. New pay advocates agree — but point out that governments aren’t providing it. As for paying certain demographic groups more than others? “I don’t see why not,” Jarrett says. After all, employers “have been happy to pay men more than women for 50 years.” Still, discussing needs and privileges “is a hell of a can of worms,” warns Barrington-Bush. Talking about pay “taps into our insecurities, our fears — whatever version of money scarcity or class position we grew up with.” Even among groups pursuing non-hierarchy and transparency, he says, money is usually last to be tackled. It’s easier within smaller organizations, and when trust is already high. Even then, it takes care and patience. “You need to create an atmosphere where everybody feels safe to share certain things,” says Jaspers. “You’re opening a box that a lot of people, especially if privileged, don’t want to open.” The post Needs-Based Salaries Are Upending Workplace Norms appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
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The People's Voice Feed
The People's Voice Feed
1 y

Iran’s President and Foreign Secretary Die In Helicopter Crash
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thepeoplesvoice.tv

Iran’s President and Foreign Secretary Die In Helicopter Crash

Iranian President brahim Raisi has died in a helicopter crash alongside foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian. Last night it was reported that a helicopter carrying the 63 year old Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and the Foreign [...] The post Iran’s President and Foreign Secretary Die In Helicopter Crash appeared first on The People's Voice.
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Jihad & Terror Watch
Jihad & Terror Watch
1 y

Jewish student sues Harvard University over its refusal to crack down on Anti-Semitic/anti-Israel mobs threatening Jewish students
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barenakedislam.com

Jewish student sues Harvard University over its refusal to crack down on Anti-Semitic/anti-Israel mobs threatening Jewish students

The law says colleges must provide for a safe learning environment including freedom from harassment and religious persecution. Apparently, the multi-million dollar donations made to Harvard from Islamic state sponsors of terrorism like Qatar are why Harvard feels justified in ignoring the law.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

‘D-Day Has Come’
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www.historytoday.com

‘D-Day Has Come’

‘D-Day Has Come’ JamesHoare Mon, 05/20/2024 - 09:05
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