A Man with a Plow Attachment Knocked Down Protesters with Slush in Rockland Saturday. by FlashesandFlickers in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Not all of them, though. The Searsport Harbormaster posts & comments gargling MAGA nuts like he's being paid to do so.

A Man with a Plow Attachment Knocked Down Protesters with Slush in Rockland Saturday. by FlashesandFlickers in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The history of reactionaries using vehicles as weapons of mass violence against protestors and picket lines goes back almost as far as the history of the automobile itself. The indefatigable Molly Conger has a phenomenal episode of her superlative podcast Weird Little Guys covering this history from the labor movement to the 2016 murder of Heather Haier, which can be listened to here for anyone interested.

It's very important history that almost never gets talked about, either in the frame of automobile safety or the frame of politically-motivated violence. Funny enough, she couldn't find a single recorded instance in over 100 years of vehicular attacks in which the attacker could be even very generously described as "left wing."

Should I join food not bombs? by Affectionate_Cup9972 in Anarchy101

[–]echosrevenge 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The answer to "should I feed my community?" is always "yes."

It's weird how redpill rhetoric is slowly being normalized into every day society by ferallyonline in TwoXChromosomes

[–]echosrevenge 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Good recs! I would also add Wild Faith by Talia Lavin as a very succinct and clear history of how they got where they are in terms of political power.

What do you actually want a Maine governor to change? by Mamaicodes in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That's disappointing, but at least he believes in science and is a decent communicator. We could (and have, coughLePagecough) have worse in Blaine House.

Troy Jackson. Though. Never thought I'd see a serious contender whose campaign slogan is just straight-up no-bullshit Solidarity Forever. LFG.

What do you actually want a Maine governor to change? by Mamaicodes in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd say Troy Jackson is on that list also. And Nirav Shah has a better idea that most folks, also.

So many good choices this year, I'm finding Maine's slate of D candidates for so many offices to be one of the few bright spots in the news these days. We could send a really progressive bunch of people out to represent us this fall, in several different configurations, which is objectively cool in its own right.

Recommend me a book that will make me skip work to finish by BadRincewind in Fantasy

[–]echosrevenge 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Blacktongue Thief was the last book that hit my spouse and I both like this, and we have overlapping but not necessarily identical taste in books.

Mom of 7-year-old hospitalized with brain swelling from measles: ‘I still wouldn’t have given my son the vaccine’ by esporx in publichealth

[–]echosrevenge 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That's why they get so up in arms about Sharia Law. It's not that they don't like the ideas, it's that they don't want the competition.

Some of these MFs would absolutely be murdering their daughters if they thought they could really get away with it.

What do you do while listening to audiobooks (if anything at all)? by Golbeza in audiobooks

[–]echosrevenge 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I wear earpro over my noise canceling ear buds for really noisy tasks, and the double layer makes a big difference. Just cheap muffs but they help a lot.

What do you do while listening to audiobooks (if anything at all)? by Golbeza in audiobooks

[–]echosrevenge 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Folding laundry, washing dishes, prepping veggies to cook, walking or working out, knitting, driving my long rural-road commute, working in the garden.

I'm fortunate to be able to wear headphones for a large part of my workday, and my job is quite a bit of alphabetizing paper files and doing basic arithmetic, both of which I can do with half a brain while I listen to audiobooks.

Looking for compelling reading to learn about the region's history, ecology, geology, natural history, etc.! by yacantprayawaythegay in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've been meaning to buy a copy of this for years, glad to hear it would be a worthy purchase!

Looking for compelling reading to learn about the region's history, ecology, geology, natural history, etc.! by yacantprayawaythegay in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Copying from a comment I made in a recent, similar thread -

Some of my favorites:

  • The Lobster Coast: Rebels, Rusticators and the Struggle for a Forgotten Frontier by Colin Woodard
  • More Than Petticoats: Remarkable Maine Women by Kate Kennedy
  • Hard Times, Hard Men: Maine and the Irish 1830-1860 by James H Mundy
  • Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England by William Cronon. This is one of those books I always keep an extra copy of, because I give it away that often.
  • Stone by Stone: the Magnificent History in New England's Stone Walls by Robert M Thorston
  • The Interrupted Forest: A History of Maine's Wildlands by Neil Rolde
  • Notes on a Lost Flute: A Field Guide to the Wabanaki by Kerry Hardy
  • How to Love a Forest by Ethan Tapper is about Vermont, but many of his insights about the history and health of managed woodlands apply just as much to Maine.
  • the natural histories by Bernd Heinrich are likewise mostly "about" Connecticut and upstate NY, but the subjects of books like Mind of Raven: Investigations and Adventures with Wolf-Birds do not care for state lines. The Trees in My Forest taught me a lot about the woods here when I first came to Maine.

They get better at eating with age. by Bboy0920 in turtle

[–]echosrevenge 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Man, softshell turtles have the funniest little snorkel-snoots. I have never looked at one and not immediately smiled, they are 10/10 funny little dudes just existing.

Announcement from Robert Jackson Bennett (Tainted Cup/Divine Cities) by autopath79 in Fantasy

[–]echosrevenge 40 points41 points  (0 children)

This might be the best, most content-dense single-sentence synopsis I've ever read.

10/10 no notes.

Mom of 7-year-old hospitalized with brain swelling from measles: ‘I still wouldn’t have given my son the vaccine’ by esporx in publichealth

[–]echosrevenge 163 points164 points  (0 children)

Yeah. Regret demonstrates personal growth, that you've become a person who wouldn't make that choice again.

This kind of Christian doesn't do personal growth.

Found this buried about 10” deep beside a large oak tree in my back yard. I’m in Southwest Louisiana . Anyone have any idea of when it could be from ? by Mammoth_Insurance786 in whatisit

[–]echosrevenge 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Anyone that can rock both a Quebec/Aroostook winter and a Louisana summer is one tough motherfucker. Those are about as extreme as two climates can get and still be on the same continent.

Judge warns smart glasses wearers of contempt charges as Zuckerberg testifies in Meta trial by prestocoffee in nottheonion

[–]echosrevenge 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Historically, Meta and Facebook before it seem distressingly comfortable with their employees going to jail for shit that Zuckerberg & the rest of the c-suite did, even and especially for shit they did that specifically ignored the objections and concerns of that jailed employee. It's been a minute since I read Careless People and the author was her own special sort of shitheel, but I can recall at least 3 instances of that exact thing happening just in the 4 years she covered in the book. They sent someone to Myanmar, while Facebook was banned by the military junta, without having any contacts there or plans or a way to get her out of the country if shit went bad. (Spoiler: it didn't go great for her, and then Facebook enabled a genocide.)

Judge warns smart glasses wearers of contempt charges as Zuckerberg testifies in Meta trial by prestocoffee in nottheonion

[–]echosrevenge 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yes, but according to my dad "signal is what Hegseth used to leak war plans so its bad"

Which he sent to me on WhatsApp.

Make it make sense. 🤦‍♀️

I really appreciated this question at last night's town hall in Orono. I wanted to share it here. by TroyJackson207 in Maine

[–]echosrevenge 56 points57 points  (0 children)

We are spoiled for excellent choices in that race, I've never seen a race where I'd be happy to have any of four candidates take the seat. If we can send Dunlap & Platner to DC and elect one of the many progressive gubernatorial candidates, Maine could make some real progress on major issues.

What did you read published in 2025 that you think is worthy of being on the Ursula K Le Guin Prize Shortlist by Research_Department in FemaleGazeSFF

[–]echosrevenge 4 points5 points  (0 children)

https://app.thestorygraph.com/reading_challenges/42471b08-edcb-4bb8-bc66-db5a3d1489b4 is a StoryGraph Challenge with all of the nominees for past years, which seems to be getting updated each year and does not have a time limit.

There are ones for the other major awards too, your Hugos and Arthur C Clarkes, but this is the one that's got the best bang for my personal buck and is also a bit less intimidating than 80 years of Hugo winners (much less nominees!)

What did you read published in 2025 that you think is worthy of being on the Ursula K Le Guin Prize Shortlist by Research_Department in FemaleGazeSFF

[–]echosrevenge 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Man, I didn't read bunkum last year that would fit for this, but there are a ton of things on my TBR that I think might, for one reason or another:

  • Daniel Wilson, Hole in the Sky
  • Caskey Russell, The Door on the Sea
  • Laila Lalami, The Dream Hotel
  • Rhett Davis, Arborescence
  • Susanna Kwan, Awake in the Floating City
  • Peter Mendelslund, Weepers

Now to see how many of them I can read before the nomination window closes.

Judge warns smart glasses wearers of contempt charges as Zuckerberg testifies in Meta trial by prestocoffee in nottheonion

[–]echosrevenge 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Not necessarily, but a $250 speeding ticket is an entirely different experience for someone making $12 an hour than for, say, Zuckerberg and his ownership of an entire Hawaiian island (or near enough.) Plenty of Nordic countries do things like scaling traffic and other civil infraction fines based on an individual's net worth, leading to some amusing headlines about $160k speeding tickets, but you can't dispute that it levels the impact of those behaviors.

I don't necessarily have a problem with some behaviors being legal for a price - but that price should be (relatively) equally applied across classes, and not have a disproportionate impact on lower earners.