{"id":409,"date":"2017-09-26T15:33:45","date_gmt":"2017-09-26T19:33:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aligncenter.org\/?p=409"},"modified":"2019-12-26T22:10:56","modified_gmt":"2019-12-27T05:10:56","slug":"newsletter-14","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aligncenter.org\/newsletter-14\/","title":{"rendered":"Newsletter #14"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\"RussetRusset Lake Cabin, Whistler – photo by the author<\/span>\n

The first week of fall is a good time to reset and regain your focus. With that, Align Center is back to a regular bi-weekly schedule with articles on capitalism from a visionary, the final ideas for a $100M grant to change the world, and a poignant long read on the state of romantic relationships. Listen to the return of my favorite podcast, plus four things I’ve been digging from the past two weeks, and some final thoughts on freedom versus loneliness.<\/p>\n

\u25e6 selected words<\/h1>\n

Unbridled – Seth Godin on Unfettered Capitalism<\/a><\/h2>\n

The respected entrepreneur, marketing visionary, and author of 18 books gives a rational take on the money-first mindset of capitalism and why it leads to a declining nation. Godin ends with a classic quotable “Seth-ism”: “Civilization doesn’t exist to maximize capitalism. Capitalism exists to maximize civilization.”
sethgodin.typepad.com (2min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

The Four Finalists for the $100M MacArthur Grant<\/a><\/h2>\n

If you could award $100 million to fund one idea that would have the greatest impact on the world, what would it be? This is the goal of The MacArthur Foundation’s 100&Change competition. Known for it’s annual “genius” grants to artists and scientists doing great things, the foundation has reviewed 1,000 applicants and selected the semi-finalists for the grant given to a “single proposal that promises real and measurable progress in solving a critical problem of our time.” The winner will be announced in December.
fastcompany.com (3min read + videos)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

The Success of Sea Turtle Conversation<\/a><\/h2>\n

Six of the world’s seven sea turtle species are listed as vulnerable or endangered. But unlike other endangered animals, the threats to turtles are easier to manage, so conservation efforts are more visible (and maybe because they’re really cute!). Last week, research in the Science Advances journal found that global efforts to protect nesting and foraging habit are working \u2014 resulting in populations bouncing back from historical declines.
phys.org (4min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

In Mexico, Weavers Embrace Natural Alternatives to Toxic Dyes<\/a><\/h2>\n

Ten years after moving to the U.S., working in a fast-food restaurant and later a concrete plant manager in California, Porfirio Guti\u00e9rrez returned to his home and his roots in Teotitl\u00e1n in Mexico’s Oaxaca province. Coming from a long lineage of textile weavers in an area known for its artisans and hand-woven rugs, Guti\u00e9rrez came back to preserve the traditions, with a renewed focus on natural dyes created from plants and crushed insects instead of typical toxic chemicals common today.
nytimes.com (10min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

Is Academia Falling to Clickbait?<\/a><\/h2>\n

Two researchers from the London School of Economics take a recent popular article on colonialism as an example of how strategies being increasingly adopted in academia mirror those used by the alt-right. They argue that an obsession with rankings, and specifically the Altmetric Attention Score, an indicator of amount and reach of the attention of a research item, is causing academia to follow trends normally seen in business to gain publicity, pitting extreme opposing views against each other at the expense of scientific consensus and healthy debate.
London School of Economics blogs.lse.ac.uk (6min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 listen in<\/h1>\n

How to Change the World – Where There’s Smoke S04E01<\/a><\/h2>\n

After a break and a candid spinoff podcast How Do We Do This?!<\/a> on how to grow their own podcast, Brett and Nick are back for the fourth season of WTS. I never miss an episode from these two, a podcast about “self-development through the lens of current events, sports, and pop culture” .
The season premiere tackles a big issue \u2014\u00a0how do we solve the problems of the world today? Featuring author Nilofer Merchant, whose new book, The Power of Onlyness, is about making “your wild ideas mighty enough to dent the world.”
libsyn.com (47min podcast)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 eat well<\/h1>\n

Autumn Carrot Sweet Potato Soup (with Apples!)<\/a><\/h2>\n

A sweet and savory soup with a touch of spice to bring in the fall. The curry and apple give it a much more complex taste than you’d expect from such a simple recipe, using common ingredients. I used a Vitamix instead of a stick blender for the smoothest texture.
onceuponachef.com<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 read slow<\/h1>\n

Love in the Time of Individualism<\/a><\/h2>\n

Cheap Sex, a new book on the modern (mainly heterosexual) dating scene by American sociologist Mark Regnerus, has created a stir. The premise is that the growing availability of sex and the factors driving down the cost of sex has been made possible by the emergence of three technologies: the Pill, high-quality pornography, and online dating. What results is a world where sex takes less effort, time and risk than ever before, where men don’t need to work so hard for access to it, and where people are putting individualism and romantic freedom above long-term relationships. A shorter, less critical commentary in The Globe & Mail Why Are Good Men So Hard to Find?<\/a> (5min read) comes to similar conclusions.
theatlantic.com (14min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 current read<\/h1>\n

Daytripper<\/a><\/h2>\n

Daytripper is THE graphic novel that turned me on to the medium. The story chronicles the struggles of a writer from Sao Paolo struggling to find his voice behind the shadow of his accomplished father. The Eisner Award winner for Best Limited Series weaves a unique world drawn in gorgeous detail with a magical, mysterious, moving story that stays with you long after you’ve put it down.
Daytripper by Gabriel B\u00e1, F\u00e1bio Moon – goodokbad.com review (256p book)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 dig this<\/h1>\n

What I’m digging lately:<\/p>\n