Book reading s,TV series transcript s,comedy, personal, Red circle podcast, Book Review s,Interviews, its popcorn for the brain. Blog copyright Mark Antony Raines
Sunday, 17 August 2014
Crass
The most politically influential band of the first wave of punk rock
bands, as the second wave began, they stopped playing since they
promised themselfs to stop in 1984. Crass was against government,
organized religion, and all that good stuff, they pointed out problems
in the punk scene itself, with their song Punk is Dead. Their most
remembered song today is probably Banned From the Roxy
Without crass, anarchy wouldnt be a popular movent today, and you
couldnt buy anarchy wristbands from the counter-revolutionaries (hot
topic) while paying tax for them, which is the biggest condradiction of
brainless mtv generation kids wearing the anarchy symbol, which most of
them think means chaos and disorder, the misconception started by
counter-revolutionaries themselfs, to make people sub-conciously believe
that anarchy will result in chaos, and not work.
JUMP TEDDY
Amazing photos show baby seal entangled in litter before snorkeler removes it in first for Lundy Island
A YOUNG female grey seal amazed the community on Lundy Island by allowing a snorkeller to get close enough to remove a plastic ring it was entangled in.
Warden of the island Beccy MacDonald said this was the first time she can recall a seal allowing a person to remove an entanglement.
Lesley Harper of Seastyle Diving came across the seal while snorkelling on a recent visit on charter boat Jessica Hettie.
Lesley said: “The seal suddenly appeared with this plastic ring wrapped around it. Luckily I managed to coax it off and stuff it in my pocket. The seal was acting like it was a toy.”
SNAKE HAS A FROG IN MOUTH
Hemp fibres 'better than graphene'
The waste fibres from hemp crops can be transformed into high-performance energy storage devices, scientists say.
They "cooked" cannabis bark into carbon nanosheets and built
supercapacitors "on a par with or better than graphene" - the industry
gold standard.Electric cars and power tools could harness this hemp technology, the US researchers say.
They presented their work at the American Chemical Society meeting in San Francisco.
"People ask me: why hemp? I say, why not?" said Dr David Mitlin of Clarkson University, New York, who describes his device in the journal ACS Nano.
"We're making graphene-like materials for a thousandth of the price - and we're doing it with waste.
"The hemp we use is perfectly legal to grow. It has no THC in it at all - so there's no overlap with any recreational activities."
Secret sauce In countries including China, Canada and the UK, hemp can be grown industrially for clothing and building materials.
But the leftover bast fibre - the inner bark - typically ends up as landREAD MORE
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