/u/nueoritic-parents's posts
The US Holocaust Museum states that “About 200,000 handicapped people were murdered between 1940 and 1945 under the T-4 program. The T-4 program became the model for the mass murder of Jews, Roma, and others in the camps.” Why isn’t this huge event more well known?
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Watching footage of older basketball games (80s I think?) I was stunned to see mostly white men on the courts. Does this mean the stereotype that basketball is a “black man’s game” is relatively new, or am I missing something here?
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In any era/part of the world when there were more illiterate people than not, what would theaters do to make sure actors received proper credit? Would someone announce the actors names before the show started? Or were illiterate/literate classes too far removed to even go to the same kinds of plays?
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What caused music videos to go from just a video of the band or singer jamming to telling a story or just being plain surreal?
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What’s the origin of “Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue, and a silver sixpence in her shoe?”
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I find it sadly impossible to believe the dynamics of vulnerable minorities + Nazis wouldn’t have resulted in some form of sexual violence, so how did the larger issue of silencing/not believing people who’d bees sexually assaulted play into the recording of the Halocaust narrative*?
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Homosexuality used to be regarded as an act, rather than an identity one could have. However, this began to change in the latter half of the 1800s. How did men, women, and gentlethem conceptions of themselves change? What sources would they have drawn on to mark this changing understanding?
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