And being next to a plane collision
piccolo
Tough race between r/Seattle and r/Portland
Parenti stopped being friends with Bernie after the Kosovo vote afaik
Do you have any other recs for like animated sci-fi shows aimed at older audiences like this, especially ones with leftist themes? I enjoyed watching Pantheon and want to find more vaguely similar media
Can you please recommend me some recipes from that book to try? I have it and made one thing from it (I think it was a kabocha squash stew) and I was very underwhelmed, but if there's better stuff in it I want to give it a go
Vegan who loves to cook here, and I've got some recommendations for you! As a quick note, I'm vegan for the animals but also interested in healthy eating, so my recommendations are generally for things that taste indulgent but nourish the body and soul as well.
- The Vegan Instant Pot Cookbook is easily my favorite that I have currently. The author, Nisha Vora, is the person behind the recipe website Rainbow Plant Life, which is by far my favorite vegan cooking website. She also has a new cookbook called Big Vegan Flavor that I have ordered but not yet received; I can't recommend it for sure but knowing Nisha I'm sure it's going to be excellent. In particular, Nisha is my go-to for Indian cuisine, but she has a wide variety of cuisines she covers well. The hummus recipe, the West African peanut stew, and the broth part of the pho recipe in the Instant Pot cookbook are particular standouts, and from her website I can't recommend highly enough her Palak Paneer with Tofu (follow the boiled tofu recipe, except you don't actually have to boil the tofu) and and her Chana Masala. She also has a YouTube channel that is also quite good. If you don't have an Instant Pot, I highly recommend getting one, they can be gotten on Craigslist or Marketplace for ~$40 usd where I am, and they're very worth it if you have the space.
- The Vegan Middle Eastern Cookbook by Noha Elbadry-Cloud is another excellent one. The recipes I've tried so far have been very flavourful and tasty. I like also that the woman who wrote it provides recipes from all over the Middle East and North Africa, and also includes her own twists on things that are not necessarily traditional but still very good. She has recipes for dishes that are vegan by default as well as good vegan takes on traditional meat-heavy meals, complete with good recipes for homemade imitation meats.
- I've heard good things about The Vegan Chinese Kitchen, which is written by the woman who runs The Plant Based Wok (cooking website). I haven't used the cookbook myself, but friends say it's good and I have enjoyed the author's recipes I've tried from her website.
Hope that helps! I'll let you know once I receive Big Vegan Flavor if it's good, because it seems like it's going to become my Bible of cooking.
(Also ADHD, maybe undiagnosed autism) This is so relatable, I've been getting very good at restructuring sentences mid-speech because I forget the exact word I'm looking for. Either that, or my brain hyperfixates on remembering the specific word I was looking for and I interrupt myself to try and get my conversation partner to help me remember the word I was looking for.
Have you seen that TikTok video that was like a 3 way split screen of Yellow Parenti, someone playing Subway Surfers, and one of those visual ASMR videos? We need to make more of that type of content
/r/trueanon is probably on the shit list unfortunately, gonna miss those nerds
"anticapitalist pokemon fanfic" is a set of 3 words describing something I didn't know I needed until becoming aware of its existence
Every day carry
When you say you want to know about the "why" in the context of math, is it like "why should I learn this stuff" or "why is this true?"
My math interest is more in the abstract rather than practical applications (and also it really depends on the particular math subject) so I don't have many recommendations for the former, but for the latter I think that learning math that's proof based can really help with that. I guess this also depends on the math you're trying to learn, but I have some resources to recommend here.
If you know some calculus but want to learn more about the "why", an acquaintance of mine wrote something called Intuitive Explanations: https://intuitiveexplanations.com/assets/CalculusIntuitiveExplanations.pdf
If you want to learn a little about a lot of different math subjects, this is a book I read some parts of and generally highly recommend: Beyond Numeracy. Another recommendation along these lines is the YouTube channel 3blue1brown, I think that person does a really good job breaking down difficult concepts into approachable video lectures.
I don't have any particular proof based books to recommend (I learned the concepts in uni classes) but something that I'd keep in mind if I were you is that sometimes when you're following along with a proof, the proof will start to assert something that doesn't immediately make sense why they're doing that. If you suspend looking for the why until you've read the whole proof, often it will make more sense in retrospect (e.g. "oh, they arrested X so they could show Y so they could show Z which lets them prove A")
I also agree with the other commenter that it'd be useful to know more about the type of math you're looking for because the subject is so wide. For example, maybe you're looking for introductory algebra or precalculus, or maybe you want math that's useful, or math that's interesting and accessible but not normally studied in high school, or maybe you're really interested in differential equations.