nilawafer 8 days ago
  • skygazer 8 days ago

    That link lacks the article text, as do archive.is’ other snapshots of it.

    • kjellsbells 8 days ago

      I could not read the article either, but one example is the Alabama Black Belt. Geologically that part of the deep South and its neighboring states is chalk, which over time has become covered in incredibly rich black soil. Perfect for growing things like cotton. Which, back in the not very recent past, was brutally made the responsibility of slaves. When the slaves were emancipated after the Civil War, many freedmen stayed on and ended up as sharecroppers, ultimately maintaining a deep well of Black American culture that persists to this day.

      Edit: unpaywalled article on the human history[1], wikipedia[2], and geology[3]

      [1] https://southernspaces.org/2004/black-belt/

      [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Belt_in_the_American_Sou...

      [3] https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/black-belt-region-...

      • Animats 7 days ago

        That's just the intro. This is from the Chronicle of Higher Education, which is mostly about university administration issues. Anyone read the whole thing? I'll bet that's a lead-in to something about how universities differ depending on location.

mettamage 8 days ago

Geology shapes culture in many places.

Simple example: the Netherlands and bikes or dried up lakes and the way Dutch people hold meetings

  • goodlinks 8 days ago

    Okay i get the flat is good for bikes.. but meetings, curious about that one?

    • gsf_emergency 8 days ago
      • leobg 7 days ago

        Interesting read. Quote:

        > Ever since the Middle Ages, when the process of land reclamation began, different societies living in the same polder have been forced to cooperate because without unanimous agreement on shared responsibility for maintenance of the dykes and pumping stations, the polders would have flooded and everyone would have suffered. Crucially, even when different cities in the same polder were at war, they still had to cooperate in this respect. This is thought to have taught the Dutch to set aside differences for a greater purpose.

aeim 8 days ago

[flagged]

  • grues-dinner 8 days ago

    The "American Dream" has always been a mixture of a thought-terminating cliché and mass delusion. No matter how much ink is spilled over it or how many hands are wrung about the death of it, you'll never actually get two Americans to agree on what it is, past a nebulous something about "freedom".

    It was just easy to not worry too much about that it when sitting pretty on 10 million square km of super-defensible natural resources while the rest of the world burned itself down twice over entrenched legacy bullshit. But now there's been time to brew up just as much domestic legacy bullshit and geopolitics and the media environment doesn't yet support a unifying us-vs-them narrative (by God they're trying) to cut through it.

    • PaulDavisThe1st 7 days ago

      > 10 million square km of super-defensible

      With a 2000 mile southern border that is extraordinarily hard to defend, and a somewhat longer northern border that we've never actually had to think about defending.

      • grues-dinner 7 days ago

        No, they're borders that would be extraordinarily hard to defend, but conveniently it's not been relevant for about 200 years. Defense is about more than having enough machine guns on the border.

        In the case of the southern neighbor and their neighbors, one might wonder if it's a complete coincidence that the collective Latin American shit hasn't been together enough to be a credible threat since that time they actually were and were eventually repulsed.

        Diplomatic and, let us say, "special" methods of making neighbors safe to be nearby is one of the key advantages that made American soil defensible in a way that, say, early 1900s French soil wasn't.

        The only credible way that border has been for the American century, or will be for the foreseeable future, a military danger would be if another superpower cut a deal to stage there, and that would be both incredibly obvious and would represent the world's longest and most vulnerable supply lines in the history of armed conflict.

        The closest anyone ever got was missiles in Cuba, and it was so utterly disconcerting that there even was a threat in the same hemisphere that the world nearly ended.

        You could also say that this only applies to conventional military threats, and there are other problems now. That is perhaps why things are beginning to feel different and sitting between two oceans and two pacified buffer zones isn't proving enough to engender national feeling, rightly or wrongly, of being large and in charge.

      • euroderf 7 days ago

        > a somewhat longer northern border that we've never actually had to think about defending.

        Well, not since they (as lackeys of the Brits) burned down Buffalo.

  • financetechbro 8 days ago

    I feel like American culture has anyways been elusive and dynamic

  • scooke 8 days ago

    Are you American, in America?