- http://bulletjournal.com/blog/
- https://zenhabits.net
- time dorks
- http://zenpencils.com
- http://www.rowdykittens.com/new/
Category: /notes design
Maybe switch this theme from Hemingway to Lovecraft.
I like how Patrick Rhone uses twenty sixteen (w/o post titles)… that may be just as useful here, esp with the use of tags/categories
- possible changes to this theme to acheive:
- suppressing title on blog layout
- increase/add/changing the visibility of tags on a post
Post formats examples.
Reddle theme in use for early 2017
This is an standard post format
From the Jacobin’s article on Tony Mazzochhi:
A recent Pew poll demonstrated that, contra liberal messaging, climate skeptics aren’t generally “more science illiterate” than most. But, being Americans, they are less likely to be represented by a labor union than the rest of the developed world. This is a country in which workers are uniquely dependent on their jobs for basic rights like health care. Which also means that they’re uniquely dependent on their employer staying in business no matter what the social or environmental costs. Is it any wonder that, in the absence of a strong labor movement and a decent welfare state, we have ourselves taken on that same “cost-benefit” analysis that corporate America developed in order to beat back environmental regulation a half century ago?
This is an aside post format
From the Jacobin’s article on Tony Mazzochhi:
A recent Pew poll demonstrated that, contra liberal messaging, climate skeptics aren’t generally “more science illiterate” than most. But, being Americans, they are less likely to be represented by a labor union than the rest of the developed world. This is a country in which workers are uniquely dependent on their jobs for basic rights like health care. Which also means that they’re uniquely dependent on their employer staying in business no matter what the social or environmental costs. Is it any wonder that, in the absence of a strong labor movement and a decent welfare state, we have ourselves taken on that same “cost-benefit” analysis that corporate America developed in order to beat back environmental regulation a half century ago?
A recent Pew poll demonstrated that, contra liberal messaging, climate skeptics aren’t generally “more science illiterate” than most. But, being Americans, they are less likely to be represented by a labor union than the rest of the developed world. This is a country in which workers are uniquely dependent on their jobs for basic rights like health care. Which also means that they’re uniquely dependent on their employer staying in business no matter what the social or environmental costs. Is it any wonder that, in the absence of a strong labor movement and a decent welfare state, we have ourselves taken on that same “cost-benefit” analysis that corporate America developed in order to beat back environmental regulation a half century ago?
(this is a quote post format)
From the Jacobin’s article on Tony Mazzochhi: