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@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-04 20:14:31

Long; central Massachusetts colonial history
Today on a whim I visited a site in Massachusetts marked as "Huguenot Fort Ruins" on OpenStreetMaps. I drove out with my 4-year-old through increasingly rural central Massachusetts forests & fields to end up on a narrow street near the top of a hill beside a small field. The neighboring houses had huge lawns, some with tractors.
Appropriately for this day and this moment in history, the history of the site turns out to be a microcosm of America. Across the field beyond a cross-shaped stone memorial stood an info board with a few diagrams and some text. The text of the main sign (including typos/misspellings) read:
"""
Town Is Formed
Early in the 1680's, interest began to generate to develop a town in the area west of Natick in the south central part of the Commonwealth that would be suitable for a settlement. A Mr. Hugh Campbell, a Scotch merchant of Boston petitioned the court for land for a colony. At about the same time, Joseph Dudley and William Stoughton also were desirous of obtaining land for a settlement. A claim was made for all lands west of the Blackstone River to the southern land of Massachusetts to a point northerly of the Springfield Road then running southwesterly until it joined the southern line of Massachusetts.
Associated with Dudley and Stoughton was Robert Thompson of London, England, Dr. Daniel Cox and John Blackwell, both of London and Thomas Freak of Hannington, Wiltshire, as proprietors. A stipulation in the acquisition of this land being that within four years thirty families and an orthodox minister settle in the area. An extension of this stipulation was granted at the end of the four years when no group large enough seemed to be willing to take up the opportunity.
In 1686, Robert Thompson met Gabriel Bernor and learned that he was seeking an area where his countrymen, who had fled their native France because of the Edict of Nantes, were desirous of a place to live. Their main concern was to settle in a place that would allow them freedom of worship. New Oxford, as it was the so-named, at that time included the larger part of Charlton, one-fourth of Auburn, one-fifth of Dudley and several square miles of the northeast portion of Southbridge as well as the easterly ares now known as Webster.
Joseph Dudley's assessment that the area was capable of a good settlement probably was based on the idea of the meadows already established along with the plains, ponds, brooks and rivers. Meadows were a necessity as they provided hay for animal feed and other uses by the settlers. The French River tributary books and streams provided a good source for fishing and hunting. There were open areas on the plains as customarily in November of each year, the Indians burnt over areas to keep them free of underwood and brush. It appeared then that this area was ready for settling.
The first seventy-five years of the settling of the Town of Oxford originally known as Manchaug, embraced three different cultures. The Indians were known to be here about 1656 when the Missionary, John Eliott and his partner Daniel Gookin visited in the praying towns. Thirty years later, in 1686, the Huguenots walked here from Boston under the guidance of their leader Isaac Bertrand DuTuffeau. The Huguenot's that arrived were not peasants, but were acknowledged to be the best Agriculturist, Wine Growers, Merchant's, and Manufacter's in France. There were 30 families consisting of 52 people. At the time of their first departure (10 years), due to Indian insurrection, there were 80 people in the group, and near their Meetinghouse/Church was a Cemetery that held 20 bodies. In 1699, 8 to 10 familie's made a second attempt to re-settle, failing after only four years, with the village being completely abandoned in 1704.
The English colonist made their way here in 1713 and established what has become a permanent settlement.
"""
All that was left of the fort was a crumbling stone wall that would have been the base of a higher wooden wall according to a picture of a model (I didn't think to get a shot of that myself). Only trees and brush remain where the multi-story main wooden building was.
This story has so many echoes in the present:
- The rich colonialists from Boston & London agree to settle the land, buying/taking land "rights" from the colonial British court that claimed jurisdiction without actually having control of the land. Whether the sponsors ever actually visited the land themselves I don't know. They surely profited somehow, whether from selling on the land rights later or collecting taxes/rent or whatever, by they needed poor laborers to actually do the work of developing the land (& driving out the original inhabitants, who had no say in the machinations of the Boston court).
- The land deal was on condition that there capital-holders who stood to profit would find settlers to actually do the work of colonizing. The British crown wanted more territory to be controlled in practice not just in theory, but they weren't going to be the ones to do the hard work.
- The capital-holders actually failed to find enough poor suckers to do their dirty work for 4 years, until the Huguenots, fleeing religious persecution in France, were desperate enough to accept their terms.
- Of course, the land was only so ripe for settlement because of careful tending over centuries by the natives who were eventually driven off, and whose land management practices are abandoned today. Given the mention of praying towns (& dates), this was after King Phillip's war, which resulted in at least some forced resettlement of native tribes around the area, but the descendants of those "Indians" mentioned in this sign are still around. For example, this is the site of one local band of Nipmuck, whose namesake lake is about 5 miles south of the fort site: #LandBack.

@detondev@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-04 18:22:41

BILL GATE

BILL GATE in a restaurant.

After eating, he gave $5 to the waiter as a tip.

The waiter had a strange feeling on his face after the tip

Gates realized and asked, "What happned?"

Waiter:"I'm just amazed because on the same table your daughter gave Tip Of ... $500... and you her Father, the richest man in the world Only Gave $5...?"

Gates smiled and replied with meaningful words, "She is daughter of the world's richest man, but I am the son of a wood cutter."

Moral: Never Forget Your Past. I…
@AimeeMaroux@mastodon.social
2025-06-05 11:32:52
Content warning:

Free to read for all of #PrideMonth:
Bratty prince #Ganymede gets to ride the cock that rules gods and men:

@azonenberg@ioc.exchange
2025-06-05 12:11:37

LATENTRED main board layout progress: got most of the GTYs and FPGA-MCU paths done, as well as the RGMII PHY.
Still lots more to do but I'm liking the floorplan, at least the parts that I've done.
I'm debating moving the RGMII PHY to the west a bit and adding a fan cutout directly behind the FPGA so that I can have it suck exhaust air right past the FPGA (possibly with a 3d printed air dam or something in the future). Will need to spend some time thinking about therma…

KiCAD layout view of the switch engine board showing the high-speed connectors now placed and labeled
@pixelcode@social.tchncs.de
2025-06-05 22:25:31
Content warning: SimpleX founder approving of right-wing extremism

Today, I learned that the founder of the #SimpleX messenger is a #ClimateChange-denying #Covid conspiracy-theorist, anti-vaxxer and

Twitter profile of Evgeny Poberezkin, the founder of SimpleX and creator of the Ajv JSON validator. Viewed via the Nitter server XCancel. On 30 May, Evgeny retweeted a post from Andrew Bridgen which reads:

“It was a military operation across the world from the development of the virus and so-called vaccines to the delivery of the propaganda narrative to increase compliance.”

Bridgen's tweet quotes an image shared by Liz Churchill, reading: “Dutch government official admits Covid pandemic …
On 28 May, Evgeny retweeted a post from Sayer Ji reading:

“Americans Are Fed Up! In just 24 hours, over 20,000 emails have been sent to Congress demanding an investigation into unauthorized geoengineering and atmospheric spraying. People are taking a stand for transparency, accountability, and the right to clean skies.”
On 16 March, Evgeny Poberezkin retweeted JD Vance's screenshot of Donald Trump's Truth Social post with a picture showing three presidential photos:

2017 – 2021: happy Trump
2021 – 2025: a robot pen faking Biden's signature
2025 – present: mad Trump
On 26 February, Evgeny Poberezkin retweeted a post from the Twitter profile “Bill Gates is a psycho”, reading:

“That’s where the money is. There is no consensus in Science, it’s about facts, and if you get down to the cold hard facts – climate change is not happening – there is no man made Global Warming now & there hasn’t been any in the past. I resent you calling me a ‘Denier” this is a word meant to put me down - there is NO significant Global Warming. John Coleman is a Meteorological exp…
@oligneisti@social.linux.pizza
2025-05-04 15:07:17

Making Firefox/Mozilla dependent on money from Google was a gigantic misstep. It should never have happened.
Firefox has become an alibi for Google against claims of monopolistic behavior. It is a repeat of how Bill Gates saved Apple except that Firefox seems to be on permanently boxed in by Google.
#Firefox

@nelson@tech.lgbt
2025-06-06 00:51:26

Calamus 24 I hear it is charged against me
This poem feels just so typically Whitman, but lesser somehow. Not one of my favorites.
He says he is "charged that I seek to destroy institutions". Charged by whom, one wonders, is he really so important? He sort of denies this, or is ambivalent to it, and then gets to the queer part:
I will establish ... the institution of the dear love of comrades
And here we are again at the central queer question: just what does he mean by "dear love of comrades"? As I read these poems I'm increasingly thinking it's both things. Sure, it's brotherly love, adhesiveness, a sort of robust fraternity. But so much of his writing and life is homoerotic it has to also have that charge. It can be both.
I feel like I've heard that phrase "the institution of the dear love of comrades" repeated often.

@kexpmusicbot@mastodonapp.uk
2025-07-03 17:09:14

🇺🇦 #NowPlaying on KEXP's #MiddayShow
Wilco:
🎵 I’m the Man Who Loves You
#Wilco
wilcohq.bandcamp.com/track/i-m
open.spotify.com/track/70gsdxS

@aligyie@digitalcourage.social
2025-07-02 12:48:41

"While crop seed vaults are common around the world, nurseries for wild and native plants are rare, and many plant species quietly become extinct. This marks #Gurukula out as a Noah’s ark for endangered plant species."

"The primary vegetation around Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary is wet evergreen, medium elevation rainforest."
"Laly Joseph, the head of plant conservation at Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary, has spent most of her life learning about and caring for plants."
"An explosion of Alsophila spinulosa tree ferns, also known as flying spider-monkey tree fern. These are native species found in tropical and subtropical forests across Asia. An abundance of ferns can mean a healthy, high-quality habitat with minimal human disturbance."
@qurlyjoe@mstdn.social
2025-07-04 03:54:54

I suspect a lot of MAGAts are celebrating tonight—the old Owning the Libs thing they love so much. Wait til meemaw gets kicked out of her Medicaid funded nursing home, and their food stamps dry up. Who’ll be celebrating then?