misheleneous Handmade Gifts | Home & Hound (@misheleneous.bsky.social) |ย Hare & Honey Bee 22, Lever Street, Manchester

An #AdoorableThursday for #WeekHforHs ๐Ÿ’™๐Ÿ’›H, Hare & Honey Bee 22 Lever Street, #Manchester (it helpfully says so above the door)A 'Hub' for Creative and Digital Agencies#AlphabetChallenge #StreetArt #Graffiti #HoneyBee #Hare #EastCoastKin #UrbanGaze #StreetPhotography #AnimalArt #Photography

misheleneous Handmade Gifts | Home & Hound (@misheleneous.bsky.social) 2026-02-26T12:46:53.283Z

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“Best Mural of the World” in the 2023 Street Art Cities competition. The neck is pretty amazing!!

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History Of Ollantaytambo, Peru

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Congo, Belgium, and the New Data Scramble

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Why you shouldnโ€™t say โ€œbooksโ€

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Brazil politicians convicted for ordering murder of black activist councilor โ€ข FRANCE 24 English

25 Feb 2026 #Brazil #MarielleFranco #justice
Brazil’s Supreme Court on Wednesday convicted two former lawmakers of ordering the 2018 assassination of Rio de Janeiro councilwoman Marielle Franco, a popular black activist whose murder exposed deep ties between politics and organized crime. Franco, an LGBTQ activist who grew up in a favela and became an outspoken critic of Rio’s powerful militia groups, was 38 when she was gunned down in the city center alongside her driver, Anderson Gomes.

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Subida da Bateria da Mocidade Independente de Padre Miguel Bateria Nรฃo Existe Mais Quente

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To fight authoritarianism, America should look to Brazil

On January 8, 2023, thousands of supporters of Brazilโ€™s right-wing former President Jair Bolsonaro stormed federal buildings in the countryโ€™s capital. Their goal? Overthrow the results of an election they claimed was rigged, despite no credible evidence of fraud.

If that sounds familiar, thatโ€™s because it is. Brazilโ€™s January 8 looked a lot like the January 6 attack on the US capital, just two years earlier: mob violence, an insurrection, and a defeated leader who refused to concede.

But the aftermath could not be more different. Jair Bolsonaro is now serving a 27-year prison sentence, while Donald Trump is president, again.

So how did two democracies, facing similar threats, end up with such different outcomes? This video explains how Brazilโ€™s democratic system worked to hold โ€œthe Trump of the Tropicsโ€ accountable and what the US could learn from the aftermath.

Read more about Brazilโ€™s response:

Vox correspondent Zack Beauchampโ€™s deep dive into what Brazil got right: How one country stopped a Trump-style authoritarian in his tracks | https://www.vox.com/politics/479290/b…

The Brazilian Report breaks down the details of Bolsonaroโ€™s coup plans: Anatomy of a coup attempt | https://newsletters.brazilian.report/…

Carnegie Endowmentโ€™s podcast, The World Unpacked, breaks down the trial and conviction of former Bolsonaro | Did the Bolsonaro Trial Really Save Brazil’s Democracy? | https://carnegieendowment.org/podcast…

The New Yorkerโ€™s excellent profile of Alexandre de Moraes includes a lot more detail on how the judge became an enemy of Trump and Elon Musk, in his mission to crack down on election misinformation: The Brazilian Judge Taking On the Digital Far Right | https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20…

The New York Times Op Ed, co-written by Filipe Campante, who is featured in the video: Brazil Just Succeeded Where America Failed | https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/12/op…

The Economistโ€™s take on how countries recover from populism: Brazil offers America a lesson in democratic maturity | https://www.economist.com/leaders/202…

If you enjoy our reporting and want to hear more from Vox journalists, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/vox. Each month, our members get access to exclusive videos, livestreams, and chats with our newsroom.

This story was supported by a grant from Protect Democracy. Vox had full discretion over the content of this reporting.

Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO

Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what’s really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com.

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Ethiopia Abandoned Tree Planting In The Desert And Did THISโ€”Nobody Saw This Coming

In the scorched highlands of Northern Ethiopia, where the earth had baked into something closer to concrete than soil, thousands of villagers showed up for work. They didn’t carry saplings. They carried pickaxes, shovels, and crowbars. And for months, under the skeptical gaze of government officials and the open laughter of neighboring villages, these workers did something that looked completely insane. They dug holes. Millions of them. They excavated over twenty thousand deep trenches. They stacked thirty-eight thousand earthen walls. They assembled four hundred and thirty-nine kilometers of stone barriersโ€”roughly the distance from London to Parisโ€”all by hand. To anyone watching, this wasn’t reforestation. This was an open-air mining operation. This was preparation for trench warfare. The local engineers had seen tree-planting campaigns come and go for decades. International organizations would arrive with nursery seedlings, plant them in neat rows, take photos for their annual reports, and leave. Within months, ninety percent of those trees would be dead. The soil was too hard. The rain ran off like water on glass. The goats ate whatever survived. Plant and pray. Pray and fail. So when these villagers started hacking trenches into rock-hard ground instead of planting trees, the skepticism was predictable. Why dig graves for water that never comes? Why move millions of tons of rock in a landscape where nothing grows? But the people digging those holes knew something the engineers had missed. They knew the forest wasn’t actually dead. It was hiding underground. And they knew that before they could bring it back, they had to plant something else entirely. They had to plant the rain first. Seven years later, satellite images show a sharp green line cutting across the Ethiopian highlands. On one side, the same dusty brown wasteland. On the other, twenty-three thousand hectares of recovering forest with a ninety percent survival rate.

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The Patience To Turn Strangers Into Art

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