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"My So-Called Band was a punk rock band from Charlotte, North Carolina active in the 1990s and 2000s. History The band was started in 1995 by singer- bassist Chris Peigler, guitarist Luke Warm, and drummer Patrick Korson. Prior thereto, Peigler had been a member of several other bands, including Intensive Care and Proletariat Madonna, and has also contributed to the fanzine Razorcake. In 2001, they started their own record label known as "Suicide Watch Records". In 2002, they began recording their third album, Always Something There To Destroy Me, at the Recording Den with Mark Puerello. Their Final Record Weapon of Mass Destruction was recorded and released in 2004, after which, Peigler and, then drummer, Kevin Gavagan formed the band Rogue Nations with long time friend Eric Seitlin. Style My So-Called Band's music, which was made deliberately to sound like that of pioneering punk rock musicians, has been described as "like Steve Forbert might've [sounded] if he'd fronted the MC5 while on the lam from all those Next Big Dylan delusionals," and like what would happen if "the Clash and The Ramones had mixed their musical chromosomes." They were also called " the Charlotte, N.C., answer to modern punk-rock" by Sarah Lee. Peigler's death Peigler died on January 8, 2014 at the age of 50. DiscographyMy So-Called Band (1997) Yesha *The Punk Girl Next Door (2000) Yesha *Always Something There to Destroy Me (2003) A1s *Weapons of Mass Distortion (2004) SW Records References Musical groups from North Carolina 1995 establishments in North Carolina American punk rock groups Musical groups established in 1995 Musical groups disestablished in 2004 "
"The manosphere is a collection of websites, blogs, and online forums promoting some forms of masculinity, hostility towards women, strong opposition to feminism, and exaggerated misogyny.; ; The manosphere has been associated politically with the far-right and alt-right. Movements within the manosphere include the men's rights movement, incels (involuntary celibates), Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW), Pick-up artists (PUA), and fathers' rights groups. The manosphere has been associated with online harassment as well as some mass shootings and other real-world acts of violence, and has been implicated in radicalizing men into committing violence against women. History The manosphere grew out of social movements such as the men's liberation movement of the 1970s and 80s. Groups now considered to be a part of the manosphere, such as the men's rights movement, predate the term "manosphere". The term, a play on the word "blogosphere", is believed to have first appeared on Blogspot in 2009. It was subsequently popularized by Ian Ironwood, a pornography marketer and author. The term entered the popular lexicon when news media began to use it in stories about men who had committed acts of misogynist violence, sexual assault, and online harassment. 2010 has been identified as "a clear tipping point" by researcher Emma A. Jane, at which the manosphere communities moved towards the mainstream from their previous position on the fringes of the Internet. She hypothesizes that this popularization was spurred by the advent of Web 2.0 and the rise of social media, in combination with ongoing systemic misogyny and patriarchal society. The manosphere was well established by 2014, and its ideas had entered more mainstream discourse, where they are sometimes used among men not necessarily identified with any specific manosphere group. Ideology and content The manosphere is a heterogenous group of online communities that includes men's-rights activists (MRAs),; ; ; ; incels (involuntary celibates),; ; Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW),; ; ; pick-up artists (PUAs),; ; ; ; ; and fathers' rights groups.; ; Some of these groups have adversarial relationships with one another. Debbie Ging writes that several groups, such as MRAs and PUAs, "exaggerate their differences in displays of infight posturing, in spite of the fact that their philosophies are almost identical". While the specifics of each group's ideology sometimes conflict, the general ideology of manosphere groups centers on the promotion of some forms of masculinity, hostility towards women, strong opposition to feminism, and exaggerated misogyny. Journalist Caitlin Dewey argues that the main tenets of the manosphere can be reduced to (1) the corruption of modern society by feminism, in violation of inherent sex differences between men and women; and (2) the ability of men to save society and/or achieve sexual prowess by adopting a hyper-masculine role and forcing women to submit to them.Dewey, quoted in The manosphere has its own distinct jargon. Men are commonly divided into "alpha" and "beta" males within an evolutionary-psychology framework, where "alphas" are seen as sexually dominant and attractive to women, who are hardwired to want sex with alphas but will pair with "beta" males for financial benefits. Among MRAs and PUAs this argument is known as "alpha fux beta bux". "Red pill" philosophy, using a metaphor borrowed from the film The Matrix, is a central tenet of the manosphere; it concerns awakening men to the supposed reality that society is fundamentally misandrist and dominated by feminist values. Donna Zuckerberg writes, "The Red Pill represents a new phase in online misogyny. Its members not only mock and belittle women; they also believe that in our society, men are oppressed by women." Manospherians believe that feminists and political correctness obscure this reality, and that men are victims who must fight to protect their existence. Accepting the manosphere's ideology is equated with "taking the red pill", and those who do not are seen as "blue pilled" or as having "taken the blue pill". Such terminology originated on the antifeminist subreddit /r/TheRedPill and was later taken up by men's rights and MGTOW sites. The manosphere is associated with the far-right and the neoreactionary, white nationalist alt-right movement. Zuckerberg writes that many alt-right members are either pick-up artists or MGTOW, and "the policing of white female sexuality is a major concern" of the alt-right, The severity of the antifeminism espoused within these communities varies, with some espousing fairly mild sexism and others glorifying extreme hatred. Racism and xenophobia are also common among groups in the manosphere, and perceived threats against "Western civilization" are a popular topic. The manosphere has been associated with online harassment as well as some mass shootings and other real-world acts of violence, and has been implicated in radicalizing men into committing violence against women. Sites The manosphere comprises various websites, blogs, and online forums. Noted sites include /r/TheRedPill, Return of Kings, A Voice for Men, PUAHate, and SlutHate. Reddit has been a popular gathering place for manosphere supporters, and several forums on the site are geared toward its ideas. However, in the late 2010s Reddit began to take steps to discourage more extreme manosphere subreddits. Some were banned, such as /r/incels (banned in 2017) and its successor /r/braincels (banned in 2018); other subreddits such as /r/MGTOW and /r/TheRedPill have been "quarantined", meaning that a warning is displayed to users about the content of the subreddit and users must sign in before they're allowed to enter. As a result, some of these communities have found new homes on websites that are more welcoming of extreme content, such as Gab. Public perception The manosphere has received significant coverage in the media from its association with high-profile violent attacks including the 2014 Isla Vista killings in California, the 2015 Umpqua Community College shooting in Oregon, and the 2018 Toronto van attack, as well as phenomena such as the sustained online abuse towards female members of the video game community that came to be known as Gamergate. Following the Isla Vista shooting, the killer Elliot Rodger was found to have been an active participant on the PUAHate manosphere forum. Following the attack, Dewey wrote that, while the manosphere was not to blame for Rodger's attack, "Rodger's misogynistic rhetoric seems undeniably influenced by the manosphere". The sociologist Michael Kimmel argued "it would be facile to argue the manosphere ... urged [Rodger] to do this. I think those places are kind of a solace ... They provide a kind of locker room, a place where guys can gripe about all the bad things that are being done to them by women". Arthur Goldwag described the manosphere in the Spring 2012 edition of the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report as an "underworld of misogynists, woman-haters whose fury goes well beyond criticism of the family court system, domestic violence laws, and false rape accusations... [who are] devoted to attacking virtually all women (or, at least, Westernized ones)." He added a caveat later that year, saying, "It should be mentioned that the SPLC did not label MRAs as members of a hate movement; nor did our article claim that the grievances they air on their websites – false rape accusations, ruinous divorce settlements and the like – are all without merit. But we did call out specific examples of misogyny and the threat, overt or implicit, of violence." In 2018, the SPLC added male supremacy as a category they track on their list of hate groups. The British anti-extremism group Hope not Hate included the manosphere in its 2019 State of Hate report. See also Bro culture * Complementarianism * Hegemonic masculinity * Identity politics * Lad culture * Masculism * Patriarchy * Toxic masculinity Notes References * Alt-right Blogospheres Criticism of feminism Cyberbullying Gender-related violence Internet culture Internet- related controversies Masculinity Men and feminism Men's rights Misogyny Opposition to feminism Social issues Social psychology Words coined in the 2000s "
"The Hamburg-Altona–Neumünster railway is the original line of the AKN Eisenbahn (railway) in the German states of Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein. Today, passenger services on the 64.5 km-long Hamburg Eidelstedt–Neumünster section are operated by AKN. The stations on the current line of A1 between Hamburg Hauptbahnhof and Eidelstedt in the Hamburg urban area were not part of the original route and are served only occasionally by the AKN. History A VTA railcar of the AKN on the line On 8 September 1884, the Altona- Kaltenkirchner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (Altona-Kaltenkirchen Railway Company), which was established in the previous year, opened the line from Altona to Kaltenkirchen for passenger traffic. Freight operations commenced on 24 November 1884. The line was initially operated by the Kintzel & Lauser company, which had also built the line and owned share in the Altona- Kaltenkirchen Railway Company. There was initially no provision for the transfer of freight to the state railways, but it was possible for freight to connect with the Hamburg tramway in Altona. Accordingly, a central buffer coupling was selected, which was also necessary at the beginning because of the sharp curves of the line. The AKE took over the management of the line in 1892. The line was originally planned as narrow gauge railway, but it was then built as standard gauge. It largely followed the Altona-Kiel road (Altona- Kieler Chaussee) built between 1830 and 1832 with its southernmost section running north along Holstensraße from the Kaltenkirchen station (Kaltenkirchener Bahnhof) in Gählerplatz in Altona. It ran over the Hamburg- Altona link line using folding track (this was able to fold to give one line or the other a clear passage), running on street level from Schulterblatt station (about where Haubachstraße now runs) to the Viktoria barracks. Further north it crossed the border of the common customs territory of Hamburg/Altona where the Bahnhof Nebenzollamt (minor customs office railway station) was established. Customs checks were carried out there until 1888 when Hamburg joined the Zollverein (German customs union). In 1893, the link line was rebuilt on an embankment to the north of the Holsten Brewery and Holstensraße station was built, as it exists today, with the AKE operating at street level on the Gählersplatz–Nebenzollamt section. On 20 August 1898, the line was extended via Kaltenkirchen to Bramstedt and Nebenzollamt station was renamed as the Bramstedter Bahnhof (Bramstedt line station). South of Eidelstedt there was a slope that caused difficulties for longer trains. In 1902, a connection was built to the state railway in Eidelstedt, where freight wagons were transferred. On 17 December 1912, the line between Altona and Eidelstedt was laid parallel to the Hamburg-Altona–Kiel railway on the current route because of the increasing traffic of the Altona-Kiel road. The line speed was now 40 km/h. The terminus in Altona was to the north of the link line in Sonderburger Platz, now Kaltenkirchener Platz, at the newly built (second) Kaltenkirchen station. This was used by the post office until 1962 and was then taken over by it. A loading facility for parcel traffic was built on the site from 1965 to 1973; until then parcel traffic had been housed in the old post office building on Stephansplatz. Permission to extend the line to Neumünster was sought in 1913 and it was approved on 1 December 1914. Operation on the new line commenced on 1 August 1916. In 1914, the company had been renamed as the Eisenbahn Altona-Kaltenkirchen-Neumünster (Altona-Kaltenkirchen-Neumünster Railway). The terminus was at the Neumünster Süd station on the Neumünster–Bad Oldesloe railway. After the Second World War the track was left in a poor condition. Wiemersdorf station was destroyed by the explosion of an ammunition train. After 1957, the track was operated with a simplified form of train control using instruction over the radio. In 1962, a connection was built for the Hamburg S-Bahn to the AKN route from Holstenstrasse station, Diebsteich station was built and the southern terminus of the AKN route was moved to Langenfelde. In 1974, the track was rebuilt with continuously-welded rail. The platforms between Eidelstedt and Kaltenkirchen were raised to a uniform height of 76 cm and extedended to a length of 100 metres. Crossings were abolished or secured with half-barriers. This allowed the travel time between Kaltenkirchen and Eidelstedt to be reduced to between 38 and 44 minutes. A central signal box was put into operation in Ulzburg Süd in 1976 and signal boxes were also installed in Quickborn, Hamburg-Schnelsen and Kaltenkirchen (from 1982). Since 1983, they work with microprocessors instead of relay technology. Signalling on the line began to be controlled from an electronic interlocking in Kaltenkirchen from 2002. The entire route was converted by 2005. The line between Ulzburg Süd and Kaltenkirchen Süd was duplicated between 1997 and 2001. For this purpose, the line in Henstedt-Ulzburg was shifted by several hundred metres to the west. The line now passes under the centre through a 630-meter-long tunnel and the end of Henstedt-Ulzburg station towards the tunnel is now located underground. The operation of traffic on the new line started on 28 August 2000 and about a year later the work was completed and the new buildings were officially opened. Between Eidelstedt and Schnelsen part of the track was rebuilt between 2001 and 2004 to pass under three streets. A new Eidelstedt Zentrum station was built on this section. The entrance to Eidelstedt station was changed. The line passes under the eastern S-Bahn track and then connects with the S-Bahn tracks, making it possible for trains to continue on the S-Bahn tracks. South of Eidelstedt station it connects with the freight line towards Langenfelde. Since 2006, the line between Schnelsen and Quickborn has been upgraded; double track has been in operation between Bönningstedt and Hasloh since 28 October 2007. The Hasloh–Quickborn Süd section has been duplicated since May 2011; this was followed by the commissioning of double track between Halstenbeker Straße and Schnelsen station in October 2011. Double track has been operational between Schnelsen and Bönningstedt since October 2012. With the completion of this work, there will initially be no further duplication. Track renewals since 1989 have almost exclusively used Y-shaped sleepers. Over 100 km of the AKN network is now equipped with them. Between 2001 and 2004, Kaltenkirchen station was rebuilt in a cutting and a 400-metre-long tunnel was built to its north. This replaced several level crossing. Since 1 December 2002, the AKN has leased the section of line between Neumünster Süd and Neumünster from DB Netz and it runs to Neumünster, continuing to Heide and Büsum. Upgrades New Kaltenkirchen station New and old Kaltenkirchen stations Kaltenkirchen Süd station The southern section of the line between Hamburg–Kaltenkirchen has been upgraded in many places since 1995. In the medium term it is planned to complete the duplication and to integrate it into the Hamburg S-Bahn network. The following projects, among others, had been completed by October 2012: *a grade separated connection with the S-Bahn network in Eidelstedt, *the new Eidelstedt Zentrum station in a sub-surface location, *duplication between Eidelstedt Zentrum and Quickborn, * duplication between Ulzburg Süd and Kaltenkirchen Süd with the elimination of all grade crossings and construction of a new Henstedt-Ulzburg station and a nearly 600 m long tunnel at this location, *a new Kaltenkirchen station in a sub-surface location. There continues to be single track between Eidelstedt and Kaltenkirchen, on individual sections between Eidelstedt and Eidelstedt Zentrum, between Quickborn and Ulzburg Süd and between Kaltenkirchen Süd and Kaltenkirchen. The entire line is controlled from the AKN operations centre in Kaltenkirchen via local electronic interlockings. All stations on the southern sector from Kaltenkirchen to Eidelstedt are equipped with electronic passenger information displays with the exception of Schnelsen; on the northern section individual stations such as Bad Bramstedt and Neumünster Süd are so equipped. Former stations Elsensee station lay between Hasloh and Quickborn Süd and was mainly used by employees of the Thörlschen margarine factory. This was closed during World War II due to air raids and moved to Hamburg-Harburg. Although superfluous, the station was only that closed in 1974 during the reconstruction of the line. Gut Gayen station lay between Bad Bramstedt and Wiemersdorf. A sandy platform still exists. Until 2002, Eidelstedt Ost station was a few hundred metres to the north of the current Eidelstedt Zentrum station. Current operation AKN's local trains now run mainly at 20-minute intervals on the Eidelstedt-Kaltenkirchen section. These intervals apply on weekdays between 5 AM and 11 PM and on Saturday between 7 AM and 9 PM. In peak hours, there are additional services with trains largely running every 10 minutes. Later in the evenings and on Sundays, services run at 40-minute intervals. Between Kaltenkirchen and Neumünster services mainly run every hour. In the peak, some trains on the A2 service (from Norderstedt Mitte to Ulzburg Süd) continue in the gaps between A1 services to Kaltenkirchen. A3 services also run between Henstedt-Ulzburg and Ulzburg Süd every hour. The busiest part of the line is the section between Ulzburg Süd and Henstedt- Ulzburg, which regularly has up to nine trains per hour in each direction. The route is regularly used for freight to and from the Norderstedt industrial railway (Norderstedter Industriebahn) and is required as a detour route when the Hamburg-Elmshorn-Neumünster line is blocked for long-distance freight trains. Passengers In 1884, the trip from Altona to Kaltenkirchen took more than two hours. Nevertheless, more than 150,000 passengers were carried in the first year. In 1930, the first railcars were used to carry the traffic more cost-effectively. After the Second World War daily passenger services were restored on 25 May 1945. In 1946, there were already ten daily passenger trains. Passenger numbers rose: in 1945 there were 1,495,000 passengers and in 1948 there were 3,883,000 passengers. From 31 March 1953, passenger services continued from Neumünster Süd station over the tracks of Deutsche Bundesbahn’s Neumünster–Bad Oldesloe line to Neumünster station. With the extension of the Hamburg S-Bahn, the southern terminus for passenger services was moved from Kaltenkirchener station in Altona to Langenfelde in 1962 and finally to Eidelstedt in 1965. The S-Bahn tracks (now lines S21 and S3) are located west and parallel with the track of the AKN, which continues to be used for freight. In 1947, more than three million passengers were carried for the first time. The exact number was 3,517,733. In 1967, the number had fallen to 2.84973 million. When it became part of the Hamburger Verkehrsverbund (Hamburg Transport Association, HVV) numbers rose to 4.21393 million passengers in 1974. Freight 10,000 tonnes were carried in the first year. The biggest users were peat manufacturers. Initially, there was no direct transfer traffic with the state railway, all freight had to be transhipped. Transfer between the systems became possible in 1902. The line had 22 railway sidings with a total of 13.59 km of track in 1934. 560,000 tons of freight was carried in 1940, but it had fallen to 348,000 tons in 1950. Since 1 January 2008, the remaining freight traffic (mainly transfers from the main line of the Norderstedt industrial railway and from Boostedt station) has been carried by DB Schenker Rail. Rollingstock Since the beginning of operations until the end of the Second World War, the AKN had a total of 28 steam locomotives, which handled all traffic until the arrival of the first railcars, built in 1930. Two more railcars were added before the end of the war. Five Esslingen railbuses were introduced for passenger services in 1951, which operated until 1963. From 1956 to 1963, MAN delivered ten more railbuses and an additional four Uerdingen railbuses were added. A total of ten control cars achieved the required capacity. In 1927 the AKN had 25 biaxial and five triaxial carriages, seven of which were also equipped for the carriage of mail. 42 covered and 72 open wagons were acquired from Deutsche Reichsbahn. Seven milk wagons carried the daily milk shipments. By 1960, this pool of rollingstock had changed only slightly. Milk wagons no longer appear in the statistics in 1936. Diesel locomotives operated for the first time on the AKN network in 1948. A total of 20 diesel locomotives operated on the line hauling freight until 1972. From 1976, new VTE railcars were operated between Eidelstedt and Kaltenkirchener. Since 1993, new VTA railcars have been used. Eight trains have been given third-rail current collectors, so that they could run on the S-Bahn network. Notes References * Railway lines in Hamburg Railway lines in Schleswig-Holstein Railway lines opened in 1884 1884 establishments in Germany "