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Besides the zoo, what are the best places to take kids in Atlanta, Georgia?

Fernbank is great for kids. World of Coca-Cola is good. If it’s Christmas, go to the Festival of Trees, ride the Pink Pig at Lenox Square and drive through the light display at Stone Mountain Park.(Actually, Stone Mountain is a good place for kids anytime except the Fourth of July, when it’s too packed for ANYONE to enjoy. There’s a beach, a train and a laser show every night - and if you want to wear out their little butts so you can get some sleep at night, climb the mountain with them.)There are museums all over town that would be enjoyable for kids. The Children's Museum of Atlanta is probably the best known, but depending on your kids, Emory has a museum called the Michael C. Carlos museum they might enjoy (my child loved it from the time she was about nine, but she had spent almost every weekend at the Birmingham Museum of Art when she was five until we moved to Atlanta when she was eight).I would avoid the Aquarium at all costs. If you’ve ever been to a city aquarium, you’ll understand why, but if you insist on taking your kids, take along plenty of Xanax and your iPod.Try the Atlanta History Center and the Botanical Garden.And then, of course, there’s Legoland at Phipps Plaza - not a museum, but a place kids love.Not every kid will enjoy every place, but there is somewhere in Atlanta for every kid.

Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Denmark? Which is the best country to live?

Switzerland, Norway and Denmark are all three in the top 4 most developed countries in the world. They all offer excellent quality of life. Now Iceland is also well ranked, but is very isolated and not lots of people live there.Norway is extremely cold, so unless you like that I wouldn't advise to go there.I personally would pick Switzerland. It's a beautiful country with amazing quality of life and infrastructure. Everything is top-notch quality. You can live next to the lake in the center of the city and still be just 40 minutes away from moutains and ski resorts. Cities are very green, full of trees, very clean and safe. There are fields and forest everywhere. The climate is great, it doesn't get too hot in summer and not too cold in winter. It usually snows a few days in winter and it's very sunny in summer. The country is in the middle of Europe and all cities like Paris, London, Berlin, Milan, Rome, Barcelona, Madrid, Lisbon, etc. are reachable in less than one hour (train or plane, depending in the city).The best cities in the country are (in my opinion) Zurich in the German-speaking side and Lausanne in the French-speaking side. These two cities are the most lively, vibrant and animated in the country. They offer lots of restaurants, bars, nightclubs, museums, festivals and activities. So if you're a student or less than 30 years old I would definitely pick one of these two. If on the other hand you have children and want more of a calm environment, Switzerland has plenty of smaller and calmer cities as well! A few that cross my mind are Neuchâtel, Sion, Nyon, Lucerne, Lugano, Biel, Thun, Schaffhausen and Fribourg. All lovely little cities with nice old town and good housing quality.Oh and people understand very well English since the language is taught to them starting at 8 years old. So basically everybody in Switzerland is fluent in English.Best of luck!

In ancient Rome, what was one of the weirdest practices they used to do?

In our society, mischievous artists like giggling schoolboys leave crude drawings of a phallus on walls to shock and titillate. They are usually scrubbed off or painted over as such images are deemed taboo and offensive. In ancient Rome, the image of the phallus was depicted on door knockers, lamps, wind chimes, charms as well as drawn and sculpted on walls and depicted in mosaics and other decorative surfaces. The sexual energy of these images was believed to protect people by invoking the power of the god Fascinus. The Vestal Virgins tended the cult of the fascinus populi Romani, who represented a masculine generative power located within the hearth, regarded as sacred. Saint Augustine notes that a phallic image was carried in procession annually at the festival of Father Liber, the Roman god identified with Bacchus or the Greek Dionysys, for the purpose of protecting the fields from fascinatio, magic compulsion:certain rites of Liber were celebrated in Italy which were of such unrestrained wickedness that the shameful parts of the male were worshipped at crossroads in his honour. …this obscene member, placed on a little trolley, was first exhibited with great honour at the crossroads in the countryside, and then conveyed into the city itself. … In this way, it seems, the god Liber was to be propitiated, in order to secure the growth of seeds and to repel enchantment (fascinatio) from the fields. De Civitate Dei, 17.21.Oil lamp with a winged fascinum:A tintinnabulum from Pompeii showing a winged phallus:A bronze polyphallic tintinnabulum of Mercury from Pompeii: the missing bells were attached to each tip (Naples Museum)Although the etymology of “fascinum” is unknown, the English word “fascinate” derives from it via the Latin verb “fascinare,” “to use the power of the fascinum to enchant, to bewitch.”The amulet itself was called a fascinum. It was worn by children to ward off illnesses. They would be worn to ward off the evil eye. The type of fascinum also indicated the social standing of the wearer.The apotropaic fascinum as a protection against the evil eye is also found in bas-reliefs, as in this example from Leptis Magna in Libya, a legged phallus ejaculating into an evil eye on which a scorpion sits:By SashaCoachman - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, File:Bas-relief of fascinus.jpgThe penis was so associated with power that it was often used as a symbol of war, adorning the chariot of the triumphator. Pliny the Elder wrote: “It is the image of this divinity that is attached beneath the triumphant car of the victorious general, protecting him, like some attendant physician, against the effects of envy.”There was even the worship of a god connected to the phallus. Priapus, Greek Πρίηπος, was a minor rustic deity originally worshipped by Greek colonists in Lampascus, Asia Minor. He protected livestock, beehives, vegetable gardens, fruit trees, grape vines and virility. The cult spread to mainland Greece then to Italy during the 3rd century BC. He was said to be the son of Aphrodite by Dionysus or the son of Hermes or of Zeus or of Pan. Hera cursed him with impotence, ugliness and foul-mindedness while he was still in Aphrodite’s womb in revenge for Aphrodite’s having been awarded the golden apple by Paris. The gods threw him down to Earth where he was brought up by shepherds and then joined the band of Pan and his satyrs. His statue, holding a wooden sickle in his hand, was used in the Roman gardens as scarecrow, and his enormous penis as a threat against thieves. Anyone who dares steal from the garden will be sodomised or sexually assaulted in another fashion by Priapus. He is a depicted as a dwarf wearing a Phrygian cap as he came from Asia Minor. Priapus is always shown with a permanently engorged penis, sometimes painted red, which inspired the coining of the medical term “priapism.” In later times, Priapus was the subject of a hilarious collection of epigrams called the Priapeia, in which he brags about his virility and threatens trespassers with picturesque sexual assaults. Ovid wrote about Priapus’ attempt to violate a nymph in his Fasti, AD 8. There were numerous statues and depictions of Priapus, including the famous fresco from Pompeii. The god is shown weighing his phallus against the produce of the garden. He is crowned with a peaked Phrygian cap, wears Phrygian boots, and has a Bacchic, cone-tipped thyrsus resting by his side.In many places, such as Pompeii, the ubiquitous phallus was also depicted in graffiti, such as the one with the inscription: “I screwed the barmaid.” Humans never change.The practice of displaying in public thousands of paintings and sculptures of the phallus in current times is found in Bhutan, where the symbol is thought to ward off evil people, spirits and gossip.

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