src: solip_ist -- monogatari
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
styofa doing anything
Mike Driver
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
🪼
Monterey Bay Aquarium
$LAYYYTER

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

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JBB: An Artblog!
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Show & Tell

izzy's playlists!

tannertan36
tumblr dot com

titsay

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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@am8ryllis
src: solip_ist -- monogatari
nationalist movements with 0 supporters: * Tunisian Vandal restorationalism - they view vandal rule in Tunisia as the true period of independence from foreign rule and cultural influence, and thus wish to add more germanic elements to the local Tunisian culture. * Double Sicilians - they fight for the creation of a modern state with the boarders of King m of the Two Sicilies (1816 to 1861), as a definitely the natural boarders of a real nation. * Neo-scythian - claim to be the real inheritors of scythian nationhood, and see Huns as evil colonialist oppressors. Occasionally they complain about the Slavs, because of the lack of modern Huns, but 1. the Slavs showed up too late to really to be to blame, and 2. the Slavs suffered enough and criticizing them makes you look like a Nazi. * European Nobility nationalist - they view the European nobility as a distinct ethnic group with their own unique culture and heritage, more related to each other than their former subjects, and thus the European nobility deserve some land somewhere to make a Noble Nation-state (to be clear, the potential state is a democracy, they are NOT monarchists). * Heptarchians - technically 7 different nationalist movements, but they are united in calling for the fracturing of England into East Anglia, Essex, Kent, Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex, and Wessex. The Sussexians are particularly eager to end the influence of danelaw in their country.
Everyone say thank you sanitation workers we owe you our lives sanitation workers
I keep thinking about that attempt I made to characterize people I get along with, a few days ago. There’s a specific thing there but I’m just not sure how to phrase it.
It’s like a sort of … feeling that the world is bigger than you, and very complicated, and filled with things you’d never expect. It’s not exactly “skepticism,” and not exactly “humility.” It’s compatible with having a high view of oneself or one’s intellect, though not with certain versions of those things. It’s compatible with strong and numerous opinions, too, though not with certain ways of having strong and numerous opinions.
It’s having your most instinctive response to the world be “this is billions of distinct things; this is jeweled chaos; this is a buzzing, blooming confusion.” And then you make models and concepts to try to make some sense of it. Sometimes you become quite attached to them. Sometimes maybe too attached. But if you become too attached it’s not because you think your concepts are reality. It’s because you feel you’ll be so terribly lost without them.
When I try to think of the opposite of this temperament I think of those sorts of political or culture bloggers who are never surprised by anything, who always respond to every news story with “oh, look, more of the thing I know about, doing the things I know it does.” It’s not that these people are too political, or too certain. It’s that their politics and certainty doesn’t feel like a lifeboat they’re clinging to in a vast roiling ocean. They give off the impression of not seeing the ocean.
And lots of things follow from this. You have to find ways of living with this ever-present sense – sometimes dulled, but never gone – that reality is too large, grotesquely large, that you’ll never find your way in it. So you learn to revel in it a bit, to become an eclectic, an amateur, collecting and admiring little bits of jeweled chaos. You collect #quotes. You learn to laugh when you see something you don’t understand, so that you don’t instead despair.
You feel wary about systems, you feel wary about things that are top-down and a priori. You like data. But not in the sense of “the data is in”; not in the sense that we have measured, so now we know, and now no one can ever question again. But you are always worrying that you are missing the forest for the trees, because there are so many trees, too many, too many. You distrust the single event, the dramatic example, because you know that reality has room for everything, because you have enough such specimens pinned and mounted in your collection to prove any claim or its negation. You want the species, not the specimen – but you feel deep down that that has to be hubris, because all you see are specimens, and the great whirling confusion laughs at your taxonomies.
You come to observation, to experimentation, to something like science, even to something like positivism, not out of a zeal for the general but because you know the particular will wash over you and crush you. When the concepts are stripped away everything is laughter and awe and horror and you bring the concepts back, not to perfect life, but simply to bear it. And you tend to your collection.
catgirl boot sequence
minor misconception, this is the Power On-Self Test (POST) handled by the catgirl's firmware in order to make sure all hardware components are functional (eyes, hair, ears, etc). The main boot sequence is initiated directly following this, in which the kernel and hardware drivers are loaded into the catgirl's memory.
THIS DRAWING WAS MADE 700 YEARS AGO BY A 7-YEARS-OLD BOY NAMED ONFIM WHO LIVED IN NOVOGROD.
more of onfime’s drawings:
It kind of fucks with me that somebody killed ötzi the iceman because ötzi himself is like whatever but the silent presence of human hands that drew back the string of the bow that shot the arrow that killed him is crazy. the idea that there were various people involved in that situation and while one of them has had his last hours painstakingly reconstructed and studied to no end, the others now only exist insofar that an arrowhead had to get into his shoulder somehow. imagine killing someone and then suddenly your entire existence is only a vague shadow implied by the fact that you killed them. much to consider
Testing the mummified bone marrow of ötzi to figure out his ancestry whole time there’s definitely another person, maybe more than one, standing in the room with us but I can never see or speak to them because I only know them through the assurance that they were there too in the form of one single arrowhead. I hate prehistory so much it’s unreal
I hate it too tbh
"The End of the World" art by Kr
When we first started using explosives in warfare, they were so volatile that people had to carry them right up to the fortification they wanted to destroy and gently place them beside it, which was ridiculous. Eventually we developed explosives that you could actually shoot out of a gun or drop from a flying machine, but they were still completely at the mercy of ballistics, so we carpet-bombed everything near the target in the hopes that a few would hit it, which was undesirable in at least two ways. Only recently have we finally begun to make serious use of "smart" munitions able to steer toward their targets and strike with precision, but it seems like even before the whole world has made that transition, we may move on to these "loitering" munitions, which can manoeuvre semi-autonomously, execute complex behaviours, and wait for the ideal moment to strike. The obvious countermeasure to these is jamming, and so it's only a matter of time before they become fully autonomous.
This is scary from the standpoint of people who would rather not be bombed, but it's interesting conceptually, isn't it? Back in antiquity you had soldiers throwing javelins, and since the soldier was obviously the weak link there, we just made the javelins ever more independent and ever more remote. It's hard to explain, but I feel a kind of wistful fondness when I imagine how we may one day have munitions so independent that they can keep fighting each other forever after all of us have died, bombs like moths whose lives are spent in larval darkness dreaming of the moment when they can finally soar away in a noble adult body that has only days to live.
You are an unreliable narrator because your coping mechanisms for your deep-seated trauma forbid you from acknowledging the reality of the situation. I am an unreliable narrator because I sincerely have no idea what the fuck is going on.
Harrow versus Gideon.
The Sandhof lilies & the Milky Way, Namibia
kylegoetschphotography
Happy Smallpox Eradication Day!
On May 8th, 1980, smallpox was declared eradicated. Meaning there is no natural spread of smallpox anywhere in the world.
Smallpox infections date back at least 3,000 years. There are smallpox scars on the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses V.
The last documented person to have naturally contracted smallpox was 23-year-old hospital cook Ali Maow Maalin, who survived the disease in October of 1977.
The last person to die of the disease was 40-year-old medical photographer Janet Parker, infected in a lab accident in the summer of 1978.
Smallpox was a terrifying disease. It was horrifically painful and killed 1/3 of the people it infected, leaving the rest badly scarred.
We got lucky with smallpox. It had no animal reservoir. Being that it only infected humans we were able to vaccinate our way to eradication.
Today variola major, the virus that causes smallpox, officially exists in 2 places: the CDC in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, and the Vector Institute, Koltsovo, Russia. It is likely that many other countries have samples as well.
Deliberate infection with cowpox to prevent smallpox was the first effective vaccine. We owe every other vaccine to this one breakthrough.
The smallpox vaccine causes a scar at the injection site. You probably know someone with a smallpox vaccine scar. Routine childhood vaccination for smallpox ended in 1972 in the USA.
We used the smallpox vaccine to vaccinate against mpox in 2022. Because of this, I have given the smallpox vaccine. We also vaccinate researchers and others at high risk.
Be grateful you live in a world that does not contain naturally spreading smallpox. It has a long and awful history.
“Haha remember when murder-hornets were gonna be a thing? What a nothingburger.”
Yes, because the Washington state government activated like a sleeper-cell and ruthlessly, systematically hunted them down and annihilated them.
“Y2K came to nothing amirite?”
Yes because an army of software engineers working around the clock, losing sleep, and busting ass till the last minute prevented it from happening.
“Remember the hole in the ozone layer?”
You mean the one that was fixed through rigorous world wide government action?
One of the root problems of our society is a refusal or inability by media to articulate that all those “it’s gonna be an apocalypse” disasters were not disasters because we collectively did something about them.
The good news is this is actually quite correctable. I maintain my firm belief that we as humans are capable of solving almost all of our problems, when we decide to do so.
And I still think that’s going to happen. I don’t know when or how, but I do know that abandoning hope won’t help bring it about.
And I refuse to let the cynics own a chunk of my heart.
Happy Smallpox Eradication Day
small little shepherdgirl with her shepherd's crook in the mercantile exchange trading pits trying to offload her sheep's wool. it's so loud and claustrophobic and there're so many people and she's been trying for hours but no one wants to buy.. she's on the verge of tears....
small little shepherdgirl out in the pasture with her flock she's sitting under a tree flipping through a copy of Shreve's Stochastic Calculus for Finance II she's learning how to price exotic options contracts on the future delivery of wool the next time she's in the big city she's gonna be prepared...
"and the universe said i love you."
prints now available here!