Claireville Conservation Area

oozey mess

★
dirt enthusiast
Xuebing Du

blake kathryn
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

JVL
noise dept.
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Peter Solarz
Cosimo Galluzzi
occasionally subtle

roma★
KIROKAZE

if i look back, i am lost

titsay
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!

Janaina Medeiros
d e v o n

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@blueacer
Claireville Conservation Area
Heart Island (Boldt Castle, right), Alexandria Bay, NY
Syria records its millionth child refugee UNICEF says the global community has failed in its responsibility to the children displaced by the violence in Syria
By Mark Tran Published in The Guardian - August 22, 2013
The Syria crisis reached another grim milestone as UN aid agencies reported that the number of registered child refugees had reached 1 million, most of whom were under 11. Within the country, more than 2 million children have been displaced, they said.
About 7,000 children have been killed since the conflict began. Of the hundreds of people killed in an apparent gas attack in rebel-held parts of eastern Damascus on Wednesday, many were children.
"This 1 millionth child refugee is not just another number," said Anthony Lake, executive director of Unicef, the UN agency for children. “This is a real child ripped from home, maybe even from a family, facing horrors we can only begin to comprehend.
He added: “We must all share the shame, because while we work to alleviate the suffering of those affected by this crisis, the global community has failed in its responsibility to this child. We should stop and ask ourselves how, in all conscience, we can continue to fail the children of Syria.”
Ahmed, 14, living at Za’atari camp in Jordan, said he longed to return home. “My brother has been killed and my sister [had] a brain injury. We thought we could not bring her here at first. But in the end we brought her and my brother in an ambulance.
"We ended up burying him here. My sister has been receiving treatment to learn how to walk again after the accident, because she lost the use of her left leg. I wish we could go back home one day."
Children comprise half the refugees from the Syria conflict, according to Unicef and UNHCR, the UN refugee agency. Latest figures show that about 740,000 Syrian child refugees are under 11. Most have gone to Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt. Increasingly, Syrians are fleeing to north Africa and Europe.
In recent days, Syrian Kurds have streamed into the Kurdish north of Iraq in numbers not seen since the civil war began. The arrival of tens of thousands of refugees caught the UNHCR and Iraq’s Kurdish regional government offguard.
Besides the physical stress and trauma of leaving home, often in perilous circumstances, refugee children must almost confront the threats from child labour, early marriage and the potential for sexual exploitation and trafficking.
More than 3,500 children in Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq have crossed Syria’s borders either alone or separated from their families.
"What is at stake is nothing less than the survival and wellbeing of a generation of innocents," said António Guterres, UNHCR high commissioner. “The youth of Syria are losing their homes, their family members and their futures. Even after they have crossed a border to safety, they are traumatised, depressed and in need of a reason for hope.”
Syria’s upheaval, now in its third year, has prompted the UN to launch a $5bn emergency appeal, the biggest in its history. Part of the appeal, the Syria regional refugee response plan, which calls for $3bn until December of this year, has currently reached only 38% of its target.
While intensified efforts are needed to find a political solution to the crisis in Syria, parties to the conflict must stop targeting civilians and cease recruitment of children, said Unicef and UNHCR.
"Children and their families must be safe to leave Syria and borders must remain open so they can cross to safety," they said. "Those who fail to meet these obligations under international humanitarian law should be held fully accountable for their actions."
Additonal information: http://storify.com/UNICEF/syrian-crisis
Topographie des Terrors
Amazing display!
Showcase: The Toronto Professional Firefighters' Association 911 Memorial, Humber River West
Beautiful discovery during a walk.
A humble, peaceful site that makes you want to sit down, take a minute and reflect.
Enough! #ChildrenofSyria have endured over two years of cruelty and carnage, and it’s time to say enough. This isn’t just about politics - it’s about survival - and these children need our help. Visit http://bit.ly/unicefsyria today. Share this message now. Every action counts.
Showcase: Brampton Cemetery
Resting place for some of earliest settlers in Brampton, Canada
# of days until you no longer 'see' your parents?
Thanks to George Stroumboulopoulos, I came across this website that let’s you calculate (ready for this?) number of times you will see you your parents before they are no longer alive.
Wesbite: SeeYourFolks.com
Using data and estimates provided by the World Health Organization, some very creative people (credited at the bottom of the site) have come up with a calculator. The simple homepage asks you to enter:
country they live in,
# of times you see your parents in a year,
mama’s age and
papa’s age right now.
BAM! its displays the horrifying/intriguing number.
Here is what I thought after doing the calculation:
WOA! TOO REAL!
The number, whether in the thousands or hundreds or tens (after trying different combinations in data entry) didn’t help me feel better.
The idea of knowing the # of times I’ll see them makes feel sad no matter how big the number was.
BUT! the silvery lining was that it made the ever present feeling (admit it, we all sadly think about that life stage) seem more real and made me want to act NOW and CONSTANTLY.
I want to make sure I see my parents regularly, talk to them in a way that we slowly move away from typical parent-child topics but about things that make them feel happy and excited about their past, what they’re doing now and what their hopes and dreams are for the future.
I admit it, conversations (meaningful, deep, holistic) with parents are challenging sometimes, especially if you have certain cultural, social, economic etc. biases or lifelong pressures/expectations always present.
BUT! you can sometimes have those aha! conversations and hopefully repeatedly or intermittently which lead to just better quality of lives both for you and your parents (I’m still working on this and will continue to).
I totally understand that there are different challenges to your interactions with parents such as distance, time, money, past issues, or perhaps you live with them but don’t actually have more meaningful conversations with them. But I think we can all do little things to increase the interactions and even enjoy them more!
I’ll stop there and go say hey! to my folks (and my be look up the sources developers of SeeMyFolks used).
a dusky shark plus mike wazowski makes a cyclops shark
(in honor of sharkweek)
Such a creative blog! Love all the sketches
Showcase: Shrine Circus
When the Circus came to town…
Do you feel like a kid yet?
I’m hoping Marvel are building up to a punchline here where the poster for Captain America 2 will be Natasha looking fierce whilst Steve clings onto her.
*waits patiently for a drawing of that said image*
did I get the broken neck angle right?
BEAUTIFUL
SAVE ME SPACE MAN
seriously though aren’t we over clinging ladies and LOTS OF FLOATING HEADS posters? this ain’t the 80s folks.
Comoooon Marvel!
Showcase: Salk Institute, San Diego
A biological research facility that sits on a hill, over looking a valley by the Pacific Ocean.
At first it seems like a regular college campus, but a short walk will lead you to a beautiful courtyard which looks like something from out of this world.
Every corner of the courtyard, hallways and garden is a photographer's playground. Endless angles to shoot from and plenty of features that draw you attention.
If you are ever in San Diego, I highly recommend visiting this architectural gem. Bring a lunch, talk a walk, enjoy the views and shoot some photos!
The Hedonic Treadmill
Word
A landmark court ruling protects shared trees from one co-owner unilaterally destroying them. Save this law from being repealed!
For tree and urban heritage lovers
Tree Porn is in Scotland doing six days of Orienteering. Today we were in Carse of Ardersier in Moray. The forest was beautiful.
Breathtakingly beautiful!
jessbennett:
ARGH. This is a) unacceptable, and b) so. fucking. preventable. See: SheSource, The Li.st, The OpEd Project, POWER Sources Project, LadyJournos.
Still: this is bigger than a sourcing problem. This is a byline problem, a Style section problem, a language problem, a trend story problem, a lazy journalism problem, an oversimplification problem. Also: I fundamentally reject the notion that women are less likely to want to be quoted.
There are free online databases to check for plagiarism. Maybe what we need is a free online database to check for dumbass, avoidable gender bias.
In an analysis of 352 front-page stories from the January and February of this year, a study found that the New York Times quoted more than three times as many male as female sources. Read more at Poynter