Did you see that recently Pedro Pascal called himself a lazy 50-year-old bougie bitch?

@theartofmadeline
Jules of Nature

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JBB: An Artblog!
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art
RMH
noise dept.
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
NASA
Not today Justin
hello vonnie
$LAYYYTER

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@celestial-supremacy
Did you see that recently Pedro Pascal called himself a lazy 50-year-old bougie bitch?
hey i just woke up to the cable being suspended,
we have to pay 400 dollars and if not they won't turn it back on. my little sister can't do remote learning, she can't go to school. i'm very upset about this.
i'm typing this out on my phone and am about to use up all of my data (what a coincidence)
sorry i'm asking for more help but i have no one else to turn to.
my paypal
please reblog and share even if you can’t donate
if you haven’t or want to reblog again, thank you!!
u lie down and its like (• ) ( •) and thats just how it is
You lie on your side and it’s just (•)(• )
what kind of eyes do y’all have
Seen in the window at Gulf of Maine Books in Brunswick, Maine. Photo: Bill Roorbach
Except America wasn’t an endless expanse of forest with no certain borders. At least not while human beings inhabited it. The idea that native peoples did not cultivate or shape our land and that we had no borders is white propaganda meant to dehumanize and de-legitimize native peoples.
This illustration here show Apalachee people using slash and burn methods for agriculture. Fires were set regularly to intention burn down forests and plains. Why would we do this? Well because an unregulated forest isn’t that great for people, actually. We set fires to destroy new forest growth and undergrowth, and to remove trees, allowing for easier game hunting, nutrient enriched soil, and better growth rates for crops and herbs we used in food and medicine.
Pre-Colonial New England, where my tribe the Abenaki are from, looked more like an extensive meadow or savannah with trees growing in pockets and groves. Enough woodland to support birds, deer, and moose, but not too much to make hunting difficult. We carefully shaped the land around us to suit our needs as a thriving and successful people. Slash and burn agriculture was practiced virtually everywhere in the new world, from the pacific coast to chesapeake bay, from panama to quebec. It was a highly successful way of revitalizing the land and promoting crop growth, as well as preventing massive forest fires that thrive in unregulated forests. Berries were the major source of fruit for my tribe, and we needed to burn the undergrowth so they could grow.
That changed when white people invaded, and brought with them disease. In my tribe, up to 9 in 10 people died. 90% of our people perished not from violence starvation, but from disease. Entire villages would be decimated, struck down by small pox. Suddenly, we couldn’t care for the land anymore. There weren’t enough of us to maintain a vast, carefully structured ecological system like we had for thousands of years. We didn’t have the numbers, or strength. So the trees grew back and unregulated. We couldn’t set fires anymore, and we couldn’t cultivate the land. And white people would make certain we never could again. Timber, after all, was the most important export from New England.
Endless trees and untamed wilderness is a nice fantasy. But it’s a very white fantasy, one that erases the history of my people and of my land. One that paints native peoples are merely parasites leeching off the land, not masters of the earth who new the right balance of hunting and agriculture. It robs us of our agency as people, and takes our accomplishments from us. Moreover, it implies that only white people ever discovered the power to shape the world around them, and that mere brown people can’t possibly have had anything to do with changing our environment.
Don’t bring back untamed wilderness. Bring back my fire setters, my tree sappers, my farmers and my fishers. Bring back my people who were here first.
Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of_fire#Role_of_fire_by_natives
https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fsbdev3_000385.pdf
http://www.sidalc.net/repdoc/A11604i/A11604i.pdf
For those curious I recommend reading Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists and the Ecology of New England. https://books.google.com/books/about/Changes_in_the_Land.html?id=AHclmuykdBQC&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false
O’ho. Our tribe used to do regular controlled burns in the brush in CA to prevent- guess what? Uncontrollable wildfires. (also it keeps the poison oak down and helps some plants propagate) And before yall panic these methods worked because they were sustainable. You can’t survive if you destroy your resources; tribes knew how to make sure they could come back to a harvest ground next year and harvest again. There was still plenty of wilderness and it was often healthier for a touch of human help here and there. people used to be all over this continent.
From a physically disabled, wheelchair user: stop using the word “crippled” to describe your experience with anxiety, depression, etc
“I have crippling anxiety” “i have crippling depression” “the stress from it all is crippling” you are using a slur. You are disrespecting every physical disabled person. Just use “disabling”. Why are slurs so engrained in how people talk about mental illness.
Just because you have a mental illness doesn’t exempt you from being ableist towards physically disabled individuals. Shut up and listen when physically disabled / chronically ill people talk about how you are being ableist towards them without saying “but i’m mentally ill so I understand” because you don’t. You don’t understand. Learn to live with that.
We are not here to teach you how to “not be ableist” you should fucking catch yourself on your own. I’m tired. I’m disabled. I’m in pain. Do the work yourself, stop making disabled people do it for you.
yes, able-bodied, non-physically disabled people should reblog this. I also believe if you don’t have issues with mobility you should reblog as well.
Good words to use instead of cr*ppled:
- debilitating
- severe
- disabling
- immobilizing
- incapacitating
I finally got all of my pens to fit in one bag. It’s the A4 size better together organizer. You’re looking at approximately 135 pens and highlighters.
Reupping this ancient post
In layman terms.
THE GOOP LAB???????
MA’AM....WHAT ARE YOU STANDING IN
I FILMED MYSELF READING THIS TWITTER POST AND I HAVEN’T BEEN ABLE TO STOP LAUGHING
Star Wars: The Last Jedi Commentary.
I am desperately delighted by every single grown-up professional actor who still says or at least mouths the sound of their spacegun firing.
I forgot Beethoven was deaf for a minute and had a hard time finding the specific typo, while laughing uncontrollably
“I’m not looking for somebody who will whisper sweet nothings into my ear to feed the ravenous ego of my heart. But someone who can look me straight in the eye and say, I love you, whether you fail or fall, just as you are.”
— Beau Taplin (via quotemadness)
oh. oh yes. i think i could get used to this view / working in bed because this used to be my work space and… it works. fingers crossed it won’t mess with my precious sleeping hours but so far so good!
Your Simple Fantasy Name
Your first initial and the last two letters of your last name.
Tag yourself, I’m Ley.
I’m fucking jon.
At least you’re not rat.
How do you even pronounce “Brg”?