I’m reblogging this every time I see it.
AND COUNTING.
EXPECTATIONS

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@dystopianbritain
I’m reblogging this every time I see it.
AND COUNTING.
Nicholas Humphrey’s terrible letting agency
For a Letting agency that prides itself on Student lettings, it sure doesn't pay attention to its Landlords, and practices in fraudulent behaviour when dealing with it's customers. I was given a horrific experience with the letting agency that still leaves me feeling vulnerable.
I am a first year student at the University of Reading, and due to some complications I was unable to get an accommodation that fit my budget on campus. Usually it's 2nd years or 3rd year students that rent but because of my situation I proposed to my family that it would be easier to go into private accommodation. I was a tad hasty with my research since I was all too aware of how close the Semester was. So I went to the first letting agency listed. I looked at a couple of properties and listed as a student letting was the property that I chose.
From the images it seemed to be a refurbished and fitted property, in the radius of my university going at a favourable rent. I then took it upon myself to call the letting agency to have confirmation of the state of the property and the look of the rent and the room that I was paying for. The agent asked if I was available for a site visit, I stated that I couldn't because of work and that I lived fairly far from the area in question and all implied and stated that I was relying on the reasonable letting agents description of the property and its availability. The letting agent seemed to perk up on the phone and then led to reassure me on the state of the property, following to rush me into paying the application fee, the deposit and the first month rent for the room. He then stated that he would forward the contract to me, to sign on a later date.
Before the contract was given to me I took the initiative to call the Landlord whose number was given and enquire about the property, she told me a complete different story on the state of the property but then followed to reassure me that this was only a temporary state and by the time I moved in none of the issues that she stated such as the room not being furbished would be there. I note here now, that she also, very much downplayed the state of the property.
Being obviously shocked by this contrast in descriptions we called the letting agent, who when we asked for the application fee and the rent back refused to do so and stated that the rent and deposit was with the Landlord and that he and her were very much sure that the property would be in an adequate state by the time I moved in. With a continuous refusal from either party to pay me back and promises that I was forced to rely upon I signed the contract. By the way on the contract the letting agent was listed as the managing agent of the property and technically I had signed with him. I signed the contract because it didn't seem like I was going to be getting my money back.
A day before moving in, I was contacted by the Landlord who was hoping that we could delay the moving in period even though i'd paid rent that covered the entire month, stating that the property wasn't ready. Obviously frustrated and angry we told her we were coming anyway, upon getting there we realised the dismal state of the property and the room that I was supposed to be letting; none of it looked like the images on the website, (the rooms looked touched up) or how the property was described. She stated that it was a work in progress, the room that I was meant to be letting was stripped to the bare wall, and there was DIY equipment, needles and pins everywhere, she said her builders had left it there. Of course there were really no builders, they would never leave a room in that state, she had obviously left it there to give the image of working on the building. I was upset and disgruntled and contacting the letting agent, he tried to reassure me that the landlord would have it all complete in a couple of months time. This did not happen, and she forced me to pay rent in advance of a quarter to stay in the property which she dumped me in a bare room without a bed which I spent a month in a sleeping bag before she got one for me. I couldn't go elsewhere for now as I had to initiate breaking contract and she had made me pay in advance and it didn't seem like she was going to give me back the money.
Anyway, she never registered my deposit and still to this day after i've moved out and gone elsewhere hasn't given me my full deposit back. The letting agent also never gave me the gas safety certificate, and only had her signature as confirmation that it existed. On a date when I had called environmental health to inspect the property they told me the property wasn't even gas safe when they called an electrician who identified a gas leak in the pipes they then shut down the heating in the property (In October!). Furthermore, the property was listed as a hmo not a student letting, there were no locks on the doors and there were other adult tenants, who were fortunately trustworthy, but could have been a very different situation.
Complaining to the higher branch team about the letting agent definitely motivated him to reply to me, but he was rather snarky and provided no real helpful information to remedy the situation even laughing at the idea of taking them to court over the disgusting situation because as he put it they were only following policy and procedure and they cut all ties with the Landlord and recommended that I should be suing her, which is very true but after getting a signature from her to break contract, (which was hard because she insisted that the contract was between me and the letting agent and not her, because as I stated before she was not the signator of the contract.) she then persisted to ghost me by changing numbers and the address listed on the contract and provided by the letting agency wasn't even viable as she doesn't seem to respond to the letters I've sent. Nor does she reply to the emails, at this point I neither have the time nor resources to go find her and then take her to court.
At this point, I only want compensation, for the economic duress and the strain of the situation and am currently going ahead with court proceedings against the letting agency, but the entire situation was awful and should never of happened and shouldn't have been dealt with the way it was.
#StephonClark #BlackLivesMatter
Details on Arrest Warrant Issued for Eagles Michael Bennett; Facing 10 Years in Jail For Allegedly Running Over a Disable Security Guard at the Super Bowl
I knew this shit didnt sound right…
They said ran over like he got her with a car. Wow
yeah I thought they meant running over with a car too. What the fuck.
Lifehack
Representation matters
#blackout2k18
100 things that you did not know about Africa - Nos.1 - 25
1. The human race is of African origin. The oldest known skeletal remains of anatomically modern humans (or homo sapiens) were excavated at sites in East Africa. Human remains were discovered at Omo in Ethiopia that were dated at 195,000 years old, the oldest known in the world. 2. Skeletons of pre-humans have been found in Africa that date back between 4 and 5 million years. The oldest known ancestral type of humanity is thought to have been the australopithecus ramidus, who lived at least 4.4 million years ago. 3. Africans were the first to organise fishing expeditions 90,000 years ago. At Katanda, a region in northeastern Zaïre (now Congo), was recovered a finely wrought series of harpoon points, all elaborately polished and barbed. Also uncovered was a tool, equally well crafted, believed to be a dagger. The discoveries suggested the existence of an early aquatic or fishing based culture. 4. Africans were the first to engage in mining 43,000 years ago. In 1964 a hematite mine was found in Swaziland at Bomvu Ridge in the Ngwenya mountain range. Ultimately 300,000 artefacts were recovered including thousands of stone-made mining tools. Adrian Boshier, one of the archaeologists on the site, dated the mine to a staggering 43,200 years old. 5. Africans pioneered basic arithmetic 25,000 years ago. The Ishango bone is a tool handle with notches carved into it found in the Ishango region of Zaïre (now called Congo) near Lake Edward. The bone tool was originally thought to have been over 8,000 years old, but a more sensitive recent dating has given dates of 25,000 years old. On the tool are 3 rows of notches. Row 1 shows three notches carved next to six, four carved next to eight, ten carved next to two fives and finally a seven. The 3 and 6, 4 and 8, and 10 and 5, represent the process of doubling. Row 2 shows eleven notches carved next to twenty-one notches, and nineteen notches carved next to nine notches. This represents 10 + 1, 20 + 1, 20 - 1 and 10 - 1. Finally, Row 3 shows eleven notches, thirteen notches, seventeen notches and nineteen notches. 11, 13, 17 and 19 are the prime numbers between 10 and 20. 6. Africans cultivated crops 12,000 years ago, the first known advances in agriculture. Professor Fred Wendorf discovered that people in Egypt’s Western Desert cultivated crops of barley, capers, chick-peas, dates, legumes, lentils and wheat. Their ancient tools were also recovered. There were grindstones, milling stones, cutting blades, hide scrapers, engraving burins, and mortars and pestles. 7. Africans mummified their dead 9,000 years ago. A mummified infant was found under the Uan Muhuggiag rock shelter in south western Libya. The infant was buried in the foetal position and was mummified using a very sophisticated technique that must have taken hundreds of years to evolve. The technique predates the earliest mummies known in Ancient Egypt by at least 1,000 years. Carbon dating is controversial but the mummy may date from 7438 (±220) BC. 8. Africans carved the world’s first colossal sculpture 7,000 or more years ago. The Great Sphinx of Giza was fashioned with the head of a man combined with the body of a lion. A key and important question raised by this monument was: How old is it? In October 1991 Professor Robert Schoch, a geologist from Boston University, demonstrated that the Sphinx was sculpted between 5000 BC and 7000 BC, dates that he considered conservative. 9. On the 1 March 1979, the New York Times carried an article on its front page also page sixteen that was entitled Nubian Monarchy called Oldest. In this article we were assured that: “Evidence of the oldest recognizable monarchy in human history, preceding the rise of the earliest Egyptian kings by several generations, has been discovered in artifacts from ancient Nubia” (i.e. the territory of the northern Sudan and the southern portion of modern Egypt.) 10. The ancient Egyptians had the same type of tropically adapted skeletal proportions as modern Black Africans. A 2003 paper appeared in American Journal of Physical Anthropology by Dr Sonia Zakrzewski entitled Variation in Ancient Egyptian Stature and Body Proportions where she states that: “The raw values in Table 6 suggest that Egyptians had the ‘super-Negroid’ body plan described by Robins (1983). The values for the brachial and crural indices show that the distal segments of each limb are longer relative to the proximal segments than in many ‘African’ populations.”
11. The ancient Egyptians had Afro combs. One writer tells us that the Egyptians “manufactured a very striking range of combs in ivory: the shape of these is distinctly African and is like the combs used even today by Africans and those of African descent.” 12. The Funerary Complex in the ancient Egyptian city of Saqqara is the oldest building that tourists regularly visit today. An outer wall, now mostly in ruins, surrounded the whole structure. Through the entrance are a series of columns, the first stone-built columns known to historians. The North House also has ornamental columns built into the walls that have papyrus-like capitals. Also inside the complex is the Ceremonial Court, made of limestone blocks that have been quarried and then shaped. In the centre of the complex is the Step Pyramid, the first of 90 Egyptian pyramids. 13. The first Great Pyramid of Giza, the most extraordinary building in history, was a staggering 481 feet tall - the equivalent of a 40-storey building. It was made of 2.3 million blocks of limestone and granite, some weighing 100 tons. 14. The ancient Egyptian city of Kahun was the world’s first planned city. Rectangular and walled, the city was divided into two parts. One part housed the wealthier inhabitants – the scribes, officials and foremen. The other part housed the ordinary people. The streets of the western section in particular, were straight, laid out on a grid, and crossed each other at right angles. A stone gutter, over half a metre wide, ran down the centre of every street. 15. Egyptian mansions were discovered in Kahun - each boasting 70 rooms, divided into four sections or quarters. There was a master’s quarter, quarters for women and servants, quarters for offices and finally, quarters for granaries, each facing a central courtyard. The master’s quarters had an open court with a stone water tank for bathing. Surrounding this was a colonnade. 16 The Labyrinth in the Egyptian city of Hawara with its massive layout, multiple courtyards, chambers and halls, was the very largest building in antiquity. Boasting three thousand rooms, 1,500 of them were above ground and the other 1,500 were underground. 17. Toilets and sewerage systems existed in ancient Egypt. One of the pharaohs built a city now known as Amarna. An American urban planner noted that: “Great importance was attached to cleanliness in Amarna as in other Egyptian cities. Toilets and sewers were in use to dispose waste. Soap was made for washing the body. Perfumes and essences were popular against body odour. A solution of natron was used to keep insects from houses … Amarna may have been the first planned ‘garden city’.” 18. Sudan has more pyramids than any other country on earth - even more than Egypt. There are at least 223 pyramids in the Sudanese cities of Al Kurru, Nuri, Gebel Barkal and Meroë. They are generally 20 to 30 metres high and steep sided. 19. The Sudanese city of Meroë is rich in surviving monuments. Becoming the capital of the Kushite Empire between 590 BC until AD 350, there are 84 pyramids in this city alone, many built with their own miniature temple. In addition, there are ruins of a bath house sharing affinities with those of the Romans. Its central feature is a large pool approached by a flight of steps with waterspouts decorated with lion heads. 20. Bling culture has a long and interesting history. Gold was used to decorate ancient Sudanese temples. One writer reported that: “Recent excavations at Meroe and Mussawwarat es-Sufra revealed temples with walls and statues covered with gold leaf”. 21. In around 300 BC, the Sudanese invented a writing script that had twenty-three letters of which four were vowels and there was also a word divider. Hundreds of ancient texts have survived that were in this script. Some are on display in the British Museum. 22. In central Nigeria, West Africa’s oldest civilisation flourished between 1000 BC and 300 BC. Discovered in 1928, the ancient culture was called the Nok Civilisation, named after the village in which the early artefacts were discovered. Two modern scholars, declare that “[a]fter calibration, the period of Nok art spans from 1000 BC until 300 BC”. The site itself is much older going back as early as 4580 or 4290 BC. 23. West Africans built in stone by 1100 BC. In the Tichitt-Walata region of Mauritania, archaeologists have found “large stone masonry villages” that date back to 1100 BC. The villages consisted of roughly circular compounds connected by “well-defined streets”. 24. By 250 BC, the foundations of West Africa’s oldest cities were established such as Old Djenné in Mali. 25. Kumbi Saleh, the capital of Ancient Ghana, flourished from 300 to 1240 AD. Located in modern day Mauritania, archaeological excavations have revealed houses, almost habitable today, for want of renovation and several storeys high. They had underground rooms, staircases and connecting halls. Some had nine rooms. One part of the city alone is estimated to have housed 30,000 people.
By Robin Walker
Part 1. 1-25
Part 2. 26-50
Part 3. 50-75
By Robin Walker
Robin Walkers book When we ruled is one of the best books Africans and African Diaspora can use firstly as a introduction to African history and secondly a good source to become proficient with precolonial African history.
Recommended reading
Please follow my patreon for more detailed information, sources, reading lists and exclusive content. www.patreon.com/Diasporicroots
Fingers crossed for all of our ACADEMY AWARD nominees at tonight’s #Oscars!
(cartoon by David Horsey)
i’m going to hell for laughing at this.
This ain’t right lmaooo
Yall!!! L M F A O
I think about this video almost daily
(cartoon by Adam Zyglis)
i would just like to point out that the recent conversation surrounding the male birth control trials isn’t just “lol weak men can’t deal with side effects” it’s the fact that when they were testing hormonal birth control for women in the 50s & 60s, the side effects were much worse, and the women who participated in them, mostly in puerto rico, were not told about the side effects or that the drug was experimental
and THEN when women dropped out, they started using incarcerated women as their guinea pigs, and then despite the fact that some scientists who participated in the original trials were like “uh i don’t think this is actually good, it’s making a lot of these women sick,” the pharmaceutical industry & fda were like ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ and approved it for the general population anyways, without really warning women about the potential for all these negative side effects
and THEN researchers basically ceased to do any type of research on side effects like depression and decreased libido for 50 years, despite the fact that women were still complaining about them, and because there was no “hard evidence” of these side effects, a lot of doctors basically just assumed women were exaggerating or making it up. and that continued until the first major study of depression in women who take hormonal contraceptives was released just. this. year.
so yeah, the patriarchy. *waves flag*
further reading:
the puerto rico pill trials
the racist & sexist history of keeping side effects of birth controls secret
“it’s not in your head” striking new study links birth control to depression
the side effects of male birth control stopping drug trials reveals a disturbing sexism
male birth control shot prevents pregnancy, researchers call for further study to reduce risk of depression, other side effects
oh, and fun fact: even after this new study was released, a lot of the scientific community is still being like “but can we PROVE these women aren’t just depressed because they’re LOVESICK?”
Okay but the Puerto Rico drug trials were not just patriarchy, they were and are a form of blatant COLONIALISM towards Puerto Rican women, who are mostly poor and of color.
And also id like to add, since this is a source of major outrage among us Puerto Ricans, that this isnt and wasnt the first time the Americans experimented on us and that as recently as THIS YEAR, they wanted to test the Naled insecticide on our population.
And Puerto Rican women were sterilized against their will en-masse during this time which was under Muñoz Marin’s 20 yr tenure as governor of the Island.
Some knowledge ✊🏾
Black Panther Cast for Essence Magazine
Never related to a post on Snapchat Buzzed more.