GERMANY: ILLUSTRATION: ROBERT RICHTER
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Cosmic Funnies

Origami Around
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
DEAR READER

Kaledo Art
we're not kids anymore.

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blake kathryn
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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Today's Document

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⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Mike Driver
RMH

Janaina Medeiros

JBB: An Artblog!
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@final-descent
GERMANY: ILLUSTRATION: ROBERT RICHTER
Find Robert and MP on Facebook here and here.
Neat
Mary Somerville is the reason for the word âscientist.â A self-taught mathematician, astronomer, and physicist, she was a master of connecting the physical sciences. In 1834, sheâd impressed a historian who found himself unable to publicly praise her because the only common description for that sort of scholar was âman of science.â He then coined the term âscientistâ- but it wasnât intended to be a gender-neutral noun, it was specifically a reference to Mary Somervilleâs expertise. Source Source 2 Source 3
Once again, Iâd like to thank everyone who has purchased a copy of my book. If you havenât purchased a copy, you can do so here. Youâll get a concise, mostly accessible refutation of common apologetic arguments, arguments atheists encounter in some form at some point in their discussions and debates with theists. If youâre interested in philosophy, this book is for you. My reductionist naturalism and my theory of consciousness will definitely be of interest; I also discuss a secular view of morality thatâs worth knowing. Happy reading! :)
The decline of a once-powerful majority is going to have profound implications.
The United States is no longer a majority white, Christian country, and that is already beginning to have profound social and political implications. At 45 percent of the population, white Christians are a shrinking demographicâand the backlash from many members of the group against the increasing diversification of America has been swift and bitter. âPeople fight like that when they are losing a sense of place, a sense of belonging, and a sense of the country that they understand and love,â says Robert P. Jones, the author of The End of White Christian America, in this animated interview. âHow do they reengage in public life when they canât be the majority?â
Authors: Daniel Lombroso, Caitlin Cadieux
Letâs be sure to kick it while itâs down.
snapslikethis:
Confession: I used to belong to this culture that trump supporters claim as their own.
Not entirely willingly, mind. I was young, religious, and I made the naĂŻve mistake in thinking that all Christians were like the ones I had encountered at my home church: warm, tolerant, kind. I fell in love, and we did what young, hormonal Christian teenagers did: rushed into a marriage.
I realized my mistake almost immediately, but it took far too long to get out.
Personally, I endured abuse at the hands of my new husbandâmental, physical, sexual, economic, emotional. You name it, he did it. Brutal is an understatement. He systematically broke me down until I was a shell of a human being. Iâm still dealing with the emotional fallout and physical side effects, and I probably will be for another decade at least.
Thatâs personally, but letâs talk his family. Because he was an extreme case, yes, but he was raised with the idea that women existed to keep their mouths shut and their legs open. I spit out two children faster than I could whip my head, because birth control wasnât part of godâs grand plan for my life. I was fulfilling my purpose as a mother, and wasnât that great? My husband didnât want the first baby. He wanted me for himself, see? Abortion was unthinkable, but he fully expected to carry a babyâmy babyâto term, then give it away.
Keeping him was my first rebellion. Keeping the next one was my second.
In the time I belonged to that family, I watched my mother-in-law endure the same, though less extreme mistreatment. I watched every young female family member be groped by the family patriarch. âThatâs just how it is.â I was shamed for making a fuss about it. I watched an older cousin try to sexually assault my teenage sister-in-law and she was the one who felt ashamed. We women made family dinners while the men sat on their asses. My husband and I lived with his parents for a short time. She and I would go to work each morningâan hour each wayâwith our husbands sitting in their robes in the living room, playing video games. When we returned hours later, weary, exhausted, they hadnât moved. The standard greeting? âWhatâs for dinner.â
Thatâs his family, and yes, some families are sexist, but letâs talk about church. Thatâs where all of this is validated, encouraged, taught. Imagine my shock, when I went to my new husbandsâ family church and encountered muted xenophobia and racism, a heavy dose of homophobia, and some damned overt sexism (see above.)
Equal roles, but different. Sound familiar? This is still being taught to little girls today.
In church, I listened with quiet disgust as pastors preached about how awful my sisterâone of the gaysâwas. I piped up and asked how that sexual sin was any different than the two young church kids whoâd just been caught âin a bad wayâ, soon to expect their first baby. Sexual sin is sexual sin, isnât it? I sure did get an earful for that one. We did church boycotts: Disney, Target. Every Sunday School class: Job, cookies, and lets pray God saves the moos-lims before they all come over and blows us up. We revered people with white savior complexes who went to be jesusâs hands and feet and save the poor, helpless Africans.
Hate and ignorance, wrapped up in the holy Scripture. Hallelujah.
Meanwhile, I endured this abuse. This abuse, and every door slammed in my face as my husband hit me, tortured me. âStay true to your vows,â the pastor would say. âYou have communication issues,â our sister-in-law would tell us. My mother-in-law: âLinds, you just have to accept it. Love is a choice.â
âBut what about the part where it says that husbands are to love their wives like Christ loves the church?â I asked.
My brother in law, joking: âThis is why women arenât supposed to speak in church.â
This America is alive and kicking, kids. Itâs never gone away; itâs just been lurking, behind closed doors. âPass the casual racism and meat loaf, would you? And get me a glass of water while youâre up. Ketchup, too.â What Iâm scared about, truly, is that I know this. And these ideas are now validated. Now mainstream. Almost 50% of our population believes this is a good idea.
âItâs our time to take America back.â
What in the hell, if theyâve been saying these things behind closed doors, and if they believe them In The Name Of Godâwhat in the hell are they going to say in the open, now? What in the hell are they going to do?
The 50s are revered as the aspirational yester-year, days gone by. Progress, as we call it, is godlessness to them. We, the godless libs, took Jesus out of schools. Weâve gone wrong ever since.
This is the America people want back, and thatâs my first fear.
The second is this:
I got out. And Iâm terrified that this, my success story, wonât happen anymore.
Iâm the rare statistic. I un-brainwashed and educated myself. I got counseling (against every Christian advice) to tread sever post-partum depression (surprise!) and in the process of becoming a healthier person, I realized what a goddamn mess I was.
It took three tries and a pastor-pseudo-therapist legitimately telling me, âYou know if he hits you again, Linds, Iâm going to have to tell you to leave.â All regretful, like it was bad news.
âWhy should I stick around and wait for it to happen again?â I asked.
He didnât have the answer. I left the next week.
It took a few boldfaced lies (itâs temporary, itâs just a separation), and a few miracles, and a large support system of family and friends who all but plucked me out of that hell.
For leaving? My price was excommunication. From his family, our friends, our church. I am the heathen who Divorced my Husband and broke our home. In that entire city, only three people talk to me now.
(No loss, but it took a long time to recognize that.)
I never, ever would have made it on my own. I had two small children, a new job that barely paid a living wage, and I was, as Iâve said, a shell of a human being. I left him and went straight to the human services office. Without subsidized childcare, healthcare, and food supplements, we would have starved or been homeless. It never would have been possible.
These are the services that will probably be cut first.
How will anyone in my situation ever be able to leave? They wonât. Not to mention federal funding for shelters, crisis counseling for families, healthcare for abused women, and legal services for domestic violence victims. Throw in a court system that doesnât value women, and a cultural mentality that believes what happens behind closed doors should stay behind closed doors, and what hope do abused, trapped women have?
If this is what makes America great again, I want out. Iâve been there, done that, and Iâm never, ever doing it again.
Youâll take it back over my cold, lifeless body.
Iliza Sheslinger, âConfirmed KillsâÂ
This is her third standup show to hit Netflix, and this one is WOKE AF, hilarious, relevant, and a painfully accurate picture of what itâs like to be female.Â
I like old, abandoned things.
The man ran for president for a year and a half, and is surprised that the presidency is such a big job. Meanwhile, his aides were under the impression that the Obama staffers would stick around and be working for them now.
The Trump administration hasnât even started yet, and itâs already a fiascoÂ
The incoming president doesnât know how the presidency works, or what the responsibilities of the office actually are. ¯\_(ă)_/ÂŻÂ
(via wilwheaton)
President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi â all of them offered conciliatory statements about Donald Trumpâs election victory.
Then there was Harry Reid.
In a blistering statement Friday, the retiring Senate minority leader attacked the president-elect as a âsexual predator who lost the popular vote and fueled his campaign with bigotry and hateâ and said that he fears for the treatment of Latinos, African-Americans, gay people, Muslims and young girls under a President Trump. He also criticized the media for covering the transition to Trump as normal, even as Obama and Trump had a civil meeting on Thursday and Schumer, the incoming Democratic leader, spoke with Trump on Wednesday.
âWe as a nation must find a way to move forward without consigning those who Trump has threatened to the shadows. Their fear is entirely rational, because Donald Trump has talked openly about doing terrible things to them,â Reid said. âEvery news piece that breathlessly obsesses over inauguration preparations compounds their fear by normalizing a man who has threatened to tear families apart, who has bragged about sexually assaulting women and who has directed crowds of thousands to intimidate reporters and assault African-Americans. Their fear is legitimate and we must refuse to let it fall through the cracks between the fluff pieces.â
One of the greatest moments in television history.
(via 2015accord / thund3rbolt)
let me be quite clear about something
if you support trump, unfollow me
if you voted for trump, unfollow me
if youâre in any way endorsing trump, a violent, misogynistic, white supremacist, rapist, racist, homophobic and transphobic piece of shit, unfollow meÂ
Iâve already lost followers since reblogging this BYE FUCKERS