i don’t normally chase after boys but if he’s a ranger of the north & heir to the throne of gondor then a bitch might just power walk
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@jamesbuchstananbarnes
i don’t normally chase after boys but if he’s a ranger of the north & heir to the throne of gondor then a bitch might just power walk
Peter: hey uh mister barnes winter soldier white wolf sir?
Bucky: Bucky
Peter: shoot, sorry mister bucky barnes winter soldier white wolf sir
Bucky: N-no
these are great lmaoo
OH I FORGOT. I SAW THE GREATEST CAR IN THE WORLD WHEN I WAS COMING BACK FROM THE JOB INTERVIEW I DID TODAY
I got the job I had interviewed for in this post and they started me at $13/hr and a guaranteed 20 hours a week thanks everyone for their support in the notes abt the job interview itself and no thanks to the people who said it was cursed
Reblog the X3 HEWWO car of career success. Reblog for a decent job
who needs horror movies when you can have pictures of polish politicians
Merry: confused awe
Frodo: confused awe
Sam: confused awe
Pippin: finally i’m getting the respect i deserve from these peasants
so accurate i am choking on my carrot. this is making me giggle harder than it should. I love Pippin so much.
no no no you guys don’t understand, Pippin is someone really important in the Shire! The books don’t talk about it a lot, and the movies won’t touch that stuff with a bargepole, but Pippin will be inheriting land rights to about a quarter of the Shire. He’s second in line to becoming military leader of all Hobbits. His dad is currently in charge of that stuff, but he’s completely aware of it, and educated for it, and that’s why he’s such an over privileged little shit in the books.
I thought it was a shame the movies didn’t talk about class differences in the Shire. Also puts M&P stealing food in an uglier light.
To be fair, at the time of the Party, Pippin would have been 12, which puts it back into a more acceptable light. And they’re stealing food from Bilbo, a wealthy and eccentric family member, which again makes things a bit different.
But yes, when they call Pippin Ernil i Perrianath - Prince of the Halflings - they are actually completely spot on.
And when Pippin tells Bergil “my father farms the land around Tuckborough” he’s deliberately downplaying his class so that he can greet the boy as an equal rather than a superior. It’s Pippin’s most adult moment in the series. Bergil is engaging in a status contest which Pippin can totally win - but instead chooses not to compete. Pippin is a gilded and spoiled lordling in the Shire, but he becomes a Man of Gondor.
Yeah, to add a bit of unnecessary trivia/level of preciseness, Frodo is the oldest of the four; he was born in 2968, was (obviously) 33 at the time of the Party, and so he’s 51 here. Sam’s second-oldest; born in 2980, he was 21 when Bilbo left and is 39 at this point. Merry’s two years younger than Sam, making him 18 or 19 in 3001, when the Party took place, and Pippin was born in 2990, so he was actually 10 or 11 during the Party, and during this scene they’re ~37 and ~29, respectively.
So yeah, Pippin’s the youngest by a lot. Plus, taking hobbit aging into account, he really is still in the equivalent of his teens; remember the Party was half to celebrate Frodo’s coming-of-age at 33, and Pippin’s around twenty years younger than Frodo.
This fucked me up. I didn’t read the books and in the movie it was shown like Frodo took off with the ring like 2 days after Bilbo’s gone away, but it was 17 years after that. OMFG.
Also worth noting that “Merry and Pippin stealing food” isn’t in the book - raiding Farmer Maggot’s fields, specifically the mushrooms, is something Frodo used to do when he was a kid, before his parents died and he moved to Hobbiton to live with Bilbo. Frodo’s still afraid of Maggot’s guard dogs, but the farmer himself is sympathetic and helpful when he finds Frodo & Co. cutting through his field.
And this is specifically invoked in the books at the Council of Elrond, where Elrond argues against Pippin in particular going, because he is so young. He’s okay with Merry going but wants to keep Pippin in Rivendell. Elrond has serious misgivings against sending an early-teenager off to face the Shadow, and given what happens to Pippin in The Two Towers, he was not wrong.
@cyrefinns
@the-books-we-travel
This is just so great. I just–I can’t.
Merry is also a prince of sorts - his father is Master of Buckland, which is the semi-autonomous boundary community between the Brandywine river and the Old Forest (never, alas, discussed in the movies). Merry and Pippin are friends in the books in part because they’re of relatively equal status and in part because they’re cousins (like all nobs, Shire nobs mostly marry each other).
However, the books also clearly make Merry the Responsible One, even though he’s only been a full adult for four years. (Think early 20s in human terms.) Merry buys and prepares the house at Crickhollow. Merry figures out the secret of the ring before Bilbo even gives it to Frodo, but Merry keeps Bilbo’s secret. Merry convinces Sam to spy on Frodo. Merry explains that they’re all joining Frodo on the Quest, whether Frodo wants them to or not. Merry cautions about the Old Forest and doesn’t go down to drink in the taproom at the Prancing Pony.
So in the books, Merry isn’t Pippin’s partner in pranks - instead, Merry and Pippin spend all their time together on the Quest because Merry’s looking after his younger cousin. Can you imagine what his mother would say if he came home without Pippin? Merry can, and that’s why he takes some pretty absurd personal risks during the books to make sure that doesn’t happen. Like, he literally rides into battle on the back of someone else’s horse, in disguise, because Pippin is probably somewhere in that battle.
Merry is 99%* common sense unless Pippin is involved, and then he is 100% save/rescue/protect/support Pippin. The character growth and maturation we see in Merry in the movies isn’t in the books; instead he has almost the exact opposite arc of becoming an extreme risk-taker, driven by his protective instincts.
(*The other 1% stabbed a ringwraith in the calf that one time, but we can argue that this was due to a natural expansion of Merry’s protective instincts toward Eowyn, with whom he’d bonded quite a lot recently, and toward Theoden, who he deeply respected as being kind of like his dad.)
bonus kleenex moment:
when pippin finds merry stumbling half-blind and sick through the streets of Minas Tirith after killing the Ringwraith, he tells Merry “Poor old fellow! I’ll look after you,” half-carries him to the healing halls, and is worried sick about him until he can finally get Aragorn in to give him medicine.
It’s the first time in the story that Pippin has looked after Merry, instead of the other way around.
It shows that Pippin has grown up, that he can protect the people who always protected him.
This is also why it’s awesome when they finally come back to the Shire, and Saruman’s made a right mess of things, and it’s Merry and Pippin that kick ass and take names. They’re the closest things the Shire has to princes and military leaders, and they’ve just had adventures that make this look like a minor action. Frodo’s tired, and Sam’s just worried about Frodo, and Merry and Pippin are like hold my pint, I got this.
When Ron, frustrated with studying for NEWTs and with Hermione’s anxious sixth-year nagging, explains to her what reading is like for him, Hermione’s breath catches. “Ron, you’re dyslexic,” she says, softly, and instantly regrets every snide comment she’s ever made towards his study habits.
Soon, by asking around, Hermione amasses a list of spells for Ron to try - some stilling the page, some changing the font of books for easy reading, some going after Ron’s temporal lobe directly.
These help, a little, but not as much as knowing there’s a word for why reading is so hard for him. That it’s normal, that he’s not stupid, and that Hermione suddenly helps instead of criticizes, looks for solutions rather than complains, praises instead of gloats.
!!! Oh
#listen tho what if #muggles are terrible about disabilities#but wizards are even worse#they don’t even have the terminology that muggles do#it’s all ‘kinda loony’ or “just dim’ or (most often) ‘not a talented witch/wizard’#and ofc ~everyone knows~ that all illnesses can be cured with magic#(except for some magical illnesses that can’t be cured at all)#but as ron talks more with hermione and other muggleborns#and researches the spells hermione gets him#and realizes that most of the spell creators probably also had dyslexia but had no word for it#he realizes that what ‘everyone knows’ isn’t true at all#after abt a year of this he talks to mcgonagall abt changing his career goals#goes into healing with a concentration on research#and a secret concentration on finding out what muggles know and bringing it into the wizarding world#(his dad is so proud of him and prolly helps out a lot too)
this paragraph is better than anything jk ever wrote about grown ron
Mark Zuckerberg lost $119 Billion dollars on the stock market today (7/26/18). This is the largest loss of wealth in a single day in modern stock history.
This will literally not change his lifestyle or effect his livelihood at all. He is still a multi-billionaire.
If I worked every single day, for the rest of my life, at $15/hr - which is more than twice the national minimum wage - I would never make even 1/1000th the amount of just the money that Zuckerberg lost today.
If I worked every single day, for the entirety of the time that anatomically modern humans have existed (200,000 years) - at $15/hr - I would still not make one tenth of the amount of just the money he lost today.
And he is still a billionaire and will lose literally zero luxury or well-being from what happened today.
You want to know how absolutely grotesque modern wealth inequality is?
There you go.
Thor: Ragnarok (2017) dir. Taika Waititi
WHY ARE NONE OF YOU FUCKERS FLIPPING SHIT?!?
NASA HAS DECLARED PLUTO A PLANET AGAIN
IT HAS MOONS!!!!! IT HAS MOONS!!!!!!!
WHAT. WHAT! PLUTO YOU FUCKING DID IT!
VIVA LA PLUTO, YOU DID IT!!!
here’s a source, National geographic y’all
VIVA LA PLUTO YASSS
VIVA LA PLUTO WE KNEW YOU COULD DO IT YOU FUCKING SUPERB SMOL PLANET YOU!!!!!
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/speaking-of-science/wp/2018/05/07/yes-pluto-is-a-planet/
another source because the nat geo one seemed confusing, you go pluto! get em!
WELL DONE PLUTO!!! :D
Hey, do you know that feeling of hitching up a long skirt so you don’t fall on your face when walking upstairs, and then you immediately become a wretched yet resolute Jane Austen character? It’s a universal thing, right?
Is there ever a point at which you decide to stop vaccinating an animal due to age? My dog is 14 and aside from minor uveitis and very mild arthritis in one knee, our vet doesn’t feel it necessary to vaccinate her anymore because 1) we’ve gotten her all her vaccines on time her entire life, and 2) she doesn’t want to “tempt fate” as she had a 15yo patient years ago who was healthy, then quickly went downhill in the week following a vaccination (I fully support our vet’s decision and reasoning)
I tend not to use ‘age’ as a guide for when to stop vaccinating so much as ‘accumulating conditions associated with age’. Any immune mediated condition, for example, would be a prime candidate for a reason to stop vaccinating.
It comes down to asking whether the potential benefits of vaccinating are still greater than the potential risks of vaccinating. For an old dog with a low-risk lifestyle, you might decide that the vaccines are no longer worth doing, though the regular health checks definitely are.
There are some animals with chronic illnesses that I would stop vaccinating after a year of age, if there was any possible correlation at all. It all comes down to the individual animal.
That said if I was worried about the animal kicking the bucket in the next 12 months, I’d probably skip the vaccine. But that’s based on health status, not age. An eight year old dogue de bordeaux is going to be in much worse shape than a 12 year old jack russel terrier.
Vaccination comes with a lot of unintended consequences… You can read a lot of articles on www.dogsnaturallymagazine about the risks and possible adverse effects of vaccinating your dog…But there are other vaccine dangers that may surprise you. These may not be the risks you commonly consider when you make vaccination decisions for your dog… The governments of the US and Canada drop rabies baits across rural areas in both countries in an effort to prevent rabies in wildlife. You may think this is a good idea as nobody wants rabid wildlife hanging around their neighborhood. But can that really be true? The vaccines in the baits are recombinant vaccinia-rabies glycoprotein. The main risk is that oral rabies baits contain live virus vaccines. But if the animal is in a weakened state when he eats the bait, it’s quite likely that either the vaccine will fail, or it will create the disease it was intended to protect against… Many vaccines given to dogs are modified live virus (MLV) vaccines. These vaccines can be shed in feces and urine for weeks after vaccination. This means these diseases can be spread through vaccination. The other problem is that MLV vaccines can make your dog ill. Vaccination against bacterial diseases like leptospirosis can also spread the disease. Holistic veterinarian Patricia Jordan DVM explains that the leptospira organism can become a source of infection for humans in contact with a dog vaccinated for leptospirosis. Dr Jordan says: “Leptospira can and will shed in a vaccinated dog and in turn, infect any humans living in the same household!” When a duck hunter contracted leptospirosis in California, the state’s field study didn’t find any leptospira in the bodies of water he frequented.
Retroviruses in vaccines can have lethal effects. Canine parvovirus suddenly appeared around the world in 1978 and is now widely considered to have come from the feline panleukopenia virus (FPV). Holistic veterinarian Deva Khalsa VMD explains how she witnessed this when she was at veterinary school … “When I entered veterinary school in 1976, parvovirus disease in dogs didn’t exist. There were no parvovirus cases at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine until 1978.” That’s when Dr Khalsa observed case after case of canines with life-threatening, bloody diarrhea admitted into ICU to be placed under 24 hour care on supportive IV fluids. The new disease was being delivered to dogs in their regular booster shots. In 2010, researchers in Scotland and Japan isolated a feline retrovirus in both dog and cat vaccines. The authors stated …
“Collectively, our data show unequivocally that RD-114 is present in live attenuated vaccines commonly used in dogs and cats from different continents and produced by three different manufacturers […] the large-scale exposure to RD-114, particularly of the dog population, may have effects that are impossible to predict even if successful RD-114 transmission was an extremely rare event.”
In US Dog World in March 1995, Dr Jean Dodds discussed the implication of retrovirus contamination in dog vaccines…
“Immune-suppressant viruses of the retrovirus and parvovirus classes have recently been implicated as causes of bone marrow failure, immune-mediated blood diseases, hematologic malignancies (lymphoma and leukemia), dysregulation of humoral and cell-mediated immunity, organ failure (liver, kidney) and autoimmune endocrine disorders – especially of the thyroid gland (thyroiditis), adrenal gland (Addison’s disease) and pancreas (diabetes).”
The case of the SV-40 monkey virus being found in polio vaccines is well known…
Viruses can mutate, allowing them to spread more easily. Dr Patricia Jordan explains…
“There are two canine parvoviruses: canine parvovirus-1 and canine parvovirus-2. CPV-2 is the primary cause of the puppy enteritis that we commonly see. Over the years, parvo has mutated from CPV-2 to CPV-2b to CPV-2c. It seems that dogs may be getting the ultimate revenge on cats: the CPV-2c strain of parvovirus is now crossing species and infecting cats with another brand new virus.”
This happens with human viruses too. A virologist with the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Olen Kew, says that there’s no difference in virulence between wild polio viruses and the mutated form. “The only difference is that this virus was originally in a vaccine vial.” A similar thing happens with the bird flu virus.
One problem with vaccine manufacturers’ claims of efficacy of their products is that vaccinated populations don’t live in a sterile lab where their testing is done. In the research lab, vaccines appear to be very effective. In the field, vaccines are much less predictable. Wildlife biologist Dr Roger Burrows noted that lions in Serengeti National Park (SNP), followed by those in the Masai Mara of Kenya, died like flies in 1994 from a new strain of canine distemper. It turned out that the same strain of distemper found in the lions was also in experimental vaccines on dogs in the area during a rabies vaccination trial. Dr Burrows further explains that in 2007, the same new distemper strain was again identified in free-living African wild dogs in Masai areas east of SNP. The fact that local breeds of domestic dogs around SNP and the Masai Mara were vaccinated against rabies, and then soon after succumbed to a virulent outbreak of distemper, suggests that the rabies vaccinations caused immunosuppression, creating increased susceptibility to distemper. Dr Vernon Coleman MB described how, in 1989, hyenas were threatened with extinction when scientists vaccinated individual animals to protect them against rabies…Dr Coleman suggests…“And yet the rabies vaccine is now compulsory in many parts of the world. Is it not possible that it is the vaccine which is keeping this disease alive?” All of these 5 dangers highlight the risks you take when you vaccinate your dog. If you do vaccinate your dog, watch for any adverse reactions … Then take steps to treat them … Vaccine side effects can often be treated successfully by a homeopathic veterinarian. … or use a ready-made anti-vaccinosis remedy to help your dog.
Oh no. You’re 13 and you’ve been fed this bull by one of the least reliable and most biased websites that I know of about dog health, ‘Dogs Naturally’. Oh this is making me cringe. Did you copy a lot of this straight off the website?
Did anyone explain to you what a modified live virus vaccine is? Historically they used to be the virus run through replication cycles on a different species cells, making it adapt to a ‘new’ host while losing efficiency with the intended vaccine recipient, but mostly these days they take a gene for a viral capsule protein and stick it onto another virus, like a canarypox. Such a modified live virus can stimulate antibody production against the target virus capsule proteins, but it doesn’t go terribly far in the host, because it’s not a canary.
Also, it’s worth examining the motives of anyone making ‘anti-establishment’ claims like ‘vaccines are bad’. Most of them want to sell you something.
Patricia Jordan - Wants to sell you anti-vaccination books and recommends homeopathy. A pro-tip for your future life, anybody recommending homeopathy is a charlatan who rejects scientific principles and you should just throw the whole person out.
We, being the scientific community, are pretty damn sure canine parvovirus mutated from feline parvovirus. Feline parvo vaccines could protect dogs from canine parvo. Also, parvovirus is not, at all, a retrovirus. Retrovirus means they have RNA instead of DNA. Canine parvovirus was certainly not ‘delivered to dogs in their regular booster shots’. That’s some pretty potent kool-aid being drunk there.
Dr Deva Khalsa wants you to call her at a rate of $125 for half an hour.
RD-114 is present in every single cat on the planet. It is present because cat cells are used in the manufacture of those vaccines.
Dr Jean Dodds I didn’t even have to look up, notorious for over-diagnosis thyroid illness based on blood test results for dogs she hasn’t even seen.
Every single possible immune stimulation of any kind can be linked to every single immune mediated condition, including the natural infection the vaccines are intended to prevent. Not a secret, discussed it quite a lot, openly, on this blog.
Claiming that rabies vaccination made animals vulnerable to distemper is such a ridiculously huge reach.
All of it, it would seem, an effort to make you, the unwitting consumer, purchase their $20 ‘anti-vaccinosis remedy’. Which is homeopathic. Which is water that they are pretending is medicine.
These people want your money, and will sell you fear and lies to get it.
Annual vaccination is unnecessary and dangerous for your dog.
Experts like leading veterinary immunology researcher Ronald D Schultz PhD proved decades ago that most dogs will be protected for many years (and probably for life) by one round of core vaccines as puppies – usually when they’re about 16 weeks old.
So, after their puppy shots, most dogs don’t need to be re-vaccinated ever, let alone year after year after year.
Dr Schultz reports:“The patient receives no benefit and may be placed at serious risk when an unnecessary vaccine is given. Few or no scientific studies have demonstrated a need for cats or dogs to be revaccinated.”
The World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA), the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA), and the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) have announced publicly that annual vaccination is unnecessary and can be harmful.
But they do nothing to stop vets from vaccinating more often than necessary.
Don’t misquote my own profession at me, thank you.
Annual vaccination is REQUIRED for non-core vaccines, if you elect to have them.
An annual booster is recommended by the WSAVA vaccination guidelines for core vaccines. Three boosters are recommended for puppies under 16 weeks. The guidelines actually talk about up to five boosters for young puppies, which is more than most vest currently even consider.
Here are the guidelines from the WSAVA, freely available in multiple languages. You can read them, anyone can read them. There’s no secrets. They are the consensus of multiple veterinary specialists all around the world, not just one you chose to quote.
These statements are all about core vaccines and core vaccines only: Distemper, Infectious Hepatitis and Canine parvovirus.
Guess what? Rabies isn’t a core vaccine. Neither is Kennel cough, leptospirosis, Lyme disease, and anything else.
As mentioned in a previous post, just yesterday, here is a quote directly taken from the WSAVA guidelines, which are the international authority on canine and feline vaccinations:
Therefore an adult dog may, according to these guidelines, still be re-vaccinated annually, but the components of these vaccinations may differ each year.
It’s on page E8.
he UK arm of veterinary pharmaceutical company (and vaccine manufacturer) Merck Animal Health is MSD Animal Health, and it operates under the name Intervet Ltd.
Intervet is shameless about teaching veterinary clinics how to sell.
I’ve seen one of their brochures promoting a clinic management system developed by veterinarian Dr Steven Garner, who has “the most productive veterinary practice in the world”.
They claim the system results in “greater owner compliance” and “can grow your practice turnover [sales] by 40% and your practice profit by 52%.”
“Greater owner compliance” of course means they get you to bring your dog to the clinic more often.
… and Intervet has dreamed up an especially sneaky way of persuading you to do that.
It starts with getting you to vaccinate your dog more often, and it also helps clinics sell you more veterinary services.
It’s called the Vaccination Amnesty program and for the last few years they’ve been campaigning hard to get UK veterinary clinics to participate.
The program targets clients whose pets’ vaccines have lapsed.
So it’s not hard to figure out that means the clinics are pushing annual vaccinations!
Intervet provides veterinary clinics with an impressive array of promotional materials to market the amnesty program.
Once they join the program, clinics offer the “lapsed” pets a complete primary course of vaccinations for the price of a single booster.
So not only are they vaccinating animals who are almost certainly already protected (because we know they’ve been vaccinated before) … they’re making them start from the beginning as if they’d never been vaccinated!
And while your dog’s at the clinic, they do their best to find other ailments that need treating, as well as selling you things like dental procedures, worming and pest control medications.
It’s working quite well for them.
Testimonials from clinics brag about how successful they were at selling additional services to people who brought their dogs in under the vaccine amnesty program.
Once again, this is a crafty way to make more money … and it’s at the expense of your dog’s health.
In case I wasn’t clear, over-vaccination exposes your dog to the potential for a lifetime of chronic disease.
Greater owner compliance means you can send reminders, text messages, email and get them to show up for their appointments. Every single Vet Practice Managemnt System (VPMS) makes a claim like this. And a modern vet practice has to have one, otherwise you’re writing all those important medical records on pieces of paper. It’s the system that holds all our data: medical records, Xray, client phone numbers, blood results, etc. Having a VPMS, or selling one, doesn’t automatically make a villain.
Specifically in your references ‘Amnesty’ program, and that is a bizarre word choice for the company, Lepto and FeLV do not have any sort of immunity or protection much beyond one year, so the animals that have lapsed may actually require them, same with feline herpes and cat flu, even if distemper, hepatitis and canine parvo might have been ok.
Lepto, FeLV, parainfluenza and feline herpes virus protection has probably lapsed for these animals, and annual vaccination is potentially highly appropriate. Lepto is a particular concern because people can catch that as well.
Their ‘promotional materials’ are not ‘impressive’. They’re quite average really.
Now, since you like bold text so much, let’s play a hypothetical.
I see a dog, or a cat, that the owner finally brings into the clinic. It’s been three, maybe five years since it’s seen a vet.
I see the animal’s teeth are rotting out of its skull, and recommend a dental procedure to aleviate this infection, chronic inflammation and pain.
It has fleas and associated allergic dermatitis. I recommend flea control and perhaps some medication because the poor animal is madly itchy, and nobody wants fleas.
I discover a lump and recommend a fine needle aspirate (a type of mini biopsy) to determine how much we need to worry about this lump.
I also check out the rest of the animal, not to discover more problems to make money from, as you would claim, but because I want this animal to be happy and healthy and owners are abysmal at noticing chronic illness.
Animals in this condition are often presented with pride by an owner claiming “He hasn’t been to the vet in years because he’s so healthy!” when the reality is that the owner just hasn’t looked.
In case that’s not clear, the most reliable and consistent way to expose your pet to a lifetime of chronic disease is to avoid taking it into the vet clinic for regular checkups.
I’m going to be rude. And I don’t care.
FUCK OFF WITH THIS ANTIVAX BULLSHIT.
My shelter is dealing with PUPPIES DYING from a disease that can be prevented by vaccines.
We’re having adopted puppies coming back with FUCKING DISTEMPER and Every. Single. One. Has DIED.
Puppies that we brought in from a rural shelter in an area where people don’t vaccinate. If the adult dogs in the area had had their shots and boosters, this would not be happening.
So why don’t you go tell the adopters of these now dead puppies that it was better that those dogs weren’t vaccinated.
And then you may kindly fuck off sideways into the sea.
that helicopter scene from civil war with my heart will go on as music
so i saw something like this almost two years ago but i couldn’t find it again when i wanted to show it to a friend so i made it myself.
DORKS
rare promo shot of all four hobbits in their regal finery. LotR - RotK.
Expectation vs reality. =X
the guy in the audience SNAPPED
i love this, video
britney spears is the reason we’re here today