PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Stranger Things
trying on a metaphor
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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Xuebing Du

pixel skylines

Product Placement

@theartofmadeline
taylor price
đȘŒ
will byers stan first human second

Andulka
Cosmic Funnies

Love Begins
AnasAbdin
we're not kids anymore.

titsay
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Today's Document

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@lycanism
it's really hard to tell people how this scene just plays like this. no editing or anything. the episode just plays out like nothing happened
had to censor so tumblr doesn't nuke it but this is one of my favourite gerard donelan comics -i don't know what else to say except the vibes are immaculate
The Chinese poster for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
The peter parker mao cup
THE NOIR-HOBIE INTERACTIONS THAT I MADE UP IN MY MIND ARE VERY REAL TO ME. SONY PLEASE PICK UP WHAT IâM PUTTING DOWN!!!
âĄâĄâĄ
âIdentifying as Two Spirit has always meant I have embraced my culture. It means I see myself more than just a gay, lesbian, or queer personâit means I am Native. Itâs important to wear regalia that is associated with me being Apache. My regalia was made by a Two-Spirit friendâs mother, Carol Sneezy, who is San Carlos Apache. My beaded T necklace was given to me by an auntie in the â90s, long before I had regalia. Approximately 10 years ago, when my mother passed away, I went to visit a cousin in Arizona, who brought me my first regalia; The red satin reminded him of my mother and the colors were beautiful, but I always wanted regalia that reflected me being Two-Spirit, which I feel my current turquoise regalia does. The drum was a birthday gift from my wife, purchased from the Stanford powwow.â â Ruth Villaseñor for Vogue
ph: Arlene Mejorado | 2021
I love to just. go onto a post detailing how China has stricter data protection laws than basically anywhere else, with links to Chinese data protection laws, excerpts from those laws, and a news article about a US company where the company itself notes that the data protection laws are too stringent for them compared to the US, and say âHey, you Morons! Didnât you know Chinese apps steal all your data and Chinaâs a surveillance state!â with no evidence backing it up other than This Is Common Knowledge - the exact same argument people use to try to say that like, the DPRK doesnât let you get a haircut - just baldfaced in front of the actual evidence to the contrary, fingers in ears.
The level of discourse on China is really quickly approaching âunknowable hermit kingdom where anything evil could be happeningâ, except about⊠a country with a fifth of the worldâs population, with full internet access that you could just. go to any time you wanted, and millions upon millions of foreign tourists, and I seriously donât know whether to laugh or cry about it. First as tragedy, then as farce.
SOHO
My commissions are open
This is Thelockpickinglaywer and what I have for you today is something very interesting. As you can tell by the agonizing screams of the damned, I have recently left the mortal coil and, upon arriving at my destination, was informed that I did not qualify for residence. I was taken by an angel of the Lord to the mouth of Hell, and when the angel left, he closed this rather large red door and sealed it with a divine key. Although Iâve never seen this particular model of lock before, Iâve spent some time investigating the cylinder with this small shard of bone. By sticking it in the back of the keyway and slowly pulling it out, I can tell that this is a five-pin tumbler lock, that can easily be single-pin picked using this shed demon scale as a tensioner tool. Letâs try that right now. Alright, nothing on one. Nothing on two. Three is binding firmly, click out of that. Nothing on four. Five is binding, little click there, back to one. Once again, nothing. Two is binding, and weâve dropped into a false set. Little click out of three. Nothing on four. Little click on one, counter-rotation on two, and we got this open. Okay folks, I think the main takeaway here is that no matter how much faith you place in a mechanism designed to ensure your safety, be it spiritual or physical, there is always a state in which it can fail. In any case, thank you for watching. Memento mori, and Iâll see you next time.
You know what the most frustrating thing about the vegans throwing a fit over my âHumans arenât Parasitesâ post is? I really wasnât trying to make a point about animal agriculture. Honestly, the example about subsistence hunting isnât the main point. That post was actually inspired by thoughts Iâve been having about the National Park system and environmentalist groups.
See, I LOVE the National Parks. I always have a pass. I got to multiple parks a year. I LOVE them, and always viewed them as this unambiguously GOOD thing. Like, the best thing America has done.Â
BUT, I just finished reading this book called âI am the Grand Canyonâ all about the native Havasupai people and their fight to gain back their rights to the lands above the canyon rim. Historically, they spent the summer months farming in the canyon, and then the winter months hunter-gathering up above the rim. When their reservation was made though, they lost basically all rights to the rim land (They had limited grazing rights to some of it, but it was renewed year to year and always threatened, and it was a whole thing), leading to a century long fight to get it back.Â
And in that book there are a couple of really poignant anecdotes- one man talks about how park rangers would come harass them if they tried to collect pinon nuts too close to park land- worried that they would take too many pinon nuts that the squirrels wanted. Despite the fact that the Havasupai had harvested pinon nuts for thousands and thousands of years without everâŠlikeâŠstarving the squirrels.Â
Thereâs another anecdote of them seeing the park rangers hauling away the bodies of dozens of deer- killed in the park because of overpopulation- while the Havasupai had been banned from hunting. (Making them more and more reliant on government aid just to survive the winter months.)Â
They talk about how they would traditionally carve out these natural cisterns above the rim to catch rainwater, and how all the animals benefitted from this, but it was difficult to maintain those cisterns when their âownershipâ of the land was so disputed.Â
So here you have examples of when people are forcibly separated from their ecosystem and how it hurts both those people and the ecosystem.Â
And then when the Havasupai finally got legislation before Congress to give them ownership of the rim land back- their biggest opponent was the Parks system and the Sierra Club. The Sierra Club (a big conservation group here in the US) ran a huge smear campaign against these people on the belief that any humans owning this land other than the park system (which aims at conservation, even while developing for recreation) was unacceptable.Â
And it all got me thinking about how, as much as I love the National Parks, there are times when its insistence that nature be left âuntouchedâ (except, ya know, for recreation) can actually harm both the native people who have traditionally been part of those ecosystems AND potentially the ecosystems themselves. And I just think thereâs a lot of nuance there about recognizing that there are ways for us to be in balance with nature, and that our environmentalism should respect that and push for sustainability over preserving âpristineâ human-less landscapes. Removing ourselves from nature isnât the answer.Â
But apparently the idea that subsistence hunting might actually not be a moral catastrophe really set the vegans off. Woopie.Â
#love seeing discussions about this#because everyone wants to see western conservation as infallible#without realizing that itâs still built on white supremacist and colonialist beliefs
- @finding-my-culture
Teresa Gutierrez, Juarez, Mexico, Photo by Miguel A. Gandert, 1992