so my five year old nephew forgot the word "non-binary" and said that he thought a character in Breath of the Wild was "one of those...secret people"
My nephew when someone is non-binary:

titsay
Peter Solarz

Kaledo Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
No title available
Game of Thrones Daily

Product Placement
art blog(derogatory)
sheepfilms

⁂
Mike Driver

Andulka
Three Goblin Art
Not today Justin

No title available
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sweet Seals For You, Always
wallacepolsom
Fai_Ryy

@theartofmadeline

seen from Malaysia
seen from Belgium

seen from Ireland
seen from Italy

seen from Ukraine
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands

seen from Sweden

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from India
seen from Singapore
seen from Mongolia

seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Venezuela
seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
@notthinkingclearly
so my five year old nephew forgot the word "non-binary" and said that he thought a character in Breath of the Wild was "one of those...secret people"
My nephew when someone is non-binary:
It's enough to make a man cry, and that's okay.
i would just like the shake the hand of whoever it was that was responsible for turning *this*:
into THIS
like someone really saw the original vi and went “there is so much untapped gay potential here” and RAN with it
characters designed for the male gaze are OUT! characters designed for my lesbian gaze are IN!
apparently almost no one’s seen the video it’s free real estate comes from so here it is
a legend
Cute cat!
sooooo can yall help me determine if this is a fireable offense
a lady just came in asking if we have oat milk and we dont so i said “our soy milk is pretty good though, thats what i use in my drinks!” and she looked at me and went “yknow soy milk lowers a mans sperm count” and without thinking i just went “cant lose something you never had”
youre laughing. i got called a soy boy and youre laughing
okay to the people confused by this allow me to shed a little light on the subject
icant fucking breathe
Hey Canadians!! Just because Trudeau needs to go DOES NOT mean you have to vote conservative to make everything worse!! Vote NDP!!! 🧡
If you let ANYTHING sway you from voting for the CPC, let it be the fact that their SLOGAN is literally a WHITE SUPREMACIST DOGWHISTLE
PLEASE PLEASE I BEG YOU TO REBLOG THIS FOR ANY OF YOUR CANADIAN FOLLOWERS!! THIS MIGHT NOT BE VALID TO YOU BUT ERIN O’TOOLE IS A DISGUSTING EXCUSE FOR A HUMAN BEING AND HAVING HIM RUNNING CANADA WOULD BE A LITERAL DISASTER
THE FEDERAL ELECTION IS SEPTEMBER 20TH! VOTE NDP!!
@yeahitsak
Patches of forest cleared and tended by Indigenous communities but lost to time still show more food bounty for humans and animals than surrounding forests.
Outcomes of scientific studies such as Marks-Block’s often affirm what Native people already know from tradition and experience, but that doesn’t mean the studies aren’t useful, Tripp says.
“We knew what the outcome was going to be,” he says. “But nobody listens if it isn’t written down like that.”
Being able to cite scientific literature may be especially important as Indigenous groups push for more rights, especially on “ceded territories” they still claim but no longer own. For example, Karuks want more burning rights on Forest Service land, while neighboring Yuroks are pushing to co-manage and conduct controlled burns in Redwood National Park.
FTA: “After more than a century on their own, Indigenous-created forest gardens of the Pacific Northwest support more pollinators, more seed-eating animals and more plant species than the supposedly “natural” conifer forests surrounding them.
“When we look at forest gardens, they’re actually enhancing what nature does, making it much more resilient, much more biodiverse—and, oh yeah, they feed people too,” says Armstrong.
The paper may be the first to quantify how Indigenous land stewardship can enhance what ecologists call functional diversity—a measure of how many goods an ecosystem provides. It joins a growing scientific literature revealing that Indigenous people—both historically and today—often outperform government agencies and conservation organizations at supporting biodiversity, sequestering carbon, and generating other ecological benefits on their land. Leaving nature alone is not always the right course, scientists are finding—and the original land stewards often do it best.”
…
“ “Western science for too long has embraced the idea of primordial wilderness,” says Jesse Miller, an ecologist at Stanford and Armstrong’s coauthor. “We’re seeing this paradigm shift to recognizing how much of what was thought of as primordial wilderness were actually landscapes shaped by humans.”
The forest gardens Armstrong studied once supplied Indigenous villages with food and medicine, including plants that had been imported from elsewhere. “Historically it was really important to have all the resources here,” says Willie Charlie, a former chief and current employee of the Sts’ailes Nation of the Coast Salish people. “If you had all that in your family, you were pretty self-sustaining.”
Willie Charlie, tirelessly explaining Indigenous practices to/with scientists
…
“In other cases, however, government policy continues to diverge from both Indigenous knowledge and science. This spring, for example, the state of Wisconsin authorized a wolf hunt that both scientists and tribes had protested.
“People outside the tribal community tend to … think a lot of our positions are culturally based. But I would argue they tend to align much more with science than the non-tribal worldview,” says Peter David, a wildlife biologist for the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, which represents 11 Midwestern Ojibwe tribes.
Peter David, a wildlife biologist with the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, hanging out with some wild rice
“The tribal worldview says wolves ought to be able to establish their own population levels, and they do that at very low levels…it aligns much better with the science.”
Despite an increasing convergence between science and Indigenous knowledge, the academy still has work to do, too, says Waller. “I would like to see forestry schools routinely sending forestry students, for example, to Menominee Tribal Enterprises,” he says. “I would like to see ecologists have an option to take an ethnobotany or traditional ecological knowledge course.”“
Reblogging because imo most people do NOT know/recognise how much indigeonous people in pre-america Americas (and most likely other places that I’m less aware of) did to both selectively breed (ie genetically engineer) plants to be better food, AND to manage land in ways that were stable, provided a lot of food at a balanced amount of work (ie much much better than grueling agricultural toil Christian settlers insisted not doing was “lazy” somehow eugh). And all while being beneficial for the ecosystem instead of combatitive! As opposed to settler colonial monoculture, which is an environmental and social disaster.
I think like, the death of Vine and Rabbit, Wikipedia constantly needing to beg for money, Discord depending so heavily on venture capital, Facebook turning towards spying on users to generate a return on all the venture capital that got them started, Adobe creative suite turning into a subscription rather than a single product you buy, the strangulation of streaming entertainment as every company pulls their content and makes it exclusive to their service, are all great examples of how like, it really doesn't matter if something is legitimately useful, efficient, or beloved, it is next to impossible for a service to exist if it doesn't make shareholders increasing amounts of money year after year. Which may seem like a "no duh" type of statement, but it's a very simple window into how the profit motive makes products and services worse, not better. And how that's not just a matter of certain companies or ceos being bad and greedy on an individual level, but is an inescapable factor of an economy where existence is dependent on generating capital.
absolutely, continued growth is not sustainable, but the only way we measure a company’s success is based on growth. there is no point where these companies go ‘we’re making enough money now, perhaps we can put excess profit back into the product (whatever that product may be)’
instead, it goes down the route of cutting services, cutting workers and strangling the userbase for every little bit of profit they can squeeze out for their shareholders in the name of “growth”
until, inevitably, the product becomes unrecognisable, goes from beloved to hated, and the userbase moves onto a new, rising product that suits their needs better... only for the process to repeat again
FUCK I love him
The most Midwestern reaction ever
amAnda cmere! lOOk!
I miss the Midwest so much
this is how every day at work has got me feeling