Quick lighting study based off a photo I took of an old church while in Scotland. And randomly putting Vampire Hunter D in it because everyone else is drawing him this month as I believe a new novel is coming out or something??
Three Goblin Art
Jules of Nature
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hello vonnie
taylor price
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Kiana Khansmith
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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blake kathryn

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

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@nutmeg3-7
Quick lighting study based off a photo I took of an old church while in Scotland. And randomly putting Vampire Hunter D in it because everyone else is drawing him this month as I believe a new novel is coming out or something??
"Vampire Hunter D" illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano and written by Hideyuki Kikuchi since 1983.
I'm totally that friend too. 😅
dhampirs saturday beer
LET'S ROCK 🔥
y’all I CANNOT
Okay so yes we need to put more money into education in the US but y'all this SPECIFIC line of thinking has much less to do with public education and everything to do with the evangelical war on science. This exact “earth age” rhetoric isn’t the result of dumb people, its being taught in Christian schools and touted in evangelical churches. Evangelical lobbies help pass laws that force states to teach creationism alongside evolution. Millions are spent every year by evangelical institutions to convince partitions that science is lying to them, to force them to belive the only place they can find truth is the church. Creationism is just another facet of that and acting like it just “Americans are dumb” rather than a pointed, purposeful campaign to keep people in a what amounts to a cult, is not oy disingenuous, its dangerous
Thank you, Uni.
Yeah as someone who was taught the earth was 6000 years old and believed it until I was like, 22: its a cultish weird thing you get shoved into your hea from a VERY young age. We had sunday school classes about how evolution was wrong when I was growing up; and about how feminism and even egaltarianism was wrong as well. Brainwashing doesn’t skip over you based on whether or not you are “smart”.
Brainwashing doesn’t skip over you based on whether or not you are “smart.”
That’s so weird cause in Catholic church we’re told the earth is thousands of centuries old
Speaking as someone who was raised evangelical, yeah this is just what’s in our schoolbooks. We had dedicated children’s radio programs (Jonathan Park, Adventures in Odyssey, etc, etc) made to teach us creationism and quite literally demonize evolution. I have science books at home that teach creationism. The very SUGGESTION that evolution could have some merit will make you pariah in many evangelical churches. This isn’t stupidity, this is a cult mentality which is so incredibly prevalent in the United States that I find it insane some people Don’t Know about it. Have some compassion for the huge amount of the population that has been raised in a religion which goes to extreme lengths to teach them that evolution is wrong not only factually, but morally.
I'm fucking dying someone please make a Pink Panther-style crime comedy about this
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The one weird monopoly trick that gave us Walmart and Amazon and killed Main Street
I'm coming to BURNING MAN! On TUESDAY (Aug 27) at 1PM, I'm giving a talk called "DISENSHITTIFY OR DIE!" at PALENQUE NORTE (7&E). On WEDNESDAY (Aug 28) at NOON, I'm doing a "Talking Caterpillar" Q&A at LIMINAL LABS (830&C).
Walmart didn't just happen. The rise of Walmart – and Amazon, its online successor – was the result of a specific policy choice, the decision by the Reagan administration not to enforce a key antitrust law. Walmart may have been founded by Sam Walton, but its success (and the demise of the American Main Street) are down to Reaganomics.
The law that Reagan neutered? The Robinson-Patman Act, a very boring-sounding law that makes it illegal for powerful companies (like Walmart) to demand preferential pricing from their suppliers (farmers, packaged goods makers, meat producers, etc). The idea here is straightforward. A company like Walmart is a powerful buyer (a "monopsonist" – compare with "monopolist," a powerful seller). That means that they can demand deep discounts from suppliers. Smaller stores – the mom and pop store on your Main Street – don't have the clout to demand those discounts. Worse, because those buyers are weak, the sellers – packaged goods companies, agribusiness cartels, Big Meat – can actually charge them more to make up for the losses they're taking in selling below cost to Walmart.
Reagan ordered his antitrust cops to stop enforcing Robinson-Patman, which was a huge giveaway to big business. Of course, that's not how Reagan framed it: He called Robinson-Patman a declaration of "war on low prices," because it prevented big companies from using their buying power to squeeze huge discounts. Reagan's court sorcerers/economists asserted that if Walmart could get goods at lower prices, they would sell goods at lower prices.
Which was true…up to a point. Because preferential discounting (offering better discounts to bigger customers) creates a structural advantage over smaller businesses, it meant that big box stores would eventually eliminate virtually all of their smaller competitors. That's exactly what happened: downtowns withered, suburban big boxes grew. Spending that would have formerly stayed in the community was whisked away to corporate headquarters. These corporate HQs were inevitably located in "onshore-offshore" tax haven states, meaning they were barely taxed at the state level. That left plenty of money in these big companies' coffers to spend on funny accountants who'd help them avoid federal taxes, too. That's another structural advantage the big box stores had over the mom-and-pops: not only did they get their inventory at below-cost discounts, they didn't have to pay tax on the profits, either.
MBA programs actually teach this as a strategy to pursue: they usually refer to Amazon's "flywheel" where lower prices bring in more customers which allows them to demand even lower prices:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaSwWYemLek
You might have heard about rural and inner-city "food deserts," where all the independent grocery stores have shuttered, leaving behind nothing but dollar stores? These are the direct product of the decision not to enforce Robinson-Patman. Dollar stores target working class neighborhoods with functional, beloved local grocers. They open multiple dollar stores nearby (nearly all the dollar stores you see are owned by one of two conglomerates, no matter what the sign over the door says). They price goods below cost and pay for high levels of staffing, draining business off the community grocery store until it collapses. Then, all the dollar stores except one close and the remaining store fires most of its staff (working at a dollar store is incredibly dangerous, thanks to low staffing levels that make them easy targets for armed robbers). Then, they jack up prices, selling goods in "cheater" sizes that are smaller than the normal retail packaging, and which are only made available to large dollar store conglomerates:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/03/27/walmarts-jackals/#cheater-sizes
Writing in The American Prospect, Max M Miller and Bryce Tuttle1 – a current and a former staffer for FTC Commissioner Alvaro Bedoya – write about the long shadow cast by Reagan's decision to put Robinson-Patman in mothballs:
https://prospect.org/economy/2024-08-13-stopping-excessive-market-power-monopoly/
If the law is still on the books, couldn't the government just start enforcing it again? Should we be writing notes to Lina Khan?
Yes, that's the idea - the editorial was written by a former and present-day staffer to one of Kahn's commissioners, the wonderful Alvaro Bedoya.
And the Biden administration is enforcing anti-trust laws, but that takes time, money, and courts that aren't packed with GOP shills.
Reagan destroyed so much in America. I can't wait for President Harris to continue the work President Biden began to repair it.
started disco
hey. no. maybe we could talk about it?
idk if anybody drew this already anyway I had 20 minutes and HAD TO