I know my value. Anyone else’s opinion doesn’t really matter.
Word, Queen Peggy. WORD.
Mike Driver
cherry valley forever

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Noah Kahan
occasionally subtle

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One Nice Bug Per Day
taylor price

titsay
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tumblr dot com
KIROKAZE
macklin celebrini has autism
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

izzy's playlists!
RMH
ojovivo

Kiana Khansmith
Cosimo Galluzzi
The Bowery Presents
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@que-divertido
I know my value. Anyone else’s opinion doesn’t really matter.
Word, Queen Peggy. WORD.
Teen Wolf AU - Arrow: In which Derek is a vigilante roaming the streets of Beacon Hills and fighting evil guys and Stiles is the cute IT guy who talks too much and without whom Derek would get nothing at all done. Also, they love each other (and Derek is stupid and thinks sleeping with other people and not dating Stiles will keep him save, but even the bad guys soon realise that his occasional hook-ups with Erica don’t mean she’s his pressure point)
I need this, like STAT
Hamilton has confused my little brother
Quincy (he's only 7): Why does everybody think Obama was the first black president?
Me:... because he is.
Quincy: What about George Washington and Thomas Jefferson?
You want a physicist to speak at your funeral. You want the physicist to talk to your grieving family about the conservation of energy, so they will understand that your energy has not died. You want the physicist to remind your sobbing mother about the first law of thermodynamics; that no energy gets created in the universe, and none is destroyed. You want your mother to know that all your energy, every vibration, every Btu of heat, every wave of every particle that was her beloved child remains with her in this world. You want the physicist to tell your weeping father that amid energies of the cosmos, you gave as good as you got. And at one point you’d hope that the physicist would step down from the pulpit and walk to your brokenhearted spouse there in the pew and tell him that all the photons that ever bounced off your face, all the particles whose paths were interrupted by your smile, by the touch of your hair, hundreds of trillions of particles, have raced off like children, their ways forever changed by you. And as your widow rocks in the arms of a loving family, may the physicist let her know that all the photons that bounced from you were gathered in the particle detectors that are her eyes, that those photons created within her constellations of electromagnetically charged neurons whose energy will go on forever. And the physicist will remind the congregation of how much of all our energy is given off as heat. There may be a few fanning themselves with their programs as he says it. And he will tell them that the warmth that flowed through you in life is still here, still part of all that we are, even as we who mourn continue the heat of our own lives. And you’ll want the physicist to explain to those who loved you that they need not have faith; indeed, they should not have faith. Let them know that they can measure, that scientists have measured precisely the conservation of energy and found it accurate, verifiable and consistent across space and time. You can hope your family will examine the evidence and satisfy themselves that the science is sound and that they’ll be comforted to know your energy’s still around. According to the law of the conservation of energy, not a bit of you is gone; you’re just less orderly. Amen.
Aaron Freeman “You Want A Physicist To Speak at your Funeral” (via focloir)
This is like installing Windows on a Mac.
I am physically required to reblog this or my heart will stop beating.
oh my god
@ninatastic
Puppy adorableness x11 billion!!
Best post. The best one.
(via White House Digital #Ham4Ham 3/19/16 – Jefferson’s Band - YouTube)
The amount of joy this brings me. I cannot even.
A quick browse on YouTube shows just how far the reach of Ham4Ham is. In fact, the August 15, 2015 Ham4Ham featuring Miranda and the late Kyle Jan-Baptiste performing “Confrontation” from Les Miserables has over 315,000 views and the October 24, 2015 show featuring the Schuyler Sisters—Jonathan Groff, Brian D’Arcy James, and Andrew Rannells—has over 275,000 hits (another version has over 252,000 hits). Somehow, Lin-Manuel Miranda has re-invented the pre-show lottery and created a product that has been seen—in person or online—by more people than Hamilton itself. Put simply, Hamilton is a game-changer in many ways, but, as Rae Votta claims, the show is “changing how fans interact with and consume the fandom around musical theatre.” Revolutionary, huh? Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Ham4Ham follows a long tradition of Latina/o (or the ancestors of present-day Latina/os) theatremaking that dates back to when the events in Hamilton were happening. As Nicolás Kanellos describes, there is evidence that as early as the 1790s, while Alexander Hamilton was going toe-to-toe with Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr, professional Spanish-language theatre companies were performing in community settings in California. This continued throughout the nineteenth century as Spanish-language theatre companies frequently traveled throughout the country performing for the public and, later in the 1920s-1940s, Mexican-American duo La Bella Netty and Jesús Rodríguez traveled the Southwest performing short skits in public spaces. These are but a few examples. In fact “taking it to the streets” was a central principal of early Latina/o theatre movements in the United States, most notably El Teatro Campesino beginning in 1965 in the grape farms in California’s Central Valley to as recently as their October, 2015 collaboration with Center Theatre Group to present Popol Vuh: Heart of Heaven in downtown Los Angeles’s Grand Park. The philosophy behind this is simple. If the people won’t come to the theatre, then take the theatre to the people. While El Teatro Campesino’s “taking it to the streets” originated from a place of social protest, Ham4Ham does so to create accessibility, tap into social media, and ultimately generate a free, self-functioning marketing campaign. In this way, Ham4Ham falls into a lineage of accessibility as a Latina/o theatremaking aesthetic—what I call an “aesthetics of accessibility”—that finds its roots in El Teatro Campesino. Others see Hamilton’s taking it to the streets as a tribute to the collaborative roots of hip-hop.
Ham4Ham: Taking Hamilton to the Streets (Howlround)
This is a pure expression of the conservative doctrine of federalism: States handle things better than the feds because they are closer to the people. But then came the debacle in Flint, when Michigan authorities embraced cost-saving changes in the city’s water supply and caused mass lead poisoning. Now members of Congress are blaming the EPA for failing to stop the problem — oblivious to the irony that they and their predecessors were the ones who denied the federal government the ability to enforce drinking-water standards in the first place.
The poisonous conservative thinking that caused the Flint crisis
See, this is what they do: they defund and obstruct and wreck the government we pay for, and then they complain that government doesn’t work, so they are the only ones who can be trusted to fix it … by cutting taxes and regulations and obstructing anyone who fights it.
And they never pay a political price, they never lose elections because of it, the Democrats don’t explicitly call them out on it nearly enough (or run elections based on conservative failure), and nothing ever changes.
And nothing ever changes because this sort of failure only hurts and kills the poor, and the vast majority of government doesn’t give a flying fuck about the poor.
(via wilwheaton)
Sent Home From Middle School After Reporting A Rape
This story contains a description of sexual assault.
Over spring break in April 2015, 13-year-old G. stopped eating and sleeping. She started having panic attacks and complained of excruciating pain. When G.’s friends and mother asked what was wrong, G. refused to tell them. Then, later that month, the video started to spread.
A boy in G.’s eighth-grade class at Spring Creek Community School, a public middle school in Brooklyn, had filmed himself penetrating G.’s mouth and anus. G. said she had been raped. The boy claimed the sex was consensual. To G.’s horror, the video he secretly filmed of her was shared all over Brooklyn.
“It was the most awful thing,” said G., who is identified by her middle initial to protect her privacy. “It was bad enough that everyone knew what happened. But knowing that they had seen the video was that much worse.”
No school principal wants to deal with such a catastrophe. But under the federal gender equity law Title IX, schools that receive federal funding have to thoroughly investigate all claims of sexual harassment and assault. Above all, schools must ensure that students aren’t denied their right to an education on the basis of sex.
When G. reported her rape, Spring Creek’s response denied her that very right, according to a federal complaint G.’s attorney filed against the New York City Department of Education in November 2015.
“Everyone was blaming things on me,” G. said. “It was so much pressure. I couldn’t take it. At times I felt like giving up on my life.”
Click for more from BlackMattersUS
Two weeks after her assault, G.’s friends helped her tell a school staff member what had happened, according to the complaint. He asked her if the sex was consensual, but when she said it wasn’t, he did not report it to other administrators or police, despite state mandatory reporting laws.
Later that month, G. reported the rape and the video to the principal. The principal called the police and G.’s mother, then told G. to leave school while they got the situation under control. Her presence would just “make things worse,” the principal said, according to the complaint.
Her presence would just “make things worse”
Her presence would just “make things worse”
Her presence would just “make things worse”
WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK?!!!!!
Hell yes, take that school and shake the shit out of it. Principals and Teachers who do NOTHING are monsters.
Credit to: Stardust&Melancholy
Oh damn.
Ladies and gentlemen, imagine if you will…Steve Yoshimoto Rogers.
Growing up in the depression in San Francisco, Steve tried to join the Army at the beginning of the war, but was turned down repeatedly. (He tried to explain that he was American, born here, but even if they had been accepting half-Japanese soldiers at that point he was too skinny and sickly.) In ‘42 he and his best friend Bucky were shipped to Manzanar - by ‘43 they were accepting Nisei soldiers, and he and Bucky were both yes-yes boys. Bucky joined the 442nd but they still didn’t let Steve in - the conditions at the camp hadn’t done anything good for Steve’s health. Without Bucky there, there was nobody to keep Steve out of trouble, fighting the guards when they tried to bully the other internees, and by the end of ‘43 Steve was sent to the prison camp at Tule Lake with the other “incorrigibles”. It was there he met Dr. Erskine. Imagine if this was the face of the symbol of America.
Holy shit, I love this, I WANT this. I want an ongoing 150 issue three-year series of this.
@samtalksfunny and what if Steve’s childhood best friend was James Morita not James Barnes
Yeah, this would be pretty awesome all right (and I could see Steve having a really conflicted time at the camps and with the loyalty oath and everything).
I desperately want to read this story!!!!!
!!!!!!DONT LET THIS GO UNNOTICED!!!!!!
All Three Major News Networks Ignored Bernie Sanders’ Speech Tuesday Night, To Show Empty Trump Podium
As Bernie Sanders took the stage on Tuesday night, the cable networks continued doing what they do best – talking.
Fox News, CNN and MSNBC all declined to carry Sanders’ speech, instead offering jokes about the evening while showing live coverage of Trumps empty podium while promising that we were all, “AWAITING TRUMP” and “STANDING BY FOR TRUMP.“
In Fact: EVERY OTHER CANDIDATE HAD AIR TIME EXCEPT FOR SANDERS
As if these stations couldn’t get any more corrupt, The Huffington Post’s Michael Calderone reported that the media have collectively given Trump some $2 billion worth of free air time.
Don’t be fooled by the media ya’ll. You can watch his incredible speech here & remember You ARE his media
Source
#StayWoke #FeelTheBern
can i just point out how chilling the imagery of trumps speech backdrop is? the wall of american flags really evokes a very fascist design aesthetic
Move over Shakespeare, teen girls are the real language disruptors
Hate vocal fry? Bothered by the use of “like” and “just”? Think uptalk makes people sound less confident? If so, you may find yourself growing increasingly unpopular—there’s a new wave of people pointingout that criticizing young women’s speech is just old-fashioned sexism.
I agree, but I think we can go even further: young women’s speech isn’t just acceptable—it’s revolutionary. And if we value disruptors and innovation, we shouldn’t just be tolerating young women’s speech—we should be celebrating it. To use a modern metaphor, young women are the Uber of language.
What does it mean to disrupt language? Let’s start with the great English disruptor: William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare is celebrated to this day not just because he wrote a mean soliloquy but because of what he added to our language—he’s said to have brought in over 1,700 words. But recent scholars have called that number of words into question. As Katherine Martin, head of US Dictionaries at Oxford University Press, has pointed out, if Shakespeare was inventing dozens of new words per play, how would his audience have understood him? Rather, it’s likely that Shakespeare had an excellent grasp of the vernacular and was merely writing down words that his audience was already using.
So if Shakespeare wasn’t disrupting the English language, who was? And how did we get from Shakespearean English to the version we speak now? That’s right: young women.
A pair of linguists, Terttu Nevalainen and Helena Raumolin-Brunberg at the University of Helsinki, conducted a study that combed through 6,000 personal letters written between 1417 and 1681. The pair looked at fourteen language changes that occurred during this period, things like the eradication of ye, the switch from “mine eyes” to “my eyes,” and the change from hath, doth, maketh to has, does, makes.
In 11 out of the 14 changes, they found that female letter-writers were changing the way they wrote faster than male letter-writers. In the three exceptional cases where the men were ahead of the women, those particular changes were linked to men’s greater access to education at the time. In other words, women are reliably ahead of the game when it comes to word-of-mouth linguistic changes.
This trend hasn’t changed much. While young people have long driven innovation, it’s not just an age thing—it’s also a gender thing. During the decades that sociolinguists have been researching the question, they’ve continually found evidence that women lead linguistic change.
Young women are leading the change away from the distinctive /r/ pronunciation of New York City, they’re leading the vowel changes in US cities around the Great Lakes, the /aw/ pronunciation in Toronto and Vancouver, the “ch” pronunciation in Panama, the /r/ pronunciation in Montreal, the ne deletion in Tours, /t/ and /d/ pronunciations in Cairo Arabic, vowel pronunciation in Paris, not to mention entire language shifts, like that from Hungarian to German in Austria—and the list goes on.
Plus, young women are on the bleeding edge of those linguistic changes that periodically sweep through the media’s trend sections, from uptalk to “selfie” to the quotative like to vocal fry.
The role that young women play as language disruptors is so well-established at this point it’s practically boring to sociolinguists. The founder of modern sociolinguistics, William Labov, observed that women lead 90% of linguistic change—in a paper he wrote 25 years ago. Researchers continue to confirm his findings.
It takes about a generation for the language patterns started among young women to jump over to men. Uptalk, for example, which is associated with Valley Girls in the 1970s, is found among young men today. In other words, women learn language from their peers; men learn it from their mothers.
While the pattern is well-established, we still don’t know for sure yet why young women reliably lead linguistic innovation. Maybe it’s nature, maybe it’s nurture; but we do know that young women tend to be more socially aware, more empathetic, and more concerned about how their peers perceive them. This may translate into a greater facility for linguistic disruption. Women also tend to have larger social networks, which means they’re more likely to be exposed to a greater diversity of language innovations.
And of course, women are still likely to spend more time caring for children than men—even if a particular woman works outside the home, daycare workers and elementary school teachers are disproportionately female. This means that even if young men were disrupting language as much as women, they would be hard-pressed to pass it along.
All of this leads us to the biggest question: if women are such natural linguistic innovators, why do they get criticized for the same thing that we praise Shakespeare for? Plain old-fashioned sexism.
Our society takes middle-aged men more seriously than young women for a whole host of reasons, so it’s only logical that we have also been conditioned to automatically respect the tone and cadence of the typical male voice, as well as their word choices.
Sure, let’s encourage young women to speak with confidence, but not by avoiding vocal fry or “like” or whatever the next linguistic disruption is. Let’s tell them to speak with confidence because they’re participating in a millennia-old cycle of linguistic innovation—and one that generations of powerful men still haven’t figured out how to crack.
—Gretchen McCullough writing for Quartz, 7 August 2015 [x]
“The role that young women play as language disruptors is so well-established at this point it’s practically boring to sociolinguists” *weeps with joy*
THIS IS SO FUCKING COOL also @loveandfolly I feel like this thing with sensitivity to/ disruption of language describes our high school circles
HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY, YALL.
person: what's your favourite television trope?
me: so these two men meet and immediately fall in love and move in together after like one day of knowing each other but because they have so many communication issues they never talk about it and they both are certain that the other one could never love him and eventually one guy has to fake his death so that this baddie guy leaves them alone but when he comes back the other guy has plans to marry a woman and he actually does it but turns out she's a freelance assassin and tries to kill the one guy and then that guy gets super coked up and hallucinates the guy he loves interrogating him about his sexuality but in Victorian times yeah I love that trope
That’s it. That’s the show.
Add their awesome message for Women’s Day to the list of all the times the Newtown, Australia, fire station was the absolute best.
I will ALWAYS repost
Hahahhahahahaa. Say what you will, Bernie ALWAYS SHOWS UP