Well that was a nice 2 month break from here...
Today's Document

Discoholic 🪩

ellievsbear
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
cherry valley forever
Jules of Nature

⁂
almost home
KIROKAZE
DEAR READER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
NASA

if i look back, i am lost
wallacepolsom
Sade Olutola

pixel skylines

No title available
$LAYYYTER

@theartofmadeline
No title available

seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from Chile

seen from Bangladesh

seen from United States

seen from Bangladesh
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Austria

seen from Bangladesh

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from United States
@sean-monadamn
Well that was a nice 2 month break from here...
The fire in Fort McMurray has be the cause of the largest evacuation in Alberta’s history, 88,000 people have been displaced from their homes not even knowing if they’ll have anything to come back to, the loss is unimaginable and devastating and yet there are people saying “this is deserved” or “karma” for the effect the oil industry has had on the environment? That is absolutely unbelievable to say and a fucking smack in the face of thousands of Albertans. (In case you didn’t know, Alberta is a generally dry province and northern Alberta happens to be especially dry this year. The only reason that fire is still burning through Fort Mac is lack of rain and wind directions.) Once again the people of this province are showing that we can come together and help in a time of disaster, and tons of assholes have the balls to say thousands of people deserve to lose everything they have. Fuck yourselves.
The people that say that Fort Mac deserves this are the people who fail to realize that the devices they post their idiotic thoughts on are bi-products of oil. Before you post anything about how these people “deserve this” realize that you depend on Fort Mac just as much as the rest of us.
Many people have lost all their belongings in the massive blaze.
A monstrous wildfire has forced 80,000 residents to flee Fort McMurray, Alta. Several have lost their homes and belongings to the fire, while others even left behind their pets as they escaped under a mandatory evacuation order.
Here are some of the ways to help those affected:
Donate money online:
The Red Cross has started an emergency appeal for help. To donate $5 by phone, text REDCROSS to 30333. The Alberta government said Wednesday it will match donations to the Red Cross.
The Wood Buffalo Food Bank is accepting donations through PayPal on its website.
The Salvation Army is also collecting financial donations online.
Emergency shelter:
Airbnb has activated its Disaster Response Tool to help provide free shelter until May 21. Residents in nearby areas can list their properties on the website.
Those able to provide accommodations can also sign up on website YMMfire.ca.
Displaced pets:
The Fort McMurray SPCA is working to reunite displaced residents with pets they were forced to leave behind. They are accepting donations to help efforts.
The Edmonton Humane Society is preparing to accept animals left without owners, and provide temporary shelter to pets with owners who have left their homes.
Social media efforts:
Facebook group Fort Mac Fire Donations is crowdsourcing donations for items such as toiletries, socks and pillows, as needed.
On Twitter, people are offering help through hashtags such as #ymmfire and #ymmhelp
Hey could you guys signal boost this, please? :) There’s a huge wildfire in a city in my province and it’s evacuated 88,000 people, there have already been 1,600 buildings destroyed and apparently tonight it’s supposed to get even worse. The province of Alberta is now officially in a state of emergency. Please signal boost, it would mean a lot to me! <3 Here is a video someone took while evacuating Here are some photos of the fire:
[x]
[x]
[x]
The largest evacation in Alberta’s history is underway with the entirety city of Fort McMurray now under evacuation notice as a wildfire begins to consume the south and western fringes of the town.
33 degree Celsius in northern alberta. Insane. Driving south on Highway 63 past Mackenzie Boulevard is impossible as of earlier today, all are evacuating north to flee fire that is already jumping east across HW 63. Apparently the Wildrose party leader‘s house has been consumed in the fire.
*
Earlier today, tens of thousands of people from the northern Alberta oilsands city were forced from their homes by a raging wildfire Tuesday that engulfed buildings, pushed billowing dark clouds of thick smoke into the air and spit ash down on residents.
The wildfire, whipped by unpredictable winds on a day when the temperature reached 32 C, worsened dramatically in a short time and many residents had little notice to flee. Towers of bright-orange flames cut through the clouds and skipped over tinder-dry forest.
Unseasonably hot temperatures combined with dry conditions have transformed the boreal forest in much of Alberta into a tinder box. The wildfire threat ranges from very high to extreme.
Forestry spokesman Bruce Mayer said a cold front is expected to come through the region by mid- to late-day Wednesday, which would bring with it shifting winds gusting to 50 km/h. He said to expect “a more intense burning day.”
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said the province is doing all it can to ensure everyone’s safety. She said she was looking into the possibility of an airlift for residents with medical issues.
“As frustrating and as scary as it is to leave your home, it’s not as frustrating and scary as to find that you’re trapped,” Notley said in a late-afternoon update.
“It is absolutely important that people follow instructions and evacuate as requested.”
Scott Long of Alberta Emergency Management said the flames had burned a number of structures, but he couldn’t say how many.
Carol Christian’s home was in one of the neighbourhoods under the order to leave. She said it was scary as she drove to an evacuation centre with her son and cat.
“When you leave … it’s an overwhelming feeling to think that you’ll never see your house again,” she said, her voice breaking.
“It was absolutely horrifying when we were sitting there in traffic. You look up and then you watch all the trees candle-topping … up the hills where you live and you’re thinking, ‘Oh my God. We got out just in time.”
Work camps associated with oilsands projects well north of the city were being re-purposed to house evacuees.
“We’ve made our work camp available to staff and their families who have been evacuated and need a place to stay,” said Cameron Yost of Shell Canada.
Resident Mark Durocher, 25, described the air as “thick.”
“If you just walk outside, you feel it (ash) falling on you. You see it floating in the air. I can take a broom and brush it off my deck,” said Durocher.
“You can taste it and feel it when you’re walking around. It feels really heavy and you can taste just how 'woody’ it is in the air.”
A local radio reporter said a trailer park that had been evacuated on Monday was on fire and flames were advancing toward businesses.
“It’s chaos on the roads. People are panicking. It’s gridlock on the roads. Flames are right next to a gas station,” said Carina Van Heerde with radio station KAOS.
Highway 63, the main way into Fort McMurray from the south, was closed after flames jumped the road.
Coun. Keith McGrath described the situation as “dire.”
Another radio reporter, J.D. Deraadt, said the fire flared up suddenly.
“I’m feeling nervous. It’s a bit of a surreal thing to see it go from nothing to big. It’s very disheartening.”
Pictures posted on Twitter showed long lines of traffic and skies darkened by thick smoke as flames licked the edges of roads.
Fort McMurray is the capital of Alberta’s oilsands region and sits about 450 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.
The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, which includes Fort McMurray, had an overall population of 125,000 in 2015. That included a temporary “shadow” population - many of whom live in work camps - of 43,000.
It’s five years ago this month that wildfires destroyed about one-third of the community of Slave Lake, Alta. More than 500 homes and buildings were damaged at a cost of almost $1 billion.
Crews had seemed to be making progress controlling the Fort McMurray blaze, burning since the weekend, but the situation worsened quickly.
Sandra Hickey, lives in a neighbourhood under the evacuation order.
“When I got in the shower earlier today the sky was blue. When I got out. The sky was black,” said Hickey, who had to leave her home. “It was fast. The wind picked up and changed direction.”
Fire officials had already warned earlier in the day that rising temperatures and low humidity could help the fire grow.
“Don’t get into a false sense of security,” fire chief Darby Allen said during a media briefing before things worsened. “We are in for a rough day.”
Crews were busy cutting down a line of unburned trees in the path of the flames to deny the fire some fuel. Air tankers were dropping buckets of fire retardant while other aircraft released water. *
This is so sad. I can see the smoke from my home--nearly three hours away from Fort McMurray and I cannot imagine what these people are going through.
Fort Mcmurray in Alberta, Canada is being devastated by a huge forest fire (May 3rd, 2016). Over 80 000 people has been evacuated and many homes, including the home of my Uncle, have been burned to the ground.
The link above is to the Red Cross, and the donations are going to help the people who have been affected by the fire.
STOP
TDS, February 11, 2015
Jordan Klepper looks at the issue of sex education in schools
is there a rule that all radical Christian white woman must wear their hair in that style or
72 hours until I’m out of the shit city that is Regina!!!
theres so much going on in this vine
when your life is falling apart but you don’t give a fuck anymore
Trust me. You want to unmute.
As depressing as this is, can we just talk for a second about how important this is in the overall projection of the Harry Potter series? At the end of both Philosorcerer’s Stone and Chamber of Secrets, the villain is vanquished and all innocents saved from any kind of permanent damage (aside from, you know, severe emotional trauma). Prisoner of Azkaban is the first time things don’t get neatly wrapped up.
Sirius and Buckbeak live, but they have to go into hiding and their innocence remains unproven until after the Second Wizarding World. It’s the first time we (or at least, some of us) have been sad about the Defense Against the Dark Arts professor leaving. And the villain escapes, living to fuck shit up in the future.
Which sort of prepares us for the next book, where basically everything goes to shit. So it’s a nice stepping stone between CoS and GoF in the level of how fucked everything is.
(Feel free to disagree with my clearly 100% scientific and objective graph.)
please just read the whole thing
this is a masterpiece.
HE’S TOYING WITH US NOW
He has become self aware.
His laugh is unsettling. He’s unsettling.
stay classy, Flyers fans
if you’re losing a series you don’t get to just start trying to kill people. that was gross flyers. seriously fucking gross.