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@silverfishsquared
Same
the fifth graders drew me weird shit at work
i love it
To people who cockblock:
Fuck you.
I do what I want
You do not control me!
Can we talk about how much freaking effort it took for that diver to get into all of that gear just to take that stupid picture in the hot tub? Youāre all fucking losers and I love you
that feel when your swag causes 333 earthquakes but your parents don't understand
this guy is going to get shot one day
If bees become extinct we will have exactly 4 YEARS to live on this planet. I donāt understand how ānot giving a fuckā is more important than your lifeā¦
okay, I have a thing to say about this. Iām no expert on bees, but I am a biologist (and entomologist) so I think there is something I can contribute thatāll be of worth.
I agree entirely with the sentiment that we must protect honeybees. Obviously they are massively important for biodiversity, as well as pollinating food crops for humans. There is no doubt that if all the honeybees in the world were to vanish in a day that the consequences would be dire.
However, I disagree that the main cause for concern regarding honeybee death is the use of Genetically Modified (GM) crops. Iād be very interested to read a research paper that says āGM crops have killed millions of honeybeesā, if indeed such a paper exists because in all honesty I find it highly unlikely that this is a true statement.
Letās start with some facts about GM crops:
1. The development of GM crops is a highly regulated process, bound by strict country-specific legislature. A great number of trials are carried out long before commercial planting of a GM crop is even considered. It is these trials, and accompanying laboratory studies, that ensure a GM crop is safe to non-target organisms (such as honeybees) by investigating direct and indirect effects (Nap et al. 2003).
2. Crops that are genetically modified to express insecticidal proteins (for crop pest control) have a high level of specificity. This means that the insecticidal proteins being produced by the GM plant will only affect a narrow range of insect groups because of the chemical properties of the protein. For example, GM crops expressing insecticidal proteins sourced from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) will only target some Lepidopteran pests (caterpillars; Romeis et al. 2006). Furthermore, a recent meta-analysis of the literature found that GM Bt crops do not negatively affect the survival of adult honeybees or their larvae (Duan et al. 2008).
3. GM crops can be tailored such that the novel gene is expressed only in particular parts of the plant. For example, GM Bt rice plants express the toxin in the stems but not the grains (Datta et al. 1998). This technique means that gene expression can be excluded from the flowers/pollen of the crop plant, so that bees and other pollinators would not be affected. Neat, huh?
So those are a token few reasons why GM crops are safer than perhaps many people believe (as the result of a lot of questionable, non-scientific articles). To come back to our main point about honeybee death, I would like to briefly mention a few alternative explanations for the recent decline in honeybee populations. These are as follows:
1. Many bees have died as the result of broad-spectrum insecticide use. These are pesticides that lack specificity, and can be harmful to non-target organisms. Neonicotinoids are a well-studied example of this (Decourtye & Devillers, 2010). Not to worry, though, because many broad-spectrum pesticides including neonics are well on their way out. Indeed, the EU recently banned a large cohort of neonic pesticides. This is still a topic of controversy, mind (Goulson, 2013).
2. Many bees have died as the result of Varroa mite infestation. Imagine youāve been bitten by several ticks, except those ticks are the size of dinner plates. That gives you an idea of the severity of a Varroa mite infestation on a single developing bee. The parasitisation of bees by Varroa mites and other parasites is often accompanied by disease transmission. This can result in colonies dying within two years after infestation (Johnson, 2011).
3. Many bees have died as the result of ācolony collapse disorderā. Ā This is a phrase that has popped up a lot recently, and is basically an umbrella term for the various causes of bee death including parasite infestation, disease transmission, environmental stresses, and management stresses such as poor nutrition (Johnson, 2011). Colony collapse has been attributed to broad-spectrum pesticide use in some instances. However, it is has still been observed in countries where broad-spectrum pesticides have been withdrawn (in the EU, like I mentioned earlier; Johnson, 2011).
So those are my main points. Please excuse the bullet-point nature of this; I was trying to keep it fairly short. Not sure I managed that haha. But anyway, my take-home message is that GM crops are not the enemy when it comes to honeybee decline. If anything, bees are at much greater danger from the use of broad-spectrum pesticides and from parasites and diseases. Using GM can even help to alleviate some of the problems associated with broad-spectrum pesticides, as they greatly reduce the need to apply such chemicals (Romeis et al. 2006).
A finishing note: Do your homework. Go on google scholar and read some of the literature, making sure it is recent (within the past 10-15 years). Literature reviews are a great way to find out what the consensus is on any given topic. Donāt use popular media as your main source of information where science is concerned; they tend to favour scandal and exaggeration. You want to know whatās really going on? Check out some research articles and see for yourself.
Thanks for sticking it through to the end of this impromptu mini-essay! āAlice
References:
Datta, K., Vasquez, A., Tu, J., Torrizo, L., Alam, M. F., Oliva, N., Abrigo, E., Khush, G. S., & Datta, S. K. (1998). Constitutive and tissue-specific differential expression of the cryIA (b) gene in transgenic rice plants conferring resistance to rice insect pest. Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 97(1-2), 20-30.
Decourtye, A., & Devillers, J. (2010). Ecotoxicity of neonicotinoid insecticides to bees. In Insect nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (pp. 85-95). Springer New York.
Duan, J. J., Marvier, M., Huesing, J., Dively, G., & Huang, Z. Y. (2008). A meta-analysis of effects of Bt crops on honey bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae). PLoS One, 3(1), e1415.
Goulson, D. (2013). Neonicotinoids and bees: Whatās all the buzz?. Significance, 10(3), 6-11.
Johnson, R. (2011). Honey bee colony collapse disorder. DIANE Publishing.
Nap, J. P., Metz, P. L., Escaler, M., & Conner, A. J. (2003). The release of genetically modified crops into the environment. The Plant Journal, 33(1), 1-18.
Romeis, J., Meissle, M., & Bigler, F. (2006). Transgenic crops expressing Bacillus thuringiensis toxins and biological control. Nature biotechnology, 24(1), 63-71.
This commentary is SO important. Succinct and with proper sourcing; beautiful.
It infuriates me when people blame GMO for everything without actually examining the evidence.
The way scientific replies on tumblr should be handled: Sourced and informed.
Bless you, science friend. And bless you again for the sources.
DO YOUR RESEARCH, FRIENDS
DAT SOURCING, THO. Itās beautiful. That comment was so well-organized and SOURCED. PROPERLY.
Wait, don't cry this time? Is Foodfight really that bad to watch or was there something else going on?
It was one of those movies that just makes you want to fuck a sheep while being stabbed in the asshole with a 50 day old breadstick from an abandoned italian restaurant owned by a man named Riggioli
i will do a lot of things but admitting im cold to my mum who told me to bring a jacket isnāt one of them
Thatās good service.
We shall never deny a guess even the most ridiculous request..
On May 28th, my sister, Edna, turned 31.
Ā Her mental age is about three years old. She loves Winnie the Pooh, Beauty & the Beast, and Sesame Street. Even though the below picture is unconvincing.Ā
Edna and āCookie.ā I think she was trying to play it cool.Ā
My name is Jeanie. Iām Ednaās younger sister. Iām also her guardian and caregiver.Ā
Thatās me on the left.Ā (Hey, you never know. After a year of writing a blog about online dating -Ā Jeanie Does the InternetĀ - Iāve come to learn that there are A LOT of fools on the internet.)Ā
ANYWAY, IāmĀ not ādoing the internetā anymore. Iām taking care of Edna full-time, after completing my MFA in Writing for Screen & Television at USC.
May 16, 2014. I wanted a picture. Edna wanted breakfast.
In case youāre wondering where our parents are, theyāre dead. Our mom died of breast cancer when she was just 33.Ā
Us with mom before she died. (Obviously.)
As for our dad, he peaced-out around the time my mom got sick. His loss - weāre awesome.Ā
Here we are being awesome at the beach. Pushing a wheelchair in the sand? Not so awesome.Ā
In case youāre wondering āWhatās wrong?ā with my sister - as a stranger once asked me on the street Ā - Ā NOTHING. Yes, Edna has a rare form of epilepsy - Lennox-Gastaut syndrome - but I donāt know if thatās anymore āwrongā than people who donāt have manners.Ā
Basically, Edna was born ānormal,ā and started having seizures as a baby. They eventually got so bad that they cut off the oxygen to her brain, causing her to be mentally disabled. Or impaired. Or intellectually disabled. Or whatever you want to call it - except āretarded,ā because in 2010, President Obama signed Rosaās Law into effect, replacing that word with āintellectually impaired.āĀ
Which is cool and all, but services for the disabled and the people who care for them are SEVERELY LACKING. Also, thereās a bunch of people working in taxpayer-funded positions who are supposed to help families like us, but donāt. (Big surprise, I know.) They just fill out paperwork (whenever they feel like it) with asinine statements like this:Ā
YUP. I transport my sister down the stairs in her wheelchair, because that is not only safe, but TOTALLY PRACTICAL. Why doesnāt everyone in a wheelchair just take the stairs, for Godās sake? Stop being so lazy, PEOPLE WITHOUT WORKING LEGS!Ā
But, as it says above, Ednaās legs do work. Whether or not she wants them to, is another story.Ā
Edna refusing to go inside.Ā
These are theĀ stairs that I have to carry her up - by myself - on a daily basis. That is, until one of my legs break and both of us are just sitting at the bottom of the stairs, helpless.Ā
For six months, I have begged - BEGGED - the State of California to help my sister, which they are required by law - The Lanterman Act specifically - to do so. But theyāve told me āthese things take timeā and that I āneed to amend my expectations.ā (That was said to me when I refused to place Edna at AN ALL-MALE CARE FACILITY. Because yes, that was an āoptionā that was offered to me.)Ā
Prior to Edna moving in with me in my one-bedroom apartment, she was living with her amazing caregiver, Gaby, back in Tucson, where we went to high school and I did my undergrad. Ednaās reppinā the Wildcats below.Ā
But back in November, Gaby also died from breast cancer. (FUCK YOU, BREAST CANCER!) This picture was taken a month before she died. She never even told me she was sick because she didnāt want me to worry.Ā
By the way, we were raised by our grandma. Edna and her were very close.
Sheās dead, too. Surprise.
She died when I was 20 and Edna was 21. Thatās when I became Ednaās legal guardian and Gaby stepped into the picture to help me out with Edna.Ā
So, six months ago, after Gaby died, I movedĀ Edna to California, where I tried to get the folks over at The Frank D. Lanterman Regional Center to help me.Ā Iāve told them Iām worried about our safety - that one of us could get hurt on theĀ stairs - Ā Iāve told them I canāt afford to pay the private babysitters $15/hour because the ones social services sent me who make $9/hour were unreliable (they didnāt show up on time or at all so I could get to school and work), untrustworthy (one of them let Edna go to the bathroom in the kitchen and then took her into the bathroom because āthat what I thought I was supposed to do.ā)Ā
But the people over at the FLRC donāt return my calls, they donāt file the paperwork on time - and the first caseworker that was assigned to us actually LAUGHED AT my sister when he came to our home to evaluate her. When I reported him to his supervisor, she told me, āThatās just [insert name of said jackass].āĀ
He was one of the two caseworkers that contributed to the report I mentioned above, which also included this:Ā
So let me get this straight - I have to feed, bathe, dress and help Edna in the bathroom and you canāt deduce whether or not she is able to vote? What in the fuck?!
Now I realize I seem angry. And you can bet your balls I am. Iām also sad. Sad for those who donāt have family to stick up from them and who waste away God knows where, monitored by no one. OrĀ monitored by people who physically and sexually assault them.Ā
Iām also sadĀ for the caregivers who are SO EXHAUSTED - trying to take care of their loved ones - while also trying to take care of themselves and battling a system that is supposed to help, but does nothing of the sort.Ā And I know a lot of people give up. They let their dreams, their marriages, their friendships slide. All while trying not to resent the very person youāre doing it all for.
Edna wanted to sit next to me the other day while I was writing. Clearly, sheās not impressed.Ā
Hereās the thing: I REFUSE TO GIVE UP. IāM NOT GIVING UP ON HER OR MYSELF. Iām going to pursue my dreams while taking care of her, AND while ensuring that the people paid to do their jobs ACTUALLY do them.
Thatās where you come in. I need you to help me get my story out there. Because I know Iām not alone in this. I want to connect with familiesĀ who are in similar situations and also show people who have no idea what itās like to care for someone with a disability (or even a loved one who is sick) that it can be rewarding. Super fucking hard. Exhausting. Painful. Isolating. But, rewarding.Ā
Iām going to get help for my sister - and others. My hope is that by sharing our story, I can bring awareness to the lack of services and help for the disabled.Ā
Thank you,Ā
JeanieĀ
Facebook:Ā Ā facebook.com/eisforedna
Twitter: @EisforEdnaĀ
This made me cry
SIGNAL BOOST
STOP SCROLLING. THIS PERSON ISNāT ASKING FOR MONEY AND THIS POST WONāT MAKE YOU SAD.
This is a really uplifting and inspirational story of a family sticking by each other and making things work despite a whole lot of shit
They just want to find other people in the same position they are, for a sense of community and to feel like they arenāt alone.
I know out of all of you, some of you have followers who are living with and taking care of intellectually or emotionally disabled family members, and this lovely and unbreakable pair of sisters need to find them.
SIGNAL BOOOOOOOOOST
IM FUCKIGN CYRUING
If Disney Princesses Were Actually Sloths by Jen Lewis Previously:Ā Nicolas Cage as Disney Princesses
I have not stopped and I will not.
Please stop, itās for your own good. Your mother and I are very worried.
MAKE ME.
IF I EVER DONāT REBLOG GOLBATMON ASSUME I HAVE DIED A TERRIBLE DEATH