pictures, politics & geekery

Month

August 2011

69 posts

awyeahmona replied to your photo: Tara and Naomi, from True Blood.

wait wait wait wait tara gets love scenes with women??? ahhh how is her arc in general now i quit watching b/c i was getting so upset at her treatment…

Sorry about the drive-by inadvertent spoiler!

But yes, Tara has been dating a woman for some time now. They’re doing a better job with her character this year, and her storyline isn’t quite so painful. She and Lafayette have both done a lot of healing during the time jump between seasons three and four. Terrible stuff is still happening, because hey, it’s Bon Temps, but… it’s better.

Jul 31, 2011
Jul 31, 20116 notes
#tara thornton #rutina wesley #true blood
Jul 31, 201110 notes
#True Blood #tara thornton #Sam Merlotte #Sam Trammell #rutina wesley
Jul 31, 2011168 notes
#politics #feelings #voting

July 2011

76 posts

Jul 30, 20113,622 notes
#history #colonialism #america #usa
“

Many countries have instituted tough new rules to curb the use of plastic bags. Some, like China, have issued outright bans. Others, including many European nations, have imposed stiff fees to pay for the mess created by all the plastic trash. “There is simply zero justification for manufacturing them anymore, anywhere,” the United Nations Environment Programme recently declared. But in the United States, the plastics industry has launched a concerted campaign to derail and defeat anti-bag measures nationwide. The effort includes well-placed political donations, intensive lobbying at both the state and national levels, and a pervasive PR campaign designed to shift the focus away from plastic bags to the supposed threat of canvas and paper bags — including misleading claims that reusable bags “could” contain bacteria and unsafe levels of lead.

“It’s just like Big Tobacco,” says Amy Westervelt, founding editor of Plastic Free Times, a website sponsored by the nonprofit Plastic Pollution Coalition. “They’re using the same underhanded tactics — and even using the same lobbying firm that Philip Morris started and bankrolled in the Nineties. Their sole aim is to maintain the status quo and protect their profits. They will stop at nothing to suppress or discredit science that clearly links chemicals in plastic to negative impacts on human, animal and environmental health.”

Made from high-density polyethylene — a byproduct of oil and natural gas — the single-use shopping bag was invented by a Swedish company in the mid-Sixties and brought to the U.S. by ExxonMobil. Introduced to grocery-store checkout lines in 1976, the “T-shirt bag,” as it is known in the industry, can now be found literally every­where on the planet, from the bottom of the ocean to the peaks of Mount Everest. The bags are durable, waterproof, cheaper to produce than paper bags and able to carry 1,000 times their own weight. They are also a nightmare to recycle: The flimsy bags, many thinner than a strand of human hair, gum up the sorting equipment used by most recycling facilities. “Plastic bags and other thin-film plastic is the number-one enemy of the equipment we use,” says Jeff Murray, vice president of Far West Fibers, the largest recycler in Oregon. “More than 300,000 plastic bags are removed from our machines every day — and since most of the removal has to be done by hand, that means more than 25 percent of our labor costs involves plastic-bag removal.”

”
—The Plastic Bag Wars, Rolling Stone Politics.
Jul 27, 20111 note
#politics #environment #plastic #oil dependency #oil culture #international politics #lobbying
Witness To War: Tim Hetherington's final photos → newsweek.com

Trigger warning: violence, weapons, images of death.

Nine days after Tim Hetherington was killed, I received an email from him. It was sent on April 20, the day he died, but for whatever reason, spent a week in digital purgatory. I read it at 2 a.m. on a Friday morning, still feeling numb and confused by his death. “Hey man, just checking in,” he wrote. “Crazy day today. Full on city fight. It’s an incredible story . . . and hardly anyone here.” In some strange way I felt that Tim was still reaching out to me, reminding me of the importance of his final story.

These photos, shot on Tim’s Mamiya 7 camera, before he died, evoke a tangible sense of gravity. Striking on their own, they hold immense power because we know they are his last. Tim was always compelled by war. He was driven by a profound need to be present, a desire to document the life and chaos of places like Liberia, Afghanistan, and Libya. Tim chronicled a dark side of humanity, and the pictures he left behind are extraordinary landscapes of vulnerability and trauma.

More than anything though, Tim’s photos speak to what it means to be a man and how war often defines masculinity. “Photography is great at representing the hardware of the war machine,” he told his good friend and writer Stephen Mayes, a month before he died. “But the truth is that the war machine is the software, as much as the hardware. The software runs it, and the software is young men. I’m not so young anymore. But I get it. That’s really what my work is about.”

— James Wellford

Jul 27, 20112 notes
#war #violence #gender #masculinity #arab spring #libya #revolution
Jul 27, 20119 notes
#poverty #activism #wealth #inequality #justice #kyriarchy #solidarity #economics #health
Jul 27, 20115 notes
#chickens #birds #animal welfare #animal abuse
“This is an impressive crowd: the Have’s and Have-more’s. Some people call you the elites. I call you my base.” —George W. Bush.
Jul 27, 20116 notes
#wealth #america #usa #george w. bush
Don’t show, don’t tell?  → web.mit.edu

Suppose someone showed you a novel gadget and told you, “Here’s how it works,” while demonstrating a single function, such as pushing a button. What would you do when they handed it to you? You’d probably push the button. But what if the gadget had other functions? Would it occur to you to search for them, if your teacher hadn’t alluded to their existence? Maybe, maybe not. It turns out that there is a “double-edged sword” to pedagogy: Explicit instruction makes children less likely to engage in spontaneous exploration and discovery. A study by MIT researchers and colleagues compared the behavior of children given a novel toy under four different conditions, finding that children expressly taught one of its functions played with the toy for less time and discovered fewer things to do with it than children in the other three scenarios. […]

File this under “studies that validate my existing beliefs”.

Anyway, this part is key:

Many children in the pedagogical condition failed to discover even one function in addition to the squeak, while children in the other three conditions found, on average, one or two functions they had not been taught. What’s more, children in the pedagogical condition spent less time playing with the toy — less than two minutes, on average — than children in the other conditions, whose times ranged from slightly more than two minutes in the naïve condition to longer than three minutes in the baseline condition.

These results suggest children are extremely sensitive to the subtleties of a teaching scenario, Schulz says: What matters is not if children are shown a function, but how they are shown that function. If they believe that an informed teacher has taught them everything, they will be less motivated to explore.

Jul 27, 201156 notes
#education #pedagogy
Jul 27, 201181 notes
#flowers #cooking
Expect Palestine to make a full-court press for a full seat in the United Nations in September, a diplomatic move which would give them leverage with Israel. Expect the U.S. to try to block it. → reuters.com
Jul 27, 201126 notes
#israel #palastine #politics #united nations #international politics
Jul 27, 20111 note
#comics #tom morello
Jul 27, 2011
#comics
Jul 25, 2011251 notes
#manatee #florida #oil spill #environment #conservation
Jul 25, 20113 notes
#pelicans #birds #oil spill #environment #conservation
Jul 25, 201111,280 notes
#trees #aerial photography
Jul 25, 20112 notes
#milky way #galaxy #stars #space #science weekend
Jul 24, 201189 notes
#galactic center #Astronomy #science weekend #stars
Play
Jul 24, 2011
#CERN #research #science weekend #physics
Jul 24, 2011
#tumblrcloud
Jul 24, 20116 notes
#light pollution #Environment #science weekend
Jul 24, 20115 notes
#cosmic dust #Astronomy #science weekend
Jul 23, 20111 note
#the sun #space #Astronomy #physics #science weekend
Jul 23, 20111 note
#science weekend #Astronomy #sun #solar corona
Jul 23, 20117 notes
#neuzz #graffiti #street art #mexico
Jul 23, 201138 notes
#Bruce Timm #Wonder Woman #comics
Jul 23, 20113 notes
#Astronomy #physics #solar wind #science weekend
Jul 23, 2011
#Astronomy #asteroid #space #science weekend
Jul 22, 20117 notes
#Astronomy #light echo #science #stars #science weekend
Reblog if you don't like DC's Reboot.

foxhack:

dr-killjoy:

thorn-:

omgggg the notes

Since I haven’t been vocal about my opinions of it so far. /sarcasm  

Over 2.25 million reblogs?

Too bad DC won’t care.

My thoughts exactly, Fox.

Jul 22, 2011999k+ notes
Jul 22, 20117 notes
#Astronomy #dwarf star #space #space dust #stars #science weekend
Jul 22, 201118 notes
#asteroid #geography #geology #impact crater #space #science weekend

hallidae:

Sudden horrible, painful thought:

    We know in the Ant-Man movie, Hank’s retired from the heroing business and Scott’s the new boy. Rumors are, Jan’s going to cameo in Avengers. We all know Whedon’s…er… history with character deaths. We all know how Jan has been royally fucked over in every comics continuity in the past few years. And there is no information still about whether Jan will be in Ant-Man at all. What if Whedon kills Jan to make Hank retire?!

This actually sounds incredibly likely.

Jul 18, 20113 notes
#avengers #joss whedon
“[…] science is not done in a vacuum. It is done in a social context, and the results of science have important implications for society, even if it is simply providing a general understanding of how we humans fit into the cosmos. Thus, simply producing new knowledge, without making any attempt to help disseminate it and explain it, is not enough. I think one cannot expect every scientist to spend time on the effort to explain science. But in a society in which the science is of vital importance and also in which many forces are trying to distort the results of science, it is crucial that some of us speak out.” —

- Lawrence Krauss (via scipsy)

Also, scientists who can effectively communicate the implications of their discoveries have a better chance of affecting further dissemination. They can (possibly) head misunderstandings off at the pass, and be advocates for themselves and their work—which, if effective, means more research dollars.

Jul 18, 201147 notes
#science #funding #science journalism #science education
Play
Jul 16, 20114 notes
#John Carpenter #The Thing
Play
Jul 15, 20115 notes
#feminism #reproductive rights #abortion
Play
Jul 15, 20116 notes
#oil dependency #oil culture #oil #Environment #green revolution #economy #politics
Play
Jul 15, 20114 notes
#capitalism #politics #economics #economy
Interview with Assembly of First Nations National Chief, Shawn Atleo → cbc.ca

In Atleo’s view, both the Indian Act and the federal department of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada could be replaced with legislation and entities that support self-determination and a government-to-government dialogue.

For example, one recommendation would see the federal department replaced with a department of aboriginal relations that would include a crown-treaty office that had the responsibility for implementing treaty obligations and a Department of Indian and Inuit Services.

There have also been calls for a First Nations auditor general and a First Nations ombudsperson as a way for First Nations to be held accountable.

Jul 14, 20111 note
#first nations #canada #shawn atleo #indian act #indigenous politics #politics
The War Room: Should the government scrap the Indian Act? (podcast) → cbc.ca

Patronizing worries about whether or not First Nations people are up to the job of self-government are on full display here, despite the near universal recognition that the federal government is failing at every turn.

Context for readers outside of Canada: The Indian Act dates to 1876. It gives the federal government sole legislative authority over First Nations peoples, and defines status and non-status Indians. The Indian Act is a source of incredible contention. Some First Nations people are hesitant to see it mothballed, as it lays out certain responsibilities on the part of the federal government. Given past Canadian government’s reluctance to deal fairly with First Nations bands, and their demonstrated indifference to suffering caused by their cost-cutting measures, folks are justifiably concerned that post Indian Act reserves would have it even worse—with no guarantees of transfers or funding.

Jul 14, 201142 notes
#indian act #canada #politics #first nations #indigenous politics
for my anarchist followers

Geopoliticus is seeking a debate with anarchists and progressives on Tumblr.

As a Progressive, I seek the following goals:

1) Institutionalized equality,

2) Access to sovereign right/the political system,

3) Protection from societal ills, the tyranny of the majority, and wealthy elites,

4) The public good as well as the public will being actualized through legitimate means. […]

What are the alternatives to the State and how do we achieve them?  What means do you advocate to dismantle government?

Jul 13, 20113 notes
#politics #political theory #political philosophy #anarchy #progressive politics
Jul 13, 20116 notes
#ontario #point pelee
Amazons (go to high school)

image

And thus begins what I can guess without even googling are a thousand racy fanfics. But it’s also the premise, more or less, of cartoonist Dave Kiersh’s thoughtful, funny minicomic Amazons, which he’s now posted online in its entirety on his new site Teenage Archive. The strip imagines what life would be like if these pulchritudinous paragons of fierce femininity were to attend high school, navigating the uncharted waters of jocks, nerds, preps, angry teachers, uncaring administrators, and unyielding dress codes.

Kiersh’s About Me blurb on Teenage Archive reads “Afterschool specials and the American Dream,” and that pretty much nails what his comics are like: Whimsical yet melancholy explorations of teenage lust, boredom, romance, and desire to escape — and adult desire to return. Amazons is more of a goof than his usual stuff, but underneath the silliness is something true about the way dudes idealize beautiful women and the sense of unattainable freedom and fulfillment these fantasy figures represent. Read it in tandem with Kate Beaton, Carly Monardo, and Meredith Gran’s “Strong Female Characters” for a very different but I think complementary take on the power such images have.

Funny, this strip had me wishing for more from Beaton, Mondardo and Gran. It’s cute, but a bit too much of that ‘adult desire to return,’ and fantasies of ‘freedom and fulfilment’ through dangerously sexy women, for my taste.

Jul 12, 20112 notes
#Wonder Woman #comics
Jul 12, 20112 notes
#Wonder Woman #costume design
Jul 12, 2011654 notes
#comics #science
“Women who feel no compunction to improve what nature bestowed upon them are, in my experience, arrogant, lazy or deluded, and frequently all three. This is especially true in the service industry, where a bare face is no more acceptable than a dentist with halitosis. It tells me that a woman doesn’t really care what others think of her. Wearing even a little make-up shows respect to others, demonstrating on the outside that you are professional, a stickler for detail, someone who doesn’t cut corners.” —

Liz Jones of the Daily Mail is kind enough to point out a woman’s self-worth and professional capability should be rooted entirely in how much lipstick she’s wearing. 

(via regularpersonlemon)

The entire piece is hilarious:

If an employee is too bolshy to stick to the sartorial edicts from on high — whatever those edicts might be — then how do we know they would adhere to rules that tell them to be polite, or honest?

For beneath the foundation-smothered surface of this issue, it tells us something far deeper, and more important, about the modern British workplace.

A recent survey of employers found the reason so many jobs are given to immigrant workers is simple: British workers don’t want to make an effort.

They think the world owes them a living, and that their ‘rights’ as an individual are all that matters.

They have such enlarged egos, so much ‘sense of self’, that they cannot subjugate themselves to any one else any more. Not even the boss.

Why does a young woman think her desire to show us her open pores and ruddy complexion outweighs the wishes of her employer to present a polished face to the customer?

To succeed in any sphere you have to conform at least a little. What a small compromise it is to be asked to wear make-up (which, as a Harrods employee, Ms Stark could have purchased at huge discount) in exchange for a job during a recession.

I don’t expect us to return to the cap-tugging subservience that existed before World War II, but surely there is nothing wrong with possessing some degree of humility?

Conforming to a high standard of dress code — and, yes, making the best of your looks in the workplace — is a sign of strength, not weakness. Kate Middleton, Michelle Obama and even Hillary Clinton do so, every waking moment of their lives. You’d think a shop assistant could bring herself to do the same.

Conforming is a sign of strength. Conforming. Is a sign of strength.

Conformity is conformity. It’s neither a sign of strength nor of weakness.

Jul 12, 2011448 notes
#fashion #beauty #class
Sometimes I wonder if all those "medical professionals", "obesity experts" and general thin people who push for mass panic about fat people understand what it's like to be told that your body is an epidemic.

alliterate:

And if they did, would they stop to consider that the fat people they’re shaming are human beings?

They’d redouble their efforts to save people from themselves, and thereby enjoy the sleep of the morally, bodily, and economically superior.

Jul 12, 201131 notes
The argument that rich people are rich because they just work so gosh-darned hard is so naive, it makes me a little nauseous.

THIS.

Jul 11, 2011163 notes
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