I like the pretty lights.


Permalink | 1 note ihatedaveybrown:

Bum-fuck Pennsylvania…   (Taken with Instagram at Rest Stop)
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Just started watching Forks Over Knives

We will see how it goes.

Permalink | 115 notes newhousebooks:

Pestilence has never looked so good. Helm Wotzkow, 1952.
Permalink | 8 notes mvaloatto:

 “RABBITS”
Andrey Flakonkishochki  (Russian Federation) via Curioos
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Permalink | 163 notes sofreshsogreen:

Basically.
Permalink | 3,594 notes "Female toplessness is legal in a lot of places in the US (although not where I live), and I’d be meeting the letter of the law with a couple of Band-aids. But I have a gut feeling that if I go anywhere that there are people—and particularly anywhere there are children—nobody’s going to be too happy about my Band-aids. The enforcement is social; women just don’t go around topless in the US.

It bothers me because it’s unequal, but it also bothers me in its implications: that my body is inherently sexual, and a man’s body isn’t. It feels like men are being viewed through the first-person lens of “it’s nice to feel the sun on my skin, and I don’t mean anything by it” and women are being viewed through the distinctly third-person lens of “it’s inappropriate for me, a heterosexual man, to see her sexy parts.” It ignores the experiences of people who are turned on by male chests and somehow manage to contain themselves when they see one.
" — The Pervocracy: My boobs want to be free. (via sexisnottheenemy)

(via verthandi)

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Permalink | 488 notes lugdunum:

COMPLEXITY GRAPHICS 
Permalink | 125 notes socialistictendencies:

leftish:

versuschristus:
All Cops Are Bastards.
[NOTE* from Leftish: Wow!  I’m shocked and disturbed by this.
I do not agree with the “Fuck the Police” banner or the above sentiment that “All Cops Are Bastards”…two things I know is that All Cops Are Humans, and All Cops Are Employed…and they want to stay employed…and that, more than anything else, probably motivates the majority of them.
Cops, too, are a part of the 99%, they just do the bidding of the 1%.  Pitting ourselves against the cops is just what the 1% wants.  They don’t want the cops to wake up and realize that they are actually part of the 99%, and btw, expendable.  The 1% are happy to have the 99% fighting amongst ourselves.
I posit that we cannot accomplish anything constructive by taking a stance against the cops, although I understand the sentiment and its easy to see how many people got there.
But even though lots of cops have been vicious and cruel in many of the Occupy arrests, it still does not help us achieve our overall long-term goals to try and fight back in this way.  There is no way to WIN a fight with “Officers of the Peace.”  They’ve got weapons.  Simply put - we cannot win a battle with the cops that takes place on the streets of our cities.
The only way to WIN against the COPS is to use the principles of Aikido…use their own energy to redirect their intentions…join with them, and include them on our side…I’m not exactly sure how to go about doing that yet, but I do believe that it would be way more constructive than the attitude depicted in both the photograph and comment above.
Violence begets violence.  Saying Fuck the Police is an irresistible invitation to them, with very predictable results.
I don’t want to see more and more coverage of cops beating up on peaceful citizens…I want to see REAL change - cleaner air, cleaner water, cleaner energy sources, cleaner politicians…
Combat in the streets can only do so much.
Plus, in truth, the cops need to wake up to their OWN predicament.  Many of them have refused to commit violence against unarmed, peaceful protesters already.  It’s just one step further for them to realize that they are one of us, that they have WAY more in common with us than with their overlords.  They need to WANT to join us…and I believe it could happen over time, but not by taking a belligerent, “Fuck the Cops” stance.
THE COPS ARE NOT THE ENEMY
and focusing on them, and creating volatile confrontations with them is not nearly as valuable or powerful a statement as other actions we might take could be.  (I, for one, would prefer if our actions took on an element of surprise.  I think broadcasting where the dissent is going to be ahead of time can be detrimental to really making a statement, and kind of goes against the whole concept of actual dissent…it is ‘dissent with permission from the government’ - we have to get a permit in advance that tells us where and when we can march - how is that dissent???   Having demonstrations, like the one above, which I’m sure was “permitted”, just gives the cops advance notice, so they have plenty of time to plan their tactics, suit up in riot gear, and properly line up for combat, with us, the unarmed enemy.)  I hope our future demonstrations will be a bit more creative, as well as target the REAL ENEMY, which, imho, is NOT the cops…
I always like to remind myself that it took 80 years for women to get the right to vote. Susan B. Anthony did not even live to see it happen…so patience is the lesson….the Occupy movement is just over 1/3 of a year old…I think, in time, we might be able to influence the minds and hearts of some of the cops and at least bring a few around to our side…
I’m with Gandhi.  I’m for Peace.  I do not like confrontations and I think that statements and actions like these hurt the purity of the movement.
But that’s just me.
P.S. Feel free to delete my commentary when re-blogging this…]
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awakenedfromthedreamoflife:

when boys go on like,

“omg she’s such a cool chick, she eats and doesn’t wear much makeup and isn’t like all other girls who just like shopping and looking in the mirror and wearing makeup and worrying about their body.”

mate, women aren’t inherently ‘superficial,’ there’s actually a…

(via lifewasshortandlifewassweet)

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aspergersissues:

A Girl Janitor Tries to Explain Privilege

Just flopping my way out of an episode of burnout. These episodes generally follow a period of higher-than-usual productivity and social stress. Gearing up for an interview with a recruiter for federal internships at mah college, battling a horrible woman whose job was to “help” me with my resume and interview skills, two gargantuan projects for raising diversity/disability awareness at my college, and changing sleeping medications has a tendency to count as “overproductive”.

I spent a large portion of that time (about three weeks of sporadic class attendance, missing appointments, and generally barely catching the ball before it drops) reading feminist, cultural, and racial blogs. It helps me acquire the language necessary to speak more efficiently on topics I’m interested in, and starting discussions I’d like to start.

Speaking of which, about three weeks ago, I was in my “Leadership Studies” class (a capstone honors course), when during a group exercise about coming up with ideas for raising (charity) funds, someone had the idea of “we could just guilt them into it”. Which led immediately to laughter, and a highly unpleasant discussion of how “pictures of poor kids” are the best way to raise funds, and how the more debased, dirty, and pathetic those photos are, the more funds will be raised. The instructor chimed in with how effective videos of children who appeared poor/dirty/starving were for raising funds for Hurricane Katrina Victims. Uncharacteristically, I stood up, put my things away in my bag, and started to leave the classroom. When the professor commented on my leaving, I whirled to face the class and more or less screamed at them that poor people are people, not objects for you to use in order to get a good grade or something like that. Until i came to this college, I never noticed just how blotchy Caucasians can become when they are mortified and/or shocked.

After this “incident”, I received an apologetic email from the professor, offering me the options of either 1. we can open a discussion about it in class, or 2. pretend like it never happened and move on. I chose the first option, since I think it is important to hear other people on such matters, and I’m interested in people’s opinions.

Three weeks later, I still have not been offered an opportunity.

Three weeks later, I tried to pitch the idea of having the Director of the Disability Services Office and another disabled student come into class and speak about diversity and whatnot.

Three weeks later, the professor for my Leadership studies class didn’t show up for my appointment, and when I emailed the idea to her, her response was verbatim “let’s talk about this”.

I asked a group of my friends about this and their response was basically, “It sounds like she was trying to be polite, and never thought you’d actually WANT to start a discussion or take her offer on speaking to the class about it.”

I’m wondering if things were slightly complicated by the email I sent out to everyone in the class two days after the original incident:

Dear Fellow Students,

I wanted to first and foremost apologize for yelling and walking out in a huff last class. Although my reaction had its reasons, it was an overreaction: inarticulate, antagonistic and generally unhelpful. I want to explain something very important, however.

I was born to a single mother with a 9th grade education in Long Beach, California. She had grown up on a farm in rural Pennsylvania. We lived in desperate poverty despite my mom working long hours doing construction cleanup and general maid work, until she took her last sixty dollars to enroll in community college. The effort she put forth as a single mother raising two children, working, and putting herself through the nursing program was the most inspirational thing I have ever witnessed.

I was a skinny, brown child who spoke english, spanish, korean, and vietnamese. I had holes in my clothes and smelled like cat pee, which is why my second grade teacher said I had to do my work in a separate classroom from the other children. Although they were poor, I was the poorest. It took me years to understand why they threw rocks at me and beat me up in the bathrooms.

The anger you witnessed the other day didn’t have a singular source; it was an outburst of the cumulative frustration I have felt since I moved to Syracuse a year and half ago, and especially since I began attending classes at OCC. There are many things I could be “labeled” as that I consider integral part of my identity: multiracial, multicultural, multilingual, non-christian, poor, bisexual, disabled, child of a single mother, and coincidentally, half my family is black, which I have learned is somehow anathema here. These are all essential things about me.

Since I got here, I have constantly heard many people say very terrible things about all of these categories. But what I really want to talk about is something that is both more and less than overt prejudice. I have had people talk about all of these categories in my presence, as if I am NOT THERE. My identity has become invisible. I have had my OWN CULTURE taught to me in a classroom, which makes me feel partially rejected, but mostly just driven home to me I am not part of “us”, I am “them”. I am the one the status quo talks about in a general sort of way, told about what “they” do/say/eat/practice, the one something “needs to be done about”, because after all, there are none of “them” in this classroom, right?

Since I got here, I have had no less than four people tell me(I’m quoting), “You are white”.

Until I got here, I don’t think I actually understood what race was.

I always thought it was a part of me, something that was mine, but I was wrong. It’s something that other people decide when they look at you. There are so very many things that you cannot see when you look at me, just like everyone else. I never understood that it was something that could be taken away.

From my perspective, unimaginable privilege coats their tongues; the power to tell others that they are “other”, the power to expect justification of the fairness of my skin tone or the lowness of my income, the power to assume that everyone in the classroom is exactly like them, and if they’re not, they should be honored to be assumed to be like them.

These are not compliments:

“You seem white to me.”

“You don’t act poor”.

“I never would have guessed you were disabled”.

“You seem so comfortable around black people”.

Here’s the thing: I’m not talking about liberal guilt; I’m not telling anyone to be anything less than proud of being who they are. I’m talking about something more radical: that I am different than many people in Syracuse, and that I also am proud of who I am. I also know that the people in class with me- all of you- are different than each other. It’s not that difficult to keep our differences in mind, and celebrate them. What happened the other day was a roomful of people assuming that no one in an Honors course, the same one as you, could have also been someone who received charity toys as a child. Every person you interact with on a daily basis is a universe of invisible identities; speak with respect to their very immediate presence. What we call “the world” is made up of perceptions we receive through our senses; thus it logically follows that if we change our perceptions, we change the world.

I’m only asking you to change the world.

I’ll even go first.

I’m not really sure how that came off. The professor made a few obscure comments in person to me the following week about “the class may be more diverse than you’re assuming it is” and I responded with, “I’m sure that’s true, which is why I want to open a dialogue”.

Results of this exchange were kinda inconclusive, and devolved to other subjects.

No clue.

I wonder if I should get some sort of cape.

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gravyholocaust:

Then come on down to Georgetown University’s New Research Building! We have ton’s of obscure high-tech research instruments, radioactive materials, thermocyclers, drawers that have cash in them, gently used dell desktops, computer monitors, purses, jackets, laptops and more! Fast service, walk in,…

I got very excited at the beginning of this post because I thought my freegan ways were about to hit the jackpot. :(