Aug. 9th, 2016

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tommyawesome:

creative pursuits Elliⓞt, Mint Potion Studios

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14-year-old accused of killing father, family says girl is ‘hero who saved them all’:

pragula:

WARREN, Ohio– A 14-year-old girl is behind bars, facing aggravated murder charges for killing her father, but her family says she did it to protect her mother and her family.

“She is my hero; I wasn’t strong enough to get out and she helped me,” said Brandi Meadows, mother of Bresha Meadows, who is currently being held in the Trumbull County Family Court on a charge of murdering her 41-year-old father, Jonathan Meadows.

With tears flowing down her face, Brandi Meadows told the Fox 8 I-Team that her husband abused her for years but she was afraid to leave.

She had filed for a protective order five years ago but later dismissed it.

“I am so sorry she had to go through this,” Brandi said Thursday. “She is my hero. She helped me; she helped all of us so we could have a better life.”

Bresha Meadows is accused of shooting her father in their Warren home during the early morning hours of July 28. Her mother called 911 right after the shooting took place.

The girl’s attorney, Ian Friedman, said Bresha is a child that faced years of abuse at the hands of her father, and she witnessed her mother being abused.

“She wanted to protect her Mom,” Friedman said.

Bresha allegedly used her father’s gun to shoot him. Family members say the father often threatened them with that very gun.

“Using that gun around the house, to intimidate, everyone in the home was terrified,” Friedman said.

There’s a link to the gofundme at the article. Please help this girl if you can. 

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jemmasimmuns:

I never thought I deserved this.
What, a trip to Hawaii?No. Happiness. This kind of happiness.
Of course you do. We both do.

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whitenectarines:

the-movemnt:

Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz just became the first Filipino woman to win an Olympic medal!

When Hidilyn Diaz lifted 200 kilograms of steel iron, she also lifted the spirits of her home country.

Diaz, a three-time Olympic weightlifter, became the first Filipino woman to win an Olympic medal when she won the silver medal in the 53kg women’s weightlifting class on Sunday. Diaz’s silver medal win ended a 20-year Olympic medal drought for the Philippines.

The last Filipino to win an Olympic medal was Mansueto Velasco. Velasco won silver for men’s boxing in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games.

But wait, it gets better. Diaz also achieved another cool first for the Philippines at the Olympics. 

follow @the-movemnt

CONGRATULATIONS!!! 🇸🇽✨🙌🏻!!!

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eternal-nova:

scurrilizzie:

i legitimately cannot stop laughing

All I can think of is that fucking THX intro that made us all deaf

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culturenlifestyle:

Land Art Installations Aesthetically Disrupt The Natural Scene

German plastic artist Nils-Udo specialises in land art installation projects, where the artist tries his hand at meddling positively with the aesthetics of nature. The artist’s origins began with paint but throughout his progressive years, nature became the chief source of inspiration which ultimately led the artist to immerse himself in land art projects.

Keep reading

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My tweets

Aug. 9th, 2016 12:00 pm
kyburg: (Default)
  • Mon, 17:28: The latest spate of 'how you know you're dealing w/ someone with high functioning -" leaves me wondering who's mentally well. Like, nobody.
  • Mon, 18:27: Sign the petition: Tell Congress to pass the Automatic Voter Registration Act of 2016 https://t.co/dqoIZfYQoc via @CREDOMobile #p2
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justice4mikebrown:

Darren Wilson still has not been arrested or charged.

Mike Brown’s parents have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city of Ferguson, former Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson and former Officer Darren Wilson.

Dorian Johnson has also filed a lawsuit against the city of Ferguson, Darren Wilson, and Tom Jackson.

The 2 lawsuits are headed to federal court as requested by Darren Wilson and Tom Jackson. The Brown family’s lawsuit will head to trial in October 2016.

Two. Years. 

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inthroughthesunroof:

myurbandream:

jabberwockypie:

skeletonmug:

artiestroke:

splintercellconviction:

giraffepoliceforce:

I really want a science fiction story where aliens come to invade earth and effortlessly wipe out humanity, only to be fought off by the wildlife.

They were expecting military resistance. They weren’t counting on bears.

Imagine coming to a hostile alien world and being attacked by a horde of creatures that can weigh up to 3 tons, run at 30 km/h (19 mph), and bite with a force of 8,100 newtons (1,800 lbf).

By the time you realise that they can traverse water, it’s too late. The surviving members of your unit manage to make it back by shedding their excess gear and running for their lives; the slower ones were crushed to death within minutes.

You later describe the creature to one of the humans you captured, wanting to know the name of the monstrosity that will haunt your nightmares for cycles to come.

The human smiles as it speaks a single word, slowly and distinctly, in its barbaric tongue.

“Hippopotamus.”

This is giving me the biggest, creepiest grin I might have ever grinned 

Imagine being the next crew to go down to earth and thinking “it’s fine, we got this. We have the weapons and equipment necessary to deal with bears and *shudders* hippopotamuses. We’ll be fine.”

And at first you are, you’ve learned how to dodge. You’ve learned where their territories are. You know how to defend yourself.

But then one night you are sleeping in your shelter. You’re in a tree covered temperate part of earth. It seems benign. There are been no sightings of the dreaded “hippos” around. Not even any bears. But there is a slight rustle of the undergrowth. You try and ignore it telling yourself it is just the wind.

Then you hear the rustle again. closer this time.

You peer out into the darkness but see nothing amongst the trees.

The rustle again and now you realise you can smell something. It’s musky and slightly foul. It’s the smell of an omen, a warning. But what of? Where is this smell coming from.

You sit up, but it’s too late. The foul smelling creature is on you. You are hit with 17kg of coarse fur and vicious bites. Long dark claws tear in to you and you are pinned down white the striped creature tries to bite your throat.

It takes some doing but you manage to wrestle free. Blood drips from your wounds and already they itch with the sign of infection. The creature has a bloodied snout, rust rad, mingling with the black and white hairs. It lets out a terrifying growl from the back of its throat and looks to attack again. It’s between you and your knife, so your only choice is to back away.

Eventually the creature gives up and snuffles off in to the undergrowth, down a hole near your shelter you hadn’t noticed before.

When you make it back to your base you once again consult the captive human.

“Badger.” they say, with a solemn nod.

One word: Moose

“Our vehicles are far superior to the local human models, in range, speed, armament, and any other metric you care to name! Nothing could possibly-”

BAMrumblerumblethumpcrash!!!

“That’s called a moose.”

“We have determined that there is no life in the water that is larger than we are. Future assaults will spend as little time on land as possible.”

Two days later, you return missing your boat and half your team.

“So what was it this time? Multiple rows of sharp teeth? Or so big it just smashed the boat?” Your human asks. You’re starting to think that if they can survive on this planet they must be better fighters than their lack of claws or hide imply.

“One row of teeth. Black and white. Ate my buddy whole.”

“Ooh, killer whale!”

GODDAMN FIRE ANTS.  GODDAMN SPARROWS.

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roane72:

aprillikesthings:

berlynn-wohl:

btamamura:

bonos-grindcore-sideproject:

berlynn-wohl:

puppyvegeta:

the-stonedsoldier:

Pros of writing gay relationships: 

- gay

Cons of writing gay relationships:

- they both have THE SAME FCKIN PRONOUNS SO I CONSTANTLY HAVE TO NAME BOTH CHARACTERS BECAUSE OTHERWISE IT’S IMPOSSIBLE TO TELL WHO’S DOING WHAT OR WHO’S SPEAKING WHO WILL SAVE ME FROM THIS HELL

I CAN’T BELIEVE THERE’S A POST ABOUT THIS. THE STRUGGLE IS REAL.

Worst way to deal with this: use epithets (the taller man, the blonde) DO NOT

Best way to deal with this: Use the pronouns a teensy bit more than you maybe feel is sufficient. Leave the fic for two days before editing (i.e. allow yourself to forget it a little). Come back and re-read. If at any point YOU can’t tell who’s doing what to whom, put names in. Leave the rest of the pronouns.

Also, for dialogue: use characterization instead of names. Let it be clear by the things that are said, the way they are said, who is saying them.

Readers are smart, let them infer sometimes. :)

^^Great advice for all kinds of writers!

@berlynn-wohl May I please ask why it is best to avoid using epiphets? I tend to use those when writing my fanfics, especially those of Danger Mouse and Albert the Fifth Musketeer seeing as those usually focus on one shorter character and one taller character.

There’s actually a whole webpage about why you should not use epithets! It’s here: Epithets: Fandom’s Designated Hitters.

But long before I saw all these things laid out and explained, the reason that I, personally, vowed to never, ever use epithets was because of all the times I’d seen people in the fanfic community specifically say that when they read something like “the taller man” or “the shorter man” they would just. Stop. Reading. The fic.

Dear SU fandom: STOP USING EPITHETS FOR THE LOVE OF GOD I know it’s tempting when you can literally describe characters by color and size BUT IT’S AWFUL and it plagues SO MANY otherwise terrific fics

Just use their names it’s okay I promise

Using/not using epithets has a LOT to do with the POV character you’re writing from. If you’re writing third person limited (and let’s be real, most of us are), you are writing from the perspective of a single character. So, ask yourself, in the middle of a steamy hot threesome scene, would Luke be thinking of Han as “the smuggler”? No of course not. If you use that epithet, you are reminding the reader that they are reading and that you are writing–which is not what you want in the middle of a steamy hot threesome scene.

Now, on the other hand, there ARE times when a character would possibly use an epithet. In the aforementioned steamy hot threesome scene, if your POV character is Han, it’s entirely plausible that he’d make some reference to what the princess is doing. (But probably not “the Jedi”–unless there’s maybe some Inappropriate Use of the Force happening.)

The issue fandom has with epithets is that we get twitchy about repeating character names and clarifying pronouns, and it’s the same way we get twitchy about overusing ‘said’. (Note: You cannot overuse said. I mean, you CAN, but it’s a LOT harder than you think.) Name, like ‘said’, are invisible words. We read them and move on. If you use ANYTHING OTHER than an invisible word, you are drawing attention to it. And if you weren’t meaning to draw attention to it, you’ve just thrown the reader out of the story again. USE THE NAMES. I promise you, we won’t care. We won’t even notice.

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blackhijabs:

isabelcostasixties:

The Supremes in January 1968

Boss✨

God, that Kodachrome saturation - love that yellow dress.

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How Learning to Cook Korean Food Helped Me Grieve (and Heal):
angrykoreanwomenunited:

I’m so tired of white guys on TV telling me what to eat. I’m tired of Anthony Bourdain testing the waters of Korean cuisine to report back that, not only will our food not kill you, it actually tastes good. I don’t care how many times you’ve traveled to Thailand, I won’t listen to you—just like the white kids wouldn’t listen to me, the half-Korean girl, defending the red squid tentacles in my lunch box. The same kids who teased me relentlessly back then are the ones who now celebrate our cuisine as the Next Big Thing.

I grew up in the Pacific Northwest, in a small college town that was about 90 percent white. In my adolescence I hated being half Korean; I wanted people to stop asking, “Where are you really from?” I could barely speak the language and didn’t have any Asian friends. There was nothing about me that felt Korean—except when it came to food.

At home my mom always prepared a Korean dinner for herself and an American dinner for my dad. Despite the years he’d lived in Seoul, selling cars to the military and courting my mom at the Naija Hotel where she worked, my dad is still a white boy from Philadelphia.

So each night my mom prepared two meals. She’d steam broccoli and grill Dad’s salmon, while boiling jjigae and plating little side dishes known as banchan. When our rice cooker announced in its familiar robotic voice, “Your delicious white rice will be ready soon!” the three of us would sit down to a wondrous mash-up of East and West. I’d create true fusion one mouthful at a time, using chopsticks to eat strips of T-bone and codfish eggs drenched in sesame oil, all in one bite. I liked my baked potatoes with fermented chili paste, my dried cuttlefish with mayonnaise.

There’s a lot to love about Korean food, but what I love most is its extremes. If a dish is supposed to be served hot, it’s scalding. If it’s meant to be served fresh, it’s still moving. Stews are served in heavy stone pots that hold the heat; crack an egg on top, and it will poach before your eyes. Cold noodle soups are served in bowls made of actual ice.

By my late teens my craving for Korean staples started to eclipse my desire for American ones. My stomach ached for al tang and kalguksu. On long family vacations, with no Korean restaurant in sight, my mom and I passed up hotel buffets in favor of microwaveable rice and roasted seaweed in our hotel room.

And when I lost my mother to a very sudden, brief, and painful fight with cancer two years ago, Korean food was my comfort food. She was diagnosed in 2014. That May she’d gone to the doctor for a stomachache only to learn she had a rare squamous cell carcinoma, stage four, and that it had spread. Our family was blindsided.

I moved back to Oregon to help my mother through chemo­therapy; over the next four months, I watched her slowly disappear. The treatment took everything—her hair, her spirit, her appetite. It burned sores on her tongue. Our table, once beautiful and unique, became a battleground of protein powders and tasteless porridge. I crushed Vicodin into ice cream.

Dinnertime was a calculation of calories, an argument to get anything down. The intensity of Korean flavors and spices became too much for her to stomach. She couldn’t even eat kimchi.

I began to shrink along with my mom, becoming so consumed with her health that I had no desire to eat. Over the course of her illness, I lost 15 pounds. After two rounds of chemo, she decided to discontinue treatment, and she died two months later.

As I struggled to make sense of the loss, my memories often turned to food. When I came home from college, my mom used to make galbi ssam, Korean short rib with lettuce wraps. She’d have marinated the meat two days before I’d even gotten on the plane, and she’d buy my favorite radish kimchi a week ahead to make sure it was perfectly fermented.

Then there were the childhood summers when she brought me to Seoul. Jet-lagged and sleepless, we’d snack on homemade banchan in the blue dark of Grandma’s humid kitchen while my rela­tives slept. My mom would whisper, “This is how I know you’re a true Korean.”

But my mom never taught me how to make Korean food. When I would call to ask how much water to use for rice, she’d always say, “Fill until it reaches the back of your hand.” When I’d beg for her galbi recipe, she gave me a haphazard ingredient list and approximate measurements and told me to just keep tasting it until it “tastes like Mom’s.”

After my mom died, I was so haunted by the trauma of her illness I worried I’d never remember her as the woman she had been: stylish and headstrong, always speaking her mind. When she appeared in my dreams, she was always sick.

Then I started cooking. When I first searched for Korean recipes, I found few resources, and I wasn’t about to trust Bobby Flay’s Korean taco monstrosity or his clumsy kimchi slaw. Then, among videos of oriental chicken salads, I found the Korean YouTube personality Maangchi. There she was, peeling the skin off an Asian pear just like my mom: in one long strip, index finger steadied on the back of the knife. She cut galbi with my mom’s ambidextrous precision: positioning the chopsticks in her right hand while snipping bite-size pieces with her left. A Korean woman uses kitchen scissors the way a warrior brandishes a weapon.

I’d been looking for a recipe for jatjuk, a porridge made from pine nuts and soaked rice. It’s a dish for the sick or elderly, and it was the first food I craved when my feelings of shock and loss finally made way for hunger.

I followed Maangchi’s instructions carefully: soaking the rice, breaking off the tips of the pine nuts. Memories of my mother emerged as I worked—the way she stood in front of her little red cutting board, the funny intonations of her speech.

For many, Julia Child is the hero who brought boeuf bourguignon into the era of the TV dinner. She showed home cooks how to scale the culinary mountain. Maangchi did this for me after my mom died. My kitchen filled with jars containing cabbage, cucumbers, and radishes in various stages of fermentation. I could hear my mom’s voice: “Never fall in love with anyone who doesn’t like kimchi; they’ll always smell it coming out of your pores.”

I’ve spent over a year cooking with Maangchi. Sometimes I pause and rewind to get the steps exactly right. Other times I’ll let my hands and taste buds take over from memory. My dishes are never exactly like my mom’s, but that’s OK—they’re still a delicious tribute. The more I learn, the closer I feel to her.

One night not long ago, I had a dream: I was watching my mother as she stuffed giant heads of Napa cabbage into earthenware jars.

She looked healthy and beautiful.

Michelle Zauner is a writer and musician in Brooklyn.

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mediamattersforamerica:

This may threaten the stability of American society.

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“Donald Trump has shown a profound ignorance of science and of the public health issues embodied in our environmental laws. He hasn’t a clue about Republicans’ historic contributions to science-driven environmental policy.”
-

William Ruckelshaus, who served as the EPA administrator under presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, and William Reilly, who served under President George H. W. Bush, in a joint statement. Read more. 
(via climatetruth)

They exist?  They do!

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dailydot:

This mom is getting blasted for saying God ‘called her bluff’ when her daughter married a black man

On August 8, Evangelical Christian site Gospel Coalition published an article titled, gulp: “When God Sends Your Daughter a Black Husband.”

The writer, a Georgia nurse and mother named Gaye Clark, begins by telling us that she’d always prayed her daughter would meet a man who was “godly, kind, a great dad, and a good provider.” Then she says, “God called my bluff. This white, 53-year-old mother hadn’t counted on God sending an African American with dreads named Glenn.”  

Turned out Glenn was OK, though. And now this woke mom has advice for others in her situation.

Hey, “Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner?” is still a thing.  Blarg.  I mean, yeah that whut, *shrug* crap.

But some days, your job is to listen.  And that’s all.

(…but I hope she apologized.  And not where I can see it, right?  What a total ego-boo, self-serving load of tripe.)

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truth-has-a-liberal-bias:

From:

Michelle DeFord
Gold Star Mother
VoteVets 

My son David re-enlisted in the Army shortly after September 11th and less than three years later, he went to Iraq. I will never forget the sound of the soldiers’ boots as they came up the stairs to tell me he was killed by a roadside bomb on September 25, 2004.

I cannot describe the sense of emptiness that losing a child brings, but I can tell you that when I saw Donald Trump attack another Gold Star Mother, I was absolutely outraged.

That’s why I agreed to share my story in a television ad VoteVets is putting on the air this week. Help me get it out there, because we must stop Donald Trump…

Mr. Trump hasn’t the slightest notion of what the word sacrifice means. Captain Khan’s mother, and the families who have lost loved ones in war, should be honored and treated with kindness, not the disrespect Donald Trump showed her.  […]

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Pokelock Study in pink2 by AiWa-sensei

Playing Pokemon Go, one of the first things you get with any umph to it is a Growlithe…which quickly becomes an Arcanine, if you’re lucky.

I remembered seeing this work before on tumblr, went back and found it again.  Still just as gorgeous as I remembered.

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