Sep. 6th, 2016

kyburg: (Default)
tehzii:

barefootdramaturg:

thewinterotter:

writerlyn:

I unabashedly loved this scene.

My favorite thing about this is that Dottie is getting fucking object concealment tips from these genius food-stealing women and she’s probably using that knowledge to hide idek small thermonuclear devices in her bra or something. Probably went back to the Red Room afterward like “omg girls let me teach you what I learned in America. It’s vital we teach our tiny assassins to knit, I met a woman who successfully concealed a whole chicken in her sweater, they’ll need this kind of ingenuity in the field.”

I also really love that this is a large group of women who unabashedly like food and eating. None of them are going “oh no my diet, what if I get fat?”, they’re like “I CAN FIT A  CHICKEN IN MY SWEATER AND THEN LATER, I HAVE A WHOLE CHICKEN FOR ME.”

I’ve reblogged this before and seen it at least a dozen times, but every time I see “AND THEN LATER, I HAVE A WHOLE CHICKEN FOR ME.” I start ugly laughing and can’t stop and frighten the dog.

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2bTm4MO
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
tura23:

amberrockstar:

ladysomnambule:

a-daks:

sociallyxawkwardxpenguin:

the-rogue-0f-light:

hektikk:

awkwardlysocialphangirl:

samandriel:

pales:

i’ll stop dressing in black when they invent a darker colour

finally something to match my soul

If you haven’t seen this, it’s actually so black that if they made clothing out of it, it would just appear as though there was a photoshopped hole where your clothing is.

finally i can become the void

i’d wear it every day

It looks like a puddle in that photo but it’s really all crinkled like the rest of the foil and the vantablack coats it. It just reflects almost no light.

It’s like a texture glitch

I feel like “need” isn’t a strong enough word here…

Because it doesn’t reflect light, it heats up - it is going to be an amazing addition to solar panels, but having clothing made from it might require some kind of heat shielding. I really do want a choker from it though - it would look like my head was just floating there above my body.

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2cjR596
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
kushandwizdom:

youngblackandvegan:

you gotta get to that point where a man who disrespects you becomes unattractive. that you become disgusted by a man who doesn’t treat you like you deserve to be treated. where it’s such a turn off to be with a man like that that no matter how you felt before, you know it’s time to get up and go. it’s a part of working on your self esteem, even when you’re not single

 

When ANYONE treats you badly, gender blind. It’s all about self-esteem and not about being single or not.

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2bTRVwL
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
npr:

The U.S. has set a new record for how much gasoline the country consumes in a month. Drivers burned more than 405 million gallons of gas a day in June, the latest month counted. The Energy Information Administration says that’s the highest amount ever, on records dating back to 1946.

Just a few years back, when the economy was suffering, “staycations” became popular. But now people clearly want to be out on the road. The Federal Highway Administration says Americans drove 280 billion miles in June, up 3 percent from June 2015.

At Valley Forge National Historical Park outside of Philadelphia the parking lot has cars from all over the place — Tennessee, New York, Montana and Washington state.

“Because the gasoline prices have been so low this summer, I’ve been able to go a lot farther and see a lot more than I initially thought I would be able to,” says Roberta Tower of Seattle. She’s retired and is three months into a cross-country trip with her small SUV and camp trailer.

U.S. Gasoline Use Hits A Record, But That May Not Last

Chart: Alyson Hurt/NPR

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2c7E8Qj
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
wordsnquotes:

culturenlifestyle:

Third-grade teacher at Doull Elementary School Kyle Schwartz decided to begin a clever and insightful project about her students’ lives. Schwartz asked them to complete a simple sentence “I wish my teacher knew…” The answers were heartbreaking and shocking.

Keep reading

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2c7Dm5E
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
unclefather:

starcunning:

train-to-win:

This makes me happy

mishi-bear

he’s having a good time

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2c7DWQZ
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
nambroth:

abirdkeeper:

tinysaurus-rex:

crisscrosscutout:

So I was told that Human Planet had a segment about pigeons in the Cities episode that I might be interested in and I was honestly so underwhelmed. I haven’t finished the episode so maybe there’s more pigeon stuff but I feel like all I saw was more Birds Of Prey Are The Only Cool And Acceptable Birds and pigeons are Trespassers In Our Urban World Who Shit On Everything And Are Useless On Top Of It. Which isn’t true and I’m so tired of this being framed as some horrible burden that humanity must face. Pigeons are the victims here, not us. 

Hate of pigeons didn’t start until the 20th Century. Before that was about 9,900 years of loving them. The rock pigeon was domesticated 10,000 years ago and not only that, we took them freaking everywhere. Pigeons were the first domesticated bird and they were an all-around animal even though they were later bred into more specialised varieties. They were small but had a high feed conversion rate, in other words it didn’t cost a whole lot of money or space to keep and they provided a steady and reliable source of protein as eggs or meat. They home, so you could take them with you and then release them from wherever you were and they’d pretty reliably make their way back. Pigeons are actually among the fastest flyers and they can home over some incredible distances (what fantastic navigators!). They were an incredibly important line of communication for multiple civilisations in human history. You know the first ever Olympics? Pigeons were delivering that news around the Known World at the time. Also, their ability to breed any time of year regardless of temperature or photoperiod? That was us, we did that to them, back when people who couldn’t afford fancier animals could keep a pair or two for meat/eggs. 

Rooftop pigeon keeping isn’t new, it’s been around for centuries and is/was important to a whole variety of cultures. Pigeons live with us in cities because we put them there, we made them into city birds. I get that there are problems with bird droppings and there’s implications for too-large flocks. By all means those are things we should look to control, but you don’t need to hate pigeons with every fibre of your being. You don’t need to despise them or brush them off as stupid (they have been intelligence tested extensively as laboratory animals because guess what other setting they’re pretty well-adapted to? LABORATORIES!) because they aren’t stupid. They’re soft intelligent creatures and I don’t have time to list everything I love about pigeons again. You don’t need to aggressively fight them or have a deep desire to kill them at all. It’s so unnecessary, especially if you realise that the majority of reasons pigeons are so ubiquitous is a direct result of human interference.

We haven’t always hated pigeons though, Darwin’s pigeon chapter in The Origin of Species took so much of the spotlight that publishers at the time wanted him to make the book ONLY about pigeons and to hell with the rest because Victorian’s were obsessed with pigeons (as much as I would enjoy a book solely on pigeons, it’s probably best that he didn’t listen). 

My point is, for millenia, we loved pigeons. We loved them so much we took them everywhere with us and shaped them into a bird very well adapted for living alongside us.

It’s only been very recently that we decided we hated them, that we decided to blame them for ruining our cities. The language we use to describe pigeons is pretty awful. But it wasn’t always, and I wish we remembered that. I wish we would stop blaming them for being what we made them, what they are, and spent more time actually tackling the problems our cities face.  

I just have a lot of feelings about how complex and multidimensional hating pigeons actually is

ALL OF THIS

And also pigeon poop was a very valuable fertilizer before we had other options, people would hire guards to stop thieves from stealing their flock’s poop.

#LovePigeonsAgain2016

Late night, reblogging, so bear with me here…Thank you for posting much of my thoughts over the past year and a half! I am known by many as “that guy who keeps the raptors”. Yes this is true, I do keep and handle raptors for educational purposes, but what many fail to realize is, I am fascinated with pigeons. My interest with birds began with the obvious, the raptors, corvids, and parrots. Then I discovered pigeons. These wonderful little birds with big attitudes and the incredible ability to thrive among people. The organization I work with got its first pigeon a little over a year ago. She was a rescue with nowhere else to go. I was quickly drawn to her character and attitude about life.

We rarely handled her, but we did spend time with her.

She grew attached to our volunteers very quickly because their were no other birds she could socialize with in our facility. 

We never intended to train her for educational programs. It was a job reserved for our raptors. It was our pigeon who decided she would be a part of what we were doing. One day, when we entered her enclosure to change water and food, she decided to fly to my hand and perch like our raptors do. 

No training, no treats, just the reward of being with us. 

What we hadn’t noticed for the couple months prior was her watching us. This brilliant little bird had been watching us every day as we trained and worked with our raptors. Finally she decided she didn’t want to be left out any longer. She made her place on our hands.

This occurred several times before we finally put her on a glove and brought her into the public. Needless to say, she was right at home. She fluffed up and preened the entire evening while people gawked and asked us why we had a pigeon on one glove and a hawk on another. 

Since then, we’ve added 5 more rescued pigeons to our growing flock. And our pigeon (Tybalt) has become a mainstay ambassador for our programs. Each of our pigeons are incredibly fun to watch and interact with. Pigeons simply don’t get enough love. They are marvelous creatures incredibly suited to life alongside people both physically and mentally. 

Raptors my have been my introduction into birds, but pigeons opened my eyes to a new appreciation for them and the fascinating world of bird cognition.

NOT ONLY are pigeons very amazing, worth our respect, and INTERESTING (did you read any of that stuff above?), but they are beautiful too!Look how lovely:

Photo by .jocelyn.

They have a complex and fascinating social structure, both within a flock and with other individuals:

Photo by Ingrid Taylar
AND THEY ARE JUST SUPER CUTE, HONESTLY:

Photo by Musical Photo Man

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2bTSEyg
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
estblshmnt:

estblshmnt:

The Establishment is keeping a keen eye on all things Science in September, from new technologies and psychological studies to space travel, gemologists, birds!, genetics, the historical underpinnings of NASA, 3-D printed organs, and why pizza—scientifically—is the perfect food.

Also, anything aliens.

Originally posted by looking-at-the-universe

As always, all mediums are encouraged, including personal essays, photography, interviews, and video work. (Maybe you’ve even got a song, a comic strip or an erotic strip tease celebrating the summer solstice!)

Some examples of science-y stories we’ve loved in the past:

Dreaming New Meanings Into Borderline Personality Disorder

The History Of Korea’s Mutant Cacti

The Strange Relationship Between G-Spots, Chili Peppers, And Childbirth

The Complicated Ethics of Penis Transplants

The Jewish Body And The Inheritance Of Trauma

Please review our pitch guidelines and send along your science-related pitches + full stories! EMAIL: getestablished@theestablishment.co

Originally posted by brittdf

KEEP THOSE PITCHES COMING!

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2cqgXiI
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
the-movemnt:

Jonathan Hubbard, a 26-year-old African-American army veteran who now lives in Chattanooga, Tennessee, served four years in the army, which took him as far as Korea and Afghanistan. “I went in to advance myself and I knew that I would not be letting the American citizens down,” he said.

But during his time in the military, Hubbard became increasingly critical of sacrificing for a country that he didn’t feel would do the same for him. He left the military at the beginning of 2016 — a year in which the extrajudicial killings of black men have continued to make headlines across the country.

The final straw for Hubbard was July 6, 2016, when a police officer in Minnesota shot and killed Philando Castile. Castile’s death came one day after Alton Sterling, another unarmed black man, was shot and killed while selling CDs outside of a store in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

After those incidents, Hubbard decided to stop singing the national anthem to protest the conditions that black people face in America. “I care about this nation, but at the same time, why am I singing a lie?” Hubbard said.

After Colin Kaepernick announced his protest last week, Hubbard started a Change.org petition to change the national anthem to “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often referred to as the “black national anthem.”

“Until we can ‘hold these truths to be self evident,’” Hubbard said, referencing the Declaration of Independence, “then I’m done.”

How millennials like Colin Kaepernick view patriotism differently

follow @the-movemnt

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2cqgSvf
via IFTTT
kyburg: (Default)
theblackoutofficial:

What is #BlackoutDay? 

Hello Tumblr! We wanted to share an updated version of our goals with you all. We hope you enjoy and share this!

A special thanks to those who submitted photos to be a part of this video and a special shout-out to the artist, musicians, and business briefly mentioned. You’ll be learning more about the faces and the talent you saw in this video as we launch our new and improved #Blackout format.

Thank you again for the support and we look forward to many more #BlackoutDays with you.

Official Site - http://ift.tt/1KCeWKF 

Tumblr - http://ift.tt/1KCeWKL

Newsletter Signup - http://ift.tt/2bQYKsX

Full #BlackoutDay Information - http://ift.tt/2bQYJVV  

Contact Email - team [at] theblackout.org or hit us up in our ask!

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2chG4a1
via IFTTT

Profile

kyburg: (Default)
kyburg

March 2021

S M T W T F S
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 1213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 2nd, 2026 05:34 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios