Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

Nov 28

(via )

ultrafacts:
“ Source: [x]
Click HERE for more facts! ”

ultrafacts:

Source: [x]

Click HERE for more facts!

(via ultrafacts)

“Conceit is incompatible with understanding.” — Leo Tolstoy, in Talks with Tolstoy by Alexander Goldenweiser (via philosophybits)

(via philosophybits)

(via )

For First Time Ever, Scientists Identify How Many Trees to Plant and Where to Plant Them to Stop Climate Crisis -

liberalbydefault:

The researchers calculated that under the current climate conditions, Earth’s land could support 4.4 billion hectares of continuous tree cover. That is 1.6 billion more than the currently existing 2.8 billion hectares. Of these 1.6 billion hectares, 0.9 billion hectares fulfill the criterion of not being used by humans. This means that there is currently an area of the size of the US available for tree restoration. Once mature, these new forests could store 205 billion tonnes of carbon: about two thirds of the 300 billion tonnes of carbon that has been released into the atmosphere as a result of human activity since the Industrial Revolution.

(via )

[video]

giallofantastique:

image

egypt-museum:
“ The Weighing the Heart Ceremony  Anubis weighing the heart of the deceased, detail from the anthropoid sarcophagus of Pensenhor, a Libyan who settled in Egypt. Third Intermediate Period, 22nd Dynasty, ca. 945-720 BC. Now in the...

egypt-museum:

The Weighing the Heart Ceremony

Anubis weighing the heart of the deceased, detail from the anthropoid sarcophagus of Pensenhor, a Libyan who settled in Egypt. Third Intermediate Period, 22nd Dynasty, ca. 945-720 BC. Now in the British Museum. EA 24906

(via egypt-museum-deactivated2021071)

egypt-museum:
“  “In the early days of archaeology it was the tombs that interested excavators and collectors. The city site was not investigated properly until the Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, under Bernard Bruyère, tackled it.
He...

egypt-museum:

“In the early days of archaeology it was the tombs that interested excavators and collectors. The city site was not investigated properly until the Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, under Bernard Bruyère, tackled it. 

He worked there for over twenty years, and he mentions that, at the beginning of the last century, a visitor to Deir el Medina might have seen houses with their walls still intact and tombs still capped by the little pyramids which were characteristic of the period. 

By the time he arrived it was all gone, wrecked by amateur archaeologists and by some professionals who did not know their trade well enough. “The passion for antiquity destroyed what the centuries had spared.””

Red Land, Black Land: Daily Life in Ancient Egypt, by Barbara Mertz

(via egypt-museum-deactivated2021071)

aegipan-omnicorn:
“ thecheshirecass:
“ terriblejoker:
“ vampireadamooc:
“ patrickat:
“ robstmartin:
“ queeranarchism:
“ bpd-disaster:
“ queeranarchism:
“ bpd-disaster:
“ queeranarchism:
“ alyesque:
“Capitalism is getting very much more dystopian very...

aegipan-omnicorn:

thecheshirecass:

terriblejoker:

vampireadamooc:

patrickat:

robstmartin:

queeranarchism:

bpd-disaster:

queeranarchism:

bpd-disaster:

queeranarchism:

alyesque:

Capitalism is getting very much more dystopian very quickly

It’s a matter of time before companies start their own Pod-communities and ‘strongly encourage’ workers to live there and set up rules like no alcohol and no defamation of the company in the Pods. 

As nightmarish as this is (and it is), this is only new for documented white people. From seasonal archiculture workers to construction workers to sweatshops, ‘sleep where you work and live your whole life controlled by your boss and coworkers pressured to spy on you’, has been very much a thing for a looooooooong time. 

This is one of many things capitalism has always done to workers and now they’re going “hhmmmm.. if I can do this to some workers, why not all of them? if I present it as a hip new way of urban living people for the ‘freelancers’ that I exploit, I might even be able to do it without the armed guards that run my sweatshops and plantations.”

I don’t really get the issue with the “sex is banned” part tho

I don’t want to hyperfocus on that part because ‘live without privacy, convert your bed into a desk by day and just work work work’ is distopian enough as it is and I don’t really want to distract from a conversation about the new fuedalism to just talk about sex. 

But can you not understand how that monotomous soulless life defined by work becomes even more soulless when you are not permitted to engage in (what is for most allosexuals) one of the most intimate moments of recreational joy and interpersonal connection? & how much it says about our lack of power when we live in places that control our sexual and reproductive lives? 

well yeah, but it’s communal living. I mean you’re spot on with the rest but idk, a ban on sex when you share your living quarters with like two dozen other people? it doesn’t seem that deep tbh. 

You know, I’ve spend time in socialist and anarchist self-organized communal living spaces where lots of people shared bedrooms because they liked it and all these spaces had a place for sex. They all acknowledged that that was a thing many humans loved and valued and so they organized to make that good thing possible. Some had a spare room with a lock on the inside that couples could use, others had dorms where sex was okay and dorms where it was not so people could choose where to sleep. It is not difficult to have communal living for those that like sharing bedrooms and also organize a place for sex. 

This, however, is not communal living. This is crammed, dehumanized corporate living. This is squeezing as many people as possible into a space defined by work. The inhabitants own nothing in this space and have no control over their environment, they can’t even paint the walls let along organize the space to meet their needs. In such a space, sex is made impossible on purpose:

image

“We built the pods facing each other so the community polices itself”

The people that made this could have organized privacy and opportunities for sex. They deliberately did not do this, they dilerabetely designed the space for minimum privacy. The purposeful banning of sex from this space is just one part, but one very obvious part, of the way these spaces are not build for humans, they are build for employees whose whole identity should be limited to their productivity. 

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, mining communities and factory towns encouraged workers to join their ranks by offering company housing and company stores, where workers and their families wouldn’t have to worry about money, because their rent and whatever they wanted from the store would simply be deducted from their paychecks.

Didn’t take long for workers to realize they were spending over 100% of their paychecks, and would have to work the rest of their lives in soul-crushing poverty to pay the company back.

Slavery isn’t gone, it just changed its name.

Adding to what @robstmartin has to say:

“I sold my soul to the company store” isn’t just a line in a song, it’s about Miner’s Scrip. When coal mines forced their employees to live in company housing, paid them in company credit usable only in the literal company store, and they charged astronomical rates for rent and food. 

Most miners ended up in multi-generational debt because their wages were so low they could not afford the basic necessities of food, clothing and shelter and ended up owing so much to the company store their grandchildren would essentially be enslaved to the company to pay off the debt.

image
image

This becomes especially chilling when you realize Cheeto Supremo ran on a policy of “bring back coal jobs”.

This is just deadass feudalism 2 Electric Boogaloo

Waiting for Google and Facebook to implement this crap.

Facebook already wants to have its own cryptocurrency, for people who don’t have bank accounts (Link goes to an article at theGuardian.com, dated 18 Jun, 2019)

(via )