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Dec 26

wolveswolves:
“ Wild wolf in Finland by Niko Pekonen
”

wolveswolves:

Wild wolf in Finland by Niko Pekonen

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[video]

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roadtonothing:

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bitter1:

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the-elf-has-had-enough:

Energy: The world is addicted to natural gas. Fossil fuel companies are fighting to keep it that way - CNN

(via shad0ww0rdpain)

phoenixonwheels:

buh-no:

phoenixonwheels:

phoenixonwheels:

motherfucker-somewhat-limited:

phoenixonwheels:

mermaidyarn:

p-artsypants:

nightingem:

phoenixonwheels:

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2021/06/07/wheelchair-scooter-damage-airplane-flights/

people have no idea like. how devestating this is. so many wheelchairs are custom made and repairing them is hellish, if they’re in a state to be repaired. most wheelchair users do not have the financial means to replace them, and SSI asset limits mean that if they’re on disability it’s a ridiculous set of hoops to even crowdfund past 2k to repair or replace.

airlines need to be held accountable for this in a major way. they see fucking over disabled people’s lives as more profitable than fixing how they handle wheelchairs. and i mean like, actually ruining lives, taking away comfort and freedom that they worked so, so hard to get. people take their lives because of this.

^ yes to all of the above.

But also like, how do you lose a wheelchair? I could understand them getting on the wrong flight, but it’s not like they’re going to fall behind the conveyor belt. If they’re labeled, shouldn’t they be able to get them back? I’m so frustrated!

Again how do you lose them? Didn’t they use them to get into the flight?

For the umpteenth time (does anyone ever check the notes?) airlines lose luggage all the time. But for those of you who clearly need more detail, here are actual things that have happened with wheelchairs.

1. The airline tells the wheelchair user at the check-in desk they have to transfer to an airport chair and then never takes their chair to the plane.

2. It gets left on the jetway.

3. It gets left on the runway.

4. It gets put on the wrong plane/sent to the wrong airport.

5. It gets put on the right plane but instead of returning it to the door of the plane, the airline sends it down to the baggage carousel and someone else takes it.

6. It gets put on the right plane and returned to the door of the plane and then while the disabled person is waiting for the whole plane to unload the airline just gives their chair to a random person/lets a random person take it instead of checking to see if the person taking it is the one who owns it.

On that last point, when you say “gives it to a random person”, do you mean they give it to a different disabled person, or just really let any old person grab it like they would one of the cheap folding chairs the airport offers to help people get across large terminals?

Both.

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[ID: Reblog by @pagerunner “Never forgetting the time Julie, her mom, and I few to NC. And when you use a chair, you get on first and get off last. (On this freakishly narrow chair they strap you on while they put the actual chair - with your name on it - in the cargo, like a stroller.) And when we finally get off the plane, Julie’s chair isn’t there. ANOTHER PASSENGER SAID IT WAS HIS AND THEY JUST. GAVE IT TO HIM? IT HAD JULIE WRITTEN ON THE TAG. And then there were stewards trying to track down the wheelchair thief, and Julie’s stuck on this tiny, foot-wide chair until they finally show up the guy is angry she’s “taking it away from him”. Worst travel day.”]

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[ID: Reblog by @liraelclayr “Frontier Airlines GAVE MY WHEELCHAIR AWAY to somebody. They told him it was an airport wheeIchair, even though there was a very large neon orange tag on it with my name on it, and it looked nothing like the wheelchairs in the airport. I was incredibly lucky to have gotten to the guy in time for him before he got away with it. He was a minute from getting away in a taxi. I will never, ever use Frontier again, and I tell my friends not to use them either.”]

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[ID: Comment by @anywaybulletjournal “People who could or would steal something like that … 😰”]

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[ID: Comment by @miranda_alfaro_ “I traveled from Richmond back to DFW my hometown this weekend and American let someone steal my wheelchair and transport it to another terminal. No one stopped anyone and thank god they found it but I was stranded for 2 hours I was so angry.”]

Just a reminder that this happens every day to wheelchairs users.

This happened to my great aunt the last time she traveled before she died.

Fuck the airport. Fuck airlines and their employees. They treat disabled people horribly and intentionally sabotage their mobility devices.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/lakenbrooks/2021/11/08/disability-advocate-engracia-figueroa-died-after-an-airline-damaged-her-wheelchair/amp/

Engracia Figueroa died as a direct result of injuries sustained when United Airlines destroyed her wheelchair.

(via shad0ww0rdpain)

pronouncingitwang:

foxgirltail:

dragonladdie:

dragonladdie:

Hey remember when they found over 200 bodies of native children buried behind a residential school and the world cared for… what, a week?

They’ve counted about 6,000-7,000 now, for those of you who do still care

It should NOT fall on Indigenous people’s shoulders to keep this known still. We’ve been doing that for generations at this point and NO ONE wants to listen to us.

We’re tired, mourning and constantly reopening our trauma and pain to keep people caring about us. It’s terrible.

I should start by noting that I am white, and not Canadian, and that if op wants me to remove this comment for any reason, please let me know.

This is a map of all the residential schools in Canada:

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[link to the article it’s attached to, it’s interactable there, so you can get a better look around]

Each dot on this map represents a residential school. Blue dots mean the school is considered completely searched. Yellow dots mean they are either in the process of being searched or there are plans to be searched. Red dots indicate that no search has happened and that no search is currently planned

There were more than 130 residential schools in Canada. This map suggests that only six have been fully searched, and a little more than a dozen partially searched (I counted 15 yellow dots). That leaves at least 109 schools completely untouched.

Let that sink in; if 6,000-7,000 unmarked, indigenous children’s graves were found by searching less than a fifth of all the schools, how many are still undiscovered.

Wikipedia estimates that the body count could be over 50,000, and honestly, that could be a low estimate

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[ID: A map of Canada with dozens of dots on it, 6 of which are blue and 7 of which are yellow; the rest are red. Later there is a screenshot from wikipedia reading, “Estimates range from 3,200 to over 50,000 children that were killed. Most of the recorded student deaths at residential schools took place before the 1950s. /end ID]

(via shad0ww0rdpain)