Oracle card game project about the Egyptian Gods & Godesses / Drawn by me on Adobe Ilustrator.
Part VI
Meretseger, Khonsu, Mut, Shu, Ammit, Geb, Naunet
All rights reserved. Please don’t use or edit my work in any way without my permission, thank you ♥
Prints : https://www.etsy.com/fr/shop/Yliade
Brad Pitt in Killing Them Softly.
Every damn frame is dripping with truth.
NEVER SEEN BUT MUST SEE NOW DAMN U DROPPIN TRUTH BRAD
you can tell he been WAITING to say some shit like this cuz he doesn’t often play roles where making statements like these would fit
New! Part 2 of our new podcast series on the SS Columbia Eagle mutiny is out now for everyone. Two US sailors in 1970 hijacked their ship carrying thousands of tonnes of napalm to be dropped on Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. This week, one of the mutineers tells us how they took control of the ship. Check it out, and subscribe here: http://bit.ly/2UkOxLJ
Pictured: the mutineers Clyde McKay, left and Alvin Glatkowski, right, in 1970 http://bit.ly/2DlVPZZ
| — | Henry David Thoreau, Journals (via philosophybits) |
npr:
More than 80% of parents in the U.S. support the teaching of climate change. And that support crosses political divides, according to the results of an exclusive new NPR/Ipsos poll: Whether they have children or not, two-thirds of Republicans and 9 in 10 Democrats agree that the subject needs to be taught in school.
A separate poll of teachers found that they are even more supportive, in theory — 86% agree that climate change should be taught.
These polls are among the first to gauge public and teacher opinion on how climate change should be taught to the generation that in the coming years will face its intensifying consequences: children.
And yet, as millions of students around the globe participate in Earth Day events on Monday, our poll also found a disconnect. Although most states have classroom standards that at least mention human-caused climate change, most teachers aren’t actually talking about climate change in their classrooms. And fewer than half of parents have discussed the issue with their children.
Most Teachers Don’t Teach Climate Change; 4 In 5 Parents Wish They Did
Illustration: Angela Hsieh/NPR
Charts: Alyson Hurt/NPR

