Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

midnightmurdershow:

Army of Darkness (1992) Directed by Sam Raimi

egypt-museum:
“The Colossi of Memnon, early 1900sView of the two massive stone statues of king Amenhotep III in the Theban Necropolis. From Professor David Gordon Lyon photographs collection in the Harvard Semitic Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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egypt-museum:

The Colossi of Memnon, early 1900s

View of the two massive stone statues of king Amenhotep III in the Theban Necropolis. From Professor David Gordon Lyon photographs collection in the Harvard Semitic Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

ultrafacts:

The Biosphere 2 project was created as a research tool for scientists to study Earth’s living systems, and it allowed scientists to play with farming and innovation in a way that didn’t harm the planet. One of the most profound discoveries made by the scientists had nothing to do with a cure for some new disease or a new way of farming land. Rather, the discovery had to do with the wind’s role in a tree’s life. The trees inside Biosphere 2 grew rapidly, more rapidly than they did outside of the dome, but they also fell over before reaching maturation. 

After looking at the root systems and outer layers of bark, the scientists came to realize that a lack of wind in Biosphere 2 caused a deficiency of stress wood. Stress wood helps a tree position itself for optimal sun absorption and it also helps trees grow more solidly. Without stress wood, a tree can grow quickly, but it cannot support itself fully. It cannot withstand normal wear and tear, and survive. In other words, the trees needed some stress in order to thrive in the long run.

(Fact Source)

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what-u-say:

sixpenceee:

Massive hail storm turns this body of water into a war zone | source

MAN! Those are HUGE! They are as big as a ice ball you put in your high ball!

neillblomkamp:

Street Trash (1987) Directed by James M. Muro

cryptofwrestling:
“ Rodan (1957)
8mm film from the 60s…
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cryptofwrestling:

Rodan (1957)

8mm film from the 60s…

tonysopranobignaturals-deactiva:

leepacey:

tonysopranobignaturals-deactiva:

this guy talks insanely fast but this is solid info on electrical outrages in the US.

privatization is cringe level 100

here’s a transcription of what this guy says in this video, because he talks extremely fast — i’m also including sources wherever possible, in case anybody wants to do some further reading or wants proof

If you’re looking at Texas right now and thinking, “It seems pretty bad that a state’s electrical grid can fail overnight from a snowstorm,” I have news for you. It’s so much worse than you could ever imagine. Don’t be a heartless idiot and blame ‘red state voters;’ it’s red states, blue states, purple states, green states, everywhere is in crisis.

In 2017, the American Society of Civil Engineers gave our energy grid a D+, because almost all of it was built in the 1950s and 60s with a 50-year life expectancy, and we’re 10 to 20 years past that. Across the country, 640,000 miles of high voltage lines run at full capacity at almost all times, which is way more than the grid was designed to handle, and Texas in particular has one of the worst ratios between planned and real capacity.

It’s so bad that the US Government has said that if just nine of America’s 55,000 electrical substations are brought down, it could cause a coast-to-coast blackout lasting 18 months or more. And testimony from the executive director of Task Force on National and Homeland Security has said that a prolonged collapse of the electrical grid could result in the death of up to 90% of the American population. [screenshot in the video has highlighted text from this source, saying: “a prolonged collapse of this nation’s electrical grid—through starvation, disease, and societal collapse—could result in the death of up to 90% of the American population.”]

Today, the US has more power outages than any other developed country. And that’s because 68% of the electricity in the US is managed by investor-owned privatized utility companies [the source I found said it’s actually 72%], and updating their systems cuts into their profits, so they don’t do anything until something fails. And when things do fail, and, for example, start massive wildfires in California, guess who pays for it? Mostly taxpayers

There’s no good news, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg, because all of America’s infrastructure is failing, so I’m gonna keep doing videos about it.

thank you !! I was hoping someone would do a transcript

internationalbatofmystery-deact:

politijohn:

liberalsarecool:

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Corporations make more profits from suffering. The scarcity is a profit center. #ForcedPowerOutage

When Corporations can make more profit by increasing scarcity, they will.

Utilities should be public. Texas is a great example of the predictable deadliness of corporate greed.

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“Capitalism is indeed organized crime, and we are all the victims.”