Nov. 15th, 2017

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daisieshowlter:

picsthatmakeyougohmm:

hmmm

wait, wait, hold up. this is legit a thing in indonesia tho. it’s like a vacation spot (?) i guess i dont really know. the lake’s water is so clear lots of tourists take pictures underwater. those things already placed there for entertainment and selfie spots.
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skamedits:

You know what I mean, like, how you talk loudly about sucking cock, and Kim Kardashian and lavender scent. Well, I absolutely respect that you go all the way on the gay-thing, but it’s just… I’m not like that. 
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Nov. 15th, 2017 01:29 pm
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itisibitch:

viralthings:

I am half Scottish and half Japanese- I hand-sewed this kimono from men’s dress shirts and boxer shorts.

What did she do: THAT
Who is she: THAT BITCH
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bemusedlybespectacled:

wyomingsmustache:

100-manslayer:

trained-chimpanzee:

I actually didnt know that

The answer is apparently “because we’re actually able to eat it”

Fun fact: white people (specifically Northern European white people) have a genetic mutation that allows them to digest lactose even after weaning, which is abnormal for all mammals and also most humans. It’s theorized that because Northern Europe doesn’t get a lot of sun, an alternative source of vitamin D (like milk) would be a useful trait. It’s a very recent mutation that would only have happened after humans started domesticating animals like cows and goats.

oh no, my bizarre moment has come, cause lactose tolerance is actually A Thing I Know About because it’s played a fascinating role in human evolution for thousands of years. This chart displays some of the broad trends, but it’s giving near continental averages, which doesn’t showcase how this kind of thing really breaks down and some of the surprising exceptions. 

Lactose tolerance is the majority trait for only a very few population groups: North Europeans (and therefore populations that draw heavily from that stock, such as America,) nomadic central Eurasians, and sub-Saharan pastoralist Africans, but that latter group is often overlooked. The vast majority of Africans cannot process lactose, but certain people groups whose lifestyles have revolved around cattle for thousands of years will have 80% and even approaching 100% lactose tolerance rates. They’d be spots of dark green amidst a sea of orange and burgundy on the above chart. 

Our hunter-gatherer ancestors were almost entirely lactose intolerant, that is definitely the biological norm (and people groups who maintained that lifestyle, such as Native Americans, remained as such – along with groups who transitioned to sedentary agricultural lifestyles, but I’ll get into that). As such, lactose tolerance is an adaptive trait that only became prevalent in environments that exerted strong selective pressure for it. So, cows were domesticated some 10,000 odd years ago in the Middle East (and some have contended for an independent domestication event in Africa as well). In either case, cattle quickly spread across the continent and we know there was milking and cheese production at least 6,000 years ago in both the Nile and Mesopotamia. While cow meat would have been enjoyed by all, in agricultural societies milk and cheese would have been options, but hardly staples as there were plenty of other things to eat as well, and therefore there would have been no selective pressure for processing lactose. Also, sedentary societies had ways of processing milk and cheese that allowed lactose intolerant people to drink/eat dairy products. Fermenting milk or aging cheese breaks down lactose, making it a non issue once ingested. This is why fermented milk may seem utterly foul to many Westerners, but is extremely common in other parts of the world. But, fermentation and aging requires time, and the ability to store things in a single location for weeks or even months. Sedentary societies adapted the milk to fit their biology, but nomadic societies did the reverse.

There are still mobile pastoralist societies in Africa today, and there have been for thousands and thousands of years. For many of them, cows are not one of many dietary options, they are the single dietary staple around which their lifestyle revolves. Biologically, this means you gotta get with the program if you wanna survive. For most mobile tribes, fermentation and aging weren’t options, so there would have been strong selective pressure favoring those who could drink milk straight outta the cow, as they would have had an additional, highly nutritious food source available to them. Milk also allowed for a marked shortening of the weaning process, transitioning children from breastmilk to cow’s milk, which would again be advantageous for groups where both the men and women work and are always on the move. Over generations these populations specialized into essentially cow-based lifestyles, creating a survival niche highly advantageous to them, and fast forward thousands of years and there are groups in Africa with near ubiquitous lactose tolerance, while the rest of the continent (and the world really) is nearly entirely intolerant. 

Many of these same factors would have influenced the central Eurasian populations, which is why Mongolians and other descendants of nomadic steppe peoples are largely lactose tolerant, as mare’s milk would have been a dietary staple (though they also developed efficient ways to ferment it). 

North Europeans developed lactose tolerance in response to deficiencies in certain nutrients. The northern climate limited Vitamin D production, and the agricultural products available to them were often low on calcium and protein, and so dairy farming developed alongside agriculture to create a more rounded diet (and this was limited to Northern Europeans, as Mediterranean peoples such as the Romans wrote about their great confusion at the northern barbarians’ ability to drink fresh milk)

And I promise all of this is fascinating because the ability to process lactose evolved independently in several different population groups and in response to different factors: lifestyles revolving around cows, lifestyles revolving around horses, deficiencies in climate and agriculture. Besides providing insight into human history and biology, lactose tolerance is also a great example of convergent evolution, where different genetic populations in different environments produce similar results. 

And uh, that’s my rant about the role of milk and lactose tolerance in human evolution. 
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openthedooritschip:

transmanrichardstrand:

what……..does this mean

fellas, is it gay to acknlowedge the concept of romance
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musicalhell:

queenofattolia:

yaushie:

so who else gets irrationally afraid and embarrassed about their interests being known to people in real life

#i’m not embarrassed but#i hate the thought of having to guard what i love#and defend any of my interests to others#people are the worst i don’t want them to know me

I call this “residual anxiety from being bullied for everything that made me even slightly unusual every day in junior high.”
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hufflepuff-the-magic-dragon:

hiranyaksha:

squidpop:

thejazzykittykat:

verbivore8642:

brigwife:

kidouyuuto:

how did they learn to translate languages into other languages how did they know which words meant what HOW DID TH

English Person: *Points at an apple* Apple

French Person: Non c’est une fucking pomme 

*800 years of war*

Fun fact: There are a lot of rivers in the UK named “avon” because the Romans arrived and asked the Celts what the rivers were called. The Celts answered “avon.” 

“Avon” is just the Celtic word for river.

Fan Fact #2: When Spanish conquistadors landed in the Yucatán peninsula, they asked the natives what their land was called and they responded “Yucatán”. In 2015, it was discovered that in those mesoamerican languages, “Yucatán” meant “I don’t understand what you are saying”

W H E E Z E

Can I add onto this? omg
So in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India there’s a bridge that’s currently known as the “Barber’s Bridge.” However, when the Portuguese had first built it, it was referred to as “Hamilton Bridge.” The local Tamil people, who couldn’t pronounce “Hamilton,” called it the closest-sounding word they could think of, “Ambattan,” which is the Tamil word for hairdresser. When the British came and took over India, they saw this “Ambattan Bridge” and gave it a direct translation, bc god-forbid a bridge without an English name, right? And so they called it, “Barber’s Bridge.”
And that’s how Hamilton Bridge became Barber’s Bridge. The end.

“The reason for this is regrettably all too common. When the first explorers from the warm lands around the Circle Sea travelled into the chilly hinterland they filled in the blank spaces on their maps by grabbing the nearest native, pointing at some distant landmark, speaking very clearly in a loud voice, and writing down whatever the bemused man told them. Thus were immortalised in generations of atlases such geographical oddities as Just A Mountain, I Don’t Know, What? and, of course, Your Finger You Fool.” - The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett
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mielparaoshun:

This is the most romantic thing I’ve read
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allthecanadianpolitics:

This week, the Canadian government will be in Bonn touting Canada’s climate plan. It will be joined by Canadian oil companies working to put a green hue on Canadian tarsands – but the world shouldn’t be fooled.

The truth is, Canada cannot yet meet its own arguably weak climate targets. The country plans to expand oil and gas production despite evidence that this is inconsistent with Paris goals. Then, there is the issue of the toxic sludge of waste products from Canada’s tar sands destruction, which form what are known as tailings ponds.

As of this year, these ponds hold 1 trillion litres of sludge that is unlike any other industrial by-product in the world. They contain a unique cocktail of toxic chemicals and hydrocarbons that will remain in molasses-like suspension for centuries if left alone.

These open, unlined ponds currently cover 220 sq km, an area of land equivalent to 73 New York Central Parks. A single tailings pond - the Mildred Lake Settling Basin - has been identified by the US Department of the Interior as the world’s largest dam.

Continue Reading.
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starship-one:

I am a:
⚪️Man
⚪️Woman
🔘Digital Artist

Looking for:
⚪️Men
⚪️Women
🔘My fucking tablet pen
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Nov. 15th, 2017 07:39 pm
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holepsi:

#GiveWillAGodDamnBreak
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andantegrazioso:

Sisterly team work | Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
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Nov. 15th, 2017 09:34 pm
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stability:

when will this happen to me
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coolcatgroup:

This cat: “YOU DON’T BELONG HERE!!”

The other cat: “Are you seein’ this shit human?”

This cat: “I… have been replaced…”
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spread-the-kpop-love:

touched-dreams:

 This literally saved my ass a few minutes ago. Yes, you can recover those files that you accidentally closed and thought you couldnt get back. 

Right after that happens, open Microsoft Word again and click File - Info - Manage Versions - Recover Unsaved Documents.

It is literally that simple.

Reblog - save a life
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shadowkat678:

jurgenronaaz:

siphersaysstuff:

aokayinspace:

witwicky:

down-to-venus:

When ICE isn’t cool.

Kal El…. is literally Hebrew. It means Voice of God. He’s a Jewish illegal immigrant. For a reason. He was written in the 30s.

I mean Superman was literally written as an allegory for first generation American Jews dealing with the struggle of assimilation vs maintaining traditional culture. The birth of Superman as a comic was essentially Jewish Immigrant history.

Not all heroes wear capes, but a hell of a lot of supervillains hire uniformed thugs to terrorize innocent civilians.

Okay I really just… need somebody to write a book on “comic book superheroes as allegories and metaphors for oppressed groups”
Superman’s a Jewish immigrant, the X-Men are a combination of LGBT and neurodivergence (don’t need a cure, may need help coping, viewed as freaks/broken by much of the population, the only difference is there isn’t a holocaust survivor with autism leading a Brotherhood of Evil Aspies)
A whole chapter on Steve Rogers’ time as Nomad when he became disillusioned with the US and declared himself a “hero without a country”@shadowkat678 could write the chapter (or her own book) on Harley Quinn, I’ve seen it, it was fantastic!

I’d be up for that.
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shadowkat678:

subversivehost:

cdrshiphard:

thischick25:

laughingmyaspergersoff:

If someone says something that you only partially understand:

DON’T ask for clarification with a generic “What?” or “I’m sorry?” (In my experience, people will repeat the phrase the exact same way without helping you to understand).

Example:
Them: “Hey, do you like pahganabasa?”
Autistic Person: “What?”
Them: “Do you like pahganabasa?”
Autistic Person: “I’m sorry, what?”
Them (annoyed): “Do you like pahganabasa?”

Instead, DO repeat the part that you did understand, and substitute a “What?” for the unintelligable part.

Example:
Them: “Hey, do you like pahganabasa?”
Autistic Person: “Do I like what?”
Them: “Pineapple pizza?”
Autistic Person: (Understands the words!)

I’ve also had successes with “I’m sorry, I only heard the first half of that sentence,” or actually verbalizing my interpretation of the part I heard incorrectly as a question: “Pahgana… basa?”.

Sometimes that makes the speaker think that they might be mumbling, or verbalizing in a way that makes them difficult to understand (because there are times it’s really not your brain–it’s their mouth).

This is also a lifesaver if you have Auditory Processing Disorder. It stopped the amount of annoyed sighs because ppl thought I was deliberately ignoring them or them saying the same thing but louder (which does not help when volume isn’t the problem)

@shadowkat678

👍
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idrils:

bussykween:

#did the rest of the men die?
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logarithmicpanda:

Me: I’ve finally reduced my “currently reading” pile to a single book!

Me: better immediately start three more.
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tabbran:

startledoctopus:

grandpamagnet:

lypreila:

cricketcat9:

meimagino:

it’s the Fifth Element song that almost nobody can actually fucking, like you’re not really supposed to be able to sing from alto –> high F above high C

just

even if you know nothing about music this is fucking iMPRESSIVE???

OMG she has INCREDIBLE voice, this just doesn’t happen!

Holy fuck

lol as soon as you make something that’s like “x was made to be impossible for a human to do,” you KNOW someone just made it their life mission to do it

her name is Jane Zhang.

realtalk this put tears in my eyes
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skarhead:

winter kisses drarry speedpaint
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the-music-mixer:

This will forever be my favorite story told by Eddie Redmayne.
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“Find someone who loves you well. Someone who never belittles you. Even in the heat of an argument. Someone who is gentle with you, but does not treat you like you are fragile. Someone who knows what you are capable of, and celebrates those pieces of you. Not someone who is intimidated by your strength. Someone who doesn’t make you feel guilty for being flawed. It is not love’s job to punish you. And remember the person you love is just as broken as you are when they fall short. No one is perfect – do not hold them to this standard. Find someone who is patient, forgiving, and apologetic. Someone who practices forgiveness freely and often. Love someone who is humble, kind, and empathetic. Not only with you, but with a beggar on the street, or a stranger in the supermarket. Common courtesy is important. Compassion is important. Kindness is important.”
- Unknown
(via thelovejournals)

Be that someone to yourself. Be that someone to your someone.

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