lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/2WV4riI

pipcomix:

tsrabbits:

followthebluebell:

chickenkeeping:

tinysaurus-rex:

as a note for those who don’t know why heritage breeds are so good: they aren’t bred to overproduce. they’re bred for health and longevity. a production leghorn lays over 300 eggs a year and will live MAYBE three years. usually dying of some horrible reproductive illness, even in a good environment. the production meat hybrids get so meaty so quickly that they can’t physically live passed a few months, eight months is the absolute max before their legs stop being able to carry them or their heart gives out. they can’t breed on their own, they don’t live long enough.

heritage breed chickens must average over six years to be considered heritage. they’re hardy birds that lay fewer eggs, often 250 or less. there are many breeds bred for meat, but they grow slowly and breed on their own. they can live long, full lives. there are dual purpose breeds. these heritage breeds have valuable, unique genetics that not only benefit us humans, but their species as well! we have breeds that can withstand frigid winters, fight off disease thanks to breeders breeding for immunity, live far longer than junglefowl (what chickens were bred from thousands of hears ago), and all sorts of cool things. these unique genes hugely benefit science.

corperate hatcheries don’t breed for these things, they might have birds that they claim are heritage breeds, but they almost always have production mixed in. they breed on a massive, uncaring scale. by banning facebook sales, ARAs are saying a big “fuck you” to breeders who are just trying to keep a breed alive and maybe make a living doing so. although i rarely meet breeders who make more money than they pour into those birds. yes, there are bad breeders, but there are a lot of really awesome breeders. all big hatcheries are bad. the decision to ban animal sales directly benefits those bad hatcheries, and none of the breeders.

tinysaurus-rex:

congrats to the ARAs who got facebook to ban animal sales. shortly before then, many rare heritage chicken breeds were getting much needed attention to save the breeds thanks to various agricultural facebook pages highligting them. but now, with the ban of animal sales on facebook, those heritage breeds have become damn near impossible to find again. guess what that means? the breeds will begin dying out again. people will go back to hatcheries who mass produce unhealthy chicken breeds in horrible conditions. folks will always buy chickens, but now instead of buying them from ethical breeders on facebook they’ll be supporting a terrible industry, woohoo.

hope y’all are proud.

this is happening with pigeons as well and its terrible. it was already damn near impossible to find a good pigeon breeder but now it IS impossible since all the groups are getting shut down, facebook was one of the few places you could meet some breeders, other than meeting them at exhibitions or clubs in person. it sure is significantly speeding up the decline of the already-scarce hobby of keeping pigeons, thats for sure

It’s hit the reptile and amphibian hobby hard too. We used to have a page to vet buyers/sellers. No one wants to buy a sick animal or support someone who treats their animals poorly. That page was removed, taking out years of reviews.

It’s also going to have a huge impact on genetic diversity since it limits our ability to match animals. Bearded dragons are intensely inbred; the ability to find good lines was essential to correcting this.

It’s happening in rabbits too. And I’d like to echo ALL of these points because they’re good.

Although who are we kidding? The elimination of specific breeds, and animal keeping as a whole, is 100% a goal of the ARA movement.

Sheep as well! The Florida Cracker Sheep group on there still has a lot of cool info but its damn hard to hook up with breeders except in PMs and even then … fb messaging sucks, ppls PM settings vary, and even being like “check out this sheep. PM me” is considered a Suspect Post these days :/
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/2OzHbVd

naamahdarling:

candidlyautistic:

letschristianfeministus:

ladymdej:

candidlyautistic:

That autistic / ADHD feel when you want to do… something.

I call this “activity cravings” because it’s like when you want a certain food but you aren’t sure which food. But for activities.

Do I want to go for a walk? Play a game? If so, what kind of game? DO I want to make things? Read? Watch tv? A movie?

then when that executive dysfunction comes into play and since you could do literally anything in the world, you end up trapped and unable to choose anything to do at all, and do nothing instead but live in that restlessness

One of the best additions to this post yet. This is one of those nuances of choice paralysis that people fail to understand - sometimes it is because we lack the executive function to choose, sometimes we want to do all the things and can’t choose.

….When parents tell you to clean your room because you came to them and said you’re bored, this is why that FUCKING SUCKS, right???
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/31dxVtq

Amazon Is Looking More and More Like a Nation-State:

taraljc:

greenjudy:

probablyasocialecologist:

Most politicians don’t understand how to confront Amazon’s market power. The most recent example is in France, where last month a decision was made to levy a 3 percent tax on Big Tech firms with global revenues higher than €750 million (~$830 million) and French revenues exceeding €25 million.

Amazon responded by simply levying its own tax on French businesses and increasing seller fees by 3 percent. As countries across the European Union consider their own plans to tax Big Tech monopolies instead of breaking them up, it’s hard to imagine why every company won’t follow Amazon’s example. The ability to levy taxes is typically reserved for states, but corporations have made it increasingly clear they’re eager to challenge and usurp any nation-state’s sovereignty.

Amazon, however, may be in a league of its own as it threatens to not only dominate the market, but become the market.

There is a special vertigo science fiction writers feel when real life busts out shit like this. 

We are living in an episode of Max Headroom
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/33wBTyM

wordsmith-storyweaver:

This is the truth: we are a nation accustomed to being afraid. If I’m being honest, not just with you but with myself, it’s not just the nation, and it’s not just something we’ve grown used to. It’s the world, and it’s an addiction. People crave fear. Fear justifies everything. Fear makes it okay to have surrendered freedom after freedom, until our every move is tracked and recorded in a dozen databases the average man will never have access to. Fear creates, defines, and shapes our world, and without it, most of us would have no idea what to do with ourselves.

Feed, Mira Grant
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/2Y71oEc

plaidadder:

thesaltofcarthage:

carissime72:

tienriu:

carefulwiththataxe:

helenarasmussen87:

captain-kiri-storm:

oregonpipeline:

cazador-red:

i-fear-neither-death-nor-pain:

dad4god:

ash-ash-bo-bash:

Washington State is in a state of emergency due to the measles outbreak which is now at 31 cases. Measles has been confirmed in 3 other states. Measles has an R-0 of 12 to 18. Measles is incredibly easy to transmit and can stay alive in the air for 2 hours and has an R-0 of 12-18 (honestly terrifying).

you know what happens with measles? permanent hearing loss due to ear infection or brain swelling, pneumonia, and intellectual difficulty again due to brain swelling. 1.5 in 1,000 will die. and again, even if you get away relatively unharmed, the infection rate is massively high and plenty others wont be as lucky.

one final note: there is precedent of multiple courts ruling that not vaccinating children is a form of medical neglect.

good job you insufferable, delusional fuckwads.

And the only people who suffer are the unvaccinated.

As for the general fearmongering this post has implied, keep in mind that measles was fairly common and often parents would bring their kids over to a house that had mumps, measles or chicken pox and while unpleasant, we generally recovered.

Now, I’m al for vaccines, but honestly, why are we so afraid of getting sick? It’s not the end of the world.

And the unvaccinated are mostly babies that are too young, the immunocompromised who will never be able to get vaccinated and people whose immune systems were wiped out by severe illnesses like cancer. Measles is the end of the world for those people. It’s not just “getting sick”. Measles is nothing like the common cold.

Severe Complications

Some people may suffer from severe complications, such as pneumonia (infection of the lungs) and encephalitis (swelling of the brain). They may need to be hospitalized and could die.

As many as one out of every 20 children with measles gets pneumonia, the most common cause of death from measles in young children.

About one child out of every 1,000 who get measles will develop encephalitis (swelling of the brain) that can lead to convulsions and can leave the child deaf or with intellectual disability.

For every 1,000 children who get measles, one or two will die from it.

Measles may cause pregnant woman to give birth prematurely, or have a low-birth-weight baby.

The Measles chapter of the Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine Preventable Diseases (Pink Book) describes measles complications in more depth.

Long-term Complications

Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a very rare, but fatal disease of the central nervous system that results from a measles virus infection acquired earlier in life. SSPE generally develops 7 to 10 years after a person has measles, even though the person seems to have fully recovered from the illness. Since measles was eliminated in 2000, SSPE is rarely reported in the United States.

Among people who contracted measles during the resurgence in the United States in 1989 to 1991, 4 to 11 out of every 100,000 were estimated to be at risk for developing SSPE. The risk of developing SSPE may be higher for a person who gets measles before they are two years of age. For more information, see Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE): MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia.

https://www.cdc.gov/measles/about/complications.html

And it’s spreading into Idaho, Oregon, Utah and Nevada.

Anyone who doesn’t vaccinate their kids should be moved onto an island away from society.

VACCINATE YOUR CHILDREN

Having been born in a developing nation, we fought tooth and nail to get vaccinated. I am still in shock that people in developed nations turn their noses up at vaccines.

I got chicken pox before I could be vaccinated and it’s only luck and my parent’s diligence that kept me from dying.

Vaccinate your kids!!

Something else to think about:  “Back in the 1960s, the U.S. started vaccinating kids for measles. As expected, children stopped getting measles.But something else happened.Childhood deaths from all infectious diseases plummeted.”

So scientists studied it and discovered that “The measles virus may erase immune memory, leaving patients vulnerable to other infections.” FOR UP TO 3 YEARS

https://www.princeton.edu/news/2015/05/07/deadly-shadow-measles-may-weaken-immune-system-three-years

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2015/05/07/404963436/scientists-crack-a-50-year-old-mystery-about-the-measles-vaccine

https://thepathologist.com/subspecialties/measles-induced-immune-amnesia

http://science.sciencemag.org/content/348/6235/694.abstract

Want to know why there used to be chicken pox and measles parties? It’s because there were no vaccines and if your kids got it at a certain age (i.e. after 6 but before puberty) than they were more likely to survive without long term effects (i.e. sterility and/or death).

OP above thinking ‘falling ill is nothing to worry about’ - those parties were all about playing statistics on making sure your children didn’t die.  So yeah, fuck off you nitwit..

Ok so I’m relatively old (53). I did get some vacs but contracted chicken pox. From my perspective as a parent the nonvaxxers fears are real. However, if vaccines were given one at a time instead of loads of 2 or 3, perhaps fears would be allayed. Why are children given so many at once? Is it the insurance companies mandate ? If so, then the possible dangers of vaccines as we know it might be allayed. Both my kids are vaccinated but I was really scared my oldest was going to be Autistic. I realize now (again, the perspective of age) that that fear was ignorant and prejudiced. An Autistic child is not a “to be avoided at all cost “ outcome. Trust me, you really would rather have an Autistic, or deaf, or blind child than not to have THAT particular child at all. And for all the other reasons stated above:

Vaccinate your children!

Vaccines are given in groups to reduce the number of needles the kid gets — it’s literally for the child’s comfort. 

Modern vaccines have fewer antigens (the active bits) than older ones, so even when you are vaccinating your child, there’s less going into your child.

http://vk.ovg.ox.ac.uk/combination-vaccines-and-multiple-vaccinations

http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/109/1/124.full

Other than for people who have demonstrated, medically diagnosed allergies or reactions to some part of the vaccine, or who are immunocompromised, the “dangers” of vaccines were invented by Andrew Wakefield to make money.

Wakefield was (IS NO LONGER) a doctor who had developed a single measles injection. But the NHS used an MMR vaccine (measles, mumps, rubella) and wasn’t interested in using his single shot.

So he found a group of lawyers who were willing to file lawsuits challenging the combination MMR shot. He rounded up 12 children (for statistical purposes, 12 participants is equivalent to supermarket gossip; it’s not reliable and you can’t extrapolate results from it), of varying developmental abilities and both with and without bowel issues, did NOT inform their parents of what he was testing, and injected them with his vaccine. He also performed painful and unnecessary procedures like colonoscopies (ON CHILDREN) and lumbar punctures. 

Two already had gut issues. NONE OF THEM BECAME AUTISTIC AFTER THE SHOT. But Wakefield flat-out lied and faked his data so he could file a lawsuit.

Wakefield’s article in the Lancet was retracted, his medical license was revoked for fraud, and he is FORBIDDEN from practicing medicine in the U.K.

Vaccines don’t cause autism. They never did.

As for the scheduling:

What happens when you get a vaccine shot is that your body produces an immune response. For many diseases, you produce let’s say a 50% response — you’re halfway protected. As the months go by, this falls to 25%. That’s when you need the next shot. So you get a second shot. This produces a 50% response again. This gets you to 75% protected. Months go by and you’re back down, but to 50%. So you get the last shot which should put you over the top.

This why children get multiple rounds of vaccines over several years. The point is to allow their bodies to become accustomed to the antibodies and learn resistance. 

I had a coworker who never had chicken pox as a child and never got the vaccine. She visited a friend who didn’t vaccinate her kids. The kids had been exposed to chicken pox but didn’t actually have it. 

She ended up with Bell’s Palsy. 

She looked like she’d had a stroke. She was on short-term disability for six months because she was simply too exhausted to function. It forced her to retire early because she no longer had the stamina to work.

Vaccinate. Your. Kids. 

Vaccination has always produced a certain amount of suspicion and anxiety, often in populations who have good reasons to be suspicious of state institutions. What’s weird about this go-round is that it is being fomented largely by people who have never been subjected to state terror and have no real reason to fear that they ever will be. It seems to me to be part of the kind of search for ‘purity’ that also drives cleanses, diet crazes, etc. and which is in part created by anxiety about the fact that our environment is now thoroughly and possibly irretrievably polluted. This anxiety is especially acute in first-time parents–because it is deliberately fomented by the baby industry. 

Seriously, when Mrs. P was pregnant with PJ, we were absolutely bombarded with messages about how threat-filled the world was and how it was our duty to spend money to protect our future child from all of these threats. We are encouraged to see the child as a ‘pure’ body that we must keep pure at all costs. It is too late for us; we are already polluted; but the child represents a brand new body who could, we are encouraged to believe, be kept free of taints and toxins if we only work hard enough and buy enough products. Don’t use the wrong kind of plastic in your baby bottles, even though there may well be enough plastic in your drinking water to damage your child regardless of what vessel you put it in. Make your own baby food out of organic vegetables, even if you will be freezing it in ice cube trays made out of the wrong kind of plastic. And so on. It is easy for me to see how some parents who were overtaken by the purity gospel would slide from “don’t let environmental toxins touch your child” to “don’t let anyone put anything into your child’s bloodstream if you can’t personally verify that it is not a toxin”–which of course no parent can actually do. 

Anyway. Vaccinate your kids. And maybe also accept that your children live in the same polluted world you live in and you can’t make the world any better for them without making it better for everyone.
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/2SA0Y5W

Is America Becoming a Cashless Society? - The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Video Clip) | Comedy Central:

gwydionmisha:

I actually think about this every time I go Downtown and I get angry every time.  About a half decade ago, they tried to switch all of downtown from meters to a drop box system.  The guys that own the fish store and all their small business neighbors were furious.  Sure, they hated the meters and wanted free parking Downtown and would have happily taken an increase in their business tax in exchange, since paid parking is bad for business.  

The drop boxes though?  Their sales revenue had dropped 60%.  The small business protested the shit out of it and they put the meters back (instead of going with a small business friendly free parking/higher business tax model, but baby steps).  The thing is though?  The area around the Courthouse and Library had no small businesses to protest, so they put in the dropboxes, and along with the parking lot next to the indie theater, they “upgraded” to smart phone only payments a year or two ago.

I have no smart phone.  A lot of poor people don’t have smartphones.

This means that there is no parking near the indie theater or the little museums for poor people.  That means that if there are no free disabled spots near the Courthouse, I can’t park close enough to pay my taxes, etc..  That means if there are no free disabled or drop off spots in front of the Library, I can’t use it.

When they put in smart phone/credit card only parking places, they are saying, “We don’t want poor people going to these businesses, these restaurants, these theaters.  We don’t want poor people in our libraries and our courthouses.”  It seems to me really fucking contrary to logic and purpose to bar poor people from the library and the courthouse, especially as BPD loves pulling people over for driving while poor, etc., and the people using the library most are poor, but there you have it.  All these things are only intended for rich people now.
lupin5th: (Default)
via https://ift.tt/2RDMoKn

tsukinofaerii:

roddytheruin:

fuocogo:

girlsandart:

harold-shes-lesbian:

this is too real though

SNL has pretty much never given any fucks but lately they’re at the point of giving negative fucks

You can tell the audience is struggling to not aknowledge accurate this is since the accuracy is the funny part.

ponytails?

The general “make sure he rapes someone else” training back in the 90s was to never wear a ponytail because it’s easy to grab. Saw similar things for loose clothing in general, and also skirts.

I got this from school (the whole sex ed “here’s what to know about your menstrual cycle and oh BTW here’s the ways you can ask to be raped” thing) to my parents (”never trust men ever for anything EVER”) to magazines and general “safety tips” like the flyers you sometimes see in women’s rooms. It was usually billed as Common Sense Ways To Avoid Becoming a Victim. Usually included not wearing heels, carry your keys in your hand and lock the car as soon as you’re in it, park under a light pole, etc.

So… yeah. There’s a lot there.

Profile

lupin5th: (Default)
lupin5th

July 2020

S M T W T F S
   12 34
567 891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 13th, 2026 11:13 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios