ninewhitebanners:

More photos of Mongolia’s reindeer-herding minority ethnic group, the Tsaatan, by Joel Santos.

Children are responsible for training reindeer for riding, because the reindeer are not strong enough to carry an adult until they are fully grown, and it works best to introduce them to the idea early. A two year old reindeer, old enough for a child to ride, is called dongor; an adult reindeer is a hoodai.

medicine:

butchcommunist:

I have a general distaste for men, I get it, and I get that some people don’t want to think critically about things but. I think a lot of people assume life is super good for cis gay men and honestly unless they fit into a lot of other categories which might offer them some power to marginalize (white, well educated, wealthy, not gnc for examples) nah man….it’s not. A huge chunk of gay men I know have been homeless at one point, many kicked out of their familial homes. It’s not all rainbows and smiles for cis gay men and it’s tone-deaf to act like it is.

Although homicide statistics don’t tell us everything about the issues afflicting LGBT people at large, black gay men and white gay men have been second to black trans women with regard to reported LGBT motivated homicides in the U.S. for the past four years according to the NCAVP. Out of 594 reported homicides throughout the Americas included in this 2015 IACHR report of LGBTI motivated violence between January 2013 and March 2014, gay men constituted 283 reported homicides and trans women constituted 282 reported homicides, vast majority of them being against Black and Latinx people. Gay and bisexual men, especially Black gay and bisexual men, account for the most diagnoses of HIV in the United States. People do a disservice to some of the most afflicted among LGBT people by extrapolating the experiences of wealthy white gay men across the realities of gay men at large.

georginasoros:

butchcommunist:

sungodsinexile:

berniesrevolution:

IN THESE TIMES


There are 14,321 Dollar General stores in America. It’s a chain that many shoppers have never heard of, yet it has more stores than Starbucks. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Dollar General company is worth $22 billion—far more than the nation’s largest grocery chain, Kroger, which has five times the revenue.

Sadly, however, Dollar General is thriving because, as the Journal puts it, “rural America is struggling.” The chain builds stores where folks are down on their luck, where 20 percent of customers receive government assistance, and where even Walmart won’t bother doing business.

I phoned several Dollar General stores and learned that none sells fresh meat or produce; the grocery aisles feature mostly canned and frozen goods. Many products, such as soft drinks, come in mini-sizes to keep unit prices low. And few locations had newspapers for sale.

Maybe that’s just as well, because headlines these days report that the stock market is remarkably high and unemployment is surprisingly low. But for rural America, news like that doesn’t hit home.

Things are looking up in Donald Trump’s America, except, of course, where they are not.

The administration’s proudest accomplishment is a tax bill that benefits millionaires and billionaires. The Joint Committee on Taxation finds that the Senate version of the bill would increase taxes on all Americans making less than $75,000 a year.

As Paul Krugman summarizes in the New York Times: “Everything this president and this Congress are doing on economic policy seems designed, not just to widen the gap between the wealthy and everyone else, but to lock in plutocrats’ advantages, making it easier to ensure that their heirs remain on top and the rest stay down.”

In rural America, where about 46 million people reside, employment and economic growth have not recovered from the last recession at a pace seen elsewhere in the nation. Childhood poverty—perhaps the most critical metric in determining a population’s well-being—is considerably higher in rural areas than in urban centers.

The crisis facing rural America is rooted in the fact that peak-level employment related to natural resources, such as mining and logging, is never coming back.

Rural America is mired in a permanent recession. Its problems are difficult to correct because of a sprawling landscape, scattered government support structures and what often seems to be federal indifference.

Many among the predominantly white rural population voted for Trump in 2016—a sign, perhaps, of utter desperation rather than considered opinion. But according to recent reporting by Politico, Trump now intends to make the most sweeping changes to federal safety net programs in a generation, using legislation and executive actions to target recipients of food stamps, Medicaid and housing benefits.

(Continue Reading)


When tens of millions of people–both rural and suburban–are forced to use Dollar Tree and Dollar General as grocery stores because Wal-Mart is too expensive, it’s safe to say the middle class is truly dead.

I love these “how do the poor live” type of articles because I’m a poor person who regularly buys things they need from the dollar store around the corner and it’s so funny to see people who are clearly upper middle class say things like “I phoned a number of dollar general stores to see if they sold fresh fruit”

Like, maybe get off the internet and stop writing articles and actually see how poor people live, you won’t catch something from going into a .99 cent store

The whole gist of this article is basically – can you believe there’s a place worse than wal mart to shop at and it’s like, yeah, I can believe it, I was there yesterday. Us poors can also use the internet

I do find it fitting that the guy who called up a Dollar General rather than just go find out and walk in would be named “Peter Funt.”

they always seem so shocked when they find places where poor people shop, as if they’ve discovered something that no one else knows about. i mean, of course those on a low income are gonna shop at discount stores.