I’ve seen an alcoholic old man have a seizure and nearly die because nobody thought he should have any money, “he’d just spend it on alcohol”. You’re damn right he would have, the seizures from delirium tremens are easily fatal and deeply terrifying. If someone would have given him just two dollars he would not have had a seizure in the middle of the street and would not have split his skull open when he hit the sidewalk. Its a damn miracle he did not die from the callous apathy of his fellow humans.
Day: July 29, 2018
@ this entire website did u know it’s possible to make an informative post about a tragedy and/or national disaster without guilting and/or blaming your entire reader base for not posting about it when they PROBABLY simply haven’t heard about it?
honestly, this makes me so mad. that’s why i NEVER reblog any post that tries to guilt people into reblogging (or guilt people in general for that matter). even if i otherwise 100% agree with a post and am really passionate about its issue. you don’t need to ask me to reblog sth, i obviously will if i care about it. but these passive aggressive comments (e.g. [x people] can reblog this btw, i don’t care about your blog theme, this is too important not to reblog, etc.) or the outright aggressive ones á la “if you don’t reblog this you have no heart” make me mad at you instead of the issue you talk about. you’re being cruel, not helpful.
China’s Xinjiang Province: A Surveillance State Unlike Any the World Has Ever Seen – SPIEGEL ONLINE – International
A captive western spadefoot toad [Spea hammondii] looking like he’d just swallowed a lemon. Images by Rob Schell.
small brain “hotel california is about drugs” normal brain “hotel california is about the music industry” giant brain “hotel california is meant to be taken completely literally and The Eagles are still trapped there”
Galaxy brain “hotel california is a fae mound abduction story”

This is when you just throw the whole husband away
In late May we found a bird nest in a cactus by the driveway. There were three blue speckled eggs in it, and they belonged to a pair of curve-billed thrashers.
Soon enough, two of the eggs hatched. Both parents came and went all day with food. When they weren’t feeding the babies, they perched nearby and guarded the nest. Since they clearly didn’t like people nearby, we set up the animal camera and mostly left them alone.
Over the next couple of weeks the skinny baby birds, which started off with giant heads and the barest hint of fluff, grew into big grumpy looking teenagers who could hardly squeeze into the nest. And then they were gone.
Cochise County, Arizona, May-June 2018.
Maybe the best thing about the weather change today: It’s been not just cooler, but pretty windy. Enough to get some decent ventilation through the silly little top-opening portion of the bedroom window!
(With no cross-ventilation in there at all. A few times I actually resorted to opening the front door and rigging up a fan to try to force some cooler night air through the sweatbox, but nope. Not much luck.)
The wind has gotten it cooled down enough in there, just today, that sleeping should be so much easier. The bedroom was hovering just over 30C/86F for at least the past week, but right now it’s down to 22C/72F 😃😪
Without the wind, that could have taken a week. From past experience. Even if it heats right up again later into the week, I’m definitely relieved to get some better sleeping conditions at all after weeks.

























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