In a shocking move, Macmillan / Tor announces that they will begin a “test” of scaling back library lending and waiting 4 months after release date before making e-books available to libraries. They say that it’s because library lending is adversely affecting their sales.
This honestly seems like a giant greedy cash grab, and I’m very disappointed with Macmillan and Tor. I cannot believe they would do this to their library patrons.
Month: July 2018
Saudi Arabia gave women permission to drive and this is the first thing they do 😭
This shit’s harder than ANY post malone track
Somebody on twitter called her SaudiB
SaudiB
The lyrics are even doper!!! :
Yo, you seem to be forgetting that today is the 10th
That means no need for taxis
The steering wheel in my hands
I smash the pedal under my foot
I won’t need anyone to drive me
I’ll help myself by myself
I’ve got the drivers license ready with me
So put the seat belt on the abaya (the outfit she’s wearing)
And keep an eye on the sidewalks and the other on the mirror
R is for going back, D is for going seeda (straight)
Watch out for every car
If it was a Ford or Cressida, your life won’t be great
Come! Pick me up! Take me there! Bring me back!
That’ll ruin the plan
If you want me to come pick you up, you gotta pay up
Gas money! Don’t underestimate it!
Debt! If you pay or don’t that’s still debt
“Careful, don’t slam the door hard” that was before
Now if you slam it hard, I’ll tie you with the seat belt… and her instagram is @leesaseal
@bastardrobocop since you asked for a source
Okay so before I saw the lyrics described as “driving safety psa” but THEY REALLY FUCKING AREN’T AND THIS IS SO MUCH BETTER
PUT THE SEAT BELT ON THE ABAYA
As an adult, I can quite literally do whatever I want to, but I always end up wanting to just go home.
ICE Has Conducted Hundreds of Raids in New York Since Trump Came to Power. Here’s What Those Operations Look Like.
In one case described in the project, six men in black masks swept through an apartment in the early-morning hours, refusing to identify themselves as they herded the tenants into the living room. In another, seven plainclothes agents surrounded a taxi with guns drawn, taking away the passenger without saying who they were, leaving the man’s belongings, and one confused driver, in their wake. In a third, a couple was walking to the subway when two agents in jeans and sweatshirts tackled the boyfriend to the ground. When the girlfriend, six months pregnant, grabbed one of the unidentified men, she, too, was thrown to the pavement.
There are other, less hands-on examples. There are numerous accounts of ICE targets being told that the voice on the other end of the phone was a municipal police officer looking to meet up to discuss an investigation, only to find, once they were in handcuffs, that that was never the case. There are instances of agents grabbing people before, after, and in court. There are stories of unmarked vehicles lurking outside targets’ homes for hours, and there are accounts of degradation, such as the man who said he was arrested by 10 agents with guns drawn, shackled, and told that he was a “fucking immigrant” and a “piece of shit.”
And then there are stories that hint at the creation of lingering psychological trauma, like the time half a dozen agents and two local cops pounded on a residential door at dawn, refusing to slide a warrant underneath as a terrified 8-year-old boy hid in an attic above them. When the boy’s father eventually relented and opened the door, he was taken away.
Dubbed ICEwatch, the interactive project, released Monday, is the culmination of years of work by the Immigrant Defense Project and the Center for Constitutional Rights, two of New York City’s leading legal advocacy organizations.
Boozhoo (hello), my name is Ken, I am a disabled Ojibwe artist from northern Wisconsin. I am writing this post because I am having a hard time making ends meet and any donations I could possibly receive at this time would be greatly appreciated. Recent events have left my bank account depleted and my cupboards bare, I have some food but it will not last and I still do not know how I will cover all the utility bills.
I do have PayPal, that is really the best way to donate at this time, the email I use for that is: baapimakwa@gmail.com, or you can click here.
Really starting to worry as July comes to an end new bills are coming and I’m already in the hole due to multiple emergencies, including the family vehicle breaking down (it was replaced but with a $490 van that needs a lot of work), there is not enough food to last and we don’t even have the gas money to get to the foodshelf.
How a Sneaky Furniture Expert Ripped Off the Rich and Tricked Versailles
Relevant to some of my recent interests.
Contains the sentence,
“I licked the chair and voilà,” he says. “I could taste the fraud.”
I will say this is the chronicle of a rare fellow who really was just in it to piss people off. It is a story full of assholes and it’s satisfying to read in that sense because we personally will never have to deal with any of them.
Also, chair-licking for fun and profit!
How a Sneaky Furniture Expert Ripped Off the Rich and Tricked Versailles
It’s okay to choose the Weird option
It’s kind of interesting, how you have to sort of reclaim your thinking processes to effectively solve problems when you’re autistic. Including some of the ones that come with chronic illness.
Example: A medication I’m on right now for an Issue has a dehydrating effect. However, I already drink what most people would consider an unreasonably large amount of water (literally constantly) under normal circumstances. I also have a routine of doing my work on the ol laptop here with my cup of water beside me, which holds like…slightly more than 24 oz?
And here’s the thing. When I’m in The Zone, I won’t get up. I’ll finish my water, and won’t get more right away (I also won’t get up to go pee or eat or do a bunch of other things for basic fleshbag maintenance).
Neurotypical wisdom would go like: oh, set an alarm, make sure you get up regularly, something something go refill ur cup, bleep blah bloobly. All of it targeted toward making you get up in a timely fashion. That shit never works, and I know already I’m not gonna fucking get up.
Guess who’s sitting here next to two identical full cups of water. And I’ll get a third cup if it seems like that will be beneficial.
But like, here’s the thing: even though that’s what works, people will try to shame this stuff out of you. For no other reason than because it’s the Weird option. It’s not what you’re supposed to do. And it DOESN’T MATTER. like, at all? Who gives a flying fuck at a rolling donut how many cups of water I have at once? No one is here to pointlessly hassle me about it anymore.
But the main problem is it gets in YOUR head not to do the “Weird thing”, no matter what and you’ll end up wasting your whole life trying to do shit in ways you really can’t and that don’t work, and then you feel bad about yourself for not Doing the Thing because you Should. And you can’t do it the way that actually works because it’s Weird.
There are all these little things that effect your behavior much to your detriment and like, unless I personally *think* about it, I’ll still avoid the “Weird” solution for various sad reasons.
TL;DR: Instead of attempting to disrupt my routine by getting up twice as often to refill my water, I bring two waters with me instead.
This post is directly responsible for me filling up my tea mug, my water glass, and grabbing a glass of juice whenever I go to the kitchen from the computer. Less getting up, yes, but drinking more liquids.
oh, wow! you know, i don’t think i noticed this post got notes but if it can help anyone cut through the unnecessary tangle of internalized ableist expectations I’m really glad!
I always bring two large cups of herbal tea to bed. (I’m more likely to finish drinking flavored substances than plain water.)
I find that, when you’re in a place where you can get up periodically, doing so is often a ‘spoon-farming’ exercise action and should be encouraged – but don’t make other healthy behaviors have to be contingent on it when that isn’t encouragement but self-punishment. The line is a fine one. Managing doing things in the ‘correct order’ can be an executive function sink – even when there’s some logical reason why it’s good to do them a certain way, (frex: brushing one’s teeth right before bed) there may be a function cost, so it could ultimately be necessary to do them differently (I have insomnia so if I start going to sleep I shouldn’t stop going to sleep). Try to keep your expectations close to your reality.
Autism is when you are the only one looking at the most interesting thing in the room.


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