hrefnatheravenqueen:

hrefnatheravenqueen:

hrefnatheravenqueen:

bowiebarbie:

inediblemadness:

tinyhousedarling:

musingsofanawkwardblackgirl:

wes-eskimo:

Venus, bussin that pussy open since the renaissance

BUST IT WIDE OPEN GIRL

Let us appreciate that this is made of marble! I couldn’t make that out of clay.

I see tiny lil dicks all over the place but this is the first time I have ever seen a statue figure with a vagina. I need more of this in my life

i have NEVER seen a statue with an actual vagina. the most i’ve seen is your standard nude woman statue with her legs clamped shut. this is boss.

That’s the vulva, not the vagina, though. Also this is not from the renaissance.

I’m reblogging this again because art – not Renaissance art but still art.

NO WAIT I’LL REBLOG THIS AGAIN BECAUSE PEOPLE ALWAYS FORGET TO CREDIT THE ARTIST – WHO’S VERY MUCH ALIVE, AND SHE LIVES IN CALIFORNIA.
This piece isn’t depicting VENUS by the way, it’s depicting a contortionist, and this is a nude study. The piece is simply called “Swan”.
The artist is Jami Young. She’s proud to fly the colours of the Pride flag on her website alongside her own art.
Her website is at http://www.jyoung-studio.com .

Her Etsy page is at https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/VolupticArt . 

The little paper airplane at the bottom of posts, for sharing, isn’t there on your posts anymore. Is that something you guys did, or is it more tumblr fuckery? I wanted to send my friend the post about fat blogs getting flagged, but no share button.

thisisthinprivilege:

We didn’t do anything except post critically about the new filter. I haven’t noticed any flagged images (we have very few images, most of the posts are text). I’m assuming they simply lied in the explanation of the new filter when they said they weren’t going to censor text.

This is Thin Privilege has been in the bad graces of @staff for a long time. We were ghost-noted in, oh gosh, 2009 or so? Maybe 2011? I forget. So I’m assuming the staff that fucked with us then is using the new filter as an excuse to fuck with us even more.

This is troubling. Thanks for the head’s up. Followers, I’d really appreciate it if you point out anything else amiss about the TiTP experience.

-ArteToLife

It hasn’t been showing up for at least a year (on mobile at any rate), and I wondered what was up with that before. Not sure exactly how long it’s been gone, but that’s definitely not a new thing.

We thought the Incas couldn’t write. These knots change everything

stormclouds-chainmail:

allthingslinguistic:

learninglinguist:

The Incas may not have bequeathed any written records, but they did have colourful knotted cords. Each of these devices was called a khipu (pronounced key-poo). We know these intricate cords to be an abacus-like system for recording numbers. However, there have also been teasing hints that they might encode long-lost stories, myths and songs too.  

In a century of study, no one has managed to make these knots talk. But recent breakthroughs have begun to unpick this tangled mystery of the Andes, revealing the first signs of phonetic symbolism within the strands. Now two anthropologists are closing in on the Inca equivalent of the Rosetta stone. That could finally crack the code and transform our understanding of a civilisation whose history has so far been told only through the eyes of the Europeans who sought to eviscerate it.

I’ve been loosely following developments in research about khipus since reading about them in an obscure paragraph in the back of my high school history textbook and every time I read more about them, it’s more and more exciting. 

The full article is fascinating. Here’s another excerpt: 

Earlier this year, Hyland even managed to read a little of the khipus. When deciphering anything, one of the most important steps is to work out what information might be repeated in different places, she says. Because the Collata khipus were thought to be letters, they probably encoded senders and recipients. That is where Hyland started. She knew from the villagers that the primary cord of one of the khipus contained ribbons representing the insignia of one of two clan leaders.

She took a gamble and assumed that the ribbons referred to a person known as Alluka, pronounced “Ay-ew-ka”. She also guessed that the writer of this letter might have signed their name at the end, meaning that the last three pendant cords could well represent the syllables “ay”, “ew” and “ka”.

Assuming that was true, she looked for cords on the second khipu that had the same colour and were tied with the same knot as the ones she had tentatively identified on the first khipu. It turned out that the first two of the last three cords matched, which gave “A-ka”. The last was unknown. It was a golden-brown fibre made from the hair of a vicuna, an alpaca-like animal. Hyland realised that the term for this hue in the local Quechua language is “paru”. And trying this alongside the other syllables gave, with a little wiggle room, “Yakapar”. That, it turned out, was the name of another of the lineages involved in the revolt that these khipus recorded.

“We know from the written testimony that one of the khipus was made by a member of the Yakapar clan and sent to Collata, and we think this is it,” she says. Hyland claims that the Collata khipus show that the cords really do hold narratives.

Yet even if she is right, it is possible these later khipus were influenced by contact with Spanish writing. “My feeling is that the phoneticisation, if it’s there, is a reinvention of khipus,” says Urton. Equally, the Collata khipus might be a regional variation. Possibly even a one-off.

Hyland is the first to admit that we don’t understand the link between these khipus and those dating from before the Spanish arrived. That doesn’t make them any less interesting though. “Even if these later khipus were influenced by the alphabet, I still think it’s mind-blowing that these people developed this tactile system of writing,” she says.

She will spend the next two years doing more fieldwork in Peru, attempting to decipher the Collata khipus and looking for similar examples elsewhere.

Read the whole thing

I first learnt about khipus in the 1980s. They’re used as a written record in the kids series The Mysterious Cities Of Gold which is from the early to mid eighties.

We thought the Incas couldn’t write. These knots change everything

thealmightyprincess:

literally-a-piece-of-trash:

mazarin221b:

berlynn-wohl:

heredayembracesnight:

knitmeapony:

Millennials should really rediscover MASH en masse. It’s dead on aesthetic for this generation.

Please rediscover M*A*S*H fellow millennials. It’s wonderful.

image
image
image
image

You’ve never experienced sarcasm and rebellion against the System like Hawkeye and Trapper and BJ’s sarcasm and rebellion against the System.

Do yourselves a favour and go watch this show

Home Office unlawfully removed child asylum seeker from UK, High Court rules

aboriginalnewswire:

Home Office unlawfully removed child asylum seeker from UK, High Court rules

The Home Office unlawfully removed a child asylum seeker from the UK and has been ordered to arrange his return in a landmark High Court ruling. An Afghan boy, who cannot be named and has been described by his lawyers as “exceptionally vulnerable”, was removed to Germany in April 2017 despite the fact he was underage and had been living with his uncle and other relatives.

Source: Home Office…

View On WordPress

broliloquy:

kelssiel:

automaticfave:

redactedkondraki:

automaticfave:

someone who’s chaotic good (me) should never be allowed to run a bakery by themself (my job)

Why

well I work for a bakery inside a grocery store and we end up composting a Lot of stuff because it’s a commercial chain and they don’t care because capitalism

so every night an hour before closing, I look thru all the stuff to see what expires the next day, and I make it “free samples”

then I hang around by the cookie table and the donut case and whenever kids come around talking to their friends abt “if they don’t buy this, they can afford that,” “do we have enough money to buy donuts?” etc, I chime in and I’m like….

hey…free samples over there take as many as u want…..take the whole thing….just eat them before u leave the store…..go…run…eat pastries….be free

you are exactly the kind of person i wanna see running a bakery

This is basically the default practice for anyone not living and working in corporate dystopia. If you cannot use or sell something, it’s worthless to you. If something is worthless to you but someone else has a use for it, you let them take it away; you get the worthless thing disposed of for free, which effectively is the best value you’re ever going to get out of the otherwise worthless thing, and you also get to network with a potential contact or just generate a bit of goodwill.

You see it all the time in small business. If a construction company has a bunch of useless bits of warped lumber cut at odd lengths, they’re not going to bother disposing of it themselves if someone wants it for firewood. You got your own truck? Great, it’s yours, saves us the gas and labour costs of hauling it away.

Food destruction is one of the worst symptoms of a broken, inefficient, oligarchic economy. It’s actually wasting labour (and therefore money) to destroy something that is worth no money to its owner, on the presumption that someone, somewhere, will be desperate enough in its absence to buy something else. It’s dubious policy at best even from a ruthlessly pragmatic standpoint, and from all other perspectives it’s basically nihilistic insanity.