#Rick Myers
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psychotic-star-girl · 5 months ago
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florabellalove · 7 months ago
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LET ME SPEAK MY TRUTH 🦢🫶🏼
sometimes I just want to read a reverse comfort fic about some big burly character absolutely breaking down, call it a saviour kink or whatever but there seems to be an absence in this world
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classichorrorblog · 2 years ago
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Halloween II (1981) - Directed by Rick Rosenthal
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pensfan4lfe2 · 2 months ago
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Vancouver Canucks || 2024-25 NHL Season
(Opening Night Roster vs CGY)
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literallyjustuhgirl · 3 months ago
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feel free to send req for these characters
supernatural — sam, dean, castiel, crowley.
twd — rick, daryl.
thomas hewitt (leatherface)
michael myers (rob zombie)
cooper howard/the ghoul (fallout)
no promises they'll get done because writers block cums more then I do
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justinspoliticalcorner · 5 months ago
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Zoë Schlanger at The Atlantic:
In the United States, as in most other countries, weather forecasts are a freely accessible government amenity. The National Weather Service issues alerts and predictions, warning of hurricanes and excessive heat and rainfall, all at the total cost to American taxpayers of roughly $4 per person per year. Anyone with a TV, smartphone, radio, or newspaper can know what tomorrow’s weather will look like, whether a hurricane is heading toward their town, or if a drought has been forecast for the next season. Even if they get that news from a privately owned app or TV station, much of the underlying weather data are courtesy of meteorologists working for the federal government.
Charging for popular services that were previously free isn’t generally a winning political strategy. But hard-right policy makers appear poised to try to do just that should Republicans gain power in the next term. Project 2025—a nearly 900-page book of policy proposals published by the conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation—states that an incoming administration should all but dissolve the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, under which the National Weather Service operates. Donald Trump has attempted to distance himself from Project 2025, but given that it was largely written by veterans of his first administration, the document is widely seen as a blueprint for a second Trump term.
NOAA “should be dismantled and many of its functions eliminated, sent to other agencies, privatized, or placed under the control of states and territories,” Project 2025 reads. The proposals roughly amount to two main avenues of attack. First, it suggests that the NWS should eliminate its public-facing forecasts, focus on data gathering, and otherwise “fully commercialize its forecasting operations,” which the authors of the plan imply will improve, not limit, forecasts for all Americans. Then, NOAA’s scientific-research arm, which studies things such as Arctic-ice dynamics and how greenhouse gases behave (and which the document calls “the source of much of NOAA’s climate alarmism”), should be aggressively shrunk. “The preponderance of its climate-change research should be disbanded,” the document says. It further notes that scientific agencies such as NOAA are “vulnerable to obstructionism of an Administration’s aims,” so appointees should be screened to ensure that their views are “wholly in sync” with the president’s. The U.S. is, without question, experiencing a summer of brutal weather. In just the past week, a record-breaking hurricane brought major flooding and power outages to Texas amid an extreme-heat advisory. More than a dozen tornadoes ripped through multiple states. Catastrophic flash flooding barreled through wildfire burn scars in New Mexico. Large parts of the West roasted in life-threatening temperatures. Facing any of this without the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration would be mayhem. And future years are likely to be worse.
The NWS serves as a crucial point of contact in a weather crisis, alerting the public when forecasts turn dangerous and advising emergency managers on the best plan of action. So far in 2024, the NWS has issued some 13,000 severe-thunderstorm warnings, 2,000 tornado warnings, and 1,800 flash-flood warnings, plus almost 3,000 river-flood warnings, according to JoAnn Becker, a meteorologist and the president of the union that represents NWS employees. NOAA is also home to the National Hurricane Center, which tracks storms, and the Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, whose pilots fly “hurricane hunter” planes directly into cyclones to measure their wind speed and hone the agency’s predictions. NOAA even predicts space weather. Just this past May, it forecast a severe geomagnetic storm with the potential to threaten power grids and satellites. (The most consequential outages never came to pass, but the solar storm did throw off farmers’ GPS-guided tractors for a while.) Privatizing the weather is not a new conservative aim. Nearly two decades ago, when the National Weather Service updated its website to be more user-friendly, Barry Myers, then executive vice president of AccuWeather, complained to the press that “we work very hard every day competing with other companies, and we also have to compete with the government.” In 2005, after meeting with a representative from AccuWeather, then-Senator Rick Santorum introduced a bill calling for the NWS to cease competition with the private sector, and reserve its forecasts for commercial providers. The bill never made it out of committee. But in 2017, Trump picked Myers to lead NOAA. (Myers withdrew his nomination after waiting two years for Senate confirmation.)
Funding for many of NOAA’s programs could plummet in 2025, and the agency already suffers from occasional telecommunications breakdowns, including a recent alert-system outage amid flooding in the Midwest. It is also subject to political pressures: In 2019, the agency backed then-President Trump’s false claim (accompanied by a seemingly Sharpie-altered map) that Hurricane Dorian was headed for Alabama. Private companies might be better funded and, theoretically, less subject to political whims. They can also use supercomputing power to hone NOAA’s data into hyperlocal predictions, perhaps for an area as small as a football stadium. Some, including AccuWeather, use their own proprietary algorithms to interpret NWS data and produce forecasts that they claim have superior accuracy. (Remember, though: Without NWS data, none of this would happen.)
[...] The NWS also has perks that a private system would be hard-pressed to replicate, including a partnership with the World Meteorological Organization, which allows the U.S. access to a suite of other countries’ weather models. International collaboration proved crucial in 2012, when Hurricane Sandy was still churning in the Atlantic Ocean. Initially, the American model predicted, incorrectly, that the storm would turn away from the East Coast. But the European model accurately forecast a collision course, which bought emergency managers in the U.S. crucial time to prepare before Sandy made ferocious landfall in New Jersey.
Project 2025 could have an impact on how accurate and precise weather forecasts are delivered, since NOAA and NWS could be significantly altered.
This is one of many reasons why we must vote Blue up and down the line.
See Also:
Daily Kos: Project 2025 will affect every part of life. Even weather updates
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brokehorrorfan · 2 months ago
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Tinsley Transfers has released a Halloween II Michael Myers mask for $79.99. The premium latex replica is designed by Oscar-winning makeup effects artist Christien Tinsley (Terrifier 3, The Passion of the Christ).
instagram
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blueeyedbesson · 7 months ago
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that was such an intense and stressful game and although they didn't win, i'm still unbelievably proud of how vancouver played the entire season
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vampiyurs · 1 year ago
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whentheshotpretty · 4 months ago
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Halloween II (1981)
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thecheshirepath · 2 months ago
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Happy 43rd Anniversary Halloween II 🎃🔪💀
Released OTD October 30, 1981 🎬
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apairofteeth · 6 months ago
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My dadcore bday card Vs. My momcore (late) bday card
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danimyerstalks · 1 year ago
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These are the images I'm using for my phone's background during October. Got them from a textless movie poster website that has slowly become more defunct over time. Obviously these are the posters for Halloween (1978) and Halloween II (1981) and they're some of my favorite movie posters.
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schlock-luster-video · 1 year ago
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On September 25, 2002, Halloween II was released on DVD in Italy.
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musicandi · 2 years ago
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That one time Percy rickrolled everyone in an interview
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lovinqbella · 2 months ago
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MOOT
If yall like any of the characters or shows or movies in tags MARRY ME? (And moot me ;p)
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