#burnett river
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whats-in-a-sentence · 1 year ago
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Having once cleared the land of whites, the Butchulla of the coast, the Gubbi Gubbi of the upper Mary and the Wakka Wakka of the Burnett stubbornly resisted their return.
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"Killing for Country: A Family History" - David Marr
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emaadsidiki · 24 days ago
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Waterfront Wonders 🏙️
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laughteristhebestmedivine · 5 months ago
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blueiscoool · 1 year ago
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Meet Methuselah, The Worlds Oldest Fish in Captivity
The lungfish arrived in San Francisco on a steamship along with 230 other fish. Today, she’s the only living aquatic animal from that vessel.
She’s super-gentle, and doesn’t get overly excited. She enjoys eating earthworms, fruits and vegetables, and slowly moving around her tank. Her favorite food – at least for what is in season now – is a fig.
If Methuselah sounds like a grand old dame, it’s because she is: she is the oldest living fish in captivity, aged somewhere upwards of 92 and potentially as high as 101 years. She arrived on a steamship from Australia along with 230 other fish to the Steinhart aquarium in San Francisco in 1938 as a young, small fish. And Methuselah’s story unfolded in a typical way, for a fish in an aquarium: she grew. Humans came to look at her. She peered back through glass at humans.
But 1938 was a different time: bread cost nine cents a loaf. A racehorse named Seabiscuit was winning races. Germany was persecuting Jews, foretelling a coming conflict in Europe. Then there is Methuselah, who is no ordinary fish. She’s the only fish still living from the steamship. And most important, she’s a lungfish – a species more closely related to humans or cows than to ray-finned fish like salmon or cod – which can breathe air using a single lung when streams become stagnant, or when water quality changes. Lungfish are also believed to be an example of the original creatures that crawled out of water and moved to land in evolutionary history. The species was discovered in 1870 – and the scientist who first described the fish originally thought it was an amphibian.
Lungfish like Methuselah have long-held secrets, but scientists have only recently attempted to understand their evolution and life history. For one thing, the fish’s genome is the largest of any animal, containing 43bn base pairs – roughly 14 times the number in the human genome. The previous record holder, the Mexican axolotl, has a genome made up of 32bn base pairs.
“Genetics is really quite straightforward for normal fish – but for lungfish they’re so unique and so different that all of those techniques didn’t or don’t work,” said David T Roberts, a senior scientist with Seqwater, the statutory authority of the government of Queensland in Australia, where the fish still live in a handful of rivers in the wild. “It’s always pushed the envelope on uncovering some of its secrets to be able to manage and conserve it – and age is a really important one.”
A fish’s age is critical to know because it tells scientists information like growth rates, maturity, longevity and how long they breed – which is vital fundamental knowledge to manage a protected species.
Lungfish – a vulnerable species – have proved especially challenging to date because they grow a lot at the beginning of their lives, but then grow extremely slowly (yet continuously) for the remainder of their lives. Ear bones that are harvested after most fish’s death can be counted like tree rings, but lungfish, always the outlier, don’t have the same composition to their ear bones.
So scientists started to use radiocarbon to date the fish – relying on a technique that basically imprints living things with a carbon signature resulting from the atomic bomb tests back in the 1950s. But that doesn’t work well in animals born before 1950, when the carbon signature changed.
Now, scientists are using DNA tools that look at methylation – the way that DNA is turned on or off – to date the fish. For younger fish, it can offer an exact number, but for older fish it gives a range of dates.
It wasn’t the first time this technique had been used. Last year, scientists estimated a lungfish named Granddad that lived at the Shedd aquarium in Chicago to be 109 years old (give or take six years) at the time of its death, confirming that lungfish can live well over 100 years. The analysis also revealed that Granddad started its life in the Burnett River in Queensland, Australia, the location of the species’ original discovery in 1870.
In the study on Methuselah, aquarium workers took samples the size of a peppercorn from the lungfish in captivity and extracted the DNA from that in order to estimate their age for the first time ever. They found Methuselah to be at least 92 years old. The scientists plan to release their findings of 30 other lungfish later this year, as part of a library of living lungfish across the world.
“Knowing how long they potentially live and understanding more about how long they could reproduce could drive how we’re caring for habitat to help keep that species afloat in the wild,” says Brenda Melton, director of animal care and welfare at the Steinhart aquarium. “It just really opens the doors for a lot of other conversations and questions that might be able to be asked about how we can better care for them in the wild and preserve habitat.”
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Roberts is inspired to continue to conserve the fish – after all, lungfish were around before dinosaurs became extinct, and their cousins possibly split off into animals with legs and then crawled on to land and then became humans, he says. “They’re a cousin to all land animals, basically.”
Methuselah’s age is now known, but she still holds other mysteries – even her biological sex. The handlers use she/her pronouns, but they actually don’t know if Methuselah is a male or female. Some fish have gender differences in size or shape – but not lungfish. And behaviorally, they suspect she’s a female, but they will not be able to find out for sure until after she dies.
Another question is if the fish is feeling old – and how do fish change when they’re geriatric? Melton says it varies widely. Most fish live only a few years – so it’s rare to see really old fish in the wild. But there are some hints: some spinal changes, like a curved back, or weight loss, cloudy eyes or looking a little gray in the scales.
Two of the other fish in the new study were estimated to be 50 and 54 years old – and Melton says they look a little more similar in coloration, while Methuselah has gotten a little lighter in color over the years. “We don’t know that that’s actually tied to her age, but it’s the only thing that we have seen physically that looks different for this fish.”
Melton says that just the existence of something that has lived for so long leaves her in awe. She wonders what Methuselah thinks of all her companions and living situations over the many years she’s spent at the aquarium – as the fish has the longest institutional memory of anything in the building.
“It’s incredible to me that after all of these years of having her in our care,” she says, “we’re still learning and we still have the ability to learn from animals in ways that we can’t even conceive yet.”
By Katharine Gammon.
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only70sgifs · 1 year ago
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Joan Rivers on The Carol Burnett Show - 1970
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This is where the soul of man never dies. - Sam Phillips on Howlin’ Wolf.
Ike Turner brought The Wolf to Sam Phillips’ attention in the early 50’s. Seems Ike and Sam never tired of changing the music world-and never getting the credit they deserved.
Where to begin?
Well, the Sun Records Howlin’ Wolf recordings deserve your attention right now. As in, scoot, go get ‘em.
You’re still here?
Fine.
Start with this one. Pretty sure it’s Willie Johnson on guitar; Wolf didn’t meet Hubert Sumlin until he went to Chicago to record for Phil and Leonard Chess.
Our resident Memphis Music Maven @golftangohotel has forgotten more of these stories than I’ll ever know. Hopefully, he will chime in.
The music of Chester Arthur Burnett (Howlin’ Wolf) is the fountainhead of the mighty river that is American Music. It’s powerful stuff, not for the timid, definitely too strong for the members of Soy Nation.
This blog celebrates the Mighty River that is American Music every day, not just during Black History Month. So, please do yourself a favor and celebrate with me.
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thorraborinn · 10 months ago
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hello there! today i came across a claim that sort of baffled me. someone said that they believed the historical norse heathens viewed their own myths literally. i was under the impression that the vast majority of sources we have are christian sources, so it seems pretty hard to back that up. is there any actual basis for this claim? thanks in advance for your time!
Sorry for the delay, I've been real busy lately and haven't been home much. Even after making you wait I'm still going to give a copout answer.
I think the most basic actual answer is that it's doubtful that someone has a strong basis to make that claim, and the same would probably go for someone claiming they didn't take things literally. I think we just don't know, and most likely, it was mixed-up bits of both literal and non-literal belief, and which parts were literal and which parts weren't varied from person to person. We have no reason so suppose that there was any compulsion to believe things in any particular way.
About Christians being the interlocutors of a lot of mythology, this is really a whole separate question. On one hand there's the question of whether they took their myths literally, and on the other is entirely different question about whether or not we can know what those myths were. Source criticism in Norse mythology is a pretty complicated topic but the academic consensus is definitely that there are things we can know for sure about Norse myth, and a lot more that we can make arguments for. For instance the myth of Thor fishing for Miðgarðsormr is attested many times, not only by Snorri but by pagan skálds and in art. Myths of the Pagan North by Christopher Abram is a good work about source criticism in Norse mythology.
Though this raises another point, because the myth of Thor fishing is not always the same. Just like how we have a myth of Thor's hammer being made by dwarves, and a reference to a different myth where it came out of the sea. Most likely, medieval Norse people were encountering contradictory information in different performances of myth all the time. So while that leaves room for at least some literal belief, it couldn't be a rigid, all-encompassing systematic treatment of all myth as literal. We have good reason to believe they changed myths on purpose and that it wasn't just memory errors.
I know you're really asking whether this one person has any grounds for their statement, and I've already answered that I don't think they do. But this is an interesting thought so I'm going to keep poking at it. I'm not sure that I'm really prepared to discuss this properly, but my feeling is that this is somehow the wrong question. I don't know how to explain this with reference to myth, so I'm going to make a digression, and hope that you get the vibe of what I'm getting at by analogy. Edward Burnett Tylor (1832–1917) described animism in terms of beliefs, "belief in spiritual beings," i.e. a belief that everything (or at least many things) has a soul or spirit. But this is entirely contradicted by later anthropology. Here's an except from Pantheologies by Mary Jane Rubenstein, p. 93:
their animacy is not a matter of belief but rather of relation; to affirm that this tree, that river, or the-bear-looking-at-me is a person is to affirm its capacity to interact with me—and mine with it. As Tim Ingold phrases the matter, “we are dealing here not with a way of believing about the world, but with a condition of living in it.”
In other words, "belief" doesn't even really play into it, whether or not you "believe" in the bear staring you down is nonsensical, and if you can be in relation with a tree then the same goes for that relationality; "believing" in it is totally irrelevant or at least secondary. Myths are of course very different and we can't do a direct comparison here, but I have a feeling that the discussion of literal versus nonliteral would be just as secondary to whatever kind of value the myths had.
One last thing I want to point out is that they obviously had the capacity to interpret things through allegory and metaphor because they did that frequently. This is most obvious in dream interpretations in the sagas. Those dreams usually convey true, prophetic information, but it has to be interpreted by wise people who are skilled at symbolic interpretation. I they ever did this with myths, I'm not aware of any trace they left of that, but we can at least be sure that there was nothing about the medieval Norse mind that confined it to literalism.
For multiple reasons this is not an actual answer but it's basically obligatory to mention that some sagas, especially legendary or chivalric sagas, were referred to in Old Norse as lygisögur, literally 'lie-sagas' (though not pejoratively and probably best translated just as 'fictional sagas'). We know this mostly because Sverrir Sigurðsson was a big fan of lygisögur. But this comes from way too late a date to be useful for your question.
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ofallingstar · 1 year ago
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List of books I read in 2023
Charlotte's Web by E.B. White
Slouching Towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion
The Maidens by Alex Michaelides
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab
The Broken Girls by Simone St. James
Women Talking by Miriam Toews
L'homme semence by Violette Ailhaud
Into the Darkest Corner by Elizabeth Haynes
A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
Dark Places by Gillian Flynn
On Magic & The Occult by W.B. Yeats
Faithful Place by Tana French
The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry
Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe
Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 by Seamus Heaney
The Love Object by Edna O'Brien
Don Quijote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
Night by Elie Wiesel
In Between the Sheets by Ian McEwan
The Lost Days by Rob Reger & Jessica Gruner
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
Parallax by Sinéad Morrissey
The Woman in the Strongbox by Maureen O'Hagan
Diaries, 1910-1923 by Franz Kafka
The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah
Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates
The Family Upstairs by Lisa Jewell
Walking to Martha's Vineyard by Franz Wright
A Tale for the Time Being Ruth Ozeki
Mouthful of Forevers by Clementine von Radics
Wasteland by Francesca Lia Block
The Fact of a Body: A Murder and a Memoir by Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich
Find Me by André Aciman
The Awakening by Kate Chopin
The Grace Year by Kim Ligget
The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson
And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie
A Stolen Life by Jaycee Dugard
Coraline by Neil Gaiman
The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole
Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King
My Best Friend's Exorcism by Grady Hendrix
Psycho by Robert Bloch
Classic Tales Of Vampires And Shapeshifters by Tig Thomas
Love Devours: Tales of Monstrous Adoration by Sarah Diemer
Through the Woods by Emily Carroll
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Putney by Sofka Zinovieff
The Woman in Me by Britney Spears
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire
Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare
The Maid by Nita Prose
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Deep by Rivers Solomon
You can follow me or add me as a friend on Goodreads.
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pastlivesandpurplepuppets · 1 month ago
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Don could be utterly charming, the life of any party. He was handsome, bronzed up well when Oregon’s sun allowed, and stayed lean and taut swimming early morning laps. In some ways, he was straight out of Hollywood. Once, when Sharon was fishing with him on the Deschutes River, he saw something to her side, told her, “Don’t move,” pulled out a pistol, and shot a rattlesnake. He sang some great Sinatra, flirted shamelessly with younger women, and preferred what he called “forties girls”—thin waists, shapely legs, high heels. He was never short on confidence—at least outwardly. It wasn’t uncommon for him to tell people, “I was the best-looking guy in Easy Company.” And he had no patience for liberal politicians. Malarkey was a slim Archie Bunker. Each evening Irene delivered his dinner on a tray as if she were his own personal waitress, and sometimes a second dinner for their neighbor Ralph, who often joined him. He favored shows that made him laugh, The Three Stooges, Carol Burnett, The Honeymooners, and, yes, All in the Family after it debuted in 1971. He also watched the news.
~ Bob Welch
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writerscafehub · 7 months ago
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𝐖𝐑𝐈𝐓𝐄𝐑❜𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐅𝐄 𝐉𝐔𝐍𝐄 𝐌𝐀𝐒𝐓𝐄𝐑𝐋𝐈𝐒𝐓
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( • ༝•)
c /づ づ 𝐇𝐄𝐑𝐄 𝐀𝐑𝐄 all the works made by the very talented members of the writer's café server in the month of JUNE. we ask, and highly encourage, that you reblog them in support. ♡
ALL WORKS ARE FOR THOSE 18+ ONLY.
𖥔 indicates smut
✶ indicates dark elements
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By ☁︎☽ Cocoa ☁︎☽ @cocoamoonmalfoy @darksideofthecocoamoon
𝐓𝐀𝐊𝐄 𝐌𝐄 𝐇𝐎𝐌𝐄 | Novacane!Michelle Jones x black!Reader
You say space will make it better and time will make it heal.  I won't be lost forever and soon I wouldn't feel.  Like I'm haunted, woah, falling
𝐀𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐀𝐍𝐓𝐇𝐈𝐍𝐄 | Life’s Perfect Ache!Paul Atreides x Pharao Hekau (OFC)
Please call me your baby, baby, baby.  Look how long that you have kept me waiting.  I'm all in, look at all that I have given.  Ooh, I knew your love before I kissed you.  And now you’ve only made me miss you.  Come get me, come love me, baby, come love me.
𝐀𝐑𝐄 𝐘𝐎𝐔 𝐖𝐈𝐓𝐇 𝐌𝐄 | Paul Atreides x black!Reader
Are you with me?  Are you in or are you out?
𝐏𝐎𝐒𝐒𝐄𝐒𝐒𝐈𝐕𝐄 𝐄𝐈𝐕𝐎𝐑 | Eivor Varinsdóttir x black!reader
you’re out on a date with Eivor and a guy sends you a drink thinking yall are just gal pals
𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓𝐒 𝐋𝐈𝐊𝐄 𝐓𝐇𝐈𝐒 | Michelle Jones x Black Cat!Reader
MJ only knows you as Black Cat. When she doesn't hear from you for weeks and hears from Peter that he’s been with Black Cat a lot lately, she can only assume….
By ★ Jen ★ @jen-with-a-pen
𖥔 𝐂𝐎𝐂𝐎𝐎𝐍 | Steve Rogers x Bucky Barnes
A chance encounter one night at a house party sparks the hottest hookup Bucky and Steve ever have.
By ☆ Stella ☆ @a-lumos-in-the-nox
𝐌𝐄𝐄𝐓 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐁𝐀𝐑𝐈𝐒𝐓𝐀
✶𝐇𝐀𝐑𝐏𝐘 & 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐋𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐄 | Fred Weasley x black!fem reader
Villainous duo doing bad shit.
𖥔𝐌𝐀𝐌𝐀 𝐆𝐄𝐍𝐄’𝐒 𝐁𝐈𝐑𝐓𝐇𝐃𝐀𝐘 | Neville Longbottom x black!female OC
The Morgan's take their kids to a family reunion in Louisiana to celebrate Mama Gene's Birthday, and Ruby and Neville have some fun themselves.
By 𓆺 Witch Aunt 𓆺 @moonlight-prose
𝐌𝐄𝐄𝐓 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐁𝐀𝐑𝐈𝐒𝐓𝐀
By ✬ Astro ✬ @eulalielatibule
𝐄𝐋𝐎𝐈𝐒𝐄 𝐆𝐄𝐎𝐑𝐆𝐈𝐀𝐍𝐀 𝐌𝐎𝐍𝐓𝐆𝐎𝐌𝐄𝐑𝐘 
Original Character Bio
By ⎈ Navy ⎈ @navybrat817
✶𝐇𝐎𝐋𝐃 𝐘𝐎𝐔 𝐓𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓: 𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐓 𝐓𝐖𝐎 | Club Owner!Bucky Barnes x Female Reader
Fic Summary: The owner of The 107th wants you to be his girl whether you like it or not.
Chapter Summary: You're anxious before your date.
𝐅𝐀𝐋𝐋 𝐅𝐎𝐑 𝐌𝐄 | Bucky Barnes x Female Reader
Bucky doesn't think he's good enough for you, but still wishes he could be your guy.
✶𝐇𝐎𝐋𝐃 𝐘𝐎𝐔 𝐓𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓: 𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐓 𝐓𝐇𝐑𝐄𝐄 | Club Owner!Bucky Barnes x Female Reader
Fic Summary: The owner of The 107th wants you to be his girl whether you like it or not.
Chapter Summary: The date is just beginning, but you're not sure if you can keep it together.
By ❥ Courtney ❥ @chasingmidnights
𖥔𝐀𝐋𝐋 𝐒𝐔𝐌𝐌𝐄𝐑 𝐋𝐎𝐍𝐆 | camp owner!Max Burnett x secretary!reader
Max comes to the camp to see how things are going, when he meets you, one of the newest secretaries to join the staff. Max is immediately smitten with you and wants to make you his. 
By ✾ Annie ✾ @nekoannie-chan
𝐏𝐀𝐈𝐍 | Steve Rogers x reader
Steve broke your heart
By ✧Bella✧ @madwomansapologist
𝐀𝐔𝐓𝐔𝐌𝐍 𝐓𝐇𝐔𝐍𝐃𝐄𝐑𝐒𝐓𝐎𝐑𝐌 - 𝐒𝐄𝐑𝐈𝐄𝐒 | Thranduil x female!reader
Thranduil thought the recent attack of spiders on a periphery village was the only thing deserving of his attention. If he could've imagined what he would found there, who he would found there, the Elvenking would wait a millenia in front of that river so he could see her sooner. Or: how Gandalf managed to keep a secret for 14 months.
By ఌ Bam Bam ఌ @buzzkillers
✶𝐅𝐀𝐁𝐋𝐄𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐃 𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐀𝐁𝐋𝐄𝐒 𝐁𝐋𝐔𝐑𝐁 | Namor x fem!reader
namor comes to the call
By 𓆸 Rika 𓆸 @fushic0re
𖥔𝐃𝐀𝐓𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐑𝐎𝐂𝐊𝐒𝐓𝐀𝐑!𝐂𝐇𝐎𝐒𝐎 | Choso Kamo x fem!reader
what it is like to date the choso kamo.
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© all works belong to the respective writers of the writers café server.
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darkmaga-returns · 2 months ago
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Climate Lockdowns Have Arrived: Spain introduces ‘paid climate leave’ so workers ‘can avoid travelling during weather emergencies’ – ‘The worker must refrain from going to work…in accordance with the climate emergency’
UK Guardian: Spain introduces paid climate leave after deadly floods - Government approves up to four days of paid leave so workers can avoid travelling during weather emergencies - Spain’s leftwing government has approved “paid climate leave” of up to four days to allow workers to avoid travelling during weather emergencies, a month after floods killed at least 224 people. ... 
The new measure aims to “regulate in accordance with the climate emergency” so that “no worker must run risks”, labour minister Yolanda Díaz told public broadcaster RTVE. If emergency authorities raise the alarm about a risk, “the worker must refrain from going to work”, said Díaz. Employees can resort to a reduced working day beyond the four-day period, a mechanism that already exists for emergencies, the government said. The legislation was inspired by similar laws in Canada, RTVE reported. “In the face of climate denialism from the right, the Spanish government is committed to green policies,” Díaz said, according to a report in El País. # Reality Check: Flooding Facts Drowned by Climate Hysteria: The BBC Ignores Spain’s Weather HistoryFlooding Facts Drowned by Climate Hysteria: The BBC Ignores Spain’s Weather History By Anthony Watts and H. Sterling Burnett The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) article, titled “Scientists sure warming world made Spain’s storm more intense,” ties recent flash flooding in Spain to climate change. This is false. Data refutes claims that flooding has gotten worse […]
SPAIN – Floods! Total failure of govt is being disguised as ‘climate change’ – Spain has actively removed dams to ‘restore river ecosystems & enhance biodiversity’ — As dictated by the UN & WEF
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whats-in-a-sentence · 1 year ago
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Having once cleared the land of whites, the Butchulla of the coast, the Gubbi Gubbi of the upper Mary and the Wakka Wakka of the Burnett stubbornly resisted their return.
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"Killing for Country: A Family History" - David Marr
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lebaronlordking · 6 months ago
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Saturday Afternoon Reggae Show DJ LeBaron Lord King August 17, 2024 [email protected]
#SaturdayAfternoonReggaeShow
4:00 PM Yabby U - Jah Over I 4:05 PM Lee Perry - Bird in Hand 4:10 PM Chronixx - Dela Move 4:13 PM Lila Iké - Dinero 4:16 PM Iotosh - Fill My Cup 4:20 PM David Conscious - Mighty Men 4:24 PM Dezarie - Gone Down 4:28 PM Queen Ifrica - A.E.I.O.U (NOTHING) 4:31 PM Lutan Fyah - Bla Bla Bla 4:38 PM Mike Brooks - River Nile 4:42 PM Buju Banton - Steppa 4:45 PM Alton Ellis - Girl I've Got a Date 4:48 PM Phillip Fraser & King Tubby - John Saw Them Coming 4:54 PM The Wailers - 400 Years 4:57 PM Izoardi - Jungle 5:00 PM Kabaka Pyramid - Red Gold and Green 5:03 PM Burna Boy - Last Last 5:06 PM Kabaka Pyramid - Well Done 5:10 PM Yendry - You 5:13 PM Chezidek - It's Time 5:17 PM J Boog - Blaze It for Days 5:21 PM JStar - Babylon Children 5:25 PM Bitty McLean - In and Out of Love 5:31 PM Jah Cure - Marijuana 5:35 PM Bobo Nattywell - Longtime 5:39 PM Mutabaruka - The Monkey - Mento Mix 5:42 PM YG Marley - Praise Jah in The Moonlight 5:47 PM Culture Brown - Strong and Bless 5:47 PM Warrior King - People of This World 5:50 PM The Wailers - Put It On 5:54 PM Watty Congo Burnett - One Hot Night 6:00 PM Steel Pulse - Prodigal Son 6:03 PM Capleton - That Day Will Come 6:07 PM Gappy Ranks - Maad Sick 6:12 PM Earl 16 - Vampires 6:15 PM Eesah - Tell No Lie 6:18 PM Tafari - All of My Love 6:21 PM Don Carlos - From Creation 6:26 PM Culture - Black Man Get Your Culture 6:28 PM Max Romeo - Chase the Devil 6:31 PM Burning Spear - Hail H.I.M. 6:36 PM Damian Marley - My Sweet Lord 6:40 PM Mikey Dread - Roots and Culture 6:41 PM Elton Preto - Roots and Culture 6:45 PM Fe Me Time All Stars - Wicked Have To Feel It 6:48 PM Stoneface Priest - After Pride Comes Fall 6:52 PM Lila Iké - Good & Great 6:53 PM Alborosie - Give It to Them
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rladpeps · 1 month ago
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all the books I read in 2024
 “Atlas Shrugged” by Ayn Rand
“The Do-Over” by Lynn Painter
 “Ash House” by Angharad Walker
“The Prince and the Pauper” by Mark Twain
 “Jane Against the World: Roe V. Wade and the Fight for Reproductive Rights” by Karen Blumenthal - ⭐️
 “The Ghosts of Rose Hill” by R. M. Romeo
“Scattered Showers: Nine Beautiful Short Stories” by Rainbow Rowell - ❤️
 “The Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka - ❤️
 “Salt to the Sea” by Ruta Sepetys - ⭐️
 “The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power” by Deirdre Mask - ⭐️
 “The Ghost of Midnight Lake” by Lucy Strange
 “Again, But Better: A Novel” by Christine Riccio
 “Emma” by Jane Austen - ❤️
 “The Shame” by Makenna Goodman - ❤️
 “Can We Talk About Israel? A Guide for the Curious, Confused, and Conflicted” by Daniel Sokatch - ❤️
 “The Help” by Kathryn Stockett - ⭐️
 “Far from the Tree” by Robin Benway - ❤️
 “The Lost Property Office” by James R. Hannibal
“A Little Princess” by  Frances Hodgson Burnett - ⭐️
 “Instant Karma” by Marissa Meyer
 “Once Upon a Broken Heart” trilogy by Stephanie Garber - ❤️
 “Rosehead” by Ksenia Anske
 “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame” by Victor Hugo - 7/10 (❤️)
 “Sorcery of Thorns series” by Margaret Rogerson - 5/10
 “The Fountains of Silence" by Ruta Sepetys - 7.8/10 (❤️)
 “Gumiho” series by Kat Cho - 5/10
 “Caraval” trilogy by Stephanie Garber - 2/10
 “Realm Breaker” trilogy by Victoria Aveyard - 7/10 (❤️)
“Anna Karenina” by Leo Tolstoy - 8.5/10 (⭐️)
 “Mansfield Park” by Jane Austen - 6/10 (❤️)
“Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow” by Gabrielle Zevin - 6.8/10 (❤️)
 “Gilded” duology by Marissa Meyer - 7/10 (❤️)
 “The Midnight Lie” (Forgotten Gods series) by Marie Rutkoski - 7/10 (❤️) 
 “Afterlife” by Julia Alvarez - 6.5/10 
 “When We Had Summer” by Jennifer Castle - 5/10
“Yolk” by Mary H.K. Choi - 9/10 (⭐️)
“How It Feels to Float” by Helena Fox - 7/10 (❤️)
 “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding - 7/10 (❤️)
“Where the Crawdads Sing” by Delia Owens - 7/10 (❤️)
 “14 Ways to Die” by Vincent Ralph - 4/10
“The Brothers Hawthorne” by Jennifer Lynn Barnes - 7/10 (❤️)
“Family of Liars” by E. Lockhart - 4/10
“I Am Not Okay With This” by Charles Forsman - 6.5/10 (❤️)
 “The Tatami” series by Tomihiko Morimi - 7.5/10 (❤️)
“Redeeming Love” by Francine Rivers - 6/10
“The Case for Christ: A Journalist's Personal Investigation of the Evidence for Jesus” by Lee Strobel - 8/10 (❤️)
“Mere Christianity” by C. S. Lewis - 6.5/10
 "Crazy Love" by Francis Chan - 7/10
 "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath - 8/10 (⭐️)
 “What Do We Know About Atlantis?” by Emma Carlson Berne - 5/10
 “Blue Period 1-9” by Tsubasa Yamaguchi - 8/10
“What Do We Know About Bigfoot?” by Steve Korté - 5/10
 “The Graveyard Book” by Neil Gaiman - 6.8/10 (❤️)
 “Children of the Whales 1-15” by Abi Umeda - 8/10
“Lolita” by Vladimir Nabokov - 7/10 (❤️)
“Blue Period 10-14” by Tsubasa Yamaguchi - 10/10 (⭐️) 
"More Happy Than Not” by Adam Silvera - 7/10 (❤️)
“The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place” by Julie Berry - 6/10 (❤️)
“Dragonslayer (Wings of Fire: Legends) by Tui T. Sutherland - 6.5/10 (❤️)
 “Monsters of Verity” series by V.E. Schwab - 7.5/10 (❤️)
“The Midnight Library” by Matt Haig - 7.5/10 (❤️)
“The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue” by V. E. Schwab - 8/10 (⭐️)
 “Two Roads from Here” by Teddy Steinkellner - 4.5/10
“History Is All You Left Me” by Adam Silvera - 8/10 (⭐️)
 “Good Omens” by Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman - 9/10 (⭐️)
“The Hollow Heart” by Marie Rutkoski - 7/10 (❤️)
“Qualia Under the Snow” by Kanna Kii - 9/10 (⭐️)
“The Setting Sun” by Osamu Dazai - 9/10 (⭐️)
“Vicious” & “Vengeful” (part of Villains series) by V. E. Schwab  - 7/10 (❤)
“Percy Jackson and the Olympians: Chalice of the Gods” by Rick Riordan - 7/10 (❤️)
“American Gods” by Neil Gaiman - 7/10 (❤️)
“Iron Widow” by Xiran Jay Zhao - 7.5/10 (⭐️)
“Our Dreams at Dusk” manga series by Shimanami Tasogare - 8/10 (⭐️)
“When the Angels Left the Old Country” by Sacha Lamb - 7/10 (❤️)
“Aristotle and Dante” series by Benjamin Alire Sáenz - 9.5/10 (⭐️)
“The Gilded Wolves” by Roshani Chokshi - 3/10
“Hearts Overboard” by Becky Dean - 6/10 (❤️)
“The Poppy War” trilogy by R. F. Kuang - 10/10 (⭐️)
“Yellowface” by R. F. Kuang - 10/10 (⭐️)
“Babel” by R. F. Kuang - 10/10 (⭐️)
“If You Could See the Sun” by Ann Liang - 7/10 (❤️)
“Permanent Record” by Mary H. K. Choi - 6.5/10 
“The Book of Tea” duology by Judy I. Lin - 7/10 (❤️)
“Something Wicked This Way Comes” by Ray Bradbury - 6.5/10 (❤️)
“1Q84” by Haruki Murakami - 7/10
“Six Crimson Cranes” duology by Elizabeth Lim - 7/10 (❤️)
“Her Radiant Curse” by Elizabeth Lim - 7/10 (❤️)
“The Folk of the Air” series by Holly Black - 6.5/10 (❤️)
“The Stolen Heir” duology by Holly Black - 6.5/10 (❤️)
“Girl Made of Stars” by Ashley Herring Blake - 7.5/10 (❤️)
“Dry” by Jarrod and Neal Shusterman - 8.5/10 (⭐️)
“Remarkably Ruby” by Terri Libenson - 7/10 (⭐️)
“Surprisingly Sarah” by Terri Libenson - 6.5/10 (⭐️)
“Always Anthony” by Terri Libenson - 7/10 (⭐️)
“Demon in the Wood” by Leigh Bardugo - 6/10
“The Language of Thorns: Midnight Tales and Dangerous Magic” by Leigh Bardugo - 7/10
“Letters of Enchantment” duology by Rebecca Ross - 7.5/10 (❤️)
“Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries” by Heather Fawcett - 8/10 (⭐️)
“Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands” Heather Fawcett - 8/10 (⭐️)
“Song of the Six Realms” by Judy I. Lin - 6.8/10 (❤️)
“These Violent Delights” duet by Chloe Gong - 7/10 (❤️)
“I Must Betray You” by Ruta Sepetys - 8/10 (⭐️)
“Wrath of the Triple Goddess” by Rick Riordan - 6/10
“When Haru Was Here” by Dustin Thao - 6/10
“Rise of the School for Good and Evil” & “Fall of the School for Good and Evil” by Soman Chainani - 6.5/10
“The School for Good and Evil” #1-3 by Soman Chainani - 6/10
“An Enchantment of Ravens” by Margaret Rogerson - 6/10
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nando161mando · 5 hours ago
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https://write.as/thewhiterosesociety/do-you-know-these-neo-nazis-heres-how-you-can-help
Do you know these neo-Nazis? Names and other information can be found at the link above.
Provided is a list of the 16 named arrestees from NSN's Australia Day stunt in Adelaide last month.
The White Rose Society are interested in any info you might be able to share about these men, no matter how small it may seem.
If you have any information about these or any other NSN members, email them securely at [email protected] - they’ll keep your info safe & anonymous.
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Richard Tinsley
36, Taromeo, QLD (South Burnett region)
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Matthew Pullen
31, Banora Point, NSW (Northern Rivers/Tweed Shire area)
While Pullen's Banora Point address is within New South Wales, he is more directly associated with the Queensland NSN cell over the border.
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fundieinfoplace · 2 years ago
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Do you have any info or confirmation on the rumored Caldwell-Duggar #4 or Swanson-Duggar #2 & #3?
Jim Bob confirmed in Joy's baby video that Gunnar was indeed #30 and being the 15th boy and that Nora #31 is the tiebreaker. So here's the breakdown
1. Mackynzie Renee Duggar oct 2009
● Baby M #2 Duggar
2. Michael James Duggar june 2011
3. Marcus Anthony Duggar june 2013
4. Israel David Dillard april 2015
5. Meredith Grace Duggar june
6. Spurgeon Elliott Seewald nov
7. Henry Wilberforce Seewald feb 2017
8. Samuel Scott Dillard july
9. Mason Garrett Duggar sept
10. Gideon Martyn Forsyth feb 2018
11. Garrett David Caldwell Duggar june
12. Felicity Nicole Vuolo july
●Asa Matthew
13. Ivy Jane Seewald may 2019
●Annabell Elise
14. Addison Renee Caldwell Duggar nov
15. Bella Milagro Swanson Duggar nov
16. Maryella Hope Duggar nov
17. Grace Annette Burnett Duggar jan 2020
●Halleli Grace
18. Evelyn Mae Forsyth aug
●Baby C
●Baby Seewald #4
19. Evangeline Jo Vuolo nov
20. Brooklyn Praise Caldwell Duggar feb 2021
21. Fern Elliana Seewald july
●River Bliss
22. Madyson Lily Duggar oct
23. Daisy Marie Swanson Duggar april 2022
24. Truett Oliver Nakatsu Duggar may
25. Collin Gene Caldwell Duggar june
26. Frederick Michael Dillard july
27. Charles John Burnett Duggar sept
● Baby Seewald #5
28. Brynley Noelle Wissmann Duggar Dec
29. Ezra Robert Swanson Duggar May 2023
30. Gunner James Forsyth may
31. Nora Kate Nakatsu Duggar may
Mackynzie, Meredith, Maryella, Madyson, Gracie, Ivy, Fern, Felicity, Evangeline, Addison, Brooklynn, Bella, Daisy and Brynley (before Nora)= 15 girls
Michael, Marcus, Mason, Charlie. Israel, Samuel, Frederick, Spurgeon, Henry, Garrett, Collin, Ezra, Gideon, Gunnar and Truett= 15 boys
So Caldwell #4 is a boy with my chosen Placer name of Collin Gene.
Swanson #2 is a girl named Daisy Marie.
And Swanson #3 is a boy with my chosen Placer name of Ezra Robert. Also here's a recent picture of Lauren Pregnant with her third
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