#crismon
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bietrofastimoff23 · 16 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Matt: I've also always been convinced that Daemon and Criston have had some sort of homoerotic twist in the evening.
>:)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes
brainyrot · 1 year ago
Text
Anyway I love him
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
73 notes · View notes
bietrofastimoff23 · 3 months ago
Text
my jaw is on the floor-
MY DREAM HAS COME TRUE
Tumblr media
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
another one 🧎🏻‍♀️🧎🏻‍♀️🧎🏻‍♀️
Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
psikonauti · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
David Crismon (American, b. 1964)
Kensett, 2015
Oil on black galvanized metal
396 notes · View notes
jojaydoodles · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
It's been quite a while since my last Kimblee post.
I'm learning how to draw fast, to drop fanart from time to time, since posting original art drops my entire account down a clif.
-- buy me a coffee
202 notes · View notes
marydithart · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Silver Wing of the Evil Star
Crimson Glow Valstrax
Needles to say he got a Redemption Arc. Originally I drew him many years ago and he wasn’t that good. Now I’m pretty satisfied with the final result.
185 notes · View notes
twinvictim · 11 months ago
Text
Vegans on this website are something else man
24 notes · View notes
lumixz · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Ash crismon<3
11 notes · View notes
minusgangtime · 5 months ago
Text
(It's just a distant memory...
♪Replaced... Condemned and disgraced... In the shadows of millions, the titan remains... All my faces, my memories shattered to bit... Lost to the sands of time, the awakening has COMMENCED!!!♪)
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
ccharlysposts · 10 months ago
Text
I'm sorry but like, Afraid of Heights by Boygenius is SOOOO Evan and Reg from Crismon Rivers ?? I can't think of anything else rn
6 notes · View notes
darkmasterofcupcakes · 2 years ago
Text
Headcanon that Crimson and Ennui are nicknames, and their real names are Ruby and Henri. 
8 notes · View notes
noizchild · 1 year ago
Text
What This Week Looks Like:
Monday:
Mars and Heaven (Cowboy Bebop, Story 21)
Summary: A long story of lemon romances of Spike and Sakura
Tea Leaves and Crismon Nails (Wasteland 2011, Hetalia, Durarara, D.Gray-Man, Match Two)
Summary: Vol. 12 is up. The toxic dark is spreading all over the world. The Dark Circus is spreading all over Europe with more people disappearing every day. Meanwhile, Ju is haunted by dreams of a plague doctor in red and the shadowy figure of a woman standing over her son’s crib. She has the feeling that something isn’t right. And she isn’t the only one who feels it.
Tuesday:
Childish Devil (Original, Chapter One)
Summary: Emily is not as she seems…
Wednesday:
Crystal Gems (Outlaw Star, Chapter eighteen, Chapter seven)
Summary: Jim and two other girls find the ancient gems of the dragon. Now they have to fight against thousands of demons to protect the dragon.
Tengoku.Chikyu.Jigoku (Ghost Hound, Volume Thirteen, Season Premiere)
Summary: TBA
Thursday:
Savage Rains (FLCL, Chapter Five)
Summary: Haruko returns and she brings with her another wave of crazy with two other friends.
Friday:
Red Sash Books (Original, Chapter Nineteen)
Summary: Eddy’s revolving door in her love life.
Saturday:
Winter Blossoms (Original, Chapter 13)
Summary: A strange man finds a pregnant woman and her two-year-old daughter along an empty road.
Sunday:
Assassin Game (Original, Chapter 20)
Summary: The son of a former assassin is kidnapped by her former employers in order to kill her. Now she must fight back to save her child.
3 notes · View notes
hyper-10aq-blog · 4 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
0 notes
psikonauti · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
David Crismon (American, b. 1964)
Tulip Refraction 6x, 2024
Oil and acrylic on metal
169 notes · View notes
Text
Hemp, Overproduction in Agriculture, and How to Control it_Crimson Publishers
Hemp, Overproduction in Agriculture, and How to Control it by Chad Hellwinckel in Environmental Analysis & Ecology Studies
Tumblr media
Opinion Hemp has the potential to support a decent living for small farmers in the US, but it depends on what will happen in the coming years after hemp is fully legalized. Hemp is no different than any other crop; if fully legalized, industry would quickly employ methods commonly used on other crops. The industrial system stands at the ready with machines, inputs, universities, transportation systems, markets, and capital, to plant hemp on large acreages, process it, market it, and bring it to consumers. If unleashed, the vast majority of the crop will be grown on large acreages under industrial management, mechanized, and with few people on the land. Organic hemp will be another option offered by the industrial model, but equally as mechanized. Any profit advantage of hemp to farmers would, within 5 to 10 years, diminish to roughly equal the market returns of other industrial crops like corn or beans.
Today new hemp farmers are able to do what they love and make a living doing it. These new farmers are truly building an ideal agrarian life; often producing organically on small acreages, while integrating other crops on the farm, raising families on the land, improving the local ecology, being good neighbors, and seeing their work as an art form - caring for the earth, the soil, and all the inhabitants of their unique corner of the universe. I want this to persist. I want to see more farmers tending to small acreages. Yet after studying the history and nature of agriculture, I believe this bright future will only be attainable if we insist upon parity in prices and a cooperative system that assures that the small hemp farmer will always receive a fair price for their crop.
The tobacco quota system that supported small scale rural farmers from the 1930’s to around 2000 provides a good model for hemp growers. The tobacco system functioned by the government granting the sole right to sell tobacco to farmer cooperatives. Cooperative members voted every 3 years to determine if they wanted price-support. If so (they always voted yes) they were subject to a quota system limiting their level of production to that which would return a living wage to tobacco farmers. Members of the cooperatives received ‘quotas’, or rights to bring a certain amount of crop to market. The program worked by limiting supply and thereby raising the market price above what the price would be under all-out free market production. The program was mostly self-funded with minimal cost to taxpayers [1]. Consumers of tobacco paid a slightly higher price, and this higher price allowed farmers to make a living on small plots of land. For example in Kentucky, tobacco made up only 1% of cropland but tobacco equaled about 50% of total crop income in the state [2]. It kept small farmers in business and, in turn, small town economies healthy.
In 2004 the program ended through a ‘buyout’ by the tobacco industry due to the decrease in domestic tobacco demand and tobacco companies importing greater amounts from other countries. Since the buyout, farmers are ‘free’ to produce as much as they want. Not surprisingly, tobacco farmers in hilly forested rural areas of Appalachia where the geography is not conducive to massive machinery could not compete. Production now happens in the flat country on the coastal plain. Instead of 1 to 5 acres of production supporting a farm family, you now see thousand acre fields under mechanization. Small Appalachian rural economies have collapsed. It may be no coincidence that the opioid epidemic has exploded in old tobacco country since the quota system ‘buyout’ in 2004.
I’ve heard some hemp farms say that the market is growing big enough for everybody and that they do not want to see any prohibitions on the growing or selling of hemp. I think we need to pause and take a deep look at the problem of overproduction in agriculture that has been a constant occurrence for the past century, and not let these boom times cloud our view of reality. Technology, mechanization, and the inability of any one farmer to control market supply has consistently driven the market price of crops below the cost of production, leading to cycles of farmer bankruptcies and consolidations. Overproduction is in the nature of agriculture and it cannot be solved without an agreed upon system of production controls [3].
Hemp is a new crop not yet in the hands of industry. New farmers and conscientious consumers should take steps now to devise a cooperative run quota system that would assure fair prices for small hemp farmers now and into the future. If full legalization occurs without a quota system, prices will likely fall within a decade, the vast majority of production will be in the hands of corporate entities, and the potential of the crop to support agrarian life and rural prosperity will have been missed [4].
For more articles in Journal of Environmental Sciences,
Please click on below link: https://crimsonpublishers.com/eaes/
0 notes
insomniacchamomile · 11 months ago
Text
Merry crisis everyone!
Tumblr media
Have Maria and Guadalupe for this holiday season!
1 note · View note