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Radio City Music Hall, âShowplace of the Nationâ, opened in New York City on December 27, 1932. Â
#Radio City Music Hall#Showplace of the Nation#opened#27 December 1932#anniversary#US history#Art Deco#Midtown Manhattan#architecture#New York City#summer 2018#2019#original photography#exterior#USA#1260 Avenue of the Americas#6th Avenue#Edward Durell Stone#landmark#Donald Deskey#tourist attraction#neon sign#marquee#night shot#travel#vacation#cityscape
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Whenever I see this Modern Family clip I immediately think of ishimondo. Since I canât draw for shit, hereâs my wonky sprite edit of Mondo and Kiyotaka locking baby Kaito in the car.
#Iâm sorry ishimondo nation I suck at editing#I used to run a warriors of hope fan account on instagram with my sister in 2018-2020 and used to make edits like this#my edits havenât improved whatsoever đ#and Iâm sorry to any Zelda fans that might follow my page for putting Danganronpa on your feed#kiyotaka ishimaru#mondo oowada#mondo owada#danagnronpa#danganronpa trigger happy havoc#ishimondo#kiyotaka x mondo#do people even make sprite edits anymore??
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Dog show commentator 1: This is the hairless American Hairless Terrier. Hard for me to believe that it comes in two varieties: hairless and coated. I don't know how you have a coated American Hairless Terrier, but they do.
Dog show commentator 2: Well, there's giant shrimp, too.
#it was a replay of the 2018 National Dog Show in case you're wondering#commentating on these shows is great because their jobs are 1) tell us what the dog is#2) remind us occasionally what the judges are looking for & 3) have nice chats about dogs and whatever in general#National Dog Show#text post#original
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The Pharaohs dream.
The football problem in Egypt
and the Pharaoh's curse.
I grieve different
I grieve different
Everybody grieves different
Everybody grieves different
The Egyptian men national team x United in Grief Kendrick Lamar
#i know no one will give two shits about this#but I'm mourning my men#I'm in my feelings#no matter how hard we play and how good we are#corruption will always find us and ruin us#as fans we don't deserve this#the players don't deserve this either#we just want to be proud of our nation#is it too much to ask for?#the amount of racism and hate the boys got was unbelievable#the amount of hate mo got even tho he was the reason we qualified in 2018 and without him we would have never thought Egypt could make it#will Egypt ever make it?#will Mohamed salah ever win a wc match ?#Maybe next wc ? or are we delusional#afcon this year might be ours?#Egypt nt#web weaving#football#soccer#le010n11#we did it once we can do it again right?#mo salah#mohamed salah#the Egyptian king
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Hannah Miller competing in the free skate at the 2018 US Championships, skating to music from The Hunger Games.
(Š Tina Tyan)
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I saw something in the news today that truly took my breath away. If you have been paying attention to U.S. politics over the past few days, youâve most likely seen this woman:
This is Bishop Mariann Budde, and on Monday (Trumpâs inauguration) she led an interfaith prayer for Trump and the incoming administration. During the service she asked him to have mercy for LGBTQ+ Americans and undocumented immigrants. This was badly received by the Trump administration (as expected).
After seeing headlines about this woman, I read something that I wanted to share. In 1998 a man named Matthew Shepard was murdered for being gay. Iâm not going to get into the details of his death on this post, but please be warned it is extremely triggering if you do choose to read more on your own. Matthew Shepardâs death caused a lot of change in the U.S. regarding how LGBTQ hate crimes are handled, and laws that were passed to protect LGBTQ+ people.
Now youâre probably wondering what Matthew Shepard has to do with an Episcopal bishop. For years after Matthew Shepardâs murder, his family had held onto his remains, too scared to lay him to rest in fear of his final resting place being vandalized. In 2018, Budde had his remains interred at the National Cathedral, which is also the place where the interfaith prayer for Trump and his administration took place. The impact of this really had an effect on me. Budde could have led a non confrontational prayer service, and chosen not to mention the harm that will come to the people Trump and his administration are going after. Instead she chose to call out hate and fear in front of some of the most powerful people on the planet, and at a place that has such a large historic meaning to the LGBTQ community.
In the next few years there will be many challenges in protecting free speech, standing up against hate, and protecting those in our communities. But I would like to believe that for every Donald Trump and Elon Musk, there are people like Marianne Budde. There are those of us who canât speak up for themselves, so itâs important for those of us who can to amplify our voices, even if itâs not the âpopularâ thing to do.
âAnd he said you should apologize. Will you apologize?
I am not going to apologize for asking for mercy for others.â - Mariann Buddeâs response in a Time interview
Link to articles: x x x
Link to the Matthew Shepard Foundation if you would like to donate
#us politics#us government#united states#lgbt#lgbtq community#donald trump#uspol#mariann budde#u.s. news#inauguration#lgbtqia#matthew shepard#queer history#american politics
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I'm so cooked
#guys i am fucked genuinely#i was trying to apply for social housing today bc my living situation has become like.. bad#house is full of mold&damp and i share a room w my sister and her bf đŹ#and as im filling out these forms i realise i need my national insurance number which i have basically never used since i got it#so i go find that and then realise. i fucking forgot to update my name when i changed it in fucking 2018#so ive just had to apply to change my name w hmrc but like its been years. am i in trouble. probably yes#also ive been vet shopping for my Very Sick Cat and lowest estimate ive gottwn for his surgery is ÂŁ800 which i still cant afford#also ive been trying to apply for a gender recognition certificate so i can get a new passport with an M on it and i have to get a tribunal#and have my declaration witnessed by a qualified official e.g a magistrate#and i cannot figure out how to do that for the life of me#please i am an ausitic adult with 0 support like#im just out here trying to figure it out w a developmental disability hindering me at every turn#im cooked#dogbunni diary log
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I love naming plants after characters. I was just thinking about how I need to get an orchid pot for my new orchid, and then I muttered to myself, "I need to get new pots for Sasuke and Naruto, too." And then paused and laughed about it.
As is, I currently have plants named Makki (from haikyuu), Merrill (from dragon age 2), Taltana (my first dnd character), Izumi (from fullmetal alchemist), Wolfwood, Vash, and Knives (Ya Bois from trigun), Symbiosis (from iwatex), AND my new Naruto, Sasuke, and Sakura.
I just like it â¤ď¸
#speculation nation#the symbiosis plant is a bonsai tree. get it. bc sym spent 400 years as a tree.#i also have Perserverance. Babybel. Merrill Junior (made from a piece of Merrill that broke off)(theyre succulents)#Asmodeus (the aloe plant). Emil (the money tree). i got them both from IKEA. different visits.#Naan junior named after Naan. the plant i had years back whose leaves were dappled like naan#Naan junior is a different kind of plant but has similar red highlights to the leaves. so i named her after her.#and... thats it! thats all my plants.#perserverance is named that bc i got it from a funeral and didnt expect it to live long. didnt wanna name it just for it to die#but then it just kept living. and it's been since 2018. nearly 6 years now. so it truly has perservered.#babybel named that bc it's like a little version of a plant i had before named Bell#which was actually short for um. Alexfapper Graham Bell. if u know u know lol#my only leafy plants are Perserverance Emil Naan Jr Wolfwood and now Naruto. also maybe Sym if u count it#also Sakura. orchid leaves though. all the rest of my plants are some kind of cactus or succulent.#love my plants. i name every single one. and they are so wonderful.#plants shit#i absolutely had a different tag for my plants than that. but im using that one now lol
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Kamala Harris just announced that her vice president will be Minnesota governor Tim Walz. Based on the coverage so far I'm really reassured by this decision.
The Washington Post did an obviously great job of making a prepared article for each option, considering how long an article they had up 7 minutes after the announcement.
((Okay technically it's not an official announcement yet it's "according to three people familiar with the pick, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a decision that is not yet public." But listen. I am 99% sure this is a weather balloon. (Meaning: a deliberate leak to gauge reaction.) Because the sheer weakness or incompetence on the part of the Harris campaign that it would take for three people to all confirm that within a few hours hours of each other and the planned announcement it is massive.))
-via The Washington Post, August 6, 2024
Honestly this decision, from everything I've read and can tell, looks like it's brilliant politics.
Important Context: The vice president(ial candidates)'s job in an election is not to be similar to the president. The vice president's job on the ballot is very, very much specifically to be different from the president. Why? So they can cover each others' weaknesses. Especially regionally.
(Sidenote: I feel a bit ridiculous saying this. But genuinely if you want to get a stronger understanding of how US elections really work. Go watch seasons 6 and 7 of The West Wing. Genuinely, a lot of politicians have said - especially back in its day - that that was the most accurate depiction of an election they'd ever seen. Also specifically features an entire arc about a contested Democratic primary convention, so also very good if you're interested in understanding weird nominating convention shenanigans.)
From the article:
"Harrisâs choice for a running mate was among the most closely watched decisions of her fledgling campaign, as she sought to bolster the ticketâs prospects for victory in November and rapidly find someone who could be a governing partner. In picking Walz, she has selected a seasoned politician with executive governing experience and signaled the importance of Midwestern battleground states such as Wisconsin and Michigan.
Walzâs foray into politics came later in life: He spent more than two decades as a public school teacher and football coach, and as a member of the Army National Guard, before running for Congress in his 40s. In 2006, he defeated a Republican to win Minnesotaâs 1st Congressional District--a rural, conservative area--and won reelection five times before leaving Congress to run for governor.
Walz was first elected governor in 2018 and handily won reelection in 2022. Though little-known outside his state, Walz emerged publicly as one of the earliest names mentioned as a possible running mate for Harris, and in the ensuing days he made the rounds on television as an outspoken surrogate for the vice president...
âThese are weird people on the other side. They want to take books away, they want to be in your exam room. ⌠They are bad on foreign policy, they are bad on the environment, they certainly have no health care plan, and they keep talking about the middle-class,â Walz told MSNBC in July. ��As I said, a robber baron real estate guy and a venture capitalist trying to tell us they understand who we are? They donât know who we are.â
Walz also has faced criticism from Republicans that his policies as governor were too liberal, including legalizing recreational marijuana for adults, protecting abortion rights, expanding LGBTQ protections, implementing tuition-free college for low-income Minnesotans and providing free breakfast and lunch for schoolchildren in the state.
But many of those initiatives are broadly popular. Walz also signed an executive order removing the college-degree requirement for 75 percent of Minnesotaâs state jobs, a move that garnered bipartisan support and that several other states have also adopted.
âWhat a monster. Kids are eating and having full bellies, so they can go learn, and women are making their own health-care decisions,â Walz said sarcastically in a July 28 interview with CNN when questioned whether such policies would be fodder for conservative attacks, later adding: âIf thatâs where they want to label me, Iâm more than happy to take the [liberal] label.â
Walz also spoke at a kickoff event in St. Paul for a Democratic canvassing effort, casting Trump as a âbully.â
âDonât lift these guys up like theyâre some kind of heroes. Everybody in this room knows--I know it as a teacher--a bully has no self-confidence. A bully has no strength. They have nothing,â Walz said at the event, sporting a camouflage hunting hat and T-shirt.
Walz has explained that he felt some Democratsâ practice of calling Trump an existential threat to democracy was giving him too much credit, which prompted his decision to denounce the GOP nominee instead as being âweird.â
âI do believe all those things are a real possibility, but it gives him way too much power," Walz said on CNNâs âState of the Unionâ regarding the Democratsâ rhetoric. âListen to the guy. Heâs talking about Hannibal Lecter, shocking sharks, and just whatever crazy thing pops into his mind.â
If Walz is elected vice president, under state law, Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan (D) would assume the governorship for the rest of his term. Minnesota Senate president Bobby Joe Champion, a Democrat, would become lieutenant governor."
-via The Washington Post, August 6, 2024
--
This guy. Sounds like. fucking Moderate swing-state/rural/Midwestern/southern/"heartland"/working class white voter catnip. He sounds like he's also a very smart politician and strong campaigner. And he's apparently genuinely a good guy with a good record, too.
He sounds like he's going to do a really good job of appealing to voters in several of the big deal swing states without being from any of them specifically. Which means it doesn't feel like pandering to one of the states involved (and thereby spurning the others), which is also great.
(Also he was the one who started "weird" @ conservatives and I think we should take that seriously as a very good political instinct/move. Judging in large part by how it has so clearly hit an actual nerve with conservatives like so little else. Also hugely relevant: that post going around about how part of why conservatives are so upset about "weird" is because in the Midwest, "weird" specifically also implies anti-social or harmful behavior.)
Officially feeling more optimistic about Trump not winning in November
#tim walz#minnesota#united states#us politics#kamala harris#harris 2024#2024 elections#election 2024#us elections#american politics#2024 presidential election#vice president#2024 election#kamala 2024#shoutout here to the post that
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All bets are off
When unions are outlawed, only outlaws will have unions. Unions don't owe their existence to labor laws that protect organizing activities. Rather, labor laws exist because once-illegal unions were formed in the teeth of violent suppression, and those unions demanded â and got â labor law.
Bosses have hated unions since the start, and they've really hated laws protecting workers. Dress this up in whatever self-serving rationale you want â "the freedom to contract," or "meritocracy" â it all cashes out to this: when workers bargain collectively, value that would otherwise go to investors and executives goes to the workers.
I'm not just talking about wages here, either. If an employer is forced â by a union, or by a labor law that only exists because of union militancy â to operate a safe workplace, they have to spend money on things like fire suppression, PPE, and paid breaks to avoid repetitive strain injuries. In the absence of some force that corrals bosses into providing these safety measures, they can use that money to pay themselves, and externalize the cost of on-the-job injuries to their workers.
The cost and price of a good or service is the tangible expression of power. It is a matter of politics, not economics. If consumer protection agencies demand that companies provide safe, well-manufactured goods, if there are prohibitions on price-fixing and profiteering, then value shifts from the corporation to its customers.
Now, if labor has few rights and consumers have many rights, then bosses can pass their consumer-side losses on to their workers. This is the Walmart story, the Amazon story: cheap goods paid for with low wages and dangerous working conditions. Likewise, if consumer rights are weak but labor rights are strong, then bosses can pass their costs onto their customers, continuing to take high profits by charging more. This is the story of local gig-work ordinances like NYC's, which guaranteed a minimum wage to delivery drivers â restaurateurs responded by demanding the right to add a surcharge to their bills:
https://table.skift.com/2018/06/22/nyc-surcharge-debate/
But if labor and consumer groups act in solidarity, then they can operate as a bloc and bosses and investors have to eat shit. Back in 2017, the pilots' union for American Airlines forced their bosses into a raise. Wall Street freaked out and tanked AA's stock. Analysts for big banks were outraged. Citi's Kevin Crissey summed up the situation perfectly, in a fuming memo: "This is frustrating. Labor is being paid first again. Shareholders get leftovers":
https://www.vox.com/new-money/2017/4/29/15471634/american-airlines-raise
Limiting the wealth of the investor class also limits their power, because money translates pretty directly into political power. This sets up a virtuous cycle: the less money the investor class has to spend on political projects, the more space there is for consumer- and labor-protection laws to be enacted and enforced. As labor and consumer law gets more stringent, the share of the national income going to people who make things, and people who use the things they make, goes up â and the share going to people who own things goes down.
Seen this way, it's obvious that prices and wages are a political matter, not an "economic" one. Orthodox economists maintain the pretense that they practice a kind of physics of money, discovering the "natural," "empirical" way that prices and wages move. They dress this up with mumbo-jumbo like the "efficient market hypothesis," "price discovery," "public choice," and that old favorite, "trickle-down theory." Strip away the doublespeak and it boils down to this: "Actually, your boss is right. He does deserve more of the value than you do":
https://pluralistic.net/2024/09/09/low-wage-100/#executive-excess
Even if you've been suckered by the lie that bosses have a legal "fiduciary duty" to maximize shareholder returns (this is a myth, by the way â no such law exists), it doesn't follow that customers or workers share that fiduciary duty. As a customer, you are not legally obliged to arrange your affairs to maximize the dividends paid by to investors in your corporate landlord or by the merchants you patronize. As a worker, you are under no legal obligation to consider shareholders' interests when you bargain for wages, benefits and working conditions.
The "fiduciary duty" lie is another instance of politics masquerading as economics: even if bosses bargain for as big a slice of the pie as they can get, the size of that slice is determined by the relative power of bosses, customers and workers.
This is why bosses hate unions. It's why the scab presidency of Donald Trump has waged all-out war on unions. Trump just effectively shuttered the National Labor Relations Board, unilaterally halting its enforcement actions and investigations. He also illegally fired one of the Democratic NLRB board members, leaving the agency with too few board members to take any new actions, meaning that no unions can be recognized â indeed, the NLRB can't do anything â for the foreseeable future:
https://www.npr.org/2025/01/28/nx-s1-5277103/nlrb-trump-wilcox-abruzzo-democrats-labor
Trump also fired the NLRB's outstanding General Counsel, Jennifer Abruzzo, who was one of the stars of the Biden administration, who promulgated rules that decisively tilted the balance in favor of labor:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/06/goons-ginks-and-company-finks/#if-blood-be-the-price-of-your-cursed-wealth
Trump is playing Grinch here â he's descended upon Whoville to take all the Christmas decorations, in the belief that these are the source of Christmas. But the Grinch was wrong (and so is Trump): Christmas was in the heart of the Whos, and the tinsel and baubles were the expression of that Christmas spirit. Likewise, labor rights come from labor organizing, not the other way around.
Labor rights were enshrined in federal law in 1935, with the National Labor Relations Act. Bosses hated â and hate â the NLRA. 12 years later, they passed the Taft-Hartley Act, which substantially gutted the NLRA. Most notably, Taft-Hartley bans "sympathy strikes" â when unions walk out in support of one another. Sympathy strikes are a hugely powerful way for workers to claim value away from bosses and investors, which is why bosses got rid of them.
But even then, bosses who were honest with themselves would admit that they preferred life under the NLRA to life before it. Remember: labor militancy created the NLRA, not the other way around. When workers didn't have the legal means to organize, they organized by illegal means. When they didn't have legal ways of striking, they struck illegally. The result was pitched battles, even bloodbaths, as cops beat and even killed labor organizers. Bosses hired thugs who committed mass murder â literally. In 1913, strikebreakers working for the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company started a stampede during a union Christmas party that killed 73 people, including many copper miners' children:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Hall_disaster
Workers didn't take this lying down. Violence was met with violence. Bombs went off outside factories and stately mansions. There was gunfire and arson. Bosses had to hire armed guards to escort them as they scurried between their estates and their fancy parties and their executive offices. The country was in a state of near-perpetual chaos.
The NLRA created a set of rules for labor/boss negotiations â rules that helped workers claim a bigger slice of the pie without blood in the streets. But the NLRA also had benefits for bosses: unions were obliged to play by its rules, if they wanted to reap its benefits. The NLRA didn't just put a ceiling over boss power â it also put a ceiling over worker militancy. Von Clausewitz says that "war is politics by other means," which implies that politics are war by other means. The alternative to politics isn't capitulation, it's war.
Trump has torn up the rules to the labor game, but that doesn't mean the game ends. That just means there are no rules.
The labor movement has many great organizer/writers, but few can match the incredible Jane McAlevey, who died of cancer last summer (rest in power). In her classic A Collective Bargain, McAlevey describes her organizer training, from a tradition that went back to the days before the National Labor Relations Act:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/23/a-collective-bargain/
McAlevey was very clear that labor law owes its existence to union power, not the other way around. She explains very clearly that union organizers invented labor law after they invented unions, and that unions can (and indeed, must) exist separately from government agencies that are charged with protecting labor law. But she goes farther: in Collective Bargain, McAlevey describes how the 2019 LA Teachers' Strike didn't just win all the wage and benefits demands of the teachers, but also got the school district to promise to put a park or playground near every school in the system, and got a ban on ICE agents harassing parents at the school gates.
This wildly successful strike forged bonds among teachers, and between teachers and their communities. These teachers went on to run a political get-out-the-vote campaign in the 2020 elections and elected two Democratic reps to Congress and secured the Dems' majority. McAlevey contrasted the active way good unions involve workers as participants with the thin, anemic way that the Democratic Party engages with supporters â solely by asking them for money in a stream of frothing, clickbait text messages. As McAlevey wrote, "Workplace democracy is a training ground for true national democracy."
Militant labor doesn't just protect labor rights â it protects human rights. Remember: MLK, Jr was assassinated while campaigning for union janitors in Memphis. LA teachers ended ICE sweeps at the school gates. Librarian unions are leading the fight against book bans.
The good news is that public opinion has swung wildly in favor of unions over the past decade. More people want to join unions than at any time in generations. More people support unions that at any time in generations.
The bad news is that union leadership fucking suuuuuuuucks. As Hamilton Nolan writes, union bosses are sitting on vast, heretofore unseen warchests of cash, and they just experienced a four-year period of governmental support for unions unheard of since the Carter administration, and they did fuck all with that opportunity:
https://www.hamiltonnolan.com/p/confirmed-unions-squandered-the-biden
Big unions have effectively stopped trying to organize new workers, even when workers beg them for help forming a union. Union organizing budgets are so small as to be indistinguishable from zero. Despite the record number of workers who want to be in a union, the number of workers who are in a union actually fell during the Biden years.
Indeed, some union bosses actually campaigned for Trump, a notorious scab. Teamsters boss Sean O'Brien spoke at the fucking RNC, a political favor that Trump repaid by killing the NLRB and every labor enforcement action and investigation in the country. Nice one, O'Brien. See you in hell:
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/08/teamster-union-trump/679513/
Union bosses squandered a historical opportunity to build countervailing power. Now, Trump's stormtroopers are rounding up workers with the goal of illegally deporting them. Fascism is on the rise. Labor and fascism are archenemies. Organized labor has always been the biggest threat to fascism, every time it has reared its head. That's why fascists target unions first. Union bosses cost us an organized force that could effectively defend our friends and neighbors from Trump's deportation stormtroopers:
https://prospect.org/blogs-and-newsletters/tap/2025-01-28-trumps-lawbreaking-also-aimed-at-workers/
Not every union boss is a scab like O'Brien. Shawn Fain, head of the UAW, won an historic strike against all three of the Big Three automakers, and made sure that the new contracts all ran out in 2028, and called on other unions to do the same, so that the country could have a general strike in 2028 without violating the Taft-Hartley Act (Fain was operating on the now-dead assumption that unions had to play by the rules):
https://pluralistic.net/2024/11/11/rip-jane-mcalevey/#organize
A general strike isn't just a strike for workers' rights. Under Trump, a general strike is a strike against Trumpism and all its horrors: kids in cages, forced birth, trans erasure, climate accelerationism â the whole fucking thing.
A general strike would build the worker power to occupy the Democratic Party and force it to stand up for the American people against oligarchy, rather than meekly capitulating to fascism (and fundraising), which is all they know how to do anymore:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/10/smoke-filled-room-where-it-happens/#dinosaurs
But before we can occupy the Dems, we have to occupy the unions. We need union bosses who are committed to signing up every worker who wants workplace democracy, and unionizing every workplace in spite of the NLRB, not with its help. We need to go back to our roots, when there were no rules.
That's the world Trump made. We need to make him regret that decision.
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/29/which-side-are-you-on/#strike-three-yer-out
#pluralistic#labor#nlra#nlrb#jennifer abruzzo#national labor relations board#national labor relations act#unions#organize#general strike#general strike 2028
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The Lafayette National Park was renamed Acadia National Park by an act of Congress on January 19, 1929. Â
#Lafayette National Park#renamed#Acadia National Park#Mount Desert Island#Hancock County#19 January 1929#anniversary#US history#Atlantic Ocean#East Coast#landscape#seascape#countryside#Maine#nature#flora#tourist attraction#landmark#original photography#summer 2018#cliff#shore#Bass Harbor#forest#shingle beach#waves#travel#vacation#USA#architecture
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Harris has been a staunch supporter of Israel for years. In 2017 she addressed the American Israel Public Affairs Committeeâs (AIPAC) annual conference and reminded attendees that the first resolution she co-sponsored as a senator was aimed at combating âanti-Israel biasâ at the United Nations. âLet me be clear about what I believe. I stand with Israel because of our shared values, which are so fundamental to the founding of both our nations,â she told the crowd. In 2018 she gave an off-the-record speech to the organization, but eventually released her comments. In that speech she claimed that she raised money for the Jewish National Fund as a Girl Scout. âHaving grown up in the Bay area, I fondly remember those Jewish National Fund boxes that we would use to collect donations to plant trees for Israel,â she told the audience. âYears later, when I visited Israel for the first time, I saw the fruits of that effort and the Israeli ingenuity that has truly made a desert bloom.â
For those unfamiliar with the Jewish National Fund (JNF), they're a Zionist organization that has been instrumental in the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.
See Stop the JNF for more information on their history, the way they operate, and their decades-long campaign of greenwashing (i.e. destroying native plants, crops, and agriculture under the banner of 'making the desert bloom').
Continuing, the Mondoweiss article goes:
âThe vast majority of people understand the importance of the State of Israel,â she added later. âBoth in terms of its history and its present in terms of being a source of inspiration on so many issues, which I hope we will talk about, and also what it means in terms of the values of the United States and those values that are shared values with Israel, and the importance of fighting to make sure that we protect and respect a friend, one of the best friends we could possibly have.â While running for President in 2019, Harris was praised by the lobbying group Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) for running to the right of Obama on the Iran deal. On the campaign trail Harris told Kat Wellman, a voter affiliated with DMFI, that she would reenter the agreement but âstrengthen itâ by âextending the sunset provisions, including ballistic missile testing, and also increasing oversight.â âI was very impressed with her. I thought she gave an excellent speech, she gave a very detailed, responsive answer to my question,â Wellman told a local paper after the exchange. âIâm pro-Israel, so I was I was very concerned and all about making sure we limit nuclear missiles in any country that could possibly destroy us all. I thought her answer was very good.�� Harris has condemned the BDS movement and claimed that is âbased on the mistaken assumption that Israel is solely to blame for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.â However, she voted against an anti-BDS bill in 2019 citing First Amendment concerns.
For the full article, which includes Kamala's response to Israel post Al-Aqsa Flood, see Mondoweiss (July 22, 2024)
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Things Biden and the Democrats did, this week #16
April 26-May 3 2024
President Biden announced $3 billion to help replace lead pipes in the drinking water system. Millions of Americans get their drinking water through lead pipes, which are toxic, no level of lead exposure is safe. This problem disproportionately affects people of color and low income communities. This first investment of a planned $15 billion will replace 1.7 million lead pipe lines. The Biden Administration plans to replace all lead pipes in the country by the end of the decade.
President Biden canceled the student debt of 317,000 former students of a fraudulent for-profit college system. The Art Institutes was a for-profit system of dozens of schools offering degrees in video-game design and other arts. After years of legal troubles around misleading students and falsifying data the last AI schools closed abruptly without warning in September last year. This adds to the $29 billion in debt for 1.7 borrowers who wee mislead and defrauded by their schools which the Biden Administration has done, and a total debt relief for 4.6 million borrowers so far under Biden.
President Biden expanded two California national monuments protecting thousands of acres of land. The two national monuments are the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, which are being expanded by 120,000 acres. The new protections cover lands of cultural and religious importance to a number of California based native communities. This expansion was first proposed by then Senator Kamala Harris in 2018 as part of a wide ranging plan to expand and protect public land in California. This expansion is part of the Administration's goals to protect, conserve, and restore at least 30 percent of U.S. lands and waters by 2030.
The Department of Transportation announced new rules that will require car manufacturers to install automatic braking systems in new cars. Starting in 2029 all new cars will be required to have systems to detect pedestrians and automatically apply the breaks in an emergency. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration projects this new rule will save 360 lives every year and prevent at least 24,000 injuries annually.
The IRS announced plans to ramp up audits on the wealthiest Americans. The IRS plans on increasing its audit rate on taxpayers who make over $10 million a year. After decades of Republicans in Congress cutting IRS funding to protect wealthy tax cheats the Biden Administration passed $80 billion for tougher enforcement on the wealthy. The IRS has been able to collect just in one year $500 Million in undisputed but unpaid back taxes from wealthy households, and shows a rise of $31 billion from audits in the 2023 tax year. The IRS also announced its free direct file pilot program was a smashing success. The program allowed tax payers across 12 states to file directly for free with the IRS over the internet. The IRS announced that 140,000 tax payers were able to use it over their target of 100,000, they estimated it saved $5.6 million in tax prep fees, over 90% of users were happy with the webpage and reported it quicker and easier than companies like H&R Block. the IRS plans to bring direct file nationwide next year.
The Department of Interior announced plans for new off shore wind power. The two new sites, off the coast of Oregon and in the Gulf of Maine, would together generate 18 gigawatts of totally clean energy, enough to power 6 million homes.
The Biden Administration announced new rules to finally allow DACA recipients to be covered by Obamacare. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) is an Obama era policy that allows people brought to the United States as children without legal status to remain and to legally work. However for years DACA recipients have not been able to get health coverage through the Obamacare Health Care Marketplace. This rule change will bring health coverage to at least 100,000 uninsured people.
The Department of Health and Human Services finalized rules that require LGBTQ+ and Intersex minors in the foster care system be placed in supportive and affirming homes.
The Senate confirmed Georgia Alexakis to a life time federal judgeship in Illinois. This brings the total number of federal judges appointed by President Biden to 194. For the first time in history the majority of a President's nominees to the federal bench have not been white men.
#Thanks Biden#Joe Biden#student loans#loan forgiveness#lead poisoning#clean water#DACA#health care#LGBT rights#queer kids#taxes#tax the rich
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Child's Sock from Egypt, c.250-350 CE: this colorful sock is nearly 1,700 years old
This sock was discovered during excavations in the ancient city of Oxyrhynchus. It was likely created for a child during the late Roman period, c.250-350 CE.
Similar-looking socks from late antiquity and the early Byzantine period have also been found at several other sites throughout Egypt; these socks often have colorful, striped patterns with divided toes, and they were crafted out of wool using a technique known as nĂĽlbinding.
Above: a similar child's sock from AntinoĂśpolis, c.250-350 CE
The sock depicted above was created during the same period, and it was found in a midden heap (an ancient rubbish pit) in the city of AntinoĂśpolis. A multispectral imaging analysis of this sock yielded some interesting results back in 2018, as this article explains:
... analysis revealed that the sock contained seven hues of wool yarn woven together in a meticulous, stripy pattern. Just three natural, plant-based dyesâmadder roots for red, woad leaves for blue and weld flowers for yellowâwere used to create the different color combinations featured on the sock, according to Joanne Dyer, lead author of the study.
In the paper, she and her co-authors explain that the imaging technique also revealed how the colors were mixed to create hues of green, purple and orange: In some cases, fibers of different colors were spun together; in others, individual yarns went through multiple dye baths.
Such intricacy is pretty impressive, considering that the ancient sock is both âtinyâ and âfragile."
Given its size and orientation, the researchers believe it may have been worn on a childâs left foot.
Above: another child's sock from Al Fayyum, c.300-500 CE
The ancient Egyptians employed a single-needle looping technique, often referred to as nĂĽlbindning, to create their socks. Notably, the approach could be used to separate the big toe and four other toes in the sockâwhich just may have given life to the ever-controversial socks-and-sandals trend.
Sources & More Info:
Manchester Museum: Child's Sock from Oxyrhynchus
British Museum: Sock from Antinoupolis
Royal Ontario Museum: Sock from Al Fayyum
Smithsonian Magazine: 1,700-Year-Old Sock Spins Yarn About Ancient Egyptian Fashion
The Guardian: Imaging Tool Unravels Secrets of Child's Sock from Ancient Egypt
PLOS ONE Journal: A Multispectral Imaging Approach Integrated into the Study of Late Antique Textiles from Egypt
National Museums Scotland: The Lost Sock
#archaeology#artifact#history#anthropology#child's sock#ancient textiles#ancient egypt#roman egypt#fabric arts#knitting#fashion#naalebinding#art#classical antiquity#children in archaeology#natural dyes#wool#yarn#ancient clothing#children#roman#sewing#egyptology#cute little stripy socks
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Nicholas Hsieh's free program costume at the 2018 Novice US Nationals.
(Source: icenetwork.com)
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500,000 protestors just in Tel Aviv. Thatâs 5% of the population of Israel, protesting just in one city. Itâs hard to comprehend numbers that big. As a point of comparison, that would be the US population equivalent of sixteen million protestors, or twice the population of New York City, protesting in one place. That doesnât count any other protest across the rest of the country.
The 2018 womenâs march was attended by about 5% of the US population nationally. There has never been a single protest gathering of that many people in one place in the USA. There likely never will be.
People like to pretend that all Israelis are evil genocide supporters. But Israelis are protesting in absolutely fucking massive numbers right now. They are protesting against their government at a larger scale than the United States ever will. That should put the American relationship to our government to shame.
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