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(via jooey-zoseph)
Posted on June 18, 2013 via reflection with 3,133 notes ()
Source: ronsgranger
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w - weeds
(via jooey-zoseph)
Posted on June 18, 2013 via ruh-roh with 95 notes ()
Source: ohreallo
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Susan B. Anthony, badass.
Lest we forget Susan B. Anthony sought voting rights for women because she was offended that black men were allowed to vote and she wasn’t, even though, as she said, their brains weren’t capable of understanding politics. Susan B. Anthony, racist.
White privilege is Susan B. Anthony being an American hero. White privilege not understand why black folks should be skeptical of mainstream feminism when this white supremacist is one of the most seminal figures in the feminist movements.
not so friendly reminder that this motherfucking shitstain literally said she would rather cut off her own arm than ever fight for the right of black people to vote (or be considered fucking human, obviously).
Posted on June 18, 2013 via Think Progress with 3,560 notes ()
Source: think-progress
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Posted on June 18, 2013 via The Nerdy Ninja with 3 notes ()
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THIS IS AN AMAZING POST AND I WILL ALWAYS REBLOG.
(via spreadthelastword)
Posted on June 17, 2013 via Mediaite with 86,048 notes ()
Source: mediaite
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Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living. It’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. DR. SEUSS
(via rustyparkers)
Posted on June 17, 2013 via collecting stamps from nowhere with 46,482 notes ()
Source: stannisbaratheon
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<3
(via starryeyed23)
Posted on June 16, 2013 via young lions with 222 notes ()
Source: michaeldelzotto
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Observing Jupiter
Jupiter…is always a joy to look at. Even through nothing more powerful than a good pair of binoculars. Jupiter’s four Galilean moons should be visible, their positions changing noticeably from one night to the next. The smallest telescope reveals features on Jupiter’s cloud tops, including two dark bands straddling the equator. Through larger telescopes, other dark belts and bright zones appear, as well as exciting detail within the belts.The best way to learn about Jupiter through observation is to draw it. Observers use a soft, 2B pencil and a dim white flashlight so that they can see what they are committing to paper. Before beginning to draw, they watch the planet for a few minutes to get familiar with the shapes and details of its belts and zones. Since Jupiter rotates very quickly - the whole planet goes once around in less than 10 hours - observers complete the basic outline of their drawings in about a quarter hour, filling in the details later.
The experience of drawing this planet brings to mind the fact that Jupiter is big. It is a planet much larger than Earth and some 400 to 600 million miles from us.
While you look at Jupiter’s moons, consider how they helped persuade Galileo that the Earth was not the center of the universe, and remember that the idea was so threatening to that era’s powerful religious politics that he was forced to recant on pain of torture. By taking us back to an earlier, darker time in our history, Galileo’s moons remind us not to be too attached to the accepted wisdom of our own age.
David H. Levy; author, Impact Jupiter: The Crash Of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9; comet co-discoverer (image sources: 1, 2, 3, 4)
Amateur Astronomers: When using a “dim flashlight”, make sure to use filtered red light, via LED or DIY.Everyone: This “darker time in our history” persists to this day. We may not have astronomers being physically tortured; no, the torture comes from our (predominantly misinformed) society’s continual persistence in ‘tolerating’ the ‘rights’ of religious influence in politics and education.
This world (and our species) deserves minds capable of critical thinking fueled by an insatiable curiosity without religious influence governed at the helm by scientifically illiterate people who claim to have a neurological two-way radio with the creator of the universe/s.
Galileo would be proud of our achievements, but more steadfast than we in his commitment to the true nature of the physical world via the scientific method and meticulous observation, to which religious “knowledge” have produced no such observations, progressions or achievements toward our understanding of the universe, led by the literal interpretation of outdated Biblical text, in order to give credit to a creator or reason yet to be named by science itself, upon which the ‘rights’ of religious organizations are allowed to exploit their superimposition of the divine plan unto our current understandings of the cosmos, without aiding in any of the countless hours of scrupulous investigation themselves.
As a father and a student of life, my parenting efforts have been led by a simple motive: teach my child (and others) how to think, not what to think. All of us the world over will benefit by a society and human civilization led by this principle as well.
Ad astra.
(via scientificillustration)
Posted on June 16, 2013 via sagan|sense with 983 notes ()
Source: sagansense
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Happy Father’s day Seeley Booth…I know he’s fictional but I don’t care.
(via endinthebeginning)
Posted on June 16, 2013 via I don't know what that means with 112 notes ()
Source: stapes
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Adam & Eve
BRYAN CHRISTIE
“Art and science serve the same function: to awaken and help keep alive the feeling of wonder about the world we live in.”
(via lstorm)
Posted on June 15, 2013 via L'ACTE GRATUIT with 107 notes ()
Source: actegratuit

