"Florida Coast – Fire Pillar" by James L. Cunningham, for the NASA Art Program, 1980s. pic.twitter.com/42rCO6fVbH
— Humanoid History (@HumanoidHistory) September 8, 2019
Wow, that is gorgeous. Looking for a print now.
"Florida Coast – Fire Pillar" by James L. Cunningham, for the NASA Art Program, 1980s. pic.twitter.com/42rCO6fVbH
— Humanoid History (@HumanoidHistory) September 8, 2019
Wow, that is gorgeous. Looking for a print now.
Took a lady self-defense class today ๐ pic.twitter.com/MymMIT3W8t
— Ari (@ariorwuteva) September 29, 2019
Oh Jesus Christ. That’s worse than useless. I’m not large or really that great of a fighter, but if she fought me like that and I wanted to her be, she’d be unconscious or dead in seconds.
That’s all show and would not result in anything good for her if she went like that at all but the most untrained fighters. These sort of self-defense classes for women instill a false sense of confidence and should be banned.
Real self-defense tips for women:
1) Carry pepper spray, as strong as is legal.
2) Take a krav maga class, one that is well-rated and tough.
3) If in a real fight, aim to disable (with pepper spray or without) as quickly as possible and run like your life depends on it, because if you had to fight, it probably does.
4) Don’t carry a gun. Chances are, it’ll be taken from you and used on you unless you’re a stone-hearted killer (most people aren’t).
5) Eyes, balls, solar plexus, nose, ears, throat are you primary targets, in that order (or whatever is easiest to reach). Don’t stand on propriety — be brutal. (This is why you need the krav class. It teaches you to ignore your instincts and be brutal.)
But if you fight like that against real attackers, you are going to die.
The plot of your favorite movie written as an r/relationship post
— desmond (@kyleauxren) August 7, 2019
My (34M) boss was keeping my (1Robot) love locked behind glass and wouldn’t let me have at her, as I knew she wanted. Then she stabbed the goon and mistakenly left me locked in behind the glass! Will she return before I run out of energy drinks, self-pity, and whining?
The US Army is in the process of changing their fitness standards, and for the better in my opinion. Instead of just the traditional push-ups, sit-ups, and two-mile run, they have now added a deadlift (using a hex bar instead of a barbell) event and other real strength measures. Standards no longer differ by gender, either.
A real positive change! The unit I was in pretty much ignored the Army standards, anyway, as they were much easier than what was expected of us there. We would’ve loved this stuff. It’s far more realistic regarding actual combat and general army tasks and matches much more closely the physical training we actually did.
The only thing I disagree with is that different unit types and jobs might have different standards. While this sounds ok on the surface, it causes division within the ranks. For instance, even though I was a photojournalist in a combat unit I still met all the same standards as everyone else in my unit, even those soldiers specifically designated with combat roles.* This left no doubt that I could fight beside them as needed and wouldn’t be a hindrance. Take that away, and why would you want someone not as capable as you fighting with you? That’d just be another thing to worry about.
*Though in a paratrooper unit, you’re really all front-line troops. Couldn’t really be any other way.
Literally no one thinks straw bans are going to reverse climate change and are sufficient. Like who the fuck are these guys dunking on here?
Local lawmakers trying to take the first tentative steps toward reducing plastic waste? 🙄
— Angie Schmitt 🚶♀️🚴♀️ 🚌 (@schmangee) September 30, 2019
I shouldn’t be, but I’m always surprised when liberals are always so shock-fuckingly naรฏve. I like Angie Schmitt and I agree with a lot of what she writes about transportation, but this is not a first tentative step for any damn thing. This is a distraction method, utterly pointless, and harms a lot of disabled people in the process while achieving absolutely nothing.
Worse than that, it achieves negative results, not only by harming disabled people, but by making me and others highly skeptical and resistant to such efforts that we might otherwise support. It’s a bit of theater explicitly designed to short-circuit any further progress in the name of “progress.”
I will never, ever understand the whole mindset of “We must do something. This is something. Therefore, we must do it.”
If you feel really powerless, "cancel culture" can feel empowering bc it gives you the socially accepted green light to hurt someone else, especially someone you perceive as having more power and visibility than you.
But that was also the same motivation behind gamergate.
— abolish the presidency (@girlziplocked) September 26, 2019
Cancel culture is the misapplication of little power to a problem insoluble with the means at hand, but it’s the only means many people have. I have some sympathy, but not much, because it harms the discourse, mostly, and causes a venal sort of bloodlust which never results in anything good or noble.