
Being Here (2008)
Girl, 20, charming but likely a bit touched in the head. Astronomy major, politics minor at a women's college. Fluent in internets, opinionated like woah, and totally awesome. The most beautiful, intelligent person you will ever meet. Slightly prone to hyperbole. Never tells a lie.
This Tumblr contains: immaturity, maturity, musings, the inane, the mundane, science, politics, astronomy, art, college life, my personal life, and a plethora of other things. Like long, fancy words. 'Cause I'm cool like that and, like, totally smart.
I don't do short writing posts. I'm more of an essayist than a blogger, so when I do write, you're going to get quite a bit.
Background image is of the spiral galaxy NGC 7331. Image found via APOD and is not my own (duh).

Being Here (2008)
Game Of Thrones Season 2: “Shadow”
so I started reading Homestuck again (I started with Kelsey in December, I think, and finished Act 1)
because it’s always all over my dashboard and I have no idea what’s going on
so
yeah
am now reading Act 4
Oh hey, how nice of you to remind me of childhood nightmares, Tumblr. How do you always know?
reblogging just because the one on the lower right freaks Gordon the fuck out and is like the only creepypasta thing to do so (he informed me of this first year, but it apparently still holds true~)
(Source: beautythatimfaking)
Cosmic Song is a work of art and cosmic ray detector embedded in the floor of one of the building entrances at CERN. It lights up with the constant rain of cosmic ray particles from outer space as people stand on the sculpture. The piece is made by the French artist Serge Moro.
so, this is basically the coolest thing I’ve ever seen.
I amended the title up there because it was actually incorrect. One in 5 women in this study reported rape. A far greater number reported sexual assault that did not meet the study’s definition of rape. Actual report is here if anyone wants to check it out. It should also be noted this was a telephone survey that only included people 18 and older. Given the high number of victims who are under the age of 18, we can’t view these stats as exhaustive. But they’re important to note anyway.
The study defined rape as “any completed or attempted unwanted vaginal (for women), oral, or anal penetration through the use of physical force (such as being pinned or held down, or by the use of violence) or threats to physically harm and includes times when the victim was drunk, high, drugged, or passed out and unable to consent.” The numbers for men were 1 in 71 reporting rape.
The study also captured:
- Sexual coercion (defined as ‘unwanted sexual penetration that occurs after a person is pressured in a nonphysical way’);
- Unwanted sexual contact (defined as unwanted sexual experiences involving touch but not sexual penetration, such as being kissed in a sexual way, or having sexual body parts fondled or grabbed); and
- Non-contact (defined as unwanted experiences that do not involve any touching or penetration, including someone exposing their sexual body parts, flashing, or masturbating in front of the victim, someone making a victim show his or her body parts, someone making a victim look at or participate in sexual photos or movies, or someone harassing the victim in a public place in a way that made the victim feel unsafe).
Once you consider what fell outside of the study’s definition of rape, nearly half of the women surveyed (44.6%) and 1 in 5 men (22.2%) reported experiencing sexual violence victimization other than rape at some point in their lives.
And who are the rapists?
More than half of female victims of rape (51.1%) reported that at least one perpetrator was a current or former intimate partner. Four out of 10 of female victims (40.8%) reported being raped by an acquaintance. Approximately 1 in 8 female victims (12.5%) reported being raped by a family member, and 2.5% by a person in a position of authority. About 1 in 7 female victims (13.8%) reported being raped by a stranger.
So, that’s less than 14% of rapes being committed by strangers. And we blame survivors for their rapes… why exactly?
(Source: socialismartnature)
(Source: forums.somethingawful.com)
Camila Vallejo was profiled in the NYTimes yesterday. She is everything OWS is not.
“In perhaps the most poignant set piece in the year of the protester, Ms. Vallejo addressed a dense ring of photographers and reporters in August while kneeling within a peace sign made of spent tear-gas shells, where she calmly mused about how many educational improvements could have been bought with the $100,000 worth of munitions at her feet.”
Props to her for being media-savvy and well-organized. That’s why she’s getting such notice.
A march to take over a vacant building by members of the Occupy movement in Oakland, Calif., turned into a violent confrontation with the police on Saturday, leaving three officers injured and about 200 people arrested.
The clashes began just before 3 p.m. when protesters marched toward the vacant Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, the police said, and began to tear down construction barricades. Officers ordered the crowd to disperse when protesters “began destroying construction equipment and fencing,” the Oakland police said in a press release.
“Officers were pelted with bottles, metal pipe, rocks, spray cans, improvised explosive devices and burning flares, the police said.” Officers responded with smoke, tear gas and beanbag projectiles. Twenty people were arrested.
Most of the arrests occurred in the evening, when large groups of people were corralled in front of the Downtown Oakland Y.M.C.A. on Broadway. At one point, one group of protesters broke into the City Hall building.
On a livestream broadcast on the Web site oakfosho.com, dozens of protesters could be seen sitting cross-legged in darkness on the street in front of the Y.M.C.A. Their hands appeared to be bound behind them, while police officers stood watch. Occasionally the protesters sang or cheered.
The events were part of a demonstration dubbed “Move-in Day,” a plan by protesters to move into the vacant convention center and use it as a commune-like command center, according to the Web site occupyoaklandmoveinday.org.
“We were going to set up a community center,” said Benjamin Phillips, 32, a member of the Occupy Oakland media team. “It would be a place where we could house people, feed people, do all the things that we have been doing.”
In an open letter to Mayor Jean Quan on the Move-in Day site, the group threatened actions like “blockading the airport indefinitely, occupying City Hall indefinitely” and “shutting down the Oakland ports.” Occupy protesters did briefly shut down the city’s busy port in November.
so an IP address within my house just showed up in my hit counter
welp
this will be interesting
I wonder to what degree of fascinating/incriminating the things I’ve posted lately are
When differentiating between cultural exchange an cultural appropriation, this first and most important thing that you have to acknowledge is that it’s fucking complicated. While there are no hard-set rules about what isn’t appropriation, there are a lot of things that definitely are appropriation.
One of the first things you learn about when you take an anthropology or sociology course is cultural exchange: the flow of goods, information, and ideas from one culture to another. One of the best examples of cultural exchange comes from the first European settlers to the Americas and the Native Americans. The Europeans gave the Native Americans horses, and the Native Americans gave the Europeans the corn and potatoes that would eventually become diet staples. In an ideal world, cultural exchange would always work like this, with both cultures coming off the better for it. Unfortunately, the horses given to the Native Americans came with smallpox and even more White people. Four hundred years later, the young descendants of the European settlers would decide that it’s cool to wear the war bonnets traditionally by warriors of the Plains tribes of Native Americans. This is cultural appropriation.
Believe it or not, it’s quite possible to create fashion inspired by other cultures without appropriating them. It just has to be done right. Alexander McQueen once said something to the effect that racism in fashion comes down to the clothing of other cultures being regarded as a costume. When creating a garment based on one from another culture, you have to know what that garment is and respect it. Every single culture on earth has garments and objects worn for the simple purpose of being fabulous and serves no function beyond that. When McQueen created his iconic Asian-inspired ensembles, he borrowed from the rich silks and embroideries of China and Japan, lovingly re-creating them on new and innovative outfits for the West. Both cultures were combined into something beautiful and never seen before.
Unfortunately, not every designer in the world is as sensitive to other cultures as McQueen. One of the most notorious examples of cultural appropriation is John Galliano’s African goddess shoes. Galliano crossed the cultural appropriation line by taking something sacred, a statuette of an African goddess, and turning it into a mundane shoe. To Westerners, this may look unique and exotic, but to Africans who worship the goddess, it’s a desecration. The Native American headdresses so popular among hipsters are hard-earned badges of honor worn by warriors and leaders who have proven their bravery and earned tremendous respect. They are worn during times of war, so when a Native American chieftain comes up to you wearing his war bonnet, you know he means fucking business. Wearing this tremendous symbol of prestige to a party degrades it into something you wear to a party. It becomes a cartoonish racial stereotype similar to the blackface that white entertainers would put on for “negro minstrel” acts.
Privilege also comes into comes into play in the world of cultural exchange. I’ve heard it complained before that it’s not fair that non-Scottish people get to wear plaid while non-Native American people can’t wear headdresses. Just because Scotland was subjugated by England 300 years ago doesn’t negate the fact that legal segregation in America existed only 50 years ago. As someone of Scottish descent, I enjoy all the perks of privilege that the English who drove my ancestors from their homeland enjoyed. Yeah, it may not seem fair that you can’t wear the war bonnet you didn’t earn, but colonialism isn’t fair, either.
Sometimes, the debate between appropriation vs. exchange falls into an awkward spot. One of the most famous western practitioners of orientalism is Paul Poiret. Poiret operated in a time when racism was a fact of life and the idea that the Eurocentric point of view might have something wrong with it was absolutely unheard of. He used oriental (which at the time meant anything from Islamic culture, India, and East Asia) design elements for their exotic and risqué factor. His designs are beautiful and a pinnacle of western design, but criticism of racism is warranted. But Poiret’s use of exoticism is still felt today. Most notably, Poiret was the first major designer to create outfits meant to be worn, in true oriental style, without a corset. At first, it was a scandal, but fifteen years after he began designing, corsets had been abandoned as a symbol of antiquity. While it may have had mostly to do with the radical social changes that came after the First World War, Poiret certainly got the ball rolling. So, technically, not wearing a corset is cultural appropriation. This is why, sometimes, you can’t just weed out every single little fucking thing that may have at one point been appropriation. I’m sure as hell not putting on a corset just to leave my house anytime soon. When another culture has a good idea, sometimes you just have to go with it.
danceswithfaeriesunderthemoon:
i’m sorry but i’m terrified of any bird that isn’t small and cute like a sparrow or a finch.
fuck i would scream if this was in my house oh god.
qt bros
did I ever tell you about the time I was at EJ’s house over the summer, and there was a party-ish thing going on, and I was rather drunk, and then SUDDENLY A BAT
ALL OVER THE PLACE
INDOORS
SO MUCH YELLING AND CONFUSION
(Source: straightwiththatheater)
Siriusly twinkling
If you live nearly anywhere on Earth and look to the southeast shortly after sunset, you’ll see the figure of Orion. Follow the three belt stars to the east, and you’ll see a bright star: Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky. If it’s near the horizon, you may see it twinkling madly: flickering, dancing, perhaps even changing color.
This gave astronomer David Lynch an idea: take a time exposure of Sirius with a camera and telephoto, and purposely wiggle the mount. He tried it on January 4, 2012, and the result is the picture shown above.
As the vibrating camera caused the star to trail around, the changing colors got recorded along the track. The changing brightness of Sirius can be seen as well, as parts of the loop-de-loop fade and intensify.
The reason stars twinkle is because of our atmosphere: little blobs of air are constantly in motion. These air parcels act like lenses, and as light passes through them, the path of the ray gets bent a little bit. That’s what causes the dancing motion, the actual twinkling.