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@harriepie

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GOOD OMENS | 2019 - 2026
this sounds like a party to me
I just googled this and⦠yes, itās absolutely real.
And there are so many articles and videos and discussions. Like, the scientific community is buzzing about this.
So much research will have to be redone because the data was absolutely compromised, off by orders of magnitude, by using standard lab gloves.
The world is probably not horrifically contaminated by microplastics. Sterile laboratories, however, are contaminated by latex and nitrile gloves.
Thank God someone bothered to check.
Update! Here is the links to the study and the writing done by the university!
Nitrile and latex gloves that scientists wear while they are measuring microplastics may lead to a potential overestimation of the tiny poll
To attenuate microplastics pollution, we first must quantify the number and types of microplastics found in the natural environment and iden
EMPHASIZING before the Right gets ahold of this that this is science working as it should!!!!
We are SUPPOSED to check each othersā work and to be skeptical of results and to test and re-test and switch up variables and look at problems from new angles. Itās a collaborative effort thatās constantly evolving!
Really glad that I didn't wear gloves for my dissertation work
kind of related to my last post - I honestly think janeway chakotay and tuvok are the best command trio we get in trek. you put any of the two of them together and you get an incredible dynamic, and then all three is just. chef's kiss. janeway and chakotay have so much going on between them that I can't even begin to get into it all here, but most importantly chakotay is the one who talks her down from her most reckless and self-sacrificial plans whenever he can. he grounds her. he steadies her when she needs it, and she trusts him to do so, to worry about the little things whilst she focuses on the big picture.
tuvok can read janeway like a book. they're absolute best friends, so close they're family in all but blood - tuvok literally mind melds with her - but he provides a different sort of support than chakotay as part of her command team. he's strangely a lot more reckless, doing things like going behind her back and breaking the prime directive to acquire technology or (eventually) contacting the vidiians against her express orders to save her and chakotay. in dreadnought when janeway sets the ship to self destruct it is chakotay who grabs her arm in panic and desire to stop her from going down with the ship. and it is tuvok who remains on board, simply standing alongside her. they are partners in crime.
and chakotay and tuvok? maquis captain and the starfleet officer who infiltrated his crew and deceived him for weeks at least? two men who clearly are very different and have almost no desire to become closer. except they are now the first and second officer of the ship, and they now have two major things in common: janeway and voyager. they both care deeply about her in their own way, and they both clearly realise that they will sometimes have to work together for the sake of voyager and its captain. night exemplifies this best, and I wish there was more of that dynamic in the show, because honestly I just love the three of them so much and I think the way their interpersonal relationships play off each other is just brilliant

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I know everyone makes a big deal out of the emotional moments in the "Chidi and Elanor Love Each Other" montage in the season 3 finale, but honestly, that's not the part that's the best. It's something that is very funny and VERY touching.
It's this moment. This one right here is how you know they love each other. See, Chidi teaches Elanor in every timeline... But here we see Elanor reaching out. She doesn't have a lot to offer Chidi, but she's TRYING. She's TRYING to teach him something that he doesn't know, and SHE IS IMITATING HIM not because it's a joke, but because she's using him as a model for love. This kind of imitation is a CLASSIC way for someone like Elanor to dip a toe into the pool of emotional vulnerability, into reciprocating effort and feelings.
AND HE'S TAKING HER SERIOUSLY. He's CLEARLY trying really hard to follow along, even though there's NO WAY this matters... Except it matters to her, so it matters to him.
Went to an urban farm and two of the goat kits are named Shane and Ilya
Xiaoge Cats can return home weeks, months or years later, but if they pick you as theirs they will always remember you and return home.
STAR TREK: VOYAGER (1995ā2001) "Unimatrix Zero"
Acrylic on canvas, 50Ć60 cm
āPoppies Ā· 2025ā
Where the air trembles with colour and everything is quietly blooming.

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You can only reblog this today.
why bother caring about the environment when 1. Itās so obviously a lost cause and 2. Thereās definitely going to be a nuclear war?
And what are you doing about it Anon? Learn about ecological restoration or get out of my way.
If you read ecology books printed in the 70s and 80s, they were absolutely convinced that whales and tigers would not survive the century. There's a whole plot in Star Trek about how whales are extinct actually. Here in Argentina, we were sure that yaguaretƩs would have gone extinct. It was thought that rainforests would be forever lost, because there was no way that such complex ecosystems would be restored.
Now, you can go to PenĆnsula ValdĆ©s and find that the whale population there is growing year after year, people can see them from their windows. In IberĆ”, where yaguaretĆ©s were extinct for over 70 years, there's now a population of 35 and growing, after being reintroduced just five years ago. As for rainforests?
We've becoming very, very good on restoring them. Natural environments, when given space and time to heal, can return to that they were. And after all, all natural enviroments are managed by human societies. It is up to us to implement a good management, un buen gobierno.
I firmly believe our children and grandchildren will see a restoration of Earth like never before.
Millions of people are working on this. You can learn about it, perhaps even become one of them. Or be a pointless doomer in my ask box. Your choice.
if there are people who care, it's never a lost cause. at one point, kÄkÄpÅ, a nocturnal flightless parrot species from aotearoa, were thought to be entirely extinct for decades. until 1977, where booming calls from males were heard on the small island of whenua hou. now, thanks to people who care so much they dedicated their lives to caring, kÄkÄpÅ numbers are close to 300. despite the setbacks. despite the small gene pool causing infertility and health problems. people cared so fucking much that they survived. this is one of COUNTLESS, countless similar stories. I'm studying ecology so that I can go into conservation and all around me, every day, I see people who care enough to put years of their lives into learning about and solving environmental problems. I don't know man. hope isn't just some nebulous thing. it's tangible if you do something with it.
Tim Wong saw the decline of the pipeline swallowtail butterfly, and dedicated himself to providing habitat and raising babies, and it worked.
Spix's Macaws were extinct in the wild for 70 years, and now captive breeding and conservation groups have reintroduced a small population (with more on the way) and there are babies being successfully raised in the wild again.
And what else is there, but hope? We exist for the grace of hope. Those who have lost all hope don't stay here. If you are here to send an ask like this, it is not because you have given up, it's that you are hoping someone will show you that that hope is worth having.
It is!! It always is!!
There will be good things and if you cannot find them, make them! The time will pass anyway, you can choose what to do with it, and so many, many people are choosing to try to help.
The Lord Howe Island rodent eradication project never fails to make me cry, itās so beautiful.
The population of an entire island working together to eradicate every last rat and mouse to save the native bird populations. They had to trap a bunch of the birds and keep them in captivity so they wouldnāt be hurt by the rodenticides, and released them after the rodents were gone. Normal residents helped by phoning in tips whenever they saw rodents. And they did it. Lord Howe Island, last I read, remains rodent free, and the native bird populations are rebounding!
Acid rain and the hole in the ozone layer, both of which were terrifying specters of my childhood, have been largely dealt with. Ecosystems devastated by acid rain are also recovering.
We are making a difference!
In 1979, an audacious, expensive conservation project was begun to try and breed california condors in captivity toward being released into the wild again. This was considered useless and hopeless by many people, but many more people said we had to at least TRY.
In 1991, the first captive-raised condors were re-introduced to Big Sur, Pinnacles, and Bitter Creek.
In 2006, three months before I turned eighteen, the first wild pair of condors was seen nesting in Big Sur in over a hundred years. A hundred years.
We did that. We fixed it.
How about another example.
When my mom was small, in the 1960s, there were many, many days of the year she was not allowed outside. Days and days they had recess indoors, because the air was so poisonous to breathe. Here's an article about it, with some good pictures.
My mom was 13 in the picture on the left. She was 50 in the picture on the right.
In 1987, there were 27 California Condors in the world, all captive.
In 2024, there were 566.
369 of them fly free.
That happened within my lifetime, and I'm not even 40 yet.
When you lose hope, think of our stories we're telling you. Recount them to yourself like a prayer. That's what I do.
There are 369 California Condors flying free in the sky right now.
There is no more acid rain.
There is an ozone.
There are wild tigers.
There are still birds on Lord Howe Island.
There are 369 California Condors flying free.
Black footed ferrets were considered completely extinct in 1979. Then we found a single den in Wyoming in 1981. In 1996 it was classified as extinct in the wild.
By 2013, there were approximately 1,200 living wild, across 18 dens. Their numbers increase regularly, and while the face challenges due to habitat loss, climate change, and their limited genetic diversity, they're in a much better place than they were.
Because people cared, and they worked, and they fought to make things better.
MULAN 1998 ā Dir. Barry Cook And Tony Bancroft

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"As long as we three are together, no matter where we are, we are home."