May you be healthy.
May you be happy.
May you be safe.
May you be peaceful and at ease.
All bodies are beautiful.

Discoholic 🪩

JBB: An Artblog!
KIROKAZE
tumblr dot com

Origami Around

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

★
YOU ARE THE REASON

Kaledo Art

ellievsbear

blake kathryn
Not today Justin

titsay

#extradirty
Keni
Cosimo Galluzzi
Game of Thrones Daily

roma★
$LAYYYTER

seen from Germany
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Guatemala
seen from Kenya

seen from Türkiye
seen from Argentina

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Colombia
seen from United Kingdom
@rabbitfishtv
May you be healthy.
May you be happy.
May you be safe.
May you be peaceful and at ease.
All bodies are beautiful.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Absolutly
That's a good saying!
The YU Pride Alliance
My mother was apparently correct when she told me that, if you try hard enough, you can learn something new every day of your life. Just the other day, for example, I learned what a writ of certiorari is: the order of a higher court to a lower court that it, the lower court, provide its record in a given case so that the higher court may review it. Apparently, this is a regular feature of life at the Supreme Court and, indeed, I also learned that the Supreme Court issues writs of certiorari to select most of the cases it hears. Who knew?
The context in which I learned about certiorari is what I’d like to write about this week because it was just a few days ago that the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a legal advocacy group that promotes the free exercise of religion, filed an emergency application with the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of Yeshiva University asking that it either issue a writ of certiorari and/or stay a ruling issued by the New York State Supreme Court last June instructing YU to treat the YU Pride Alliance, a group serving the LGBTQ+ community at Yeshiva, as any other student group, i.e., by providing it with funding and with an on-campus meeting place. YU’s argument that the ruling requires the school to go against its own religious principles and is thus a violation of its First Amendment rights sounds rational, at least at first, and that point was made forcefully.
It turns out, slightly amazingly, that Yeshiva specifically amended its charter in 1967 to describe itself, not as a religious institution at all, but rather specifically as an educational one. And that was the crucial detail that prompted the lower court’s ruling: although it is true that religious corporations, including ones “incorporated under the education law,” are exempt from compliance with the New York City human rights law, YU’s decision specifically not to describe itself as a religious institution means that that exclusion specifically does not apply to them. This, at least to me, is a mere detail: no one with even a passing acquaintanceship with Jewish life in the United States would seriously argue that YU is not a religious institution. Its name implies as much. It houses a rabbinical seminary that trains modern Orthodox rabbis and is widely regarded as the flagship institution of modern Orthodoxy in America. So let’s say that the New York court’s ruling turned on a detail that itself feels negligible and inconsonant with reality as we know it. What then? Should its ruling be overturned? Does a religious institution have the right to engage in overtly discriminatory practices if it finds justification for those practices in its traditions and traditional practices? May the government step in to protect citizens whose human rights are being violated even if the violation in question is being carried out by a religious institution? These are the questions that the whole kerfuffle about the YU Pride Alliance bring to my mind. And all of them circle around the single issue that churns and roils at the center of the matter: does the Constitution permit the government to determine what is and what isn’t legitimate religious practice protected by the First Amendment?
I broached this topic last October when I wrote about the case of John Henry Ramirez, a former Marine who murdered a convenience store worker in Corpus Christi, Texas, in 2004 and then fled to Mexico, where he was eventually apprehended four years later. He was tried for murder, convicted, and sentenced to death. As the date of his execution drew closer, he sued the State of Texas over the fact that the state was refusing to grant his minister, the Reverend Dana Moore of the Second Baptist Church in Corpus Christi, the right not only to be present at his execution but also to lay his hands on Ramirez’s head and to pray with him as he was going to be put to death. When I wrote last year about this case, it was still undecided. But it is undecided no longer: Ramirez won in court and Texas was ordered to permit Reverend Moore to serve his congregant in whatever way his religious training dictates. Ramirez’s execution is scheduled to take place on October 5 of this year and will presumably take place as he prays with his minister’s hands set upon his head.
When I wrote about the Ramirez case (click here), I argued that the key issue here is not whether the laying-on of hands is or isn’t a legitimate part of the Baptist last-rites ceremony, but rather whether the government should have a voice in the discussion at all. I argued, I hope persuasively, that it should not. In my opinion, I wrote, the First Amendment should be understood not only to guarantee freedom of religion in the philosophical sense but also in the practical, and that the government should therefore never be empowered to decide what does or doesn’t constitute “authentic” religious behavior. I’m willing to accept exceptions to that rule in the extreme case: if a fundamentalist group were to embrace the biblical institution of slavery and argue that the Thirteenth Amendment prohibiting slavery was a violation of their civil rights, I would certainly not be supportive of that argument. But the Ramirez case was nothing like that and simply involved the State of Texas attempting to tell a Christian minister what does and doesn’t constitute a “real” Christian ritual. That is not something any American should find rational or reasonable.
Just lately, the Supreme Court has issued several rulings that seem, at least to me, to thin the famous wall between Church and State that is so foundational to our American republic.
In Carson v. Makin, the Supreme Court determined that the State of Maine was acting illegally in refusing school vouchers to parents whose children attended religion-based private schools. The argument was simple: those parents pay taxes, their children attend the school of their choice, parents whose children attend “regular” private schools get government assistance, so why shouldn’t parents whose children attend parochial schools? That this decision eroded the barrier between church and state seems obvious. But the Court felt that the importance of not discriminating against citizens because of their religious affiliation was the greater good. I feel conflicted about the decision. On the one hand, I certainly understand how helpful that kind of assistance could be for Jewish parents who send their children to day schools. But, on the other, feeling that no ultimate good can ever come—not for Jews and not for anyone—from eroding what was once considered the impermeable wall between Church and State. But especially not for Jews and other members of minority faiths!
In Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, the Supreme Court considered the case of a school district in Washington that fired a local football coach after he refused to abandon his practice of kneeling down in prayer at the end of every game and allowing students, if they wished, to join him. (Left unreported was whether he prayed after every game or only if his team won.) The school board felt that, since Coach Kennedy only engaged in Christian prayer, this practice was an offense against the Establishment Clause that forbids the government—in this case, a state-run public school—from endorsing one specific religion over any other. The Supreme Court felt otherwise, decreeing that the School District was wrong in, in effect, denying Coach Kennedy his right to speak freely. About this too, I have mixed emotions. Certainly, the coach’s practice must have appeared to most, or at least to some, to be a kind of official endorsement specifically of Christian prayer as opposed to the prayers of any other faith group. On the other hand, the notion that any citizen’s right to engage in prayer can or should be limited by governmental restrictions on religious activity in public places seems wrong to me. So here too I sit on both sides of the fence, wanting the wall between Church and State to be ironclad, but also wanting the government to keep its hands off religion entirely…and certainly not to dictate where and when individuals can say their prayers.
And that brings us back to the YU Pride Alliance. Should an American university—regardless of how it self-defines in terms of its theological or philosophical orientation—be permitted to engage in discriminatory practices against recognized groups that would be unequivocally illegal if that discrimination were to take place, say, in the workplace or in a public school? Or is the greater good served here by the government being prohibited from interfering in the behavior of religious institutions regardless of whether that involves behavior that would otherwise be illegal? (I reject as ridiculous the argument that Yeshiva University is not an Orthodox Jewish institution.) Is the greater good served here by allowing YU to sneer openly and, in my opinion, embarrassingly and unjustifiably prejudicially at its gay students if that is the price we must pay for religious institutions not having to answer to the government for their practices or standards? Or has society long since turned that corner with respect to the respect due gay people? We certainly wouldn’t tolerate the government looking away if a school, even a religious one, were to forbid its Black students or its Hispanic or Jewish ones to form affinity groups promoting their culture or history! To ask the question differently: is this really about the place of gay people in America or is really about the willingness of the government to regular religion? In a sense, it’s about both.
In the end, I think the Supreme Court will probably endorse Yeshiva’s right to discriminate against its own gay students. But in such an instance, the challenge will then pass to the Jewish community itself: whether the government can or should regular religious institutions at all is one thing, after all, but it is another thing entirely to ask if the Jewish world will just shrug its shoulders and hope the issue just goes away…or stand up to speak with a united voice against YU’s misguided and unjustified decision to disenfranchise its own gay students for the sake of some unspecified religious principle. I suppose they must have one. But the one I suggest they adopt in its place come precisely from last week’s Torah portion: tzedek tzedek tirdof, Scripture enjoins the faithful: never ever tire in the pursuit of justice for all.
SCOTUS has become an instrument of an attempted takeover by Christian fundamentalists in the US who wish to create a fundamentalist Christian theocracy in America. We have sitting members of the American government saying as much openly!
Jews will be second class citizens if a Christian theocracy comes to be, and the very conservatives that are pushing this agenda are too deeply aligned with neo-Nazi groups to be trusted.
The fact that a Jewish organization should appeal to this arguably illegitimate court to give them the right to bash other Jews is appalling.
Abandoned Soviet hydrofoil boats
Or luxury spaceship, crash-landing on jungle planet.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Selected splash pages by Jack Kirby for Kamandi, The Last Boy on Earth.
I really need to read Kamandi!
I have owned the complete set of comics for about 30 years… and I've never read it through!
New York in the 1930s by Samuel Gottscho.
The energy this city had…
Skip Google for Research
As Google has worked to overtake the internet, its search algorithm has not just gotten worse. It has been designed to prioritize advertisers and popular pages often times excluding pages and content that better matches your search terms
As a writer in need of information for my stories, I find this unacceptable. As a proponent of availability of information so the populace can actually educate itself, it is unforgivable.
Below is a concise list of useful research sites compiled by Edward Clark over on Facebook. I was familiar with some, but not all of these.
⁂
Google is so powerful that it “hides” other search systems from us. We just don’t know the existence of most of them. Meanwhile, there are still a huge number of excellent searchers in the world who specialize in books, science, other smart information. Keep a list of sites you never heard of.
www.refseek.com - Academic Resource Search. More than a billion sources: encyclopedia, monographies, magazines.
www.worldcat.org - a search for the contents of 20 thousand worldwide libraries. Find out where lies the nearest rare book you need.
https://link.springer.com - access to more than 10 million scientific documents: books, articles, research protocols.
www.bioline.org.br is a library of scientific bioscience journals published in developing countries.
http://repec.org - volunteers from 102 countries have collected almost 4 million publications on economics and related science.
www.science.gov is an American state search engine on 2200+ scientific sites. More than 200 million articles are indexed.
www.pdfdrive.com is the largest website for free download of books in PDF format. Claiming over 225 million names.
www.base-search.net is one of the most powerful researches on academic studies texts. More than 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them are free
Good to remember.
Someone else getting rights you already have has no affect on your life.
Someone who should not have an AR-15 getting an AR-15 could end your life very violently.
Your 'freedom' is under threat from a gun.
I beg to differ. Knowing queer people will definitely affect your life, as will knowing people from all around the world and all walks of life. Knowing people who are open about their reproductive choices will change your life. Your life will be enriched by friendships with the most diverse range of people. The conservative movement is about closing the gates on who you get to interact with and what even those people can share about themselves. There is a world of wonder, and putting on blinkers will make your life worse.
Thor Annual #3 by Jack Kirby
quite
Wait, I forgot her name… but it was an anagram of "An alien ant."

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
What We Learned from the January 6th Hearings
Now that the first batch of hearings from the Select Committee are done, we are starting to get “What did we learn?” stories.
Hearing 1: By December 2020, Trump knew he had lost. He had been told that by many people in his administration and even his own daughter Ivanka. His claim that there was fraud was shot down by his own attorney general, Bill Barr, who said he had investigated and there was no significant fraud. Nevertheless, Trump continued to say he won.
Hearing 2: On Election Night, a drunk Rudy Giuliani told Trump to declare victory, which Trump did, despite having many of his own people tell him that millions of (largely Democratic) absentee ballots hadn’t been counted yet. As Trump kept coming up with more crazy theories, Acting Deputy AG Richard Donoghue kept shooting them down but Trump kept insisting they were true.
Hearing 3: This one focused on John Eastman’s plan to have Mike Pence throw out electoral votes for Joe Biden and declare Trump the winner. Eastman was told by many people that such a move would result in violence in the streets. Eastman didn’t care and neither did Trump. When the true story leaked to The New York Times, Trump vigorously denied it, despite knowing that it was true. White House lawyer Eric Herschmann told Eastman to get the best criminal defense lawyer he could because he was going to need it. Eastman’s response was to ask for a pardon (which he didn’t get). Eastman might be the easiest of Trump’s cronies to convict now because there is a paper trail (a letter he wrote asking state legislatures to appoint their own electors) and numerous witnesses to what he said and did. If he were to flip to save his own neck after being indicted, he could easily nail Trump to the wall.
Hearing 4: This one was about Trump’s efforts to intimidate state and local officials, from the level of poll workers like Shaye Moss up to the level of Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers ® and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger ®. A focus here was the phony (and illegal) slate of electors Giuliani and his helpers had put together in Arizona, Georgia, and other states.
Hearing 5: A last-ditch effort by Trump was to try to replace Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen with environmental lawyer Jeffrey Clark, who was prepared to do anything Trump told him to do, like seizing all the voting machines. Rosen resisted with everything he had. Herschmann summarized this by telling Clark: “Good, you fu**ing a**hole, congratulations, you just admitted that the first step or act you would take as attorney general would be committing a felony.” Donoghue was more concise: “We’ll call you when there’s an oil spill.”
Hearing 6: This day belonged entirely to Cassidy Hutchinson, Mark Meadows’ then chief-of-staff. She made it clear that the attack on the Capitol was not a spontaneous uprising. Trump and Giuliani had planned it days in advance. Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, and everyone else in the White House knew about it. Cipollone, among others, knew the goal was illegal (e.g., was obstruction of justice and defrauding the electoral count) and tried to dissuade everyone from pulling it off. Hutchinson also said that in a December lunch meeting when Barr again told Trump that there was no fraud, Trump was so angry he threw his lunch at the wall, covering it with ketchup. She also personally heard Trump ask that metal detectors be removed from the rally right before the attack on the capitol. Trump said “I don’t fucking care if they have weapons. They’re not here to hurt me. Take the fucking mags away. Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in.“
Hearing 7: This hearing focused to the “unhinged” White House meeting in December when Trump announced that he was going to appoint Sidney Powell special counsel and have her seize the voting machines. When all the lawyers, including Herschmann and Cipollone, told him that declaring martial law and seizing the machines was illegal, he called them a bunch of pussies. As this hearing ended, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) casually mentioned that Trump may have engaged in witness tampering, a federal crime.
Hearing 8: Finally, the focus was on the actual coup attempt. The hearing showed beyond any doubt that while it was going on, Trump watched it happily on Fox News, despite entreaties from his staff, Republicans in Congress, and his family to tell the rioters to go home. The hearing made it clear that Trump wanted the coup to succeed and if Mike Pence got killed in the process, well, he deserved it. Anyone who watched the hearing learned that Trump was not befuddled or confused or paralyzed by what he saw on TV. He liked it and actively wanted it to continue and to succeed in stopping the electoral count. He even sent out a tweet encouraging the mob.
taken from https://www.electoral-vote.com/evp2022/Senate/Maps/Jul25.html#item-1
No prob
Helped me too
The link to that website I got it from always gives good concise explanations to complex sprawling stories
Useful summary.
Big Oil profits are a cancer.
Jail them and every politician who has ever profited from their lies.
(via Sony Walkman WM-504 | IAIN CLARIDGE)
What breathtaking industrial design.
If a trans woman became chess world champion, terfs would unironically go: "It's unfair, male brains are much smarter than female brains. It's well known that women are fucking stupid. #feminism"
They literally did this to a trans woman who won a game of jepoardy named Amy Schneider.
Like they unironically argued that men are "socialized to like trivia more than women" and "men are genetically predisposed to have faster reaction times than women" and other complete nonsense.
"Women are fucking stupid and inherently inferior to men" - terfs, without a single fucking shred of irony or self-awareness
its literally even fucking co-ed!!! its not like jeopardy is a fucking gendered thing!!! there were also men competing w her!!! wtf
The reason you can't use logic to "convince" bigots that their position is wrong is that they don't give a fuck about logic. They will just spew any shit that attacks their targets, self-contradictory or not.
Yeah so the Big Think is literally owned by big oil. They’re making shit up so people feel too exhausted to fight for any change. Ignore this kind of environmental nihilism, all it does it help the rich avoid change.
The fuck
All of this. Sure, make responsible choices in your life. Push your communities for better transit and less sprawl, all of that. But this kind of guilt-tripping is deliberate obfuscation by the oil industry and their enablers.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Osamu Tezuka and Moebius kicking it in Kyoto in 1982 (From this amazing gallery of photographs!)
Oh, you know, just OSAMU TEZUKA AND MOEBIUS HANGING OUT. NO BIG DEAL!
Titans picnic, too.
Artist Zach Brunner illustrates the perfect scenes of gay domesticity !
I mean, other than the fact that these people are all slobs who live like they're 20 years old, these are really lovely and tender.