Where are the read more links on this app????
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
wallacepolsom
YOU ARE THE REASON
Cosmic Funnies

blake kathryn
Cosimo Galluzzi
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Noah Kahan
Stranger Things
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

gracie abrams
🪼

shark vs the universe

izzy's playlists!
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

pixel skylines
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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@saranthropology
Where are the read more links on this app????

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.
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I'm 100% too afraid to be myself. Everything I want to do and be I'm only happy about doing if no one knows. ___ esp like how do I tell my conservative boyfriend I'm questioning my gender identity and sexuality and basically my identity is nothing?
Right now, high school seniors across the country are trying hard not to think about what is — or isn’t — coming in the mail.
They’re anxiously awaiting acceptance letters (or the opposite) from their top-choice colleges and universities. But this story isn’t about them. It’s about a big group of seniors who could get into great schools but don’t apply: high-achieving students from low-income families who live outside of America’s big cities.
These students often wind up in community college or mediocre four-year schools. It’s a phenomenon known in education circles as “undermatching.”
Here are three reasons why this happens.
Why Many Smart, Low-Income Students Don’t Apply To Elite Schools
Photo Credit: Shereen Meraji/NPR
A (clever) schematic way of quantifying model uncertainties by categorising them in two ways: systematic (accuracy; how near the model is to reality), and statistical (precision; how well known are model parameters).
From IOPScience: Enhancing the interaction between nuclear experiment and theory through information and statistics. (PDF)
Read More
Disappointing Popsicle Jokes
Historically accurate Popsicle Jokes

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.
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When I was a student at Cambridge I remember an anthropology professor holding up a picture of a bone with 28 incisions carved in it. “This is often considered to be man’s first attempt at a calendar,” she explained. She paused as we dutifully wrote this down. “My question to you is this – what man needs to mark 28 days? I would suggest to you that this is woman’s first attempt at a calendar.” It was a moment that changed my life. In that second I stopped to question almost everything I had been taught about the past. How often had I overlooked women’s contributions? How often had I sped past them as I learned of male achievement and men’s place in the history books? Then I read Rosalind Miles’s book “The Women’s History of the World” (recently republished as “Who Cooked the Last Supper?”) and I knew I needed to look again. History is full of fabulous females who have been systematically ignored, forgotten or simply written out of the records. They’re not all saints, they’re not all geniuses, but they do deserve remembering.
Sandi Toksvig, 'Top 10 unsung heroines' (via ninestories)
I'm really glad to be back on tumblr. But I also feel like I have no idea what's happening!
i swear taylor swift dated more guys then i have followers on tumblr
I feel sorry your follower count is so low maybe it’s all the slut shaming :(
Back on tumblr for the first time in years. I hope I can keep up! Also just stalked the hell out of a friend from the past. My anxiety made me a shitty person. Also, so do boys. But the beeest part of being in a relationship with them is not having sex with them because they're still figuring out their sexuality. Because sex with boys sucks. //wanting to be single and get more tattoos and travel and ya know live//
“When did slavery end in America?”
If you ask a white teenager, you might get the answer, “Four hundred years ago.” But that’s not the answer. Four hundred years ago was 1615, when the Jamestown colony had only existed for eight years and chattel slavery was just beginning.
Others might say, “When Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, of course.” But that’s not right either. That only freed slaves in Confederate territory seized by the Union. The Union slave states—Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware, and the then-in-formation West Virginia—were exempt and allowed to keep their slaves, along with Tennessee, which had more or less been returned to the Union, and Union-loyal areas of Louisiana (including New Orleans) and coastal Virginia. Because it was unenforceable in most of the Confederate states, only about 1-2% of slaves were freed by the Emancipation Proclamation.
“Well, then,” they might say, “it was definitely when the Thirteenth Amendment was passed.” And still, they would be wrong. While that pivotal law did free the vast majority of America’s slaves, the text of the law is this: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.“
So when did slavery end in America? The answer is, “Never.”
As discussed in the PBS documentary Slavery By Another Name (available in full by clicking the link), as the federal government withdrew funding and support for Reconstruction, the South began a system of leasing prisoners—allowed by law to be used as slaves—to the plantations to replace their free labor. Those affected by this system were treated even worse than those held in bondage under slavery before the Civil War, as slaves were an expensive investment—the $800 average cost of a slave in 1860 is roughly $21,000 in today’s dollars—but leased prisoners were replaced by the prison if killed and payment continued as scheduled, deincentivizing what little humane treatment was afforded slaves.
It was so profitable and in such high demand that, within ten years of its implementation, the stereotype of black people in America had changed. Prior to the Civil War, the stereotype of black people was that we were inherently docile, servile, and loyal. This only makes sense, because if we were viewed as inherently violent and thieving and criminal like we are today, why would they have trusted us with their livelihoods, their crops, and their children? (Side note: this is also where the stereotype of black people loving watermelon came from—the idea that if we were just given a cool slice of watermelon on a hot day, we would work forever). But once they were no longer allowed to own us outright and had to lease us from prisons, police and judges did everything in their power to make sure they had a robust source of free labor. Black people were arrested on false or trumped-up charges, and within ten years, the recorded arrest and conviction rate for black people had skyrocketed so much that the stereotype was entirely inverted from what it had been previously.
The prison system may have stopped leasing prisoners to plantations, but they still lease prison labor to corporations and local governments. Prisoners—primarily black, of course, because we are targeted—are forced to fight wildfires, manufacture consumer goods, and even make goat cheese for Whole Foods. Our economy was built on slave labor, and it still runs on it to a disconcerting extent. And to make that work, black and Latino neighborhoods are targeted by law enforcement and manipulated through things like school closings and schools being unfathomably underfunded to ensure an ever-growing population of prisoners, an ever-growing population of slaves.
So the next time someone asks you when slavery ended in America, tell them the truth. Tell them, “Never.”

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White privilege is your history being taught as a core class and mine being taught as an elective.
please let them know.
white privilege is your history being taught as a core class, and mine being banned because it would promote "the overthrow of the U.S. government, foster racial resentment, and advocate ethnic solidarity."
Thank you
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAW

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.
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becoming an adult cheat sheet!!!
learn how to coupon
how to get free therapy
clean bathroom tips
what to do when you can’t pay your bills
learn time management skillz
recipes that take 30 minutes or less
see if you’re paying too much for your cell phone bill
create a resume
how to make a doctor’s appointment
organize your closet
find the right career
a list of stress relievers
how to pick a major
how to take care of yourself when you’re sick
things to bring to a doctor’s appointment
what the hell is a mortgage?
buying a used car
how to pick a health insurance plan
read the news
leave your childhood traumas behind
how to quit smoking
a list of hotlines in a crisis
what to expect from your first gynecologist appointment
what to do if you get pulled over by a cop
things to keep in your car in case of an emergency
I think I'm going to church this weekend for the first time in a REALLY long time.