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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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Queer Naturism/Ecology Pride Flag
Queer naturalism/naturism (naturqueer) or queer ecology (ecoqueer): an endeavor to understand nature, biology, and eco-friendly sexuality (ecosexuality) in the light of queer theory; or a queer set of ecoanarchism (ecoanarqueer or anecoqueer), horosexual sexecology, and geosexual forms of queer nudism
Ecologist - Salvador, 2023
Plastic world
Parc de la Ciutadella - Barcelona
© 2019 Oscar Alcañiz - Please, do not erase this text if you reblog this picture
La mujer de la montaña (Kona fer Ă strĂð, Benedikt Erlingsson, 2018)
En otra Ă©poca podrĂa haber sido hasta transgresor realizar una cinta cuya protagonista es una ecoterrorista, pero en tiempos de Greta Thunberg es prĂĄcticamente nadar a favor de la corriente. Esta falta de riesgo temĂĄtico-argumental se compensa con un detalle de puesta en escena tan loco como encantador y es que la banda sonora de la pelĂcula son unos señores que acompañan a la protagonista con sus instrumentos por allĂĄ donde vaya, poniendo la melodĂa, algo parecido al trovador de Algo pasa con Mary, pero sin letra, y siempre en un discreto segundo plano. HalldĂłra GeirharðsdĂłttir tiene el doble papel de Halla, que lleva doble vida: directora de un coro local versus su labor como azote del gobierno y las elĂ©ctricas, y su hermana gemela, profesora de yoga que lleva una vida mĂĄs espiritual y tranquila. Un mensaje de alerta sobre el cambio climĂĄtico, que nunca estĂĄ de mĂĄs, aunque quizĂĄ no estĂ© en manos de los telespectadores, ni del pueblo llano, el impulsar medidas para evitar el desastre, o al menos retrasarlo lo mĂĄximo posible.

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A Small Guide to Reducing Your Footprint While Broke
Most efforts to reducing our waste and being more green are usually not that affordable. While they mostly will save you money in the long run, they are expensive items to first buy, and when youâre struggling to make rent you donât feel like going for the most expensive item - no matter if itâll end up saving you 20 dollars by next year.Â
So here are a compilation of things that are cheap or free that will help the enviroment and your wallet!Â
Web Stuff:
- Put Ecosia as your default search engine on your laptop, phone or tablet (and grab your friendâs phones when they arenât looking and put it there too). They are a Chromium based search engine that plants trees with the revenue from your searches! They plant a tree after roughly 46 searches, all their energy comes from solar panels, and also they donât sell your data to third parties.
- Go into GreaterGood.com and into their Click to Give campaings! Itâs free to you, and you can click once a day. Just donât give to their Autism Campaing - theyâre sponsored by Autism Speaks, an ableist organization that wants to âcureâ autism.Â
- Not a green tip, but a money saving one: if you shop online, join Honey, its a crome extension that finds you coupons on every purchase you do. Then maybe you can, yâknow, plant a tree with the money you saved or something.
- Follow @brokestminimalist on here, they are better at adulting than me, and they have some very good posts on how to save money and time in usually very green ways.
Out and About Stuff:
- You mustâve read this one before, but refuse panphlets and freebies. And also bags, straws, lids, and basically anything you donât need, or anything you are able to go without and would end up throwing away rapidly. These things add up.
- Shop locally and in small businesses whenever possible It activates local economy and reduces de chances that your food had to travel long spaces or was sprayed with toxic chemicals that affect the earth around it.Â
- Always carry around your own bags. You donât need a fancy bag, just use our backpack, or an old bag from a gift you recieved, or some of the plastic bags from that one bag of bags you got under your sink. (And if you ever forget, save those new bags to reuse later at least).
- Try, to the best of your abilities, to use public transit, walk, or cycle the most you can. Also try to look up which of the public transit options you have (if you have more than one) is the greener one. And for the love of god, unless you have a good reason, donât take a bus for just 6 blocks.
- If you have no choice but to use a car, then carpool, and make sure your car is as efficient as possible: remove extra weight where possible, make sure your tires are properly inflated and have the right air pressure, and slow down your travel speed by 10 km/h (6mph). All of this will both make you have a smaller enviromental impact and also save you gas money and maintenence costs.
- Carry your own water bottle and snacks/lunch to avoid buying things out of hunger while outside.
Food stuff:
- Honestly, go dumpster diving near closing times. Itâs less gross than you think, will save you money, and will save perfectly good food from being sent to landfill and creating methane gas.
- Make your own apple cider vinegar out of apple scraps, like cores and skins. itâs as simple and putting the scraps on a jar, filling the jar with water and one or two tsp of sugar, covering the jar with some cloth and leaving the jar in a dark, warm place, stirring once or twice a day.
- Grow your own herbs and medicinal plants. Grow stuff like aloe in a pot (wich you can grow from a piece of a leaf), green onions, celery and leek (you can grow them in a windowsill by simply putting the ends on water!), and really anything else that you can grow easily that you use frecuently. Look at what your needs are, what you buy the most, and try to grow something that satisfies THAT.
- Make your own veggie stock with your scraps. Use skins, ends and leaves from carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, pumpkins, celery, zuchinnis, tomatoes, and really any vegetable you use that has a soup named after it (I wouldnât put lettuce there, for example). I have also started to put the water that comes on canned veggies, after all its just salt and veggie juice, which is all this stock is gonna be about. Set your chickpea water apart, tho. Itâs called aquafaba and its an excellent egg replacement.
- Go vegan, if you can. Itâs the most impactful individual action you can have for the enviroment, and it can be made unexpesively (its just easier or harder to do depending on where you live). If you canât, then try to reduce your meat, eggs and dairy consumption. Remember you donât have to do it perfectly to make a difference.
- Cook more at home. You know this one. Also, turn off your heating for 20 minutes before and just warm your house with the excess heat from cooking. If you did something in a pot with water, allow the water to cool before throwing it fro that sweet sweet heat.
Trash and Treasure:
- Look up your local recycling plant, and see what you can recycle on the curbside and what you canât, and also what days are reserved por picking up recycling. Make sure the things you put there are clean and dry. (yep, you gotta wash your trash if you wanna recycle it). Thereâs even a chance you can make a profit off of recyclables, but if you figure out how to let me know.
- Compost at home. Itâs fairly simple, and it can be done in apartments too. Research your different choices and how to properly take care of it for cheap, flea-less, rat-less, and odor-less compost.
- Im not gonna tell you to buy second hand clothes, because you probably already do, but buy second hand everything. You can get furniture, home appliances and cookware secondhand. Look around for garage sales and pawn shops.
- Mend the things you already own. Learn embroidery and some basic sewing skills for your clothes. Glue the sole of your shoes together when they start to fall apart. Teach yourself how to fix your things, youtube is right there.
- Use your public library! For gods sake! Many tumblr posts have tackled this issue better than I ever could. Use your public library. They might even have some tools or cookware you can borrow just like books instead of having to buy them yourself.
- Bulk shop. It can really be cheaper than buying in package, and you can just avoid that plastic and also avoid buying more than you need.
But the most important thing you can do is protest. None of these things, as good as they are, are enough to stop climate change. We need systematic change, and it has to come from our goverments. So donate, join activism groups, or protest.
Forget saving the planet â we need to save Greta from the death cult of environmentalism.
âAny adult who cheered Greta Thunbergâs speech to the UN yesterday should be ashamed of themselves. Her emotional rant was a deeply disturbing spectacle. It revealed a young woman, a girl, in essence, who is in the grip of terror, of a morbid, debilitating belief that life as we know it is coming to an end. You could not have asked for firmer proof that the green ideology is seriously screwing up the next generation by pumping them with fear and panic and a deranged belief that the end of the world is nigh. It isnât the planet that needs saving â itâs Greta. She needs to be saved from the death cult of eco-alarmism.
It was a truly sad sight. Greta, 16, spoke through tears. And her tears were understandable given she believes life on Earth is being suffocated and murdered by greedy, marauding mankind. She berated the gathered heads of state. âYou have stolen my dreams and my childhood⊠People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction and all you can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth. How dare you?â With each nightmarish word, with each unhinged dystopian prediction of doom, her voice wobbled and her emotions span out of control. It was a public meltdown. And of course the politicians applauded it â perversely, they love nothing more than being told how awful they are by a petrified, disorientated girl.
Who did this to Greta? Who turned a bright and curious 16-year-old schoolgirl into a prophet of horror, into a young woman who admits to feeling terror and who believes the Earth is on fire? Adults did. The green-infused educational, political and cultural elites did. The people who have been feeding kids a narrative of eco-fear for years did this. Their secular Armageddonism, their wilful exaggeration of every problem mankind faces, their marshalling of the politics of fear to try to force people to change their allegedly wicked, eco-harmful behaviour â all of this has convinced many young people that the future is dark, mankind is doomed, and there is no point even going to school, far less planning oneâs life, because we will all be dead soon. They did this to Greta, and to others, and it is unforgivable.
The extent to which adults have indoctrinated kids with eco-nihilistic fear was made clear in the words of the UN general-secretary Antonio Guterres. Opening the UN Climate Action Summit yesterday, at which Greta made her frazzled, tragic speech, he said: âNature is angry.â What is this superstition? It is positively pre-modern. This anthropomorphising of nature is central to the eco-alarmist outlook. It presents everything from forest fires to floods as punishment for humankindâs sins, as natureâs payback to the pox that is humanity and our âfairytales of eternal economic growthâ, as Greta describes it. In Biblical times, freak weather and plagues of locusts were viewed as Godâs punishment of human beingsâ sinful behaviour; now we hear talk of âweather of mass destructionâ and âangryâ natural events that are apparently Gaiaâs punishment of us for committing the sin of economic growth. The words change, but the backwardness and hysteria are eerily similar.
Greta Thunberg is admirable in many ways. She is driven and articulate. But it is patently clear now that she is being exploited. She is being pushed to the forefront of the most fearful and superstitious movement of our times. She has been turned into the chief spokesperson for doom, the mouthpiece of eco-misanthropy, a soothsayer of the horrors humankind will allegedly bring upon itself. The aim seems to be to make environmentalism an unquestionable, untouchable ideology. Witness how anyone who raises even a peep of criticism of eco-nonsense will now be asked: âHow dare you criticise Greta and the other brave climate-striking children?â These kids are being used as moral shields by adults to protect the increasingly bizarre politics of environmentalism from interrogation and criticism. It is dizzying in its cynicism.
And it is destructive, too. Destructive of public debate, destructive of critical discussion, and destructive of the kids who are being dragged into this terrifying, miserabilist worldview to play the role of a stage army to adult societyâs own loss of faith in mankind and in economic growth. Enough. Set Greta free. Stop instructing her in the cult of fear and let her go back to school and to a normal youthful life. If you really must have a child speaking at the UN, how about a teenager from Africa or India who believes economic growth is not a fairytale but absolutely essential to their liberation from poverty? Weâve all heard more than enough from middle-class Westerners who think economic growth is oh-so-horrible. Letâs hear from someone in the teeming billions around the world who profoundly disagree with this downbeat, anti-human, Western-centric crap.â
â Brendan O'Neill, 24th September 2019.