sabbatine:

diseonfire:

thepfa:

nohetero:

scottthepilgrim:

which fucking fedora wearing friendzoned nerd made this thing

yeah but notice that the seal’s intent is to eat those fish and the shark offers a mutually beneficial relationship for them

in which a dudebro unintentionally makes a really accurate analogy for the reason that they’re single forever

That’s a whale shark. They’re docile and in no way threatening to people or those fish depicted. Seals, by contrast, will attack people, possibly out of a frustrated sense of entitlement combined with poor socialization skills.

Well that backfired spectacularly.

This is in every way perfect irony. It’s beautiful.

fuckyeahfluiddynamics:

Hummingbirds are incredible acrobatic fliers, capable of hovering for more than 30 seconds at a time, even in windy conditions. Their feeding habits are equally impressive. Many species of hummingbirds have a forked tongue, each half of which curls over like a partial straw. As the bird extends its tongue, its beak compresses the space inside the tongue’s curls. Once in the nectar, both halves of the tongue re-expand, pulling liquid in along the full length of the tongue. For the birds, this is a much faster technique than simply sucking the nectar up like a straw. Hummingbirds can lick nectar more than ten times a second this way. For more gorgeous imagery of hummingbirds, be sure to check out National Geographic’s full feature. (Image credit: A. Varma, source; via Aarthi S.)

How did your cat manage to kill a coyote? (And various others.)

gallusrostromegalus:

To Be Clear: Tiggy is my former biology teacher’s cat, not mine.  

Tiggy was found on the street by her six-year-old son and they thought he was a teenager, except his teeth weren’t in great shape, and he never got any bigger.  He’s lived with them for 15 years, and Mrs. A thinks he’s probably 17 now.

Tiggy is SUPPOSED to be an indoor cat, but he is Cunning and Apparently Feels No Pain, so he’s managed to get out may, many times by jimmying window locks open, working doorknobs knocking a hole in the roof from the attic, and straight-up running through single-pane glass once.  So Mrs. A, attempting to mitigate his environmental impact, has him permanently wearing a neon yellow, reflective strip vest/harness, with bells, a flashing light and a beeper that goes off every 12 minutes, in case he gnaws the bells off.  It also has a GPS tracker made from a modified Ankle bracelet, that tells her when he gets out.

IN SPITE OF THIS, he’s still murdery little shit.

The Loud Harness seems to have slowed down his genocide of the local small vertebrates, but had a curious backwards effect: The large carnivores come over and try to throw down with him.

If you’re wondering how  6lb kittykat takes down a 45 lb coyote:  Stone-cold bastard kills them the same way a lion takes down a fucking zebra-He latches onto their windpipes and either asphyxiates them by clamping down or actually rips their throats out.  The ruff does nothing.

We know this, and his estimated body count, because he likes to bring back particularly difficult kills to the porch to show off.

In 2012, Mrs. A’s son brought home a malamute/GSD puppy and Mrs. A was terrified that Tiggy was going to kill him too.  Instead, Tiggy took Tobasco under his proverbial wing and went from “Mighty Hunter” to “Overprotective Parent”, staying in the yard and guarding Tobasco from any potential harm with the same murderous zeal as he’s always had.  

…He also taught Tobasco how to stalk, chase, and corner the local wildlife and last year Mrs. A came home to find a six-point mule deer buck in her kitchen, attempting to hide on top of the stove.

gallusrostromegalus:

captainsnoop:

it’s a shame they dont got “pet cats, but bigger”

like they got dogs in all sorts of cool sizes but we cant make cats bigger than cats because “ooh they’ll kill us” or whatever

bullhockey, i say. if human beings can make the species Canis lupis familiaris in to different shit like the Mastiff and the Pomeranian and have it still be the same animal, we can make cats that are dog sized and have them not be dangerous 

The issue is less with how prospectively murderous cats might be and more that cats don’t have the genetic layout that lets us breed for things like size and colors quite as easily.  I am very tired and only have a passing knowledge of the subject, so someone who is a cat scientist should take this post., but have a summary, based on my understanding:

We’ve been breeding Maine coons and Norwegian forest cats and others for AGES trying to make them big, but unlike dogs, who had bigass ancestors recently, cats only had smol ancestors recently and even pushing into the 30lb range has taken a long time and can present serious health issues.   

Hilariously, in my experience, the bigger the cat, the LESS murderous it’s been.  Sir Fluffington is a Maine Coon weighing in at 23lbs, is the heaviest cat I personally know and is a total potato that can’t be arsed to chase a string.  Tiggy, a 6-lb domestic shorthair, is a fucking menace will a kill count of 4 foxes, 8 coyotes, innumerable small animals, and an attempt on a mountain lion.  (Tiggy is  an indoor cat but also Cunning and gets out)

pinchtheprincess:

cactustreemotel:

msdoublenegative:

sjw-proverbs:

girljanitor:

tacticalconscience:

Even if you don’t think vaccines and autism are related … these are some staggering numbers!

YES THESE NUMBERS ARE STAGGERING I WOULD ALSO POSIT THAT HAVE YOU CONSIDERED THESE IMAGES AND TEXT ALSO

image

image

12/10 best response to this idiocy.

correlation does not equal causation dumbasses

Those are the best graphs ever.

I have seen similar posts, but this one has the best charts. 

aberrant-eyes:

batscoundrel:

They simply
called themselves The Scouts. No one was entirely sure why, since scouting as
an action was only one of many things they did. With how many legends
surrounding them were popping up in the Wasteland like fresh new plant life, it
was an understatement to say I was honored to be invited to one of their
encampments.

As I walked
deeper into the heart of the outpost, I watched one of the younger initiates,
not even in her teens, sulk and frown. “No no, little trooper,” said her older
supervisor, slipping bullets into a salvaged ammo belt with a practiced,
mechanical efficiency. “You can’t be a gunner on a supply run yet. I know you’re
eager, but show me you can tie all your knots first. Show me you can start a
fire, both smokeless and signal. Tell me the names of some of the stars. Then
we can talk about you getting your marksmanship badge.”

Everyone in The Scouts knew what all their kind were capable of via a “badge”
system I’ve seen nowhere else in the Wasteland except old, creaking warlords
who clung to trophies from wars long past, and those pretending to be them. But
none of these simple glimmering objects—most often fashioned from scavenged
bottlecaps or mechanical washers—glorified war. They indicated which practical
skills an individual Scout had achieved recognized proficiency in, so that they
always knew who could do what, and assign things quickly—or spy teaching
opportunities. They even had sashes to attach them to that indicated rank—the newest
initiates’ made from simple cloth, often hemmed themselves as a first project,
the more experienced ones bearing their badges on ones made from seatbelts, a
prominent feature of cars from the Old World. The very oldest, the leaders, they
wore large ones fashioned from scraps of burst tire, sometimes decorated
further with old nails or bits of scrap metal.

“We survived the Last War,” the guide explained to me, “because we were damn
well taught how to.”

And it was this survival knowledge that was passed to their initiates, with the
hope that as long as there were groups like them in these barren, radiation-soaked
dunes, hope could exist. Life could slowly become more comfortable, even
regularly bearable, because people out there knew how to cope, how to survive,
how to bend even this unforgiving landscape to their will.

Out of what was, according to the guide, a proud tradition, they recruited only
women. This tradition, with some of the less pleasant cultures of the
Wasteland, had also made them into something of a rescue program—many of their
newer initiates were captured from the settlements of warlords; broken, angry
girls who would otherwise grow up to be thought of as things.

Continuing our tour, the guide waved over a friend, who accompanied me strictly
from behind. I felt the barrel of a gun press gently into my upper back.
“We don’t want to threaten you,” the guide said, “but you’re about to see some
particularly delicate secrets. You understand.”
I simply nodded. No one these days could be assumed to be entirely trustworthy.

I was led, prodded by the gun, into what was termed “the bakery.” My nose was
filled with the most pleasant scents I think I will ever encounter. Groups of
Scouts, sweating in the heat of the enclosure, which used lens-focused sunlight
to act as a natural oven, worked away mixing dough or setting small flat rounds
of some kind of bread to cool on mesh racks.
“We cannot show you where we get the wheat. Partially because we steal much of
it from those who hoard it, and we cannot afford to give our enemies more
reasons for a vendetta.”
Again, I simply nodded. My guide handed me one of the flat rounds.
“Try it. It’s called a cookie.”
It was a hearty thing, thick and chewy and heavy. It was immensely satisfying,
though the taste admittedly, in spite of the smell, left a little to be
desired.
“They’re rations we’ve carefully designed. One of these can sustain a person for
two days.”
Their efficiency continued to be impeccable. I ate half of the cookie and
slipped the rest into a pocket. She handed me a smaller one, ring shaped.
“Now try one of these.”
I had never tasted anything like it before or since. It was sweet. Very sweet.
Something about it made me smile. I started to laugh, and she laughed with me.
Even the guard chuckled.
“What about this one?” I asked. “What kind of ration is it?”
“It’s not a ration,” she said with a hint of pride. “Those ones are simply made
to be enjoyed. Hope is harder to spread if you don’t experience something nice
once in a while just for the sake of it. We call those ones ‘Samoas.’ There are
a few other recipes.”  
Something nice, just for its own sake. A concept that had almost been lost. As
I chewed and reflected on this, trying hard to restrain myself from just
gobbling the rest down at once, I overheard snippets of conversation, again
between the younger and older members.
“Now, some of you are probably asking, ‘how do we make caramel? Wasn’t that
made from sugar? Isn’t sugarcane extinct?’ Some of the very youngest of you are
probably asking ‘what’s sugar?’ to begin with. One of the breeds of lizard in
these dunes stores sugars extracted from its digestion in a special organ, and
when we gather it and boil it…”
More of the lesson was lost in the general din of the bakery. I had finished my
cookie, and thanked my guide profusely. She looked to the guard, then to me.
“Would you like to see a delivery run?”
It seemed like only minutes later I was a passenger in one of their vehicles,
the cargo bay of which had been loaded with containers all filled with cookies—half
of them the sustaining ration variety, half of them varieties of the sweet ones
I had experienced. My guide was the driver, the guard who had been trained on
me was one of two gunners. A new guard was assigned to me for safety’s sake. A
couple other Scouts, younger ones, were along to simply help unload the cargo
and provide lookout.
“We have a screening process,” the guide shouted to me over the roar of twin
V-8 engines. “We only deliver to settlements that are not ruled by a warlord.
Settlements we know will share with each other rather than having an elite hoard
it all. This shipment’s going to New Bartertown, on the coast of the Glowing
Sea.”
I ask what they traded.
“For the sweeter cookies, mostly metal, glass, and tires. For the rations?
Nothing. The rations are simply given because they ought to be.”
It was the first time I had heard such a sentiment stated so directly. It would
not be the last time I reflected on it.
Only eighty kilometers outside The Scouts’ camp, there was commotion, and I
could not be talked to, only watch.
“PINPOINT! WATCH YOUR NINE! CITADEL IS INCOMING!”
I heard the thud of drums in the distance and the thrum of a guitar, an
arrangement I had heard once or twice in my life. Immortan Joe and his warboys,
who lorded over nearly a third of the west of the continent. Their raids, from
my experience, were almost always successful. Joe himself was likely uninvolved
with such a trivial affair, but as the other vehicles roared closer I could
make out the unmistakable gangly white silhouettes of his infamous army of sons…
“TAKE WHAT YOU WILL, WARBOYS!” the closest one screamed even above the noise of
the cars and music. “TAKE WHAT YOU WILL, BUT LEAVE THE SAMOAS FOR THE IMMOR—”
and he was promptly cut off by a round through the throat. Pinpoint had earned
her name. I didn’t see more than three or four bullets wasted the entire trip.

My guide was right.
They survived because they were damn well taught how to.

 At the end of it all, I elected to stay in New Bartertown for a while, thanking
The Scouts for their time. I had to find paper and ink and write all this down.
It took nearly a week to trade for it, and until then I simply cycled these
words over and over in my head.
I don’t know if I’ll want to leave for a while yet. The smiles on the faces of
the people here are too infectious. It’s been too long since I’ve been around a
smile that wasn’t caused by the suffering of another, but rather by the most
elusive resource in all of the Wastes—hope.

Remember, it’s “ride eternal”, not “ride for a month or two and get bored”.

inaheartbeat-film:

In a Heartbeat – Animated Short Film (2017)

A closeted boy runs the risk of being outed by his own heart after it pops out of his chest to chase down the boy of his dreams

© Beth David and Esteban Bravo 2017


It’s here! After a year and a half of hard work, we are both so excited to finally share our film with you. Thank you all for your support and encouragement – this film means the world to us, and your kindness and enthusiasm has made this journey all the more meaningful. It is our great pleasure to share with you this labor of love, and we hope with all our hearts that you enjoy watching it as much as we did making it.