The thing about patriarchy is that individual men, gay and straight, are often really wonderful people who you love deeply, but they have internalized some really poisonous shit. So every once in a while they say or do something that really shakes you because you’re no longer totally certain they see you as a human being, and you feel totally disempowered to explain that to them.
cheriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:
GET YOUR WEAK ASS SHIT OUTTA THE WHITE TIGER TAG
THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT POST YOU’LL EVER SEE UNDER THIS TAG
Picture #1:
Kenny. Kenny doesn’t have down’s syndrome. Kenny is (was) severely deformed due to generations of inbreeding. This should be the true face of white tiger “conservation”Picture #2
Zuri was born with a severely compromised immune system due to inbreeding. Here she is with apparently a full bodied case of ringworm.Although Zuri was born normal looking on the outside, she has an incredibly weak immune system and was near death when she came to live at Noah’s Ark. At her original home, she was hidden from the eyes of the visiting public as she was missing almost all of the hair on her body. Her owners had called their vet in multiple times, but had decided Zuri was a hopeless case and was ready to euthanize her.
Is this not beautiful enough for you? Do you refuse to acknowledge that for every “beautiful” picture of white tigers you reblog there are at least a dozen others like Kenny and Zuri? And countless more that die shortly after birth, hidden away from the public eye to protect this disgusting practice and keep the adoring public in ignorance.
EDUCATE YOURSELVES!!
All White Tigers are Inbred and are not Purebred
I haven’t heard of Zuri, thanks for posting this!
(via moreanimalia)
Oh yeah, I was supposed to finish this over a year ago. Shoot.
The Devin Townsend Project - Ho Krll
Hey! I’ve been working on an arrangement of Unite Synchronization for front ensemble for a while now. I’m hoping to be able to play this at my school’s spring concert.
Some of the sound didn’t export so well, so there’s a few problems with the vibes’ parts being cut short in a few places, but it should sound fine otherwise!
Source: Bandcamp
During the Bubonic Plague, doctors wore these bird-like masks to avoid becoming sick. They would fill the beaks with spices and rose petals, so they wouldn’t have to smell the rotting bodies.
A theory during the Bubonic Plague was that the plague was caused by evil spirits. To scare the spirits away, the masks were intentionally designed to be creepy.
Mission fucking accomplished
Okay so I love this but it doesn’t cover the half of why the design is awesome and actually borders on making sense.
It wasn’t just that they didn’t want to smell the infected and dead, they thought it was crucial to protecting themselves. They had no way of knowing about what actually caused the plague, and so one of the other theories was that the smell of the infected all by itself was evil and could transmit the plague. So not only would they fill their masks with aromatic herbs and flowers, they would also burn fires in public areas, so that the smell of the smoke would “clear the air”. This all related to the miasma theory of contagion, which was one of the major theories out there until the 19th century. And it makes sense, in a way. Plague victims smelled awful, and there’s a general correlation between horrible septic smells and getting horribly sick if you’re around what causes them for too long.
You can see now that we’ve got two different theories as to what caused the plague that were worked into the design. That’s because the whole thing was an attempt by the doctors to cover as many bases as they could think of, and we’re still not done.
The glass eyepieces. They were either darkened or red, not something you generally want to have to contend with when examining patients. But the plague might be spread by eye contact via the evil eye, so best to ward that off too.
The illustration shows a doctor holding a stick. This was an examination tool, that helped the doctors keep some distance between themselves and the infected. They already had gloves on, but the extra level of separation was apparently deemed necessary. You could even take a pulse with it. Or keep people the fuck away from you, which was apparently a documented use.
Finally, the robe. It’s not just to look fancy, the cloth was waxed, as were all of the rest of their clothes. What’s one of the properties of wax? Water-based fluids aren’t absorbed by it. This was the closest you could get to a sterile, fully protecting garment back then. Because at least one person along the line was smart enough to think “Gee, I’d really rather not have the stuff coming out of those weeping sores anywhere on my person”.
So between all of these there’s a real sense that a lot of real thought was put into making sure the doctors were protected, even if they couldn’t exactly be sure from what. They worked with what information they had. And frankly, it’s a great design given what was available! You limit exposure to aspirated liquids, limit exposure to contaminated liquids already present, you limit contact with the infected. You also don’t give fleas any really good place to hop onto. That’s actually useful.
Beyond that, there were contracts the doctors would sign before they even got near a patient. They were to be under quarantine themselves, they wouldn’t treat patients without a custodian monitoring them and helping when something had to be physically contacted, and they would not treat non-plague patients for the duration. There was an actual system in place by the time the plague doctors really became a thing to make sure they didn’t infect anyone either.
These guys were the product of the scientific process at work, and the scientific process made a bitchin’ proto-hazmat suit. And containment protocols!
(via allisonpregler)
Source: creepylittleworld









