It is time for an update to the introduction.
My name is Morgan, I am a crumbling ancient who has been in fandom longer than some of you have been alive, I believe in live and let live, fancops and antis are not welcome here in any capacity, and being an asshole will get you blocked. I am into multiple things at any given time and I am happy to chat away with whomever about whatever.
The ADHD is medically verified, the autism is a peer review diagnosis. It gets weird here.
Places you can find me and what I do:
Feel free to follow me anywhere! I’m here until this ship sinks.
My inbox is always open and I’m here to have a good time.
Let’s have one together.
David Bowie as Jareth aka The Goblin King
LABYRINTH (1986) dir. Jim Henson
(via skywalkerangst)
“how did you get into writing” girl nobody gets into writing. writing shows up one day at your door and gets into you
“how did you get into writing” girl i’ve been tormented by the visions since i was eight years old
(via roxycake)
When I was in vet school I went to this one lecture that I will never forget. Various clubs would have different guest lecturers come in to talk about relevant topics and since I was in the Wildlife Disease Association club I naturally attended all the wildlife and conservation discussions. Well on this particular occasion, the speakers started off telling us they had been working on a project involving the conservation of lemurs in Madagascar. Lemurs exist only in Madagascar, and they are in real trouble; they’re considered the most endangered group of mammals on Earth. This team of veterinarians was initially assembled to address threats to lemur health and work on conservation solutions to try and save as many lemur species from extinction as possible. As they explored the most present dangers to lemurs they found that although habitat loss was the primary problem for these vulnerable animals, predation by humans was a significant cause of losses as well. The vets realized it was crucial for the hunting of lemurs by native people to stop, but of course this is not so simple a problem.
The local Malagasy people are dealing with extreme poverty and food insecurity, with nearly half of children under five years old suffering from chronic malnutrition. The local people have always subsisted on hunting wildlife for food, and as Madagascar’s wildlife population declines, the people who rely on so-called bushmeat to survive are struggling more and more. People are literally starving.
Our conservation team thought about this a lot. They had initially intended to focus efforts on education but came to understand that this is not an issue arising from a lack of knowledge. For these people it is a question of survival. It doesn’t matter how many times a foreigner tells you not to eat an animal you’ve hunted your entire life, if your child is starving you are going to do everything in your power to keep your family alive.
So the vets changed course. Rather than focus efforts on simply teaching people about lemurs, they decided to try and use veterinary medicine to reduce the underlying issue of food insecurity. They supposed that if a reliable protein source could be introduced for the people who needed it, the dependence on meat from wildlife would greatly decrease. So they got to work establishing new flocks of chickens in the most at-risk communities, and also initiated an aggressive vaccination program for Newcastle disease (an infectious illness of poultry that is of particular concern in this area). They worked with over 600 households to ensure appropriate husbandry and vaccination for every flock, and soon found these communities were being transformed by the introduction of a steady protein source. Families with a healthy flock of chickens were far less likely to hunt wild animals like lemurs, and fewer kids went hungry. Thats what we call a win-win situation.
This chicken vaccine program became just one small part of an amazing conservation outreach initiative in Madagascar that puts local people at the center of everything they do. Helping these vulnerable communities of people helps similarly vulnerable wildlife, always. If we go into a country guns-blazing with that fire for conservation in our hearts and a plan to save native animals, we simply cannot ignore the humans who live around them. Doing so is counterintuitive to creating an effective plan because whether we recognize it or not, humans and animals are inextricably linked in many ways. A true conservation success story is one that doesn’t leave needy humans in its wake, and that is why I think this particular story has stuck with me for so long.
(Source 1)
(Source 2- cool video exploring this initiative from some folks involved)
(Source 3)
Unfortunately, I don’t have citations, but I have heard about the same phenomenon through Nat Geo Live presentations in the Amazon and Serengeti. Most individuals who are poachers or use slash-and-burn farming are doing this out of survival, not ignorance or greed. They have families to feed and children who will starve if they don’t find food or money. As OP said, fixing the human suffering fixes the conservation issue and is a win-win, while preaching conservation to starving people does nothing.
But on top of that, you know who the most ardent conservationists are once security has been achieved? The people who had once been forced to poach or slash-and-burn to survive. You know who’s great at tracking down gorilla poachers? Ex-poachers. Who’s good at understanding and advocating for people forced to do these things to survive? Ex-poachers. Who can convince others to take a chance on finding a better way to survive? Same answer.
It is win-win-win. As ecologists, conservationists, and environmentalists we must get out of our ivory towers of knowledge, stop carrying them into the field, and remember humans are part of the ecosystem too. And that sustainable change will never happen if human needs aren’t addressed.
I also love this story about the arapaima in Brazil. They increased the population of this endangered giant fish literally a hundred times over- from 3,000 to 300,000- by ending the total ban on arapaima fishing and instead creating legal fishing organizations. The fishing organization members get trained on how do population counts and determine how many fish they can take while still leaving enough for the population to grow.
The former illegal fishers are now sought-after experts, because they know how to spot the arapaima and tell juveniles apart from adults. They get to keep practicing the fishing skills that were passed down to them. The actual process of fishing is easier because they can work together and don’t have to sneak around. The profits are higher because they can sell the fish openly to restaurants and to the public. The fishing organization members make sure that other people in their communities don’t fish illegally. And the numbers of arapaima keep going up and up, so there’s plenty to go around even as more people join the fishing organizations.
If you click all the way through to the report from the conservation org that started the fishing organizations project, there are quotes from fishing organization members:
- “We built a second house and I’m putting my oldest two kids through college on the money we get from fishing.”
- “Nowadays you have young people walking around with pockets full of cash saying "I got 6,000 from fishing this year!” It used to be you wouldn’t even get 50 reais of pocket money.“
- "At the first harvest after we started the fishing organization, I saw full-grown arapaima for the first time, really big ones like they’re supposed to be. Before, I had only heard about how big they could get. That’s when I knew that our work was paying off and we could keep moving forward.”
(via demonsummoning)
~Rot~
My latest artwork of Daron! The pose fascinated me and what originally started as a warm up sketch turned into a full piece! I hope you all like it! Close ups, the sketch, and a shitpost of me bothering my brother are below ❤️
(via dailymalakian)
One year ago today, the word “bearotonin” was born. To celebrate this anniversary, here is some of the bearotoniniest bearotonin we have
2 years to the day since the word “bearotonin” was birthed! Here’s some bearotoniny bearotonin for the occasion!
So wild that it’s been 4 YEARS since the word “bearotonin” first entered the English language lexicon! We hope you’ll join us in celebearating the occasion with some particularly bearotoniny bearotonin
(via storyweaverofgondor)
I think some Very Online people are ignoring the way Tim Walz has been trying to fight back against ICE as much as he feasibly can as governor of Minnesota and consistently sounding the alarm on just how bad things are because it’s direct proof that the Harris-Walz ticket would not have approved of ICE acting this way and this would not be happening if Harris and Walz had won. Remember, the skeleton key to understanding a significant chunk of discourse about American politics is that the moral frauds online aggressively lie about Democrats and downplay Republican evil so they could justify not voting, and then desperately try to save face and act like they hold no culpability when Republicans win and kill people. That’s all it ever is.
Funniest justification for gay sex thank you Marlon Brando
(via wastelandimbaby)