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@neverenoughxp

Gentle reminder that very little fandom labor is automated, because I think people forget that a lot.

That blog with a tagging system you love? A person curates those tags by hand.

That rec blog with a great organization scheme and pretty graphics? Someone designed and implemented that organization scheme and made those graphics.

That network that posts a cool variety of stuff? People track down all that variety and queue it by hand, and other people made all the individual pieces.

That post with umpteen links to helpful resources, and information about them? Someone gathered those links, researched the sources, wrote up the information about them.

That graphic about fandom statistics? Someone compiled those statistics, analyzed them, organized them, figured out a useful way to convey the information to others, and made the post.

That event that you think looks neat? Someone wrote the rules, created the blogs and Discords, designed the graphics, did their best to promo the event so it'd succeed.

None of this was done automatically. None of it just appears whole out of the internet ether.

I think everyone realizes that fic writing and fanart creation are work, and at least some folks have got it through their heads that gif creation and graphics and moodboards take effort, and meta is usually respected for the effort that goes into it, at least as far as I've seen, but I feel like a lot of people don't really get how much labor goes into curation, too.

If people are creating resources, curating content, organizing the creations of others, gathering information, and doing other fandom activities that aren't necessarily the direct action of creation, they're doing a lot of fandom labor, and it's often largely unrecognized.

Celebrate fan work!

To folks doing this kind of labor: I see you, and I thank you. You are the backbones of our fandoms and I love you.

As someone living in Minnesota, if you think both sides are the same, and Trump is only doing openly what Obama did quietly, I will simply say I don't remember minority-owned businesses having to keep their doors locked during the day to stop ICE from coming in and taking everyone.

One of the team behind the letter was blunt. “The brain microplastic paper is a joke,” said Dr Dušan Materić, at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research in Germany. “Fat is known to make false-positives for polyethylene. The brain has [approximately] 60% fat.” Materić and his colleagues suggested rising obesity levels could be an alternative explanation for the trend reported in the study. Materić said: “That paper is really bad, and it is very explainable why it is wrong.” He thinks there are serious doubts over “more than half of the very high impact papers” reporting microplastics in biological tissue.
But the brain study is far from alone in having been challenged. One, which reported that patients with MNPs detected in carotid artery plaques had a higher risk of heart attacks and strokes than patients with no MNPs detected, was subsequently criticised for not testing blank samples taken in the operating room. Blank samples are a way of measuring how much background contamination may be present. Another study reported MNPs in human testes, “highlighting the pervasive presence of microplastics in the male reproductive system”. But other scientists took a different view: “It is our opinion that the analytical approach used is not robust enough to support these claims.”
Further challenged studies include two reporting plastic particles in blood – in both cases the researchers contested the criticisms – and another on their detection in arteries. A study claiming to have detected 10,000 nanoplastic particles per litre of bottled water was called “fundamentally unreliable” by critics, a charge disputed by the scientists. The doubts amount to a “bombshell”, according to Roger Kuhlman, a chemist formerly at the Dow Chemical Company. “This is really forcing us to re-evaluate everything we think we know about microplastics in the body. Which, it turns out, is really not very much. Many researchers are making extraordinary claims, but not providing even ordinary evidence.” While analytical chemistry has long-established guidelines on how to accurately analyse samples, these do not yet exist specifically for MNPs, said Dr Frederic Béen, at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam: “But we still see quite a lot of papers where very standard good laboratory practices that should be followed have not necessarily been followed.”
A key way of measuring the mass of MNPs in a sample is, perhaps counterintuitively, vaporising it, then capturing the fumes. But this method, dubbed Py-GC-MS, has come under particular criticism. “[It] is not currently a suitable technique for identifying polyethylene or PVC due to persistent interferences,” concluded a January 2025 study led by Dr Cassandra Rauert, an environmental chemist at the University of Queensland in Australia. “I do think it is a problem in the entire field,” Rauert told the Guardian. “I think a lot of the concentrations [of MNPs] that are being reported are completely unrealistic.” “This isn’t a dig at [other scientists],” she added. “They use these techniques because we haven’t got anything better available to us. But a lot of studies that we’ve seen coming out use the technique without really fully understanding the data that it’s giving you.” She said the failure to employ normal quality control checks was “a bit crazy”. Py-GC-MS begins by pyrolysing the sample – heating it until it vaporises. The fumes are then passed through the tubes of a gas chromatograph, which separates smaller molecules from large ones. Last, a mass spectrometer uses the weights of different molecules to identify them. The problem is that some small molecules in the fumes derived from polyethylene and PVC can also be produced from fats in human tissue. Human samples are “digested” with chemicals to remove tissue before analysis, but if some remains the result can be false positives for MNPs. Rauert’s paper lists 18 studies that did not include consideration of the risk of such false positives. Rauert also argues that studies reporting high levels of MNPs in organs are simply hard to believe: “I have not seen evidence that particles between 3 and 30 micrometres can cross into the blood stream,” she said. “From what we know about actual exposure in our everyday lives, it is not biologically plausible that that mass of plastic would actually end up in these organs.” “It’s really the nano-size plastic particles that can cross biological barriers and that we are expecting inside humans,” she said. “But the current instruments we have cannot detect nano-size particles.”

Whoopsie it was all bad science rushed out the door.

Anonymous asked:

They. Fucking. Knew.

Groups of college students who don't even have time to wash their own asses for days at a time suddenly had manifestos in support of Hamas ready to go on October 7th that went on and on for hundreds of pages and used specific jargon and code names that Hamas used. Social media accounts that had been dormant for years suddenly started posting again seconds before the attack. They got permits for their "protests" on October 6th. They had professionally printed banners that take weeks to get done. Allegedly unconnected groups across the country were saying the same words, verbatim, at the exact same time.

These animals knew what was going to happen. They were in on it. They were active participants in October 7th and every single one of them deserves to rot in prison for the rest of their lives. Every single one of them is a murderer who worships death.

I will never trust a goy again as long as I live.

The shitstains at Columbia knew. They posted on their instagram as the attacks were starting after they had been dormant for months. There’s a whole section in the October 8 documentary about it.

the critical thing to me about trinity santos' storyline in s1 is that she doesn't really get adopted by senior staff like the rest of the med students or interns. her relationship with robby is pretty minimal up until the latter part of the season, we don't see her meaningfully interact with collins or mckay, mohan calls her aggressive, and her relationship with langdon progresses from strained to mortal enemies. Garcia gives her some guidance, but that's more flirting than mentorship, and it ends pretty much as soon as trinity makes a mistake like the student she is/starts prodding into areas Garcia doesn't want her to ask about

this is partially because trinity is definitely a little overconfident and can come off as abrasive, but we see other doctors exhibit those same qualities and they still have respect from their peers.

The thing that's different about TRINITY is not her personality but that she's on the lower end of the medical totem pole — and she doesn't let that stop her from questioning authority.

Unlike the other med students like whitaker or javadi, trinity is not just going to respect senior staff because of their innate POSITIONS until she's given a reason to. She pokes authority back in a way a lot of these people aren't used to, and they read that as arrogance as opposed to justifiable wariness based on what we know of trinity's past.

The situation with langdon escalates the way it does because trinity gets responses from senior staff about it in a way that is probably deeply familiar and rings more of her alarm bells

trinity gets flak from garcia for not minding her business because Garcia pretty much dismisses her as a source: treating trinity as someone who's not showing her bosses due deference and therefore completely misses the red flags the questions trinity asks should raise.

trinity's told by others to trust her superiors and that there are systems in place, but how many people and systems have failed trinity? How many times did she hear "trust me, believe me, we know what's best for you" from authority figures when she was actively in harm's way?

Now, is trinity a bit arrogant? Yeah. Does she need to work on her interpersonal skills? You betcha. But underneath that, she's deeply compassionate, an intuitive and quick thinker, and very dedicated. much like everything else in the pitt, trinity santos is more than what you see on the surface, and she deserves some grace

still thinking about how perfect a flag this is for human space exploration. Shapes and symbols can change meanings between people and cultures currently, let alone hundreds or even thousands of years into the future.

And what is the purpose of placing a flag on a foreign planet? It’s a way to say “we were here.” And the one, immediate symbol that any other human who came to the same spot any number of years later would be able to recognize a human hand. Even if governments change and collapse, we all understand a handprint.

and if you found yourself somewhere where you wanted to mark humanity’s presence, but didn’t have a flag with you? Well, you have your own hand.

The Pitt characters and their Badge Reels 1/2

It’s been run over by an ambulance and somehow still functional

She uses the one they gave her during orientation

She keeps it classy (and loves a monogram)

Santos got it for him (he pretends not to like it)

She loves this one unironically but pretends she isn’t excited to have one coordinated with Dennis.

She has a bunch of these and color coordinates then with her under scrubs and jacket

Millennial queen

I don’t think he’d have a silly one but he is sentimental about it. He wears Adamson’s or one he got in New Orleans during residency. It’s scratched and dented and he will never stop using it.

The Pitt characters and their badge reels 2/2

His kids made this for him during a Rick and Morty phase.

She has a black badge reel with this penlight attached

He also has a bunch of superhero tattoos and they’re a hit with peds patients.

He says Ellis bought it for him, really he won it with Dunkin points and really likes it (low hanging fruit but come on I had to do it)

Shen did buy this one for her

My favorite yappers <3

"if you convince people that there's no difference between a blood thirsty dictator and a dedicated leader who is human and thus unable to solve every problem, the dictator wins."

by the way guys, this deployment of ice to minnesota is largest ever. more agents than chicago. we are a much less dense state. we are being inundated.

It is the largest Department of Homeland Security operation in history. And yet Minnesota’s Somali population (this operation’s primary target) is upwards of 90% naturalized American citizens. It’s even more of a manufactured crisis than most DHS operations. Genuinely living in Minnesota now feels like we’re a small country on the brink of invasion.

I saw two ICE trucks yesterday on my way to give my friends back their house keys from when I was looking after their cats. I got home today and I heard whistles and honking from people chasing ICE, but by the time I got Matilda in the house they were gone so I couldn't join in the chase. I know there was a major attempt to steal my neighbors from just a few blocks away this morning while I was at work.

It doesn't feel like we're on the brink of invasion. It feels like we're being newly occupied by an invading force. Except that the invading force doesn't just want our total submission; they also want to rip half our neighbors out of our arms. They came for Hmong Minnesotans next, and they are also more than 90% citizens. We have a lot of minority populations who settled here because Minnesota prides itself on welcoming refugees; both populations have been here for more than thirty years.

Fuck this shit. It is terrorism.

Not just feels like, is. Feels like because is.

And for all the rest of us US occupants not in Minnesota, it's coming to us, too. Ohio is getting door-to-door ICE today, for instance, and I've seen multiple friends in other states posting photos of big ol' trucks, beds packed with ICE vehicles, rolling in to town.

We're still not quite two weeks into 2026. Get ready to plant your feet.

This would be terrorism even if exactly zero immigrant residents of Minnesota were naturalized citizens.

But ICE has made it clear: this isn't about the "illegal immigrants" that US politicians and others made up and fearmongered about for years. It's about terror. It's about white supremacy. It's about fascism.

I can't stop thinking about this TERF that was trying to argue with me, a disabled person, that if I claim to support gender/sex de-segregation in sports then I must also think it's fine for us to abolish the special Olympics and man. I'd have to look into it more to formulate a proper opinion but I'm hard into diabled liberation and hate you so sure. Yeah. I bet there are plenty of disabled athletes that do just as good if not better than abled people.

Do not test me bitch, I'll die on any hill.

I'm just saying if someone refused to punch me because I'm disabled I'd be just as offended as if their reason was me being a woman.

It's just so disrespectful for disabled athletes too. Like the Special Olympics as far as I can tell isn't actually related to the official Olympics and is for people with intellectually disabilities, the official event for disabled athletes through the Olympics is the Paralympics and afaik is open to disabled athletes with hundreds of different medical conditions.

The Special Olympics is more for local events to help disabled people get out and make friends and play sports, things a lot of disabled people are excluded from. The Paralympics is rigorous just like the regular Olympics and you do have to qualify just like all the other abled athletes do. You have to train HARDER than other athletes and do things ways no one would ever expect.

Maybe leave disabled people out of your mouth or I'll show you exactly what this wheelchair can do.

Also the Special Olympics are gender integrated. Just for the record AND has dedicated itself to inclusion which explicity names and welcomes queer and trans athletes.

The Paralympics does have some integrated events and some that aren't, but both them and the Special Olympics specifically sate that a policy of gender integration actually encourages women to join.

The disabled people are ahead of TERFs on this one. We already know we're not that different and stronger together.

Bro the Paralympics isn't there to make it fair for disabled people, it's to make it fair for abled people because we keep kicking their asses at shit and I also found out that there are disabled people who compete in both Olympics, not just the Paralympics, so we aren't being excluded because we're weak. We're being contained because we're too strong.

Funnily enough a demographic being "too good" at a sport is why women aren't allowed to play against men. It's because women beat them.

If anything it sounds like cishet male athletes are the ones who have it easy!

From the article:

"Times for the marathon present the most stark difference. The men’s able-bodied world-record time is two hours and three minutes compared with the fastest official wheelchair time of one hour 20 minutes. Even over 800m Marcel Hug’s record of one minute 31.12 seconds is almost 10 seconds faster than David Rudisha’s London 2012 world-record winning time of one minute 40.91 seconds. Similar trends hold for the women’s world records, although the differences are less pronounced.
In both men’s and women’s events the fastest wheelchair racers are in the T54 category. Athletes in T54 have normal arm muscle power and have partial-to-normal trunk control. T54 competitors include Britain’s David Weir, a four-time Paralympic gold medallist at the London 2012 Olympics in distances from 800m up to the marathon. T54 also boasts Hug, the man with the astounding achievement of being world record holder in the 800m, 1,500m, 5,000m and 10,000m. The thought of able-bodied athletes dominating over such a wide range of distances is inconceivable.

And before you say "oh the wheelchair makes it easier" no the fuck it does not. I'm nearly a year into owning my manual wheelchair and I still struggle to get around due to my arms being too weak to carry me that far. Also even the most optimized manual sports wheelchairs are still adding 10-15lbs that every athlete has to pull along with their body weight and they're doing it with their Fucking Arms and core. Plus yeah they can coast, but unless it's downhill it's not actually that easy to maintain speed while coasting, and going uphill in a wheelchair is far harder than you'd think and requires a lot of strength and a mastery of balance, and like I've had the pleasure of both being able to run as a child before my disability kicked in and trust me, running is easier, no contest.

Fuckin' idiot ass argument.

Disabled athletes are just as much spectacular athletes as able-bodied athletes are. And 100% seconding that running is so much easier than using a manual wheelchair, those things are hard fucking work.

At the intersection of these two topics, I'm also just gonna add a shout-out to legend Robyn Lambird for being the first out non-binary Paralympic medallist (they got bronze in the 100m wheelchair sprint at Tokyo), and I believe one of 3 out non-binary athletes who were competing that year.

Also defs recommend watching the Paralympics next time it comes around, if you don't usually. Para-sports are so great to watch! And I believe Robyn's on track to be on the Aussie wheelchair rugby team, which is the most fun to watch.

Competitive powerlifting's Open (everyone in the meet) bench press event is absolutely dominated by athletes without legs, because the score uses a calculation based on bodyweight, and these people are down 30-40% vs us fools with them.

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