Multifandom - I reblog what I want

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
kendrysaneela
baddywronglegs:
“derinthescarletpescatarian:
“ deathsmallcaps:
“ derinthescarletpescatarian:
“ kinkeryandgeekery:
“ picktheonesthatlast:
“are we ignoring both of the penises, or…..?
”
Pilots drawing things with flight paths is a niche interest but a...
picktheonesthatlast

are we ignoring both of the penises, or…..?

kinkeryandgeekery

image

Pilots drawing things with flight paths is a niche interest but a fucking fantastic one. Boeing Dreamliner 18-hour test flight.

derinthescarletpescatarian

I’m just happy that the pilots out there have this kind of precision.

deathsmallcaps

Oh I thought some pilot was doing this to some poor passengers who just wanted to go from Chicago to LA or something and then I scrolled up and saw it was test pilots.

derinthescarletpescatarian

“And if you look out the left window, you’ll see the same mountains again, but from a slightly different angle.”

baddywronglegs

“This is a notice to all passengers to remain seated as we are about to experience some serifs”

brightlotusmoon
un-monstre

Hate it when TikTok farm cosplayers and cottagecore types say stuff like "I'm not going to use modern equipment because my grandmothers could make do without it." Ma'am, your great grandma had eleven children. She would have killed for a slow cooker and a stick blender.

un-monstre

I’ve noticed a sort of implicit belief that people used to do things the hard way in the past because they were tougher or something. In reality, labor-saving devices have historically been adopted by the populace as soon as they were economically feasible. No one stood in front of a smoky fire or a boiling pot of lye soap for hours because they were virtuous, they did it because it was the only way to survive.

jimmythejiver

Taking these screenshots from Facebook because they make you log in and won't let you copy and paste:

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startrekgaysex

[TEXT ID: 3 screenshots of a Facebook post from the account The Curiosity Curator. the post reads:

"When the washing machine arrived in 1925, she sat on the kitchen floor and cried for three hours-not from joy, but from grief for the fifty years she'd lost.

Mary Richardson was 62 years old when she turned on an electric washing machine for the first time. Her daughter found her sobbing, surrounded by soap and laundry, and asked if someone had died.

Mary looked up, tears streaming down her weathered face, and whispered: "All those Mondays. All those years. It didn't have to be that hard."

For fifty years-every single Monday since she was twelve years old-Mary had done laundry by hand. Not the romantic version you see in nostalgic photographs.

The brutal reality: waking at 4 AM, hauling 50 gallons of water from a frozen well, scrubbing clothes in boiling lye soap that stripped skin from her knuckles, bending over washtubs for ten hours straight until her back spasmed and her hands bled.

2,600 wash days. 26,000 hours of backbreaking labor.

Her diary entries, discovered by her great-granddaughter a century later, tell the truth history books sanitize:

"Monday again. My hands are so raw I can barely hold the pen. I watch Father reading while I scrub his shirts and think: why is his comfort worth more than my hands?"

She was only fourteen when she wrote that.

There was no "bonding" over shared labor. There was exhaustion and silent resentment. There were no songs-only groaning, water splashing, and women too tired to speak.

The washing machine had been invented in the 1850s.

Electric models existed by 1900. Wealthy women in cities had them for decades. But Mary was born poor and rural, so she scrubbed on a washboard until her hands became gnarled and her back permanently bent.

That's a 25-year gap between technology existing and Mary being able to afford it. Twenty-five years of unnecessary suffering.

When the machine finally arrived, it did in fifteen minutes what had taken her two hours of brutal physical labor. She watched it fill with water automatically, agitate the clothes without anyone touching them, and she understood-truly understood for the first time-how much had been stolen from her. She cried for three hours. Not tears of gratitude. Tears of grief.

Her daughter Alice wrote: "Mother grieved for all the Mondays she'd lost. For her ruined hands. For the life she could have had. I tried to comfort her, but what could I say? She was right. It didn't have to be that hard."

Mary lived fifteen more years. She never did laundry again-not because she was too elderly, but because her daughters understood intimately what fifty years of wash days had cost her.

At her funeral in 1940, Alice said: "My mother's hands were destroyed by laundry. Her back was broken by it.

Half her life was stolen by a task that should have been mechanized decades earlier. We're told to celebrate women like her for their resilience. I think we should be angry instead. Angry that she had to be resilient at all." The women in attendance-who'd lived their own decades of wash days-applauded. Because they knew. They all knew.

The washing machine didn't just save time. It liberated women. It gave them back their hands, their health, their Mondays, their lives.

When we romanticize "simpler times" and "family traditions," we erase the reality: women were trapped in systems of domestic labor that destroyed their bodies and stole their futures.

Mary Richardson never got to pursue education, travel, or develop talents beyond domestic skills. Because every Monday was wash day.

She was 62 when a machine did in fifteen minutes what had taken her fifty years. And she grieved for every Monday she'd lost.

Sometimes progress isn't about losing tradition.

Sometimes it's about ending suffering we mistook for virtue.

Sometimes the "good old days" were only good because we've forgotten who was hurting.

And sometimes the greatest gift isn't resilience-it's liberation from ever needing it again."

END TEXT ID]

brightlotusmoon
katelyn-danger

At the risk of sounding stupid, I just found out how long the stone age lasted. In my head it's about as long as other historical time periods, a couple thousand years before ancient egypt, and conceptually looks like a bad car insurance commercial. Nope! Dead wrong! The stone age lasted for 3.4 MILLION YEARS.

crosspollytaupe

Okay wow i would not have guessed millions. Maybe in like the tens of thousands? But definitely would have way undershot.

katelyn-danger

I told my wife and they said "Yeah, modernity is a recent and strange invention"

backwardsorbust

Oh yes! Hello I am wife. And these are the oldowan tools:

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The first image is my favorite, the iconic oldowan hand axe, but you'll note there's a wide range of other tools crafted for everything from crushing nuts and stones, to awls and engraving devices. There is some evidence, albeit hotly debated, that these tools MIGHT have been used in ancient burials. Maybe. This is up for debate because these tools are THREE MILLION YEARS OLD. They pre date homo sapiens and homo erectus. They pre date the ice age. Hell, they pre date the fucking ice caps. We don't think humans were burying their dead as we understand it today, but maybe?? These were made by homo habilis, or the "handyman", so named for their invention of tools.

It makes me feel very small to look at these, like looking up at a starry sky.

weaselle

here's a thing never fails to make me feel the Feels and think the Thoughts:

it's about technology and human tools and where we are and where we started:

see up there where it says "They pre date homo sapiens and homo erectus"?

For MOST of the time humans have been using stone tools, the design and shape of those tools changed more slowly than the shape of our skeleton has changed.

from about 2.9 million years to about 1.7 million years ago, our tools remained the same while we went from Homo Habilis (or a similar realative) to Homo Erectus (or a similar relative) all while our stone tools remained basically the same as the images above, in the Oldowan style

and then, after about a million years of that, we had a technological revolution and the world moved on to the Acheulean stone tools, which looked like this

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that classic flaked tear-drop shape. And then those stayed essentially the same for another million years while our bones took us from Homo Erectus through growth with our sister species Neanderthal and Denisovan all the way to Homo Sapiens Sapiens.

Our tools used to evolve slower than our bones. For a couple million years.

only in the last few generations have our tools and technology evolved so crazy fast

My grandmother was born when there were still horses in the streets. Her first job they washed the cast iron cookware in the creek out behind the restaurant. She went from radio and telephone switchboards being high tech, to watching literal robots in space. Right around the time she died they were developing a prototype car that you could wear a hat full of sensors and control things like the windshield wipers by thinking about it.

not kidding

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think about that, from horses in the streets to a car you can drive with your thoughts.

even just a couple hundred years ago, people were living a life that was in many ways not terribly different from how it has always been, with most people, for example, still heating their water and doing their cooking over an open fire in their home.

And these last few generations have gone from inventing TV to investigating pieces of atoms and exploring space and also btw inventing the EATR robot which is basically a robot that can eat plants (and animals, specifically "chicken fat") as fuel to power itself

Again not kidding, wish i was, how long do you think it will be before somebody downloads something like grok onto an EATR? like whaaaaat are we doing omg

anyway, the point is, technology used to be slow, giving us many generations to get used to it and oversee changes to it. For 3 million years our technology has had slow advances, and then in just the last few hundred years technological development went berserk.

Every tool and technology and scientific breakthrough that has been invented or discovered in the last one thousand years ... has happened in just 0.03% of the time since we started making stone tools.

Now? Now while we are alive you and me right now, is a truly unprecedented time in human existence. All this new discovery and new tech that keeps happening is not normal. Like most things, it is both great and awful, but it certainly isn't what we've been doing.

Humanity is no longer changing faster than our tools -- our tools are changing so fast they are starting to be the thing that is changing us.

brightlotusmoon

"Humanity is no longer changing faster than our tools -- our tools are changing so fast they are starting to be the thing that is changing us."

brightlotusmoon
theterribletenno

I was just thinking about the old Japanese censorship laws that gave birth to tentacle porn...

So for anyone not in the know, the Japanese government decided to fight perversion with censorship.

Specifically you weren't allowed to draw penises.

So they drew things that WEREN'T penises instead. Like tentacles. Fast forward to today and tentacle porn is an entire standalone genre with thousands upon thousands of examples and enjoyers.

The attempt at censorship did not quell perversion, it only caused it to mutate.

And now I'm thinking about tumblr's decision to ban porn and of all the people leaving captions under videos of heavy machinery and industrial accidents like "I need someone to do this to me" and "this wouldn't fix me but it would help" or "everything reminds me of her"

All this to say that without porn on Tumblr

The perverts are mutating again

salmonballer

person who’s pro-censorship but only because they believe it will lead to new and exciting developments in the field of perversion

lolotehe

I am BEGGING tumblr to allow regular porn again.

zhenya-grey

person who’s pro-censorship but only because they believe it will lead to new and exciting developments in the field of perversion

this is how I thought about it for a while tbh. Let it mutate mwahaha