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Yeah, That Rosslyn

@rosslynpaladin

(she/her) "We can tolerate everything BUT Intolerance." I am a Christian, a Feminist, an unapologetic Autistic, a proud Native American, A Chronic Illness Spoonie (CFS/ME) and a political moderate who likes using Reason to address things. I don't harass people for their views, life, sexuality, gender, identity, or etc. if you're not going around attacking people. Let's get along, life is so short.  You Can Expect: Autism Acceptance activism, other Human Rights Activism like Feminism and Native issues, the odd bit of my spiritual Christian uplifting thoughts, Zen philosophy, Spoonie life, and Medieval Reenactor stuff (SCA), Ball Jointed Dolls (Legit Only) Medieval history, and other stuff too.

I am not a donation post visibility blog, sorry

those do exist. or exist as a thing some blogs will do on certain days.

but if I don't know you and you're tagging me for Exposure assuming I have a giant follower count or something,

I will be blocking you.

this is my blog and my hangout spot, not your springboard. I cannot verify the reality of total strangers' posts.

Hey Mr. Green, why don’t they offer the tuberculosis vaccine in the United States anymore? I have the TB vaccine (I was born outside of the US) and I have the scar and so many people I know are like “yeah I have it” even though I know they stopped giving it out. So what’s the whole deal with that?

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The BCG vaccine is only effective in preventing severe illness and death in very young children (like under the age of five mostly). Kids only get TB if there is a lot of TB floating around infecting them. So in areas with very low TB transmission rates (like the United States), experts have determined it doesn't make sense to vaccinate people at birth, since their chance of developing TB before five is almost zero.

But if you're born in a region with lots of TB transmission, it does make sense to get BCG at birth. Unfortunately, it won't protect you in adolescence or adulthood, though.

BCG is currently the only vaccine for TB and it's over 100 years old. There are promising vaccines on the horizon, which is VERY exciting, but it's worth remembering that we already have lots of strategies for preventing TB. Just offering people (especially kids) adequate nutrition is a way of preventing TB. (Around half of all people who get sick with TB are malnourished, and this is an especially profound problem in children.)

We can also offer close contacts of the sick preventive therapy, which is a course of antibiotics that ensures they won't get sick. So yes, we need better tools like new vaccines. But also: We HAVE good tools; we just fail to implement them because we've decided to live in a world where we accept malnutrition and inadequate access to medical care, even though we know there are plenty of resources to provide adequate nutrition and medical care to all humans. Those resources are just distributed unjustly.

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tastyresippys

Food history has been so sanitized by the demonization of carbs. “Our ancestors only had fruits and veggies they didn’t have all these refined carbs” our ancestors drank beer 25/8 because the water was bad. Our ancestors drizzled honey on shit ever since we knew it existed. We’ve been making bread for our entire recorded history. It’s true that bleached sugars specifically are a new thing but high glycemic carbs are not new at all, we’ve been consuming them for thousands of years

Quick correction bc I see this myth everywhere.

People drank beer & fruit wine 25/8 because it was high in calories and also tasty and pretty cheap/easy to make in bulk.

IT WAS NOT USED TO REPLACE OR SANITIZE WATER! THEIR WATER WAS NOT BAD!

The alcohol content in beer/wine back then was too low to actually sanitize anything effectively, and beer/wine only lasts for 6 months (usually less) even while still sealed in a cask, due to oxidization. Oxidation turns fermented liquids into vinegar. Wine and beer wasn’t meant for long-term storage.

This is great, because vinegar is the great preserver! VINEGAR is what people used to store their foods long-term, along with SALT and DRYING and SMOKING.

“Pickling” can be done with pure vinegar if you don’t have any expensive salt around, and vinegar can be made by fermenting any fruit or grain with wild yeast! If you’re lucky, you can also get wine/beer treats out of it on the way.

Circling back around: beer/wine was NEVER a replacement for water. Humans have been drinking from ground springs, wells, rainwater, and clear running water since our ape ancestors got the instinct to avoid stagnant pools.

If you didn’t have immediate access to a source of clean water, you didn’t fucking build a town there!

That’s a big reason why, WORLDWIDE, settlements are ALL historically clustered around sources of water like springs, wells, and rivers. (Or utilized rainwater catchment & storage) And why “the town well is poisoned/dried up!” Is a huge and terrible thing that comes up in a ton of old stories. Losing your source of freshwater means everyone has to move somewhere else, or die.

Even in huge cities, you’d be surprised at how sophisticated freshwater delivery systems were in the middle-ages. London had the “great conduit.” - a man-made, underground channel that moved water directly from a freshwater spring to fill a water tank in the Cheapside marketplace, accessible to the public. This conduit was built in 1245.

Mesopotamians in the BRONZE AGE built clay pipes for sewage removal, and other pipes for rain water collection, and wells. In 4,000 BC.

Building Aqueducts to move spring water into towns was first attributed to the Minoans, who lived in 2,000 BC.

Sanskrit texts from 2,000 BC also detail how to purify water you’re not sure about: expose it to Sunlight, filter it through Charcoal, dip a piece of copper in it at least 7 times, and filter it again. (UV treatment kills bacteria, Charcoal catches many poisons and heavy metal, copper is also antibacterial) <- even if they didn’t know what germs were, prehistoric humans were great at recognizing patterns, and noticing when people DIDNT die.

Persians in 700 BC used ‘qanat’, or tunnels dug into hillsides to let gravity move (CLEAN!) groundwater to nearby towns + for agriculture irrigation. Qanats were still the main water supply for the entire Iranian capitol city until about 1933.

The Roman Empire (312 BC) also built aqueducts to move spring and groundwater across miles and miles.

The Incas (1450) built wondrous examples of hydraulic engineering. Their “stairway of fountains” supplied the entire city of Machu Picchu with fresh spring water from a pair of rain-fed springs atop the mountain. The fountain canals could carry about 80 gallons a minute.

Getting clean drinking water was just not an issue for normal people in MOST long-term settlements. They may not understand germ theory, but they knew clean water was important and would kick up a BIG fuss if those water sources were sabotaged.

In conclusion: people absolutely drank beer and wine with breakfast. They also drank water. It was not a replacement.

In many cultures, there were weak beers. They had names like small beer — they were specifically beers that had low alcohol because people knew that beer got you drunk and if you watered it down or re-brewed using previously used hops or barley or whatever, then you would get a beer that wouldn’t get you drunk.

Same with wines: there was get you drunk wine, and there was wind that you could drink a lot of. They were also cordial made by concentrating fruit juice, or historical drinks like Posca.

As far back is the Babylonian Empire they were making pastries out of dates and pistachios and flour.

Previous to that they probably were as well, but we don’t have any written records of it.

Literally as soon as somebody figured out that you could smash some high fat, high carb, high sugar stuffed together and bake it into something resembling cookies, they absolutely did.

So you should go and eat a cookie, because all of your ancestors spent a lot of time arranging the situation of civilisation to make sure that cookies were available. And if you don’t eat one then they’re going to be very sad

And so will you.

Also there’s a degree of Eurocentrism in the “everyone was drinking beer constantly” thing. In premodern Europe, yeah, beer was a very common beverage. This is absolutely not the case in all premodern societies.

Most cultures had some kind of intoxicant, yes, and in many cases an alcoholic beverage would be among the more common options (as @fuckingrecipes says, high in calories, tasty, & easy to make*), but by no means was everyone on the same page with consuming it recreationally or as an everyday part of their diet. Sometimes it was only for special occasions, or for ceremonial purposes, or just not that big a part of their lives.

* Beer is actually one of the more complicated ones, which might be why people used to thinking of it as the Default Booze assume there must have been a stronger driving force than “fun to get drunk” behind alcohol production. Grain is harder to ferment, but you can also make bread with it, in some regions it’s easier to grow in large quantities than fruits & such, and there are some state-building pressures behind mass grain cultivation that would take a while to get into. Fruit wines & ciders are dead easy, mead is practically naturally occurring, and palm wine is basically the instant microwave dinner of alcohol — you can tap a tree in the morning & get drunk off it in the afternoon.

And no, it was never about the water being unsafe to drink. (It’s theoretically possible that in some specific times & places this could have come up, but it’s not Why we have alcohol.) Just logistically, there’s no way to make that work. Even if you’re producing drinks with a high enough alcohol content to actually be sterile, which you probably aren’t without having access to more advanced distillation technology** than you’d need to just purify the water in the first place, you’re not going to have enough of that to replace all the water you’d normally drink. You’d have to dilute it again, and we’re back where we started. And even if you have the resources necessary to devise a system where you produce enough high-alcohol-content beverages to drink nothing else… well, I don’t know if you know this, but liquor is not great for hydration purposes, so you’d better put water back into your diet anyway. As a concept, it just doesn’t work once you think about it.

** Everyone say thank you to medieval Arabic alchemists for figuring out how to distill alcohol. Next time you crack open a bottle of whiskey or suchlike, raise a glass in the general direction of Baghdad and/or pour one out for the House of Wisdom.

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.

While all od ICE is in Minnesota the rest of us need to go to ICE headquarters and remove all the people and burn it to the ground, blow up any ICE vehicles and leave a note "with love from all the real americans"

OP: How I exercise every morning. It helps keep my energy channels flowing smoothly and boosts my vitality. This is jianfa剑法(sword technique) and zhangfa掌法(palm technique) from Daoist tradition of Wudang Mountain. (cr 少特君)

STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE 1993 – 1999・4x01 The Way of the Warrior

@afurioushawk ain't this a mood

Trivia:

This entire scene only exists because the episode was short and they needed about two minutes thirty of extra materiel.

Back in the day TV episodes needed to be a pretty precise length, for obvious logistical reasons. If you were thirty seconds long or a minute short, that was a problem. The second episode of Way of the Warrior happened to come in short. Good writing teams could tell just by reading their scripts if they'd come up short or long; if you worked in the business long enough and had a good fell for your actors you could look at some pages and tell how much time they'd fill when shot.

Way of the Warrior was short. So they threw together the root beer speech (you'll notice if you watch the episode closely that you could completely excise it and it wouldn't change the episode flow or substantive content at all; that's because it was stuck in between two other scenes after the fact) and plugged it in to make up the time.

And it only went on to become possibly the most famous scene in all of DS9, and an iconic piece of what Star Trek could really do when the actors and the script came together.

Cant talk now, i'm kicking my feet and twirling my hair giggling as i play with my characters covered in blood and tears like barbies. you understand

Zhao Zhao (Chinese, b. 1982)

Constellations, 2021-2022

Embroidery on silk

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wtxch

ok so i’ve seen some of you aren’t that sure that this is actually embroidery (i was suspicious too bc damn!!!!) so here you is another embroidery of his with some close ups♥ :

Constellations, 2017 (300 x 980 cm)

embroidery on silk

embroidery on silk-

Embroidery on Silk???

Embroidery?????? On silk???????

Fleur de Lis Scroll

This pretty border pattern would make a perfect border - whether you're working on a historical costume, the perfect outfit for the next LARP, or something interesting to add to your everyday clothes! This pattern sticks to your garment, showing you exactly where to stitch, and dissolves effortlessly in water when you're done, making this an easy and satisfying project for beginners.

hang ten indeed friend

That's too many types of blade to be good at throwing

average karlach gameplay

So, I usually try to find/check sources for Really Cool videos (and photos) these days, what with AI being what it is (not that I don't trust a random spam video posting account with no tags or sources on any videos, but... well, I don't, actually), and I'm pleased to announce that this video is from a world champion knife thrower, Soulthrower!

And if you like this compilation, the guy actually has a shitton more videos on his various media accounts, including vids with advice/instruction on learning to throw knives etc, yourself. He also mentions on every single page that he is a stroke survivor, so I feel that's important to mention here, too.

Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the Godmother of Rock and Roll...

Born in 1915, by the 1930's and 40's she was playing gospel with an electric guitar (which was pretty damned groundbreaking for the time). As time went on her music moved into rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and there was not a rock and roller worth the name in the 50's, 60's and 70's who didn't cite her as an inspiration.

Look at the above video, this is a woman about to turn 50, bopping up and down with the sheer energy of the music.

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