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why don't you find out for yourself

@srasrtortuga / srasrtortuga.tumblr.com

Personal blog. Female. Venezuelan. Indifferent to the internet's moralistic panopticon.
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Does anyone here agree with Nanno? Please raise your hand?

Girl from Nowhere 2.05 “SOTUS”

underrated twin peaks line is the best and worst people are drawn to a dead dog and the rest just turn away

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Generative AI is invented and immediately used by men to automate women, undress women, undress CHILDREN, enact abuse of women and spread misogyny

From the article:

“If you look only at the trend of species declines, it would be easy to think that we’re failing to protect biodiversity, but you would not be looking at the full picture,” said Penny Langhammer, lead author of the study and Executive Vice President of Re:wild. What we show with this paper is that conservation is, in fact, working to halt and reverse biodiversity loss. It is clear that conservation must be prioritized and receive significant additional resources and political support globally, while we simultaneously address the systemic drivers of biodiversity loss, such as unsustainable consumption and production.”

This massive meta analysis (for those not familiar, a study analyzing the results of many studies on similar topics) found that the vast majority of conservation efforts show much much better results than doing nothing. In many cases, biodiversity loss was not only stopped but reversed.

This shows that conservation efforts really work and money invested is put to very good use. Legally protecting endangered species really works, restoring habitat really works, removing invasive species really works, returning land to Indigenous communities works. All of the blood, sweat, and tears being poured into protecting the natural world has been making a real, big, tangible, difference on a global scale.

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Bronze Bull Head Ornament with Standing Oxen, Dian Kingdom (Dian Culture), Western Han Dynasty, c. 2nd–1st Century BC (approx. 150 BC). Excavated near Lake Dian, Ancient Yunnan, Southwest China

Courtesy Alain Truong

Banded Linsang (Prionodon linsang), family Prionodontidae, Thailand

  • Once thought to be in the Viverridae, with genets and civets, the 2 species of Asian Linsangs were placed in their own family in 2004, based on genetic data.
  • They are actually more closely related to the family Felidae.

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