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chloetus · 8 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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“If you’re not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing.” – Malcolm X
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chloetus · 9 years
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Russell Howard’s Good News s10e03
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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I can’t remember anyone before you. They’re like smudged ink on my palm after rain. I wrote their names down so I wouldn’t forget them, but then you drizzled down out of the sky and now it’s nothing but you.
(via iloveyourstride)
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chloetus · 9 years
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i wonder if magic is real, but only in a really mundane way.
when i was little i could almost inerringly switch back to disney channel right as the ads ended when i was channel surfing.
maybe youve never accidentally crushed a ladybug underfoot. maybe your microwave popcorn never burns. maybe you can spin around lots and lots of times before you get dizzy.
is that magic??
honestly im not sure if these are magic or just small, invisible skills. im not sure which i like better.
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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114 years young: Light bulbs before planned obsolescence.
By Lisa Wade, PhD
There is a light bulb in a fire station in Livermore, CA that has been burning since 1901. It was manufactured in the late 1890s. And, yes, there is a BulbCam.
According to Hunter Oatman-Stanford, writing for Collectors Weekly, the first homes that had electricity were serviced entirely by electric companies. He explained:
Generally, customers would purchase entire electrical systems manufactured by a regional supplier who would handle installation and upkeep. If a bulb “burned out,” meaning the filament had deteriorated from repeated heating, someone would come and replace it for you [for free].
Given this business model, it made sense to try to develop bulbs that would burn out as infrequently as possible, and the goal was to make ones that would last forever. The one in Livermore was made by the Shelby Electric Company and, interestingly, no one remembers what they did to make their time-defying bulbs. For now, at least, their secrets are a mystery.
Only later, when electric companies turned over the job of replacing lightbulbs to homeowners, did they decide that it would be more profitable to make cheap bulbs that burned out frequently. As of around 1910, companies were charging the equivalent of $33 for a 1,500 hour lamp (which is about the same life of an incandescent bulb today). Yikes. At least the price has gone down.
We call this planned obsolescence: the practice of designing products with a predetermined expiration date aimed at forcing consumers into repeat purchases. Since the mid-1900s, more and more products have been literally designed to fail. In some cases, we seem to have fully accepted cyclic purchasing (think, for example, of the constant replacing of our electronic devices) or we are embarrassed into doing so (think fashion and the stigma of driving an old car). Other times, like with the lightbulb, we just assume that this is the best engineers can do.
Planned obsolescence is criticized for being wasteful. How many light bulbs sit in landfills today? How many natural resources have we extracted or burned up to make their replacements? How many cargo ships and semis have been filled with lightbulbs and taken around the world?
The little light bulb in Livermore is a great reminder that just because we live in technologically advanced societies doesn’t mean we always have access to the most advanced technology. Other forces are at work.
Lisa Wade is a professor at Occidental College and the co-author of Gender: Ideas, Interactions, Institutions. Find her on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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Accept the fact that you will grow apart from people you’ve had significant relationships with. Understand when someone no longer positively affects your life. Let them go. Don’t hinder your growth.
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chloetus · 9 years
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chloetus · 9 years
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Self love is a journey, it is a never-ending practice of consciousness and acceptance. It begins today, right now, wherever you are. Don’t wait for it to come to you - seek it in this very moment, in any way possible. Start small, for each positive thought will grow into something much larger. Before you know it, you’ll be climbing mountains.
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chloetus · 9 years
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Watch: Bill Nye uses science to defend women’s reproductive rights.
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chloetus · 9 years
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When your lady on her period.
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