Tumgik
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
46 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
56 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
Way beyond.
26 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
37 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Text
Women In History
I grew up believing that women had contributed nothing to the world until the 1960′s. So once I became a feminist I started collecting information on women in history, and here’s my collection so far, in no particular order. 
Tumblr media
Lepa Svetozara Radić (1925–1943) was a partisan executed at the age of 17 for shooting at German soldiers during WW2. As her captors tied the noose around her neck, they offered her a way out of the gallows by revealing her comrades and leaders identities. She responded that she was not a traitor to her people and they would reveal themselves when they avenged her death. She was the youngest winner of the Order of the People’s Hero of Yugoslavia, awarded in 1951
Tumblr media
23 year old Phyllis Latour Doyle was British spy who parachuted into occupied Normandy in 1944 on a reconnaissance mission in preparation for D-day. She relayed 135 secret messages before France was finally liberated. 
Tumblr media
Catherine Leroy, War Photographer starting with the Vietnam war. She was taken a prisoner of war. When released she continued to be a war photographer until her death in 2006.
Tumblr media
Lieutenant Pavlichenko was a Russian sniper in WWII, with a total of 309 kills, including 36 enemy snipers. After being wounded, she toured the US to promote friendship between the two countries, and was called ‘fat’ by one of her interviewers, which she found rather amusing. 
Tumblr media
Johanna Hannie “Jannetje” Schaft was born in Haarlem. She studied in Amsterdam had many Jewish friends. During WWII she aided many people who were hiding from the Germans and began working in resistance movements. She helped to assassinate two nazis. She was later captured and executed. Her last words were “I shoot better than you.”. 
Tumblr media
Nancy wake was a resistance spy in WWII, and was so hated by the Germans that at one point she was their most wanted person with a price of 5 million francs on her head. During one of her missions, while parachuting into occupied France, her parachute became tangled in a tree. A french agent commented that he wished that all trees would bear such beautiful fruit, to which she replied “Don’t give me any of that French shit!”, and later that evening she killed a German sentry with her bare hands. 
Tumblr media
After her husband was killed in WWII, Violette Szabo began working for the resistance. In her work, she helped to sabotage a railroad and passed along secret information. She was captured and executed at a concentration camp at age 23. 
Tumblr media
Grace Hopper was a computer scientist who invented the first ever compiler. Her invention makes every single computer program you use possible. 
Tumblr media
Mona Louise Parsons was a member of an informal resistance group in the Netherlands during WWII. After her resistance network was infiltrated, she was captured and was the first Canadian woman to be imprisoned by the Nazis. She was originally sentenced to death by firing squad, but the sentence was lowered to hard lard labor in a prison camp. She escaped. 
Tumblr media
Simone Segouin was a Parisian rebel who killed an unknown number of Germans and captured 25 with the aid of her submachine gun. She was present at the liberation of Paris and was later awarded the ‘croix de guerre’. 
Tumblr media
Mary Edwards Walker is the only woman to have ever won an American Medal of Honor. She earned it for her work as a surgeon during the Civil War. It was revoked in 1917, but she wore it until hear death two years later. It was restored posthumously. 
Tumblr media
Italian neuroscientist won a Nobel Prize for her discovery of nerve growth factor. She died aged 103. 
Tumblr media
A snapshot of the women of color in the woman’s army corps on Staten Island
This is an ongoing project of mine, and I’ll update this as much as I can (It’s not all WWII stuff, I’ve got separate folders for separate achievements). 
File this under: The History I Wish I’d Been Taught As A Little Girl
238K notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
35 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
I Mean, Really?
69 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
10 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
38 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
29 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
0 notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
For trump, cruelty is the point, like any well-qualified malignant sociopath.
7 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
no emergency?
16 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
There is a difference between exercising religious beliefs and imposing them on others. Our Constitution fiercely protects the former and expressly prohibits the latter. – Rep. Joseph Kennedy III
It’s easy for significant stories to get lost in the sound and fury of Donald Trump’s frontal assault on American democracy, epitomized by his militarized co-opting of Washington’s Fourth of July celebration. As my interview with Angie Maxwell, co-author of “The Long Southern Strategy,” shows, Trump’s presidency was decades in the making, with racism, sexism. and fundamentalism all playing crucial roles. The forces that brought him to power are ultimately far more consequential than he is.
That’s why a cluster of recent developments involving questions of religious privilege deserve far more attention from the public and the media than they have received. These events reflect both the advancement of a theocratic, “dominionist” worldview that elevates the state-sanctified religious liberty of some at the obvious expense of others — and a rising tide of liberal, secular resistance.
12 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
Hymenopteran Adaptation.
39 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
A message to the few remaining true republicans.
92 notes · View notes
ghostofdarwin · 5 years
Link
37 notes · View notes