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-   -   What expanded your mind today? (http://www.butchfemmeplanet.com/forum/showthread.php?t=6151)

Hollylane 03-03-2013 11:54 PM

I just noticed this warning on a BBC News item...I don't know why this isn't done everywhere.

WTG BBC!


http://i47.tinypic.com/nxue8l.jpg


"Adverts are a major problem as they are trying to attract attention. One way is to make the material very active. Sixty per cent of photosensitive epileptics have their first seizure while watching television."

AmazonWoman1 03-04-2013 12:43 AM

I love Ted Talks
 
I watched this today & was really entertained while I was informed.
http://www.upworthy.com/watch-the-te...-or-two?c=upw1

She talks about gossip being sociology & uses a gay Egyptian king to illustrate it*G*

Jesse 03-04-2013 06:27 PM

http://www.ted.com/talks/allan_savor...te_change.html


Desertification of the world's grasslands, Allan Savory suggests, is the immediate cause of poverty, social breakdown, violence, cultural genocide -- and a significant contribution to climate change. In the 1960s, while working in Africa on the interrelated problems of increasing poverty and disappearing wildlife, Savory made a significant breakthrough in understanding the degradation and desertification of grassland ecosystems. After decades of study and collaboration, thousands of managers of land, livestock and wildlife on five continents today follow the methodology he calls "Holistic Management."

In 1992, Savory and his wife, Jody Butterfield, formed the Africa Centre for Holistic Management in Zimbabwe, a learning site for people all over Africa. In 2010, the Centre won the Buckminster Fuller Challenge for its work in reversing desertification. In that same year he and his wife, with others, founded the Savory Institute in Boulder, Colorado, to promote large-scale restoration of the world's grasslands.

AmazonWoman1 03-06-2013 02:39 PM

what I noticed today:
 
As I was reading a thread today it became apparent that it was in a way a form of mirroring to others what they can not see of themselves.A cheaper & quick therapy in a way.By posting comments about others comments it illuminated to the poster more about their value judgements ,prejudices etc.I thought it was fantastic people could grow from something so simple.Very cool for me.It made me have a deeper appreciation for what kind of tool threads truly were.When one of us expands our awareness this becomes a little bit better place to live.Thank you

Hollylane 03-10-2013 04:28 PM



Read the text here...

one of the powerful parts of this spoken word:

"to this day
kids are still being called names
the classics were
hey stupid
hey spaz
seems like each school has an arsenal of names
getting updated every year
and if a kid breaks in a school
and no one around chooses to hear
do they make a sound?
are they just the background noise
of a soundtrack stuck on repeat
when people say things like
kids can be cruel?"

Hollylane 03-10-2013 04:52 PM

Sick...No,really...Sick.
 

Hollylane 03-10-2013 05:19 PM

19-Year-Old Kid Who's Giving Creationists a Run For Their Money.

Zimmeh 03-10-2013 06:42 PM

Several shows on PBS.

Zimmeh

Hollylane 03-11-2013 09:58 PM

My mother sent me this...
 
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/ass...al-gallery.jpg

Five days before Christmas 1943, a helpless American bomber pilot locked eyes with a German fighter pilot over the frozen skies of Europe. The German pilot spared the life of the American, and both men would reunite and become friends 50 years later. Franz Stigler and Charles Brown started the war as enemies, but during a tense wartime encounter, both men discovered a higher call.

The pilot glanced outside his cockpit and froze. He blinked hard and looked again, hoping it was just a mirage. But his co-pilot stared at the same horrible vision.

"My God, this is a nightmare," the co-pilot said.

"He's going to destroy us," the pilot agreed.

The men were looking at a gray German Messerschmitt fighter hovering just three feet off their wingtip. It was five days before Christmas 1943, and the fighter had closed in on their crippled American B-17 bomber for the kill.

The B-17 pilot, Charles Brown, was a 21-year-old West Virginia farm boy on his first combat mission. His bomber had been shot to pieces by swarming fighters, and his plane was alone in the skies above Germany. Half his crew was wounded, and the tail gunner was dead, his blood frozen in icicles over the machine guns.

But when Brown and his co-pilot, Spencer "Pinky" Luke, looked at the fighter pilot again, something odd happened. The German didn't pull the trigger. He nodded at Brown instead. What happened next was one of the most remarkable acts of chivalry recorded during World War II. Years later, Brown would track down his would-be executioner for a reunion that reduced both men to tears.

Listen to the story on CNN Radio Here

KCBUTCH 03-11-2013 10:25 PM

The degrading treatment of indigenous people around the world still
Seeing tribes go from free, to gathered and hunted for sport, and currently being used by wealthy tourist companies as caged tourist attractions
Money mistreats who it can to make more money
I knew all this but the subtle reminder in a documentary in my cultural anthropology class opens my mind again to those things

Hollylane 03-17-2013 12:59 PM

The Associations won't be happy to hear this...But that doesn't make it less true...
 

Obese heart patients 'do better'

Obese cardiac patients are less likely to die than their normal weight counterparts, say researchers.

This is despite them reporting worse health and being less likely to follow lifestyle advice, a study of more than 4,400 patients reported.

One explanation is that doctors treat the disease more aggressively, the University College London team said.

The British Heart Foundation also said that where people stored fat, not just general obesity, was important.

It is not the first time researchers have pointed out this paradox, that being overweight or obese - a risk factor for heart disease in itself - can actually lead to a better prognosis.

One theory has been that maybe such patients were fitter, despite their size - taking more exercise for example.

To see if this was the case, researchers from University College London looked at data from patients who took part in the Health Survey for England or Scottish Health Survey.

They found that, as with other studies, patients with cardiovascular disease who were obese or overweight were less likely to die over the next seven years than people of a normal weight who had the condition.

In all 31% of patients were obese - that is with a body mass index of 30 or more - they reported in Preventive Medicine.

Those patients tended to be younger but reported worse health and had more heart risk factors such as raised cholesterol and blood pressure, but were less likely to smoke.

The researchers found that those who took part in physical activity at least once a week and did not smoke had a lower risk of death whatever their weight.

But obese patients who did not stick to these healthy lifestyle recommendations still had a lower risk of death than normal weight patients who smoked or were inactive.
BMI a 'poor marker'

Study leader Dr Mark Hamer said they were trying to explain why obese heart patients seemed to do better by looking at lifestyle factors, but they found that it was not the case that obese patients were healthier.

"We don't yet understand this paradox and we would clearly not advise patients to put on weight.

"One of the more sensible explanations may be that when obese patients present to their doctor, they are given more aggressive treatment because they are seen as very high risk," he explained.

"We do know, for example with cardiac rehabilitation, that the thing that absolutely works is exercise - that dramatically reduces risk even though you don't necessarily lose weight."

Other work by the same researchers has shown that a certain proportion of obese patients have very normal health and are not at increased risk of heart disease.

"BMI is quite a poor marker of what's going on," Dr Hamer added.

June Davison, a senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: "It seems contradictory that one of the risk factors for heart disease may improve survival rates.

"The reason for this link remains unclear, but it's possible that those with a higher BMI go to their doctor sooner and may be treated more aggressively.

"Also, this study only measured BMI. When looking at health risk it's not only BMI that matters, but where fat is stored.

"Carrying excess fat around the middle can produce toxic substances which can increase your health risk."

Semantics 03-27-2013 02:03 PM

Portraits of Refugees Posing With Their Most Valued Possessions

http://cdn.petapixel.com/assets/uplo...ria-1-copy.jpg

http://cdn.petapixel.com/assets/uplo...dan-6-copy.jpg


The most important object Dowla was able to bring with her is the wooden pole balanced over her shoulder, with which she carried her six children during the 10-day journey from Gabanit to South Sudan. At times, the children were too tired to walk, forcing her to carry two on either side.

Portraits of Refugees

Girl_On_Fire 03-29-2013 10:19 PM

A 9-year old discussing the meaning of life and the universe.

Hollylane 03-30-2013 09:16 AM

https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...75809255_n.jpg

Broccoli: Decline in Nutrients % Change 1950 vs. 1999: 60% less calcium! Petrochemical Monoculture depletes the soil.

https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...05991761_n.jpg

Kätzchen 04-01-2013 07:44 PM

I came across a web blog for Queer & Trans* people of color (QTPOC), the other day: Black Girl Dangerous.

Founding editor, Mia McKenzie, and her assistant editor Janani, co-host this very important news blog with others who contribute actively in raising maximum awareness on what life is like for people of color and the systematic oppression that QTPOC people face on a daily basis. I read on this particular site that a person should not copy and paste any item on their site to any other site, so I will leave a link below for those who would like to explore further. I highly recommend reading this blog.

http://blackgirldangerous.org/about-bgd/


KCBUTCH 04-01-2013 09:55 PM

The class with the teacher of whom gravely offended me spoke about the topic at hand which enlightened me greatly.

RockOn 04-01-2013 10:12 PM

love being away from the office ... attending technical training all week ... skills upgrade ...

technology marches forward ...stayed tuned or be a "has been"

geek dat get-go-gadgie
:)

Hollylane 04-07-2013 09:54 AM

This week I encountered two forms of entertainment (Bones Season 8, Episode 18, The Survivor in the Soap, & James Patterson's book, Cross Country), that sent me diving into refreshing my knowledge about what has happened, and what is happening in Sudan. Much of what I have read and watched has brought me to tears, anger, frustration, action, and commitment to further action.


~baby~doll~ 04-30-2013 04:30 PM

I'm reading a book i recently bought, "Third Sex Third Gender Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History" by Gilbert Herdt

I expanded my mind while journeying toward self awareness. I found out how how much the wrong views on human sexuality and gender Charles Darwin presented have crushed other gendered people in Western Society. He created the current standard for the two gender system and left no room for those of us who do not fit in. Because of him we are all called abnormal.. Thank you Charles Darwin for making it difficult.

~baby~doll~ 05-13-2013 12:11 AM

Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity: The Lives and Work of Intellectual Women by Lori Jo Marso
Quote:

Examining the lives and work of historical and contemporary feminist intellectuals, Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity explores the feminist struggle to "have it all." This fascinating interdisciplinary study focuses on how feminist thinkers throughout history have long striven to balance politics, intellectual work, and the material conditions of femininity. Taking a close look at this quest for an integrated life in the autobiographical and theoretical writings of well-known feminists such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Emma Goldman, and Simone de Beauvoir, alongside contemporary counterparts, like Azar Nafisi, Audre Lorde, and Ana Castillo, Marso moves beyond questions of who women are and what women want, adding an innovative personal dimension to feminist theory, showing how changing conceptions of femininity manifest themselves within all women’s lives.
The quote is a description from Amazon.com


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