S4So

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S4So

S4So

@stand4standon

Engage in sense making like your life depends on it, cuz it does‼️ A shared understanding is but the cohesive element in societies. Crucial to be rebuilding it.

Biosphere/Biósfera Inscrit le Haziran 2022
932 Abonnements66 Abonnés
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
Grateful for finding art such as this sketching over an entire lifetime, just like that: communication mastery. In a few seconds, so many questions arise. What is a lifetime but an evolving sketch? As it forces us to pause, what moves us, at times also moves us to move others.
QinduoXu@QinduoXu

Painting the whole life of a man in just a few minutes, which is really impressive and makes me wonder the meaning of our lives. #China Credit: Douyin user huihuabiji

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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@MishArqt Siguen hablando raro… Y si sumamos a los vecinos colindantes de Tepito y la Guerrero… ¡Nonohualco-requetequísimo!
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Mishell Altamirano
Mishell Altamirano@MishArqt·
El templo de San Miguel, el centro del viejo barrio de "Nonohualco" o Nonoalco, el "lugar donde hablan raro", en el que se asentaron poblaciones que dialogaban en maya en el extremo poniente del islote de Xaltilolli, es un espacio construido a finales del Siglo XVII...
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@RincnCuriosoo Fue así como un día me enteré que se podían hacer llamadas de larga distancia desde teléfonos públicos…. ¡Gran día con la alcancía!
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Rincón Curioso
Rincón Curioso@RincnCuriosoo·
¿Te acuerdas de esto? 👇
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Armando Maravilla - Wonder
Uno de los hitos más icónicos de la ciudad. No pienso discutirlo
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@cinegothique Si provienes de una familia sionista, tienes toda la razón. De hecho, ¿has considerado la eutanasia?
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אעליה
אעליה@cinegothique·
No hay fortuna más grande en esta vida que ser huérfano.
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@POVMexico Dentistry that lasts, what a concept!
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🇲🇽POVMEXICO
🇲🇽POVMEXICO@POVMexico·
Mexico has one of the oldest examples of cosmetic dentistry in the world. Over 2,000 years ago, the Maya were drilling circular cavities into healthy front and back teeth and inlaying them with jade, pyrite, turquoise, and obsidian. The work was so precise that the pulp was rarely damaged. The adhesive, made from plant resins, has held for millennia. It wasn't for pain. It was for beauty and status.
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@BigImpactHumans New follower, if that helps in any way, however minuscule it might be…
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LilHumansBigImpact
LilHumansBigImpact@BigImpactHumans·
Hey chat, I’m feeling really sad 😔
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LilHumansBigImpact
LilHumansBigImpact@BigImpactHumans·
Scientists have discovered geological features on Mars that could point to the existence of a long-dried up ocean that once covered a third of the Red Planet’s surface.
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@dylthorn @anishmoonka Bit blown up on the costs! And you’re describing why individual family urban housing is a terrible world destroying idea. Trees are fine. We need urban trees much more than they need to be around us, almost as wolves turned into pets, they pay a heavy price to keep us company.
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Dylan Thornsberry
Dylan Thornsberry@dylthorn·
@anishmoonka People forget all the added cost of these trees - - You have to clean your gutters - clean your roof - hire a leaf cleanup crew - trim the trees The trees can easily add 5,000 to $10,000 a year to each homeowner’s maintenance bill which cancels out any value increase
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Those two streets can be 22°F apart at 3pm on the same July day. The houses are cookie-cutter copies of each other. The only thing the builder changed on the top street was the trees. That number comes from a 2024 paper in Nature that pulled data from 182 studies across 110 cities. Big shade trees can drop the air at street level by up to 22°F. In Tacoma, a separate Nature study tracked temperatures along sidewalks all summer and found blocks without tree cover hit dangerous heat five times more often than fully shaded blocks. Your own driveway can be two different climates. The money is worse. Mature trees add 3 to 15 percent to a home's price (U.S. Forest Service data). On a typical American house at $429,000, the homeowner ate somewhere between $13,000 and $64,000 in lost value the day the bulldozers showed up. The Department of Energy says good tree shading cuts summer A/C bills by 15 to 50 percent. Even one tree on the west side of your house saves about 12 percent on your energy bill by year 15. The health part is the one that surprised me. A Philadelphia study found that getting the city to 30 percent tree canopy would prevent 271 to 400 deaths a year. The trees America already has quietly save around 1,200 lives annually by pulling heat and pollution out of the air. The Nurses' Health Study followed 108,630 women for eight years, and the ones living on the greenest blocks were 12 percent less likely to die from any cause. Builders still do it because old trees are expensive. They slow down site prep, and if a branch cracks a new roof in a storm, the builder gets sued. Meanwhile, some new suburbs now require rooftop solar, and tall trees block the sun those panels need. America is losing about 36 million urban trees a year. Almost nobody is planting them back. So yeah, Bill is right. We did ruin a good thing. It just costs a lot more than it looks.
Bill@BillWiIdin

We ruined such a good thing

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Markcee
Markcee@Markcee_Cfr·
@anishmoonka Are there humans that actually behave like them? I don't think so, they act so crazy...
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
A 15-pound honey badger can survive a cobra bite that would kill a full-grown man in under two hours. Then it finishes eating the snake. A biology grad student at the University of Minnesota wanted to know how. She needed badger blood to find out, and the only samples she could get were from two American zoos in San Diego and Indiana. What she found in the DNA was one tiny change. There's a small socket on your muscle cells that your nerves plug into to tell your muscles to move. Cobra venom kills you by jamming that socket shut, so your lungs stop working. The honey badger's socket has a swapped-out amino acid that gives it a positive electrical charge. Cobra venom is also positively charged. Like magnets pointing the wrong way, the venom gets pushed off before it can lock in, and the muscles keep firing. The same workaround showed up separately in hedgehogs and pigs. Mongooses got there too, with a slightly different molecular trick. Four different animals with no shared ancestor all arrived at the same solution because venomous snakes kept biting them for millions of years. That only covers snakes like cobras and mambas. Puff adders work differently, destroying tissue instead of paralyzing muscle, and the DNA trick doesn't help there. So when a puff adder lands a solid bite, the badger collapses into a kind of coma for two or three hours. Then it wakes up groggy and eats the snake anyway. The skin is maybe the unfairest part of all this. It's about a quarter inch thick, rubbery, and so loose it fits like a wetsuit two sizes too big. A lion can clamp its jaws on a honey badger and the badger will twist halfway around inside its own skin and start clawing the lion's face while still in its mouth. Bee stingers barely get through. Porcupine quills don't either. Which brings us back to the bees in that photo. They're annoying. A few sneak through to the face, and enough stings have killed honey badgers in the wild. Honey badgers still die. But they're running three different defense systems at the same time, and one of them is a genetic lottery ticket evolution has pulled four times.
Science girl@sciencegirl

The honey badger doesn’t care

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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@sebasepuman @CCivicaCatalana Al revisionismo le encanta hablar de las enfermedades contagiosas para ocultar el impacto de las guerras de exterminio que acabaron con el 100% de la gran parte de los pueblos y la sobreexplotación laboral que asesinó millones de indios cual si fueran bestias de carga.
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SebaSepuMan
SebaSepuMan@sebasepuman·
@stand4standon @CCivicaCatalana 2 temas a conversar: 1. Abrupta caída de población originaria tras la llegada española se debió a matanzas promovidas por la corona o más bien por enfermedades o acciones a espaldas de la corona? 2. Antes de los españoles no hubo exterminio y matanza entre pueblos originarios?
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Convivencia Civica Catalana
Convivencia Civica Catalana@CCivicaCatalana·
El historiador de origen indígena Maher Sabarino "Cuando me hablan de la 'opresora' España, yo siempre me pregunto por qué los oprimidos indígenas apoyaron a España y no se rebelaron. Y sí un criollo rico llamado Bolívar. Algo no cuadra. Es que la realidad es justo la contraria"
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@sebasepuman @CCivicaCatalana Después de tres siglos de genocidio, la corona había desarrollado cierto estado de equilibrio, mismo que fue alterado por los primeros gobiernos “independientes”. Eso no quiere decir que fue peor que el exterminio de 9 de cada 10 personas ocurrido en siglos previos.
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SebaSepuMan
SebaSepuMan@sebasepuman·
@CCivicaCatalana Algo parecido ocurrió en Chile con los mapuche. Las nuevas repúblicas independientes fueron mucho más destructivas de los pueblos indígenas que los 300 años anteriores de colonización española.
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@LectorHistoria @GBlancpain @CCivicaCatalana Todos los procesos que lejos de ser subsecuentes, han sido simultáneos a partir de la llegada de los europeos a estas tierras, hasta la actualidad. • Encuentro • Conquista • Exterminio • Evangelización • Colonización • Independencia • Reconquista • Soberanía
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Pedro Salmerón Sanginés
Pedro Salmerón Sanginés@LectorHistoria·
FALSO DE TODA FALSEDAD. ¿No se rebelaron? ustedes son tremendamente ignorantes. No dejó de haber rebeliones desde 1521 hasta el gran incendio de 1810 en el que 50,000 indígenas destruyeron la capital mundial de la plata y sus símbolos de opresión y hambue. Faltan aquí los recuentos de las guerras contra los mayas (su última ciudad conquistada en 1697) y la gran rebelión de Canek, la guerra del Mixtón, las recurrentes rebeliones de Mixes y Zapotecas, la indomable historia de los huicholes... pero quedémonos con esta breve bibliografía científica sobre las guerras y rebeliones del septentrión de 1550 a 1810: x.com/lectorhistoria…
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@Brenn0505 Comparación absurda. No cargabas tu teléfono a todas partes. No contenía todo tipo de información confidencial. No había riesgo de robo de personalidad. El gobierno crea riesgos innecesarios, y el crimen organizado encontrará muchas formas de continuar operando y beneficiarse.
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𝕭𝖗𝖊𝖓𝖓🖤🤍
Wey ahora se quejan que el gobierno vaya a tener acceso a saber tu número de celular. Yo viví en la época de la sección amarilla y la sección gris donde venía el nombre de la persona y su número de teléfono y todos los que tenían una sección amarilla te buscaban por tu nombre y encontraban tu teléfono. 🤣😂😂
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S4So
S4So@stand4standon·
@ChilangoCom Lo que no entendieron es que son tortillas de harina (de trigo). Las de maíz sí se venden calientes.
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Chilango
Chilango@ChilangoCom·
Las entendemos, tortillas. 😮‍💨 ¿Quién más se empieza a pegar cuando está caliente? 🥵🔥 Mándanos tus fotos con situaciones que solo ocurren en #Chilangolandia a contacto@chilango.com #Chilango #cdmx
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