Nigel J Walley
66.2K posts

Nigel J Walley
@WalleyVision
All my own nonsense when talking UK & Ireland, cycling, art and politics! The media tech stuff is under @nwalley & architecture tech under @ChimniWalley

This Trans Day of Visibility, let's remember those too often overlooked in endless debates over trans rights: trans people. Trans men and women deserve our love and support, not exclusion and hate.




Up and at em with The Double Deckers. The tune was written by Melvyn Hayes, no less, and the show starred him, Brinsley Forde from Aswad, Peter Firth from Spooks and Debbie Russ who now reads the news on the World Service. Gloriously infectious!

Up and at em with The Double Deckers. The tune was written by Melvyn Hayes, no less, and the show starred him, Brinsley Forde from Aswad, Peter Firth from Spooks and Debbie Russ who now reads the news on the World Service. Gloriously infectious!

Newest Vegas Loop Station at the beautiful Fontainebleau Resort @fblasvegas


And why do trans men and women ‘deserve our love’? What lefty cobblers.

I refuse to believe this is real

In 2008, evolutionary anthropologist Katie Hinde began studying breast milk from rhesus macaque mothers. What started as a routine study turned into a groundbreaking discovery. She found that mothers raising sons produced milk richer in fat and protein, while those raising daughters had different nutrient balances. This led Katie to a radical conclusion: milk is not just nutrition—it’s information. Her research revealed that milk shapes behavior, not just growth. For instance, first-time mothers produced milk with higher levels of cortisol, influencing their babies to grow faster but also become more anxious. Katie also discovered that milk changes based on the baby’s immune needs. When a baby is sick, the mother’s milk quickly adapts by producing more white blood cells and targeted antibodies. Katie’s work, which challenged the scientific consensus, was largely ignored. She launched a blog, Mammals Suck Milk, to spark discussions, and her findings, including that every mother’s milk is unique, gained widespread attention. In 2017, she took her research to a TED stage, and in 2020, her work was featured in Netflix’s Babies. Today, as a professor at Arizona State University, Katie continues to revolutionize our understanding of infant development and lactation. Katie Hinde didn’t just study milk—she uncovered a living, responsive communication system, revealing that nourishment is intelligence. Her discovery shows that sometimes the biggest revolutions begin by listening to what others ignore.

Btw, this is the founder of the Trans Day of Visibility


Do you stand with NHS Doctor - Rahmeh Aladwan? Please RT after voting - thank you.



















