tushbutt - hold onto your heinie

Month

June 2012

May 31, 2012439 notes
May 31, 2012432 notes
Advocating Progress: A veteran risks all to get homes for the homeless → reagan-was-a-horrible-president.tumblr.com

nbclatino:

image


(Photos courtesy The Vet Hunters Project)

U.S. Army veteran, Joe Leal, was born in rural Harlingen, Texas, to a mother addicted to drugs and spent many of his childhood years homeless. In order to change his destiny, he joined the Army at 18. Nearly 20 years later, he…

May 31, 201248 notes
May 31, 20122,920 notes

May 2012

May 31, 20121,605 notes
boonies

boone is pretty sweet but i don’t know anyone so it’s not super fun like the summer should be

i need to meet people here

where they @

boone tumblrites, are you
-rad (radical also ok)
-progressive
-punk 2 death (diy forever)

make friends with me

i am a pretty cool cat myself

May 31, 20121 note
#boone #app #asu
May 31, 2012530 notes
May 31, 2012522 notes
May 31, 20122,228 notes
“

I know I’ve told this story before, but my abusive ex refused to let me take birth control. I was on the pill until he found them in my purse.

I went to the Student Health Center—they were completely unhelpful, choosing to lecture me about the importance of safe sex (recommending condoms) instead of actually listening to my problem.

Then I went to Planned Parenthood. The Nurse Practitioner took one look at my fading bruises and stopped the exam. She called in the doctor. The doctor came in and simply asked me: “Are you ready to leave him?” When I denied that I was being abused, she didn’t argue with me. She just asked me what I needed. I said I need a birth control method that my boyfriend couldn’t detect. She recommended a few options and we decided on Depo.

When I told her that my boyfriend read my emails and listened to my phone messages and was known to follow me, she suggested to do the Depo injections at off hours when the clinic was normally closed. She made a note in my chart and instructed the front desk never to leave messages for me—instead, she programmed her personal cell phone number into my phone under the name “Nora”. She told me she would call me to schedule my appointments; she wouldn’t leave a message, but I should call her back when I was able to.

And that was it. No judgment. No lecture. She walked me to the door and told me to call her day or night if I needed anything. That she lived 5 blocks from campus and would come get me. That I wasn’t alone. That she just wanted me to be safe.

I never called her to come to my rescue. But I have no doubt that she would have come if I had called. She kept me on Depo for a year, giving me those monthly injections in secret, helping me prevent a desperately unwanted pregnancy.

I cannot thank Planned Parenthood enough for the work they do.

”
—Curious Georgiana (via sexistmorons)
May 29, 201243,974 notes
May 28, 20123,140 notes
Pitifully paid workers, weak environmental policies, supply chains that allow manufacturers to abdicate responsibility. Simon Brew asks: is it even possible to buy ethically sound technology? → pcpro.co.uk

futurejournalismproject:

Via PC Pro UK:

In the past, when people have voiced ethical concerns surrounding technology, it’s typically been centred on environmental issues. Such issues, as we’ll see, are still relevant, but it’s increasingly the human consequences of manufacturing technology that are coming under the microscope.

How is the end user supposed to know just how their shiny new product came to be? Do they even care that there’s a sporting chance the manufacturer itself couldn’t tell you where every last component came from? And if they did, how is it possible to have confidence that the product they’ve just bought conforms to any kind of ethical standard? Or do we all just want to buy the cheapest product available?

Is it even possible to buy any technology with a clean conscience, without bankrupting ourselves in the process?

As I post this I think of the phones, laptops, tablets, cameras and assorted gear that allow us to do what we do. I don’t know the answers — and don’t want to use that as an excuse to abdicate the issue — but am glad we’re seeing more tech reporters tackling where our shiny things come from and the consequences of our having them. — Michael

May 28, 201230 notes
May 28, 2012182 notes
May 28, 201219 notes
May 28, 201220,985 notes
May 27, 201233,355 notes
May 27, 20125,174 notes
May 27, 201272,724 notes
May 27, 20121,238 notes
Play
0:00
May 25, 201225,269 notes
Next page →
2012 2013
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
2011 2012 2013
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
2010 2011 2012
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
2010 2011
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December