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The DWR Sunday Religious Disservice – God’s Life Hacks
September 13, 2015 in Religion | Tags: The DWR Sunday Religious Disserivce | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Hard to argue with this top 10 11 list of religious christian life hacks… :)
10. How to Deal with Annoying Neighbours.
9. How to Peel a Banana.
8. How to Get an Abortion.
7. Foreskins: Perfect Gift for Any Occasion.
6. How to Get High Without Using Drugs
5. How to Donate Sperm Without Masturbating.
4. How to Prevent Pregnancy
3. How to Get Rid Of Mold in Your House.
2. How to Beat Your Slaves (erroneously #3 in the video)
1. How to Kill Someone.
0. How to Deal with Children who Make Fun of Your Baldness.
You’d think by now that we could see the absurdity that is religion…
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Dr. Jen Gunter: Ben Carson says a 22 week fetus can feel pain. Science says Carson is wrong.
September 12, 2015 in Feminism, Medicine | Tags: Abortion, Anti-Choice Zealotry, Dudes, Reproductive Freedom, Republican Jack-Asses, Science | by The Arbourist | 6 comments
Dr. Jen Gunter : Ben Carson says a 22 week fetus can feel pain. Science says Carson is wrong.
Wow, another dude Republican candidate who gets the vapours when it comes to female reproductive issues.
Dr.Carson is a neurosurgeon perhaps he can discover what is making his thoughts come from ass instead of his head.
Quelle Surprise.
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Masters, Poor Whites, Poor Blacks – The Class Based Racial Divide
September 12, 2015 in History | Tags: Histroy, Race, Racism, Slavery | by The Arbourist | 2 comments
History – A tonic to aid in understanding the higgly-piggly we have today.
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The DWR Baroque Interlude – J.S Bach Invention No.2 in C Minor
September 11, 2015 in Music | Tags: Bach Invention No.2 in C minor, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
he Inventions and Sinfonias, BWV 772–801, also known as the Two- and Three-Part Inventions, are a collection of thirty short keyboard compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750): 15 inventions, which are 2-part contrapuntal pieces, and 15 sinfonias, which are 3-part contrapuntal pieces. They were originally written as musical exercises for his students.
Bach titled the collection:
Honest method, by which the amateurs of the keyboard – especially, however, those desirous of learning – are shown a clear way not only (1) to learn to play cleanly in two parts, but also, after further progress, (2) to handle three obligate parts correctly and well; and along with this not only to obtain good inventions (ideas) but to develop the same well; above all, however, to achieve a cantabile style in playing and at the same time acquire a strong foretaste of composition.
We’ve featured Invention No.2 already, but as a keyboard piece. I love this rendition of it. :)
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Wake Up Call – Animated Short
September 10, 2015 in Education | Tags: Capitalism, Environmental Destruction, Supply Chains, Wake Up Call | by The Arbourist | 4 comments
A tonic against the slash and burn capitalism we’re supposed to worship.
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Locked Tight – Why You Can’t Retweet Me – By Stacey May Fowles
September 9, 2015 in Feminism, Internet, Media | Tags: Feminism, Online Harassment, social media, Stacey Fowles, The Walrus | by The Arbourist | 4 comments
Wow. What brilliant article by Ms.Fowles recently published by the Walrus. I’m gonna put the whole thing up here because it sheds light on so many of the issues that face women today in the online world. Consider this example #2348239487 of how woman’s experiences in society are dramatically different than those of men.
“Every so often, someone (always a man) sends me a casual tweet asking why he can’t retweet me. Of course, the obvious answer is that my account is locked—a tiny optional blessing of Twitter’s functionality that means I’m not searchable to the world outside. The more complex answer relates to why my account is locked in the first place, why I would choose to keep people from reading my brilliant musings on ’90s’ teen movies, Rihanna’s latest video, or the myriad virtues of Magic Mike XXL. There are easy, palatable answers I have given to those that ask; I value my privacy, or I like to keep my circle small and manageable, or I prefer to keep the personal aspects of my life away from my employers and ex-boyfriends.
But the most important (and truest) answer is this: I am afraid of men on the Internet.
There’s good reason for this fear, and it’s likely one you’ll empathize with if you’re a woman who has ever dared to have an opinion in the techno-public realm. In fact, women have never once asked me why my account is locked—and unlike some of my male editors, they’ve never recommended opening it up. They understand that the online world has become a horror show, and that men largely drive that horror. Men are usually the ones who post nude pictures of their exes, release the home addresses of the women they dislike, and run the vileness that is Gamergate. (I’m even reluctant to type the word Gamergate, as if doing so conjures the hoards like some kind of Internet Candyman.) Of course, Not All Men, but unless a new Twitter follower has “I hate women” or some variation thereof in his bio, there’s no good way to predict which one will decide to take offence at you merely existing. And there’s no way to know whether that person who is offended will be the one to threaten to end your life.
Online technology has allowed a stranger to tell me he’d like to penetrate me with a broken light bulb because I’d “probably like it.” It has let a commenter inform me that women shouldn’t act the “way they do” if they don’t want men to commit crimes against them. I’ve been the subject of mockery and derision on men’s-rights-activist websites and right-wing blogs. On a good day, the Internet helps people let me know I’m stupid, and on a bad one it helps them threaten me with bodily harm. It’s facilitated me being called a man hater, a feminazi, a libtard, a hack, an attention whore, or just a plain old whore. It’s brought me patronizing questions, profanity-laden emails, and abuse masquerading as “criticism.”
It has also been a great way for people to tell me that I should ignore all this, that I should get a thicker skin, and if I don’t like it maybe I should get offline altogether.”
Catch the rest at the Walrus, as apparently they need their ad revenue – tracking down hole in the wall blogs for copyright violations is an expensive business.
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Back to School is Here…
September 8, 2015 in Education | Tags: back to school, Meh | by The Arbourist | 2 comments
And there was great celebration…






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