Você reconhece uma boa amizade logo de cara, não tem frescura, não tem logica, acontece. E não tem essa de que pra ser amigo tem que ter não sei quantos mil anos de convivência e de conhecidos. Que nada, quando é pra ser amigo? Em menos de 5 minutos de conversa já dá pra sentir.
This morning photograph features long shadows across Middle Prong Little River, as seen from a bridge in the Tremont section of the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. Prints and more are available in my galleries at Pixels and Redbubble. Thanks for stopping by!
Have any of you ever been grateful that you unfollowed someone’s blog? I am.
Sometimes I see some people that I used to follow, and think, how happy I am that they showed who they are. Especially, when they take a post of mine, don’t tag me in it and use my post to be a bigot.
Never Ever do that, by the way.
If you want to use my post to expose your bigotry’s, at LEAST have the decency to tag me in it. I am still shocked by the blogger who did that by the way. At first I thought they were supporting trans people … Nope … By the way, if you want to use my post to support trans people, go for it. You don’t have to tag me, IF you support trans people. You do, if you want to be a bigot towards anyone.
Climate Change is a … HOT … topic! See what I did there.
Anyways, I saw something recently from a “I.T. Specialist” who said that it was
“it is absurd and arrogant to think that we, humans, are a threat to the planet AND that we can modify the weather. If we try to accomplish this we will only ensure our extinction.”
Well…I gave him a few actual facts, and I quote myself here…
“It’s absurd and arrogant to think that human beings play no part in changing the climate. While our ancestors have been around for about six million years, the modern form of humans only evolved about 200,000 years ago. Civilization as we know it is only about 6,000 years old, and industrialization started in the earnest only in the 1800s. Dinosaurs went extinct about 65 million years ago (at the end of the Cretaceous Period), after…
It is crucial that the tours we take, and the bridges we build, like the Duke Ellington Bridge, in DC, help our society to become more fully inclusive for all of us today, and to come and work together, for all of us.
I still believe that attention to shared histories through walking (and singing!) tours may provide part of an answer. I started a note about that based on my own walking singing tour company, a few years ago, in my book Stayed on Freedom’s Call:
” … an academic author and lover of history, it was clear that this forgotten cooperation was a story that needed to be told in as many ways as possible, for the sake of both communities, and for the city at large. Many tours exist which view the history of one community or another in isolation from other communities…
Bem Vindos a este espaço onde compartilhamos um pouco da realidade do Japão à todos aqueles que desejam visitar ou morar no Japão. Aqui neste espaço, mostramos a realidade do Japão e dos imigrantes. O nosso compromisso é com a realidade. Fique por dentro do noticiário dos principais jornais japoneses, tutoriais de Faça você mesmo no Japão e acompanhe a Série Histórias de Imigrantes no Japão. Esperamos que goste de nossos conteúdos, deixe seu like, seu comentário, compartilhe e nos ajudar você e à outras pessoas. Grande abraço, gratidão e volte sempre!
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