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@Tattooed_mummy It was first discovered in monkeys, but infects a lot of mammals and the primary reservoir is probably rodents so it's not a terribly accurate name. But the stigma is the association of the word "monkey" with a disease that's most prevalent on the African continent, and which in the global North is showing up more in among men who have sex with men, who are a marginalised group in many countries

So is being renamed to avoid stigma by the , which is of course a sensible decision but I have "mmm-pox ba duba dop" to the tune of Hanson's Mmm Bop going round my head all day as a result. And now you do too. Sorry. theguardian.com/world/2022/nov

Jules boosted

RT @JolyonMaugham@twitter.com

The poverty premium embedded in pre-payment meters - where the most financially vulnerable pay the highest prices for energy - is wrong in principle.

What's more we think, often, the pre-conditions for installing a PPM are ignored by energy companies. independent.co.uk/news/uk/good

🐦🔗: twitter.com/JolyonMaugham/stat

Jules boosted

"He talked of his dreams in a strangely poetic fashion; making me see with terrible vividness the damp Cyclopean city of slimy green stone—whose geometry, he oddly said, was all wrong" - H.P. Lovecraft

#Cyclopean has two meanings, it is commonly accepted Lovecraft meant "denoting a type of ancient masonry made with massive irregular blocks." Another meaning is "of or resembling a Cyclops"

I present: #Abandoned powerstation control room, in beautiful otherworldly green with Cyclopean skylight🖤

Jules boosted

A Home Office report on asylum journeys finds that economic rights and labour market access do not act as a pull factor for asylum seekers.

The ban on asylum seekers working (except after a year where they can find a role on the shortage occupation list) leaves many destitute or reliant on informal work without enforceable rights. It is based on the dogma that changing the policy would act as a 'pull factor.'

#AsylumSeekers #WorkersRights #LiftTheBan

freemovement.org.uk/home-offic

Jules boosted

Little Owl.

Just before I relocated to the Isle Of Mull, during the winter CV19 lockdown, I spent a few sessions late in the day at the little owl site in Worcestershire.

Each time I stayed until dusk hoping to capture images of the adult female backlit against the setting sun.

Took a few visits, but I was rewarded eventually.

#LittleOwl #owl #worcestershire #WildlifePhotography #NaturePhotography #BirdsOfPrey #BirdPhotography #BirdsInFlight

Jules boosted

Continuing down the thought thread of connecting ecovillages or federated communities into a common tech stack. This time about #libraryeconomy and #librarysocialism, and how communities might be able to request and offer goods and services without the need for monetary exchange, and in a way that kinda follows a library of everything approach to things.

A big thing I see in subverting capitalism, and building new forms of living and organizing, is by decommodifying as much as we can. A great way to do that is to look at meeting people's basic needs, and having a way for people to both ask for something, and give something, without paying money. I guess it comes down to social capital, but I don't really like that term, and it fits better with the term gift economy anyways. In some forms it can be mutual aid, other times it can just be meeting a need when it comes up.

The concrete "how" on doing this might look like timebanks. I really like the software from timebanks.org though it doesn't have a self host option and requires an internet connection. Locally to me denton.timebanks.org is a great example where people can offer things, and request things as well. So it can be a very quick way of seeing the needs of people, and trying to meet those needs.

In terms of lending libraries, there isn't anything so far that I found that is free and open source that can handle things well. Most of the FOSS stuff is related to libraries. koha-community.org/ is a good example of this. I wish there was a way to have a library of things as well (though I guess with some finessing you could make it work)

I think it would be awesome to have the two combined, in the way that timebanks works, where people can request and offer things, combined with a more concrete way of tracking what has been lent to who.

Different communities could have their own internal sharing sites, on their own internal intranet-networks. But also they can connect, federate or be interoperable with other communities as a whole. So if a request in the community net is there, an offer can be found to meet that need. That way each community maintains their autonomy, while also being well-connected with the world at large and able to help move resources around. It would be great to have something that combines these ideas together in one place to make it alot easier, and also have it free and open source, so anyone can use it.

It's the start of an idea at least. It might be a good place to start for a real world #solarpunk experiment, of federated, interconnected communities that use technology as a way to connect with others, while organizing things horizontally and equitably, while maintaining a balance with the ecosystem by making bioregional+permaculture+indegenous knowledge led ecovillages.

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One of the nicest things about #Shetland winters is when the mirrie dancers appear. Mirr means blur in Shetland #dialect. Tonight as I watched the #AuroraBorealis , it really did appear like dancing figures, the speed of their movement obscuring their edges as they merged with the darkness #nature #Scotland #aurora

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“The End Fuel Poverty Coalition is advising customers who are contacted by their energy supplier about a prepayment meter installation to talk to the Good Law Project, which is looking to challenge the transfers.” independent.co.uk/news/uk/good

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Never forget, when you’re being pressured to prove that safe bike-lanes or pedestrian crossings across fundamentally unsafe conditions are ‘needed,’ it's hard to justify a bridge by the number of people swimming across a raging, crocodile-filled river.

#urbanism #cities #streets #streetsforpeople #urbanplanning #transportation #bikes #walking

Jules boosted

The László Nagy laboratory has published a beautiful and detailed fungal tree of life of microscopic diversity. You can Download it in high resolution!!!

#micology #biology #treeoflife #mondaymood #biodiversity #microscopic_life #microscopic #fungal #fungalturn

Link: group.szbk.u-szeged.hu/sysbiol

@velobetty Just being a datapoint here, not criticising what anyone else finds entertaining, but I'm a woman and I really don't like it

@WilliamNB Katadyn Hiker all the way! Mine's lasted a decade and the only bit that's broken was the waterproof pouch that came with it to store the tubing in

@Ruth_Mottram It's more nerdy curiosity than any serious attempt to track anything but I'm always interested to see where people are coming from

Jules boosted

Nobody should ever go hungry.

Ever.

We have enough food to feed every single person.

The reason they don't have that food is because somebody decides they don't deserve it.

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It also angers me that politicians spend their time vilifying vulnerable people, exemplifying greed while blaming those in poverty for their own situation, indulging in selfish and self-serving politics, and showing not a single bit of care for people who are vulnerable and who struggle for money.

The thing lacking from the #UKGovernment is kindness and empathy and my personal opinion is that this shows a fundamental lack of empathy and compassion in Tory MPs.

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Jules boosted

Reading this article about Morrison's #AskForHenry scheme where anybody can ask discretely for a warm meal at no charge and it brought me to tears. I think in part because it breaks my heart that some people don't have access to warm and healthy meals, in part because of the cruel environment that creates this situation, and in part because of the dignified way that people are helped with this.

examinerlive.co.uk/news/cost-o

I keep hearing the figure of one moderator per thousand users being bandied around as necessary for online safety, but that's a suspiciously round number - have there been any studies or compilations of experience looking at this to generate that figure?

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