never forget
ever
(via johnyoo92)
never forget
ever
(via johnyoo92)
DARPA funds 100 Year Starship to develop human interstellar flight capabilities
An ambitious effort for an interstellar travel planning organization officially kicked off this week, after DARPA awarded $500,000 to form the 100-Year Starship initiative. Former astronaut Mae Jemison, whose proposal was selected earlier this year, will lead the new independent organization. The goal is to ensure that the capability for human interstellar travel exists within the next 100 years. […]
[read more @popsci | @gizmag] [100 Year Starship] [Project Icarus] [image credit: Adrian Mann]
(via emergentfutures)
I find that the worst part of having a slight interest in someone romantically is if I dream about them. I may not even be that interested or may feel that it’s not going anywhere because I don’t want it to. Then I go and have a dream. My dream’s usually aren’t fantastical or illogical. They’re usually about everyday events. So then I dream of an event with “her” (whoever that may be at the time) and it turns out we have a great time. Romantic in every respect, but not out of the realm of reality. Not outside of my abilities. I dream, and then I awake. To find that none of that happened and those dear memories that I created where all a figment of my sub-consciousness. The worst part is, sometimes my dreams have a habit of turning themselves into a reality years down the road; so who knows if this dream will ever come true?
And I know what I have to do now. You gotta keep breathing. Because tomorrow the sun will rise. Who knows what the tide could bring.
12. Given the strange twists and contradictions of the Society over the years, is there any relationship between the Society and mental illness?
- Yes, unfortunately. Members of the Society, according to an Australian study are “three times more likely to be diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia and nearly four times more likely from paranoid schizophrenia than the rest of the population at risk.”
- Why? Either the Society “tends to attract an excess of pre-psychotic individuals who may then break down, or else being a Jehovah’s Witness is itself a stress which may precipitate a psychosis. Possibly both of these factors may operate together.”
John Spencer, The Mental Health of Jehovah’s Witnesses
http://www.blueletterbible.org/study/cults/exposejw/chap1.cfm
(Source: memewhore)
War isn’t about who’s right it’s about who’s left.
WARNING: HUGE SPOILERS! other than that, absolutely amazing analysis of character interaction and emotional relationships. you have my arrows and my axe.
science bros.
There are no words to describe my feelings about this relationship. But I’m going to try.
First of all, their parallels. Both geniuses, top of their field. Both suffered an accident that physically changed them, forever, and not in a wholesome Spider-Man kind of way. Both try to do what they can to help others despite their own issues; Banner heals people, Tony works on developing clean energy. And both struggle, in their own way, with duality; Tony and Iron Man, Bruce and the Hulk. Two identities, one body. Only difference is Iron Man’s bad side is Tony.
I mentioned somewhere that Tony sees a bit of himself in Banner because they both have a monster inside them that they can’t control, a creature that springs fully formed from the id, the base impulses and the nasty stuff at the back of the mind. Bruce’s is a giant green rage monster. Tony’s trashed a party in Iron Man 2. Banner has a control over his that Tony hasn’t quite achieved yet; don’t think I didn’t notice Tony pouring himself a whiskey when confronting Loki. Tony is envious, fascinated, and most of all, impressed by Bruce’s control.
So he doesn’t walk on eggshells around Bruce like the others, because that’s not what Bruce needs. Tony sees Bruce’s restraint, sees the quiet, brilliant man making self-deprecating jokes in the corner of the room, sees the way people look at him like he’s going to snap any second, and thinks “nope”. Tony does what no-one else aboard that Helicarrier does. He trusts him. He makes jokes and jabs him and teases him and above all, treats him exactly how he would treat anyone else— he has a great regard for Bruce’s brilliance, and tells him so, but he doesn’t try to ignore the Hulk in the room. When he says “wow, you’ve really got a handle on this, haven’t you?” he’s not saying “gosh, it’s incredible you haven’t snapped yet and killed everyone on board” he’s saying “I know you have a handle on this, you wouldn’t be here if you didn’t, so I’m gonna poke you with this sharp object to prove it”. And you can see Bruce relax, and smile, and trust him back.
But then Tony goes even further, and invites Bruce to come to his R&D department. I’m pretty sure the two of them drive off together in Tony’s car at the end of the movie to do just that. And, okay, sure, Bruce is smart, but Tony’s tech is his baby. How many people get invitations to come and see his work? He invites Bruce because he recognises his brilliance, yes, but there’s another reason. He’s inviting Bruce to come down and work with him after this is over. He’s giving Bruce something to do next, a purpose, an alternative to disappearing into the ether to be alone with his monster. Tony knows from experience that being alone with your issues doesn’t end well, so for what’s only the third time in his life he extends the hand of friendship to a guy he’s known barely an hour.
And then, he tells Bruce to let the beast loose. Not just because they need him to fight, but because it will help him. If Bruce can take this thing that he sees as a curse and turn it into a gift, well, that’s going to lift him out of a very dark place. I’m not saying Tony knew about Bruce’s attempted suicide, but I think he had a suspicion that Bruce had been, in his words, “low”. So he encourages Bruce to take all that crap and pain and the Other Guy and use him to help people; after all, that’s what he did.
And it pays off. Nobody— nobody— thinks Bruce is going to turn up for that final battle. You can see the look on Natasha and Steve’s faces when Tony asks if Bruce turned up yet. They’ve counted Bruce out. Guy’s a mess, right? He’s too volatile. Doesn’t play well with others. He could never work as part of a team. No-one thinks he’ll come through when it matters. Except Tony. He has faith in him, and that faith is rewarded. It’s no wonder the Hulk is the one to catch Tony. Tony’s the one who helped let him out. He’s just returning the favor.
How do you judge righteousness? A friend and I got in a conversation over how people we see judge righteousness as compared to how we (my friend and I) judge righteousness and I’m curious to see what others think. So, how do you judge righteousness?
So slick.
LOL i fucking laughed so har when i watched this videoo
LOLOL
BWAHAHHAHA
will pull on some chick for the lolz one day