Saying that cannabis isn’t a drug further stigmatizes drug use. Cannabis is a drug, and that’s okay. When you say it’s just a plant or it’s just medicine, while both those statements are true, it is harmful in many ways. People who use drugs are not bad. Drugs are not bad. Stop stigmatizing drug use and start encouraging safe drug use.
Alcohol is ALSO a drug, and so is nicotine and caffeine. The more we recognize that the chemicals we use to alter our physical and mental states are all drugs, the more respect we have for these substances for both risks and benefits. Not only does the recognition of this destigmatize drug use, it promotes safer drug use by encouraging responsible engagement with drugs instead of treating it as an all or nothing situation.
Lyra, my beloved cat of 13 years, passed away this year on Father’s Day. She’s been by my side through very difficult times and was my little rock of steady and unrelenting love. I struggled a lot drawing this, and struggled a lot posting it, but I know I would’ve wanted to read a comic like this that validated my grief for her when I lost her.
Wherever you are, Lyra my little summer star, I love you always! Thank you for being the best thing in my life.
i learned that actor Danny Trejo has the most on-screen deaths of anyone in Hollywood history, with 65. Followed by Christopher Lee (60), Lance Henriksen (51), Vincent Price (41), Dennis Hopper (41), Boris Karloff (41), and John Hurt (39). (x)
Yet poor Sean Bean is stuck with the reputation for dying in every movie. Unfair.
Give him time, he still has many years of dying yet to come.
Also there’s the question of density vs quantity. If you make a hundred movies and die in 50, and someone else makes 30 movies and dies in 30, the first one has died more, but the second one has died more often per movie.
It’s the DPM ratio that really counts, IMO.
65/402 16% Danny Trejo 60/282 21% Christopher Lee 51/259 20% Lance Henriksen 41/211 19% Vincent Price 41/205 20% Dennis Hopper 41/204 20% Boris Karloff 39/209 19% John Hurt 33/117 28% Sean Bean
I’m so proud of the statistical side of tumblr for coming through on this.
There’s an old inn in my city literally called The Old Inn (Den Gamle Kro) that lives up to its name on the outside.
And inside they have old looking eating areas as you would expect.
But by far my favorite area is the old courtyard/alley they build a roof over so people can enjoy it all year round. It look so cozy and magical. It’s giving me Scandinavian Spirited Away (Studio Ghibli) vibes. I could definitely see trolls, elves and gnomes working and visiting here.
I want to be clear this is a tiny, tiny fraction of the overall global burden of tuberculosis: 10,000,000 people get sick with TB every year, and 1,250,000 die (almost all of whom die unnecessarily–TB is curable).
It’s also a small fraction of the U.S. burden of TB–we have about 10,000 cases of TB annually in the U.S. It’s an airborne disease, so we shouldn’t be surprised that people are getting sick. We should be horrified that we’re allowing so many people to get sick even though TB is both curable and preventable. (We can stop chains of infection by offering preventative antibiotics to close contacts of the sick.)
We should absolutely be worried about TB in the United States. An airborne disease that’s allowed to infect and sicken ten million people each year is an ongoing threat to all humans. But we should also remember that while we worry about a hypothetical TB pandemic, much of the world has never emerged from the TB pandemic that has lasted for thousands of years and killed many billions of people.
Should you be worried about contracting TB? Yes. But you should mostly be worried that the U.S. government has paused all TB funding, which will increase antibiotic resistance, needless death, and the risk that untreatable versions of the disease will emerge and spread.