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1000 results for “keepers”

  1. Who knows what this script is? Photographed here is a bamboo/wood carving of an endangered script, and here at the Script Keepers Network, we have many different ongoing projects that we would love people to join. If you’re interested, there are two upcoming SKN meetings - on July 6th 9-10 am EST, and 4-5 pm EST. This is just one of the many things you could be a part of! Links in bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #endangeredscripts #endangeredlanguages #culture #woodcarving #meeting #community

  2. Who knows what this script is? Photographed here is a bamboo/wood carving of an endangered script, and here at the Script Keepers Network, we have many different ongoing projects that we would love people to join. If you’re interested, there are two upcoming SKN meetings - on July 6th 9-10 am EST, and 4-5 pm EST. This is just one of the many things you could be a part of! Links in bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #endangeredscripts #endangeredlanguages #culture #woodcarving #meeting #community

  3. Who knows what this script is? Photographed here is a bamboo/wood carving of an endangered script, and here at the Script Keepers Network, we have many different ongoing projects that we would love people to join. If you’re interested, there are two upcoming SKN meetings - on July 6th 9-10 am EST, and 4-5 pm EST. This is just one of the many things you could be a part of! Links in bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #endangeredscripts #endangeredlanguages #culture #woodcarving #meeting #community

  4. Who knows what this script is? Photographed here is a bamboo/wood carving of an endangered script, and here at the Script Keepers Network, we have many different ongoing projects that we would love people to join. If you’re interested, there are two upcoming SKN meetings - on July 6th 9-10 am EST, and 4-5 pm EST. This is just one of the many things you could be a part of! Links in bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #endangeredscripts #endangeredlanguages #culture #woodcarving #meeting #community

  5. Who knows what this script is? Photographed here is a bamboo/wood carving of an endangered script, and here at the Script Keepers Network, we have many different ongoing projects that we would love people to join. If you’re interested, there are two upcoming SKN meetings - on July 6th 9-10 am EST, and 4-5 pm EST. This is just one of the many things you could be a part of! Links in bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #endangeredscripts #endangeredlanguages #culture #woodcarving #meeting #community

  6. Welcome to the new Script Keepers Network, a community that people can join to help document, preserve and revitalise some of the world’s 250+ endangered scripts. We are spearheaded by Tim Brookes of the Endangered Alphabets project, who has been studying and working with minority cultures for the past 16 years. Whether you’re a linguist, a teacher or a software developer, all are welcome and implored to join - just click the link in our bio.

    #scriptkeepersnetwork #preservation #documentation

  7. Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta:

    An industrial buildout on the southern tip of Texas is erasing the last traces of an ancient world that still won’t die...

    Mancias, now a 70-year-old long-haired great-grandfather, knows secret stories that could never be written:

    about the last free villages on the Rio Grande’s banks,
    about the massacres,
    about his people’s disguises and
    about their flight, at last, in the 1940s to the Panhandle of Texas,
    where he grew up picking cotton.

    He knows about the old river with an ancient forest and enormous, teeming marshlands of which only glimpses remain.

    He knows how much was lost and how quickly it happened.

    He also knows that people don’t believe him.

    He heard the same lines all his life:
    that the original inhabitants of Texas are gone,
    that his grandparents made up their stories,
    that he was just a Mexican from Lubbock.

    This society has been trying to get rid of Mancias’ people for 500 years.

    It couldn’t kill them all, so it’s destroying the evidence that they ever existed.

    That’s what Mancias sees as 100-ton bulldozers flatten the hills his ancestors camped on,
    churn up their bones, and casually crush them into rubble,
    removing these last traces of their world.

    “They almost annihilated us, and that genocide continues,” Mancias said.

    “To destroy the environment you have to destroy the people who protect it.”

    He faces a formidable foe here at the last frontier for oil and gas on the Gulf Coast of Texas.

    Every other major inlet from the Mississippi River west through Port Arthur, Houston, Freeport, Lavaca Bay, and Corpus Christi is already ringed with refineries, chemical plants, and terminals. 

    But at the farthest tip of Texas, the Rio Grande meets the Gulf between wildlife refuges,
    a state park, and a majestic wilderness that still shelters endangered and little-known wildlife.

    This is where Houston-based developer #NextDecade has begun constructing an $18 billion mega-project,
    which it called the “largest greenfield energy project [financed] in U.S. history”
    when it announced in 2023 that it had secured investors to proceed

    texasobserver.org/forgotten-ke

  8. Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta:

    An industrial buildout on the southern tip of Texas is erasing the last traces of an ancient world that still won’t die...

    Mancias, now a 70-year-old long-haired great-grandfather, knows secret stories that could never be written:

    about the last free villages on the Rio Grande’s banks,
    about the massacres,
    about his people’s disguises and
    about their flight, at last, in the 1940s to the Panhandle of Texas,
    where he grew up picking cotton.

    He knows about the old river with an ancient forest and enormous, teeming marshlands of which only glimpses remain.

    He knows how much was lost and how quickly it happened.

    He also knows that people don’t believe him.

    He heard the same lines all his life:
    that the original inhabitants of Texas are gone,
    that his grandparents made up their stories,
    that he was just a Mexican from Lubbock.

    This society has been trying to get rid of Mancias’ people for 500 years.

    It couldn’t kill them all, so it’s destroying the evidence that they ever existed.

    That’s what Mancias sees as 100-ton bulldozers flatten the hills his ancestors camped on,
    churn up their bones, and casually crush them into rubble,
    removing these last traces of their world.

    “They almost annihilated us, and that genocide continues,” Mancias said.

    “To destroy the environment you have to destroy the people who protect it.”

    He faces a formidable foe here at the last frontier for oil and gas on the Gulf Coast of Texas.

    Every other major inlet from the Mississippi River west through Port Arthur, Houston, Freeport, Lavaca Bay, and Corpus Christi is already ringed with refineries, chemical plants, and terminals. 

    But at the farthest tip of Texas, the Rio Grande meets the Gulf between wildlife refuges,
    a state park, and a majestic wilderness that still shelters endangered and little-known wildlife.

    This is where Houston-based developer #NextDecade has begun constructing an $18 billion mega-project,
    which it called the “largest greenfield energy project [financed] in U.S. history”
    when it announced in 2023 that it had secured investors to proceed

    texasobserver.org/forgotten-ke

  9. Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta:

    An industrial buildout on the southern tip of Texas is erasing the last traces of an ancient world that still won’t die...

    Mancias, now a 70-year-old long-haired great-grandfather, knows secret stories that could never be written:

    about the last free villages on the Rio Grande’s banks,
    about the massacres,
    about his people’s disguises and
    about their flight, at last, in the 1940s to the Panhandle of Texas,
    where he grew up picking cotton.

    He knows about the old river with an ancient forest and enormous, teeming marshlands of which only glimpses remain.

    He knows how much was lost and how quickly it happened.

    He also knows that people don’t believe him.

    He heard the same lines all his life:
    that the original inhabitants of Texas are gone,
    that his grandparents made up their stories,
    that he was just a Mexican from Lubbock.

    This society has been trying to get rid of Mancias’ people for 500 years.

    It couldn’t kill them all, so it’s destroying the evidence that they ever existed.

    That’s what Mancias sees as 100-ton bulldozers flatten the hills his ancestors camped on,
    churn up their bones, and casually crush them into rubble,
    removing these last traces of their world.

    “They almost annihilated us, and that genocide continues,” Mancias said.

    “To destroy the environment you have to destroy the people who protect it.”

    He faces a formidable foe here at the last frontier for oil and gas on the Gulf Coast of Texas.

    Every other major inlet from the Mississippi River west through Port Arthur, Houston, Freeport, Lavaca Bay, and Corpus Christi is already ringed with refineries, chemical plants, and terminals. 

    But at the farthest tip of Texas, the Rio Grande meets the Gulf between wildlife refuges,
    a state park, and a majestic wilderness that still shelters endangered and little-known wildlife.

    This is where Houston-based developer #NextDecade has begun constructing an $18 billion mega-project,
    which it called the “largest greenfield energy project [financed] in U.S. history”
    when it announced in 2023 that it had secured investors to proceed

    texasobserver.org/forgotten-ke

  10. Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta:

    An industrial buildout on the southern tip of Texas is erasing the last traces of an ancient world that still won’t die...

    Mancias, now a 70-year-old long-haired great-grandfather, knows secret stories that could never be written:

    about the last free villages on the Rio Grande’s banks,
    about the massacres,
    about his people’s disguises and
    about their flight, at last, in the 1940s to the Panhandle of Texas,
    where he grew up picking cotton.

    He knows about the old river with an ancient forest and enormous, teeming marshlands of which only glimpses remain.

    He knows how much was lost and how quickly it happened.

    He also knows that people don’t believe him.

    He heard the same lines all his life:
    that the original inhabitants of Texas are gone,
    that his grandparents made up their stories,
    that he was just a Mexican from Lubbock.

    This society has been trying to get rid of Mancias’ people for 500 years.

    It couldn’t kill them all, so it’s destroying the evidence that they ever existed.

    That’s what Mancias sees as 100-ton bulldozers flatten the hills his ancestors camped on,
    churn up their bones, and casually crush them into rubble,
    removing these last traces of their world.

    “They almost annihilated us, and that genocide continues,” Mancias said.

    “To destroy the environment you have to destroy the people who protect it.”

    He faces a formidable foe here at the last frontier for oil and gas on the Gulf Coast of Texas.

    Every other major inlet from the Mississippi River west through Port Arthur, Houston, Freeport, Lavaca Bay, and Corpus Christi is already ringed with refineries, chemical plants, and terminals. 

    But at the farthest tip of Texas, the Rio Grande meets the Gulf between wildlife refuges,
    a state park, and a majestic wilderness that still shelters endangered and little-known wildlife.

    This is where Houston-based developer #NextDecade has begun constructing an $18 billion mega-project,
    which it called the “largest greenfield energy project [financed] in U.S. history”
    when it announced in 2023 that it had secured investors to proceed

    texasobserver.org/forgotten-ke

  11. Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta:

    An industrial buildout on the southern tip of Texas is erasing the last traces of an ancient world that still won’t die...

    Mancias, now a 70-year-old long-haired great-grandfather, knows secret stories that could never be written:

    about the last free villages on the Rio Grande’s banks,
    about the massacres,
    about his people’s disguises and
    about their flight, at last, in the 1940s to the Panhandle of Texas,
    where he grew up picking cotton.

    He knows about the old river with an ancient forest and enormous, teeming marshlands of which only glimpses remain.

    He knows how much was lost and how quickly it happened.

    He also knows that people don’t believe him.

    He heard the same lines all his life:
    that the original inhabitants of Texas are gone,
    that his grandparents made up their stories,
    that he was just a Mexican from Lubbock.

    This society has been trying to get rid of Mancias’ people for 500 years.

    It couldn’t kill them all, so it’s destroying the evidence that they ever existed.

    That’s what Mancias sees as 100-ton bulldozers flatten the hills his ancestors camped on,
    churn up their bones, and casually crush them into rubble,
    removing these last traces of their world.

    “They almost annihilated us, and that genocide continues,” Mancias said.

    “To destroy the environment you have to destroy the people who protect it.”

    He faces a formidable foe here at the last frontier for oil and gas on the Gulf Coast of Texas.

    Every other major inlet from the Mississippi River west through Port Arthur, Houston, Freeport, Lavaca Bay, and Corpus Christi is already ringed with refineries, chemical plants, and terminals. 

    But at the farthest tip of Texas, the Rio Grande meets the Gulf between wildlife refuges,
    a state park, and a majestic wilderness that still shelters endangered and little-known wildlife.

    This is where Houston-based developer #NextDecade has begun constructing an $18 billion mega-project,
    which it called the “largest greenfield energy project [financed] in U.S. history”
    when it announced in 2023 that it had secured investors to proceed

    texasobserver.org/forgotten-ke

  12. Finders Keepers (2014) (Import) Available April 26

    #horror#horrormovies#FindersKeepers#ViaVision – @viavisionent – No soul is safeAfter her divorce, Allyson Simon and her daughter Claire move into an old house outside the city. When Claire finds an old doll left in the house by the previous occupants, Allyson begins to see sinister changes in her daughter. When Allyson […] …

    #horror #ad #Releases #FindersKeepers

    horrornerdonline.com/2024/04/f

  13. Finders Keepers (2014) (Import) Available April 26

    #horror#horrormovies#FindersKeepers#ViaVision – @viavisionent – No soul is safeAfter her divorce, Allyson Simon and her daughter Claire move into an old house outside the city. When Claire finds an old doll left in the house by the previous occupants, Allyson begins to see sinister changes in her daughter. When Allyson […] …

    #horror #ad #Releases #FindersKeepers

    horrornerdonline.com/2024/04/f

  14. Finders Keepers (2014) (Import) Available April 26

    #horror#horrormovies#FindersKeepers#ViaVision – @viavisionent – No soul is safeAfter her divorce, Allyson Simon and her daughter Claire move into an old house outside the city. When Claire finds an old doll left in the house by the previous occupants, Allyson begins to see sinister changes in her daughter. When Allyson […] …

    #horror #ad #Releases #FindersKeepers

    horrornerdonline.com/2024/04/f

  15. Finders Keepers (2014) (Import) Available April 26

    #horror#horrormovies#FindersKeepers#ViaVision – @viavisionent – No soul is safeAfter her divorce, Allyson Simon and her daughter Claire move into an old house outside the city. When Claire finds an old doll left in the house by the previous occupants, Allyson begins to see sinister changes in her daughter. When Allyson […] …

    #horror #ad #Releases #FindersKeepers

    horrornerdonline.com/2024/04/f

  16. "both keepers fighting for a spot on the national team" okay but they're having wildly different levels of success in that fight

    #CHivWAS #NWSL

  17. Oath Keepers leader, Stewart Rhodes, is being sworn in to testify in the eligibility trial of AK Rep David Eastman.
    #AlaskaPolitics

  18. Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes was convicted Tuesday of seditious conspiracy for a violent plot to overturn Joe Biden’s presidential win, handing the Justice Department a major victory in its massive prosecution of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.

    A jury found Rhodes guilty of sedition after three days of deliberations.
    #Jan6thDomesticTerroristAttack #OathKeeper

    apnews.com/article/42affe16144

  19. Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes has been found GUILTY of SEDITIOUS CONSPIRACY. #oathkeeper #oathkeepers #us #news