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  1. The first 2025 All-Star Ballot update is here!

    Andrew McCutchen and Isiah Kiner-Falefa are in the Top 10 in their position groups in the National League.

    #VotePirates ⏩️ pirates.com/allstar

  2. #SourceOfTheDance

    Stan Rogers, "Pharisee"
    Garnet Rogers with Bob Franke's "Thanksgiving Eve"

    John McCutcheon and Tom Chapin, "Calling All the Children Home"
    [which always feels like a lament to me, lately. More so than usual now.]

    Going out on George Winston, "Thanksgiving"

    #StaySafe and #BlessedBe!

  3. Fascinating stencil color in Three American Beauties (Edwin S. Porter and Wallace McCutcheon, 1906).

    Preserved by the Museum of Modern Art.

    #SilentFilm #EarlyFilm #Cinemastodon

  4. Fascinating stencil color in Three American Beauties (Edwin S. Porter and Wallace McCutcheon, 1906).

    Preserved by the Museum of Modern Art.

    @film #SilentFilm #SilentEra #EarlyFilm #FilmHistory #Cinemastodon

  5. 150 Years after the 13th Amendment

    After the United States civil war, in 1865 the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were approved by Congress and ratified.

    What seems so natural, so obvious and simple was not so simple in the New World. it took a long time before the majority was willing to accept it was wrong in every sense.

    13th Amendment of the nited States Constitution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:


    Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

     

    But lots of pioneers who came from Europe and liked those cheap labour-forces did not want to have those “monkies” like they were often called, being part of their normal co-habitats.

    Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad looking at an album of photographs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, based on congressional acts, which gave the president authority to confiscate rebel property and forbid the military from returning slaves of rebels to their owners. Being liberated from their masters those Negroes started to create their own free businesses. Only addressing the rebelling southern states the proclamation did not resolve the issue of slavery for the nation as a whole. It was thought the Thirteenth Amendment (the first of the three so-called “Civil War Amendments“) would bring a solution for all coloured people, prohibiting slavery throughout the country. To extend the rights of citizenship to all people regardless of race or colour the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were added.

    Congress enacted a number of statutes to enforce the provisions of the Civil War Amendments, but by the end of the nineteenth century, most of those statutes had been overturned by the courts, repealed, or nullified by subsequent legislation.

    Segregation of the races in schools, public accommodations, public transportation, and various other aspects of public life, was honoured for a long time after the amendment was written.

    It has taken many man years before that all persons could have full and equal enjoyment of public inns, parks, theatres, and other places of amusement, regardless of race or colour.  Even today, anno 2015, we see that in the United states there are still many states or regions where the white people are not so happy with those with a darker skin. In several regions it is still more difficult for a coloured man to find work than for a white man.

    1904 caricature of “White” and “Jim Crow” rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow’s legal pretense that the races be “separate but equal” under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment {John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.}

    The Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 by an 8–1 vote, holding that Congress had exceeded its authority to enforce the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court held that private discrimination against African Americans did not violate the Thirteenth Amendment’s ban on slavery. Following this decision, several northern and western states began enacting their own bans on discrimination in public places. But many other states did the opposite: they began codifying racial segregation and discrimination in laws that became known as the Jim Crow laws. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.

    Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Potter Stewart (1915–1985)

    Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority, turned to the Thirteenth Amendment and observed that it was adopted to remove the “badges of slavery” and that it gave Congress power to effect that removal. Stewart wrote:

    Congress has the power under the Thirteenth Amendment rationally to determine what are the badges and the incidents of slavery, and the authority to translate that determination into effective legislation…. [W]hen racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too is a relic of slavery.

    Normally this 13° amendment also enables Congress to pass laws against sex trafficking and other modern forms of slavery, but the sex trafficking is still a very flourishing business, though some part may come under threat when Donald Trump shall be able to get a firm wall between the Mexican border with increased controls.

    “At the bus station in Durham, North Carolina.” May 1940, Jack Delano. Deutsch: “An der Bushaltestelle, Durham, North Carolina.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Français : “A la gare routière, Durham, Caroline du Nord.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Español: “En la estación de autobuses, Durham, Carolina del Norte.”, Mayo de 1940, Jack Delano. Italiano: “Alla fermata dell’autobus, Durham, Carolina del Nord.” Maggio del 1940, Jack Delano. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was a long overdue step in the long road the Americans continue to walk in their efforts to address and uproot the systemic injustices embedded into their society. Still today we can see there too many people being forced to terrible inhuman conditions.

    Having politicians speaking arrogantly about other coloured and other cultured people makes it that other Americans do not see any harm in using those people as cheap labour and treating them as scum. This week in Europe we once more got to see and hear how a man with lots of money could point his finger to those whom he considered to be cullings and scourings which were just there to be used outside the United states of America to produce cheap products for the American White supremacy.

    In the Republican primary the material or essence of those amendments from 150 years ago are at large.

    In Europe many people, like me, were afraid the first black president of America would have been put in the grave soon. It worked out differently, for the good. Though lots of good ideas were retained by the republicans, America may be proud of the work Barack Obama still could establish with all that counteraction.

    Standing in the United States Capitol today, President Obama reflected on the history of the progress which was made in the United States of America — hard-fought, hard-won, incomplete, but always possible.

    Watch his remarks here about the century and a half of freedom and about the stealing of men, women and children from their homelands, separating husbands from wives and parents from children:

    *

    *

    As many made clear at the time of its ratification, the 13th Amendment was not a final step, but rather the first step in making real the promise that all men are created equal. Read the letter that Annie Davis, an enslaved woman living in Maryland, wrote to President Lincoln asking if she was free after he had signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He never replied, but the answer was no. It would take an amendment to Maryland’s constitution — and the 13th Amendment — to ensure that she and all enslaved people in the U.S. were free in the eyes of the law.

    “President Lincoln understood that if we were ever to fully realize that founding promise, it meant not just signing an Emancipation Proclamation, not just winning a war. It meant making the most powerful collective statement we can in our democracy — etching our values into our Constitution.”

    The 13th Amendment: 150 Years Later, President Obama Reflects on the Abolition of Slavery 9 December 2015

    “We would do a disservice to those warriors of justice — Tubman and Douglass, and Lincoln and King — were we to deny that the scars of our nation’s original sin are still with us today. We condemn ourselves to shackles once more if we fail to answer those who wonder if they’re truly equals in their communities, or in their justice systems, or in a job interview. We betray the efforts of the past if we fail to push back against bigotry in all its forms.”

    “For however slow, however incomplete, however harshly, loudly, rudely challenged at each point along our journey, in America, we can create the change that we seek.

    “All it requires is that our generation be willing to do what those who came before us have done: to rise above the cynicism and rise above the fear, to hold fast to our values, to see ourselves in each other, to cherish dignity and opportunity not just for our own children but for somebody else’s child. To remember that our freedom is bound up with the freedom of others — regardless of what they look like or where they come from or what their last name is or what faith they practice…

    “That is our choice. Today we affirm hope.”

    +

    Preceding

    Coming closer to the end of 2015 and the end for Donald Trump as presidential candidate

    Vatican against Opponents of immigration

    ++

    Additional reading

    1. Stand Up
    2. Consequences of Breivik’s mass murder
    3. Religion, fundamentalism and murder
    4. Believing in God part of being American for Discriminating Americans who feel discrimiated
    5. Why I’m Angry
    6. A last note concerning civil rights

    +++

    Further related articles

    1. Obama-McCain-latina. June 15, 2008
    2. White Australian Panel Fails To Grasp The Concept Of Racism In Discussion About The Word “Negro”
    3. “Adding Insult With Significant Physical Injury”: The 2016 Campaign Joke That’s No Longer Funny — Just Violent
    4. Donald Trump, the Great Wall of China … and a little history
    5. Trouble on the border?
    6. America’s Berlin Wall
    7. Think it’s time to admit Donald Trump is right about Mexico but of course you won’t…
    8. Trump proposes increase of fees on Mexican visas to build Mexico border wall
    9. We Already Have a Wall, Mr. Trump
    10. “Donald Trump’s hot minute at the US-Mexico border”
    11. Trump: Border Patrol Union Backed Out Because They Were ‘Petrified’ To Say What’s Happening At Border
    12. Border Patrol Union In Texas Backs Out Of Meeting With Donald Trump
    13. Donald Trump fights back
    14. Why the Donald is dangerous
    15. “Sinvergüenza”: Trump, Bush Don’t Care That ‘Anchor Baby’ Isn’t ‘Politically Correct’
    16. Democrates Hope Race Across US-Mexico Border Will Ease Building Tension Over Trade
    17. Refugees on Our Doorstep
    18. The Draft Riots of 1863
    19. How well do you know your American history?
    20. The Emancipation Proclamation
    21. Emancipation Proclamation
    22. Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address
    23. More thoughts on The Civil War rebroadcast
    24. 5 Things You May Not Know About Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation : Sarah Pruitt
    25. If Slavery Is Not Wrong, Nothing Is Wrong
    26. Hallowed Ground Retained
    27. Ben Carson Uses Empowerment Message in Bid to Sway Black Voters
    28. The New Slavery

    +++

    Related articles

    Rate this:

    #13AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #14AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #15AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #1865 #2015 #AbrahamLincoln #AfricanAmericans #AmericanSettlers #AnnieDavis #CheapLabour #CivilWarAmendments #ColouredPeople #DonaldTrump #EmancipationProclamation1863_ #JimCrowLaws #Maryland #MexicanBorder #Negro #NewWorld #PioneersOfNorthAmerica #PotterStewart #RacialDiscrimination #RacialSegregation #ReconstructionPeriod #Segregation #SexTrafficking #Slavery #USCivilRightsActOf1875 #UnitedStatesConstitution #WhitePeople #WhiteRace

  6. #TDIM #OnThisDay #BOTD #Music 🎂
    Martijn Garritsen AKA Martin Garrix, DJ/Producer, 1996
    Oliver "Olly" Murs, singer/songwriter, 1984
    Dan Auerbach, singer/songwriter/guitar, The Black Keys, 1979
    Martine McCutcheon, actress/singer, 1976
    Shanice Wilson-Knox, singer/actress/dancer, 1973
    Natalie Appleton, singer, All Saints, Appleton, 1973
    Sinéad O'Carroll, singer, B*Witched, 1973
    Danny Wood, singer/songwriter, New Kids On The Block/NKOTB, 1969
    Greg Kurstin, musician/songwriter/producer, 1969
    1/3

  7. #TDIM #OnThisDay #BOTD #Music 🎂
    Martijn Garritsen AKA Martin Garrix, DJ/Producer, 1996
    Oliver "Olly" Murs, singer/songwriter, 1984
    Dan Auerbach, singer/songwriter/guitar, The Black Keys, 1979
    Martine McCutcheon, actress/singer, 1976
    Shanice Wilson-Knox, singer/actress/dancer, 1973
    Natalie Appleton, singer, All Saints, Appleton, 1973
    Sinéad O'Carroll, singer, B*Witched, 1973
    Danny Wood, singer/songwriter, New Kids On The Block/NKOTB, 1969
    Greg Kurstin, musician/songwriter/producer, 1969
    1/3

  8. Naty @eclecticpassions ·

    I feel like I progressed up a level today in my Git skills by creating a new branch to manage my theme improvement!

    I downloaded Git Graph 2 (fork of the popular mhutchie VSC plugin) by hansu: github.com/hansu/vscode-git-gr

    It's so cool seeing the branch graph view 🤩 and I'm learning to write better commit messages/formatting.

    Useful resources:

    gist.github.com/joshbuchea/6f4

    wiki.openstack.org/wiki/GitCom

  9. 150 Years after the 13th Amendment

    After the United States civil war, in 1865 the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were approved by Congress and ratified.

    What seems so natural, so obvious and simple was not so simple in the New World. it took a long time before the majority was willing to accept it was wrong in every sense.

    13th Amendment of the nited States Constitution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:


    Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

     

    But lots of pioneers who came from Europe and liked those cheap labour-forces did not want to have those “monkies” like they were often called, being part of their normal co-habitats.

    Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad looking at an album of photographs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, based on congressional acts, which gave the president authority to confiscate rebel property and forbid the military from returning slaves of rebels to their owners. Being liberated from their masters those Negroes started to create their own free businesses. Only addressing the rebelling southern states the proclamation did not resolve the issue of slavery for the nation as a whole. It was thought the Thirteenth Amendment (the first of the three so-called “Civil War Amendments“) would bring a solution for all coloured people, prohibiting slavery throughout the country. To extend the rights of citizenship to all people regardless of race or colour the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were added.

    Congress enacted a number of statutes to enforce the provisions of the Civil War Amendments, but by the end of the nineteenth century, most of those statutes had been overturned by the courts, repealed, or nullified by subsequent legislation.

    Segregation of the races in schools, public accommodations, public transportation, and various other aspects of public life, was honoured for a long time after the amendment was written.

    It has taken many man years before that all persons could have full and equal enjoyment of public inns, parks, theatres, and other places of amusement, regardless of race or colour.  Even today, anno 2015, we see that in the United states there are still many states or regions where the white people are not so happy with those with a darker skin. In several regions it is still more difficult for a coloured man to find work than for a white man.

    1904 caricature of “White” and “Jim Crow” rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow’s legal pretense that the races be “separate but equal” under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment {John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.}

    The Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 by an 8–1 vote, holding that Congress had exceeded its authority to enforce the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court held that private discrimination against African Americans did not violate the Thirteenth Amendment’s ban on slavery. Following this decision, several northern and western states began enacting their own bans on discrimination in public places. But many other states did the opposite: they began codifying racial segregation and discrimination in laws that became known as the Jim Crow laws. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.

    Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Potter Stewart (1915–1985)

    Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority, turned to the Thirteenth Amendment and observed that it was adopted to remove the “badges of slavery” and that it gave Congress power to effect that removal. Stewart wrote:

    Congress has the power under the Thirteenth Amendment rationally to determine what are the badges and the incidents of slavery, and the authority to translate that determination into effective legislation…. [W]hen racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too is a relic of slavery.

    Normally this 13° amendment also enables Congress to pass laws against sex trafficking and other modern forms of slavery, but the sex trafficking is still a very flourishing business, though some part may come under threat when Donald Trump shall be able to get a firm wall between the Mexican border with increased controls.

    “At the bus station in Durham, North Carolina.” May 1940, Jack Delano. Deutsch: “An der Bushaltestelle, Durham, North Carolina.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Français : “A la gare routière, Durham, Caroline du Nord.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Español: “En la estación de autobuses, Durham, Carolina del Norte.”, Mayo de 1940, Jack Delano. Italiano: “Alla fermata dell’autobus, Durham, Carolina del Nord.” Maggio del 1940, Jack Delano. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was a long overdue step in the long road the Americans continue to walk in their efforts to address and uproot the systemic injustices embedded into their society. Still today we can see there too many people being forced to terrible inhuman conditions.

    Having politicians speaking arrogantly about other coloured and other cultured people makes it that other Americans do not see any harm in using those people as cheap labour and treating them as scum. This week in Europe we once more got to see and hear how a man with lots of money could point his finger to those whom he considered to be cullings and scourings which were just there to be used outside the United states of America to produce cheap products for the American White supremacy.

    In the Republican primary the material or essence of those amendments from 150 years ago are at large.

    In Europe many people, like me, were afraid the first black president of America would have been put in the grave soon. It worked out differently, for the good. Though lots of good ideas were retained by the republicans, America may be proud of the work Barack Obama still could establish with all that counteraction.

    Standing in the United States Capitol today, President Obama reflected on the history of the progress which was made in the United States of America — hard-fought, hard-won, incomplete, but always possible.

    Watch his remarks here about the century and a half of freedom and about the stealing of men, women and children from their homelands, separating husbands from wives and parents from children:

    *

    *

    As many made clear at the time of its ratification, the 13th Amendment was not a final step, but rather the first step in making real the promise that all men are created equal. Read the letter that Annie Davis, an enslaved woman living in Maryland, wrote to President Lincoln asking if she was free after he had signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He never replied, but the answer was no. It would take an amendment to Maryland’s constitution — and the 13th Amendment — to ensure that she and all enslaved people in the U.S. were free in the eyes of the law.

    “President Lincoln understood that if we were ever to fully realize that founding promise, it meant not just signing an Emancipation Proclamation, not just winning a war. It meant making the most powerful collective statement we can in our democracy — etching our values into our Constitution.”

    The 13th Amendment: 150 Years Later, President Obama Reflects on the Abolition of Slavery 9 December 2015

    “We would do a disservice to those warriors of justice — Tubman and Douglass, and Lincoln and King — were we to deny that the scars of our nation’s original sin are still with us today. We condemn ourselves to shackles once more if we fail to answer those who wonder if they’re truly equals in their communities, or in their justice systems, or in a job interview. We betray the efforts of the past if we fail to push back against bigotry in all its forms.”

    “For however slow, however incomplete, however harshly, loudly, rudely challenged at each point along our journey, in America, we can create the change that we seek.

    “All it requires is that our generation be willing to do what those who came before us have done: to rise above the cynicism and rise above the fear, to hold fast to our values, to see ourselves in each other, to cherish dignity and opportunity not just for our own children but for somebody else’s child. To remember that our freedom is bound up with the freedom of others — regardless of what they look like or where they come from or what their last name is or what faith they practice…

    “That is our choice. Today we affirm hope.”

    +

    Preceding

    Coming closer to the end of 2015 and the end for Donald Trump as presidential candidate

    Vatican against Opponents of immigration

    ++

    Additional reading

    1. Stand Up
    2. Consequences of Breivik’s mass murder
    3. Religion, fundamentalism and murder
    4. Believing in God part of being American for Discriminating Americans who feel discrimiated
    5. Why I’m Angry
    6. A last note concerning civil rights

    +++

    Further related articles

    1. Obama-McCain-latina. June 15, 2008
    2. White Australian Panel Fails To Grasp The Concept Of Racism In Discussion About The Word “Negro”
    3. “Adding Insult With Significant Physical Injury”: The 2016 Campaign Joke That’s No Longer Funny — Just Violent
    4. Donald Trump, the Great Wall of China … and a little history
    5. Trouble on the border?
    6. America’s Berlin Wall
    7. Think it’s time to admit Donald Trump is right about Mexico but of course you won’t…
    8. Trump proposes increase of fees on Mexican visas to build Mexico border wall
    9. We Already Have a Wall, Mr. Trump
    10. “Donald Trump’s hot minute at the US-Mexico border”
    11. Trump: Border Patrol Union Backed Out Because They Were ‘Petrified’ To Say What’s Happening At Border
    12. Border Patrol Union In Texas Backs Out Of Meeting With Donald Trump
    13. Donald Trump fights back
    14. Why the Donald is dangerous
    15. “Sinvergüenza”: Trump, Bush Don’t Care That ‘Anchor Baby’ Isn’t ‘Politically Correct’
    16. Democrates Hope Race Across US-Mexico Border Will Ease Building Tension Over Trade
    17. Refugees on Our Doorstep
    18. The Draft Riots of 1863
    19. How well do you know your American history?
    20. The Emancipation Proclamation
    21. Emancipation Proclamation
    22. Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address
    23. More thoughts on The Civil War rebroadcast
    24. 5 Things You May Not Know About Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation : Sarah Pruitt
    25. If Slavery Is Not Wrong, Nothing Is Wrong
    26. Hallowed Ground Retained
    27. Ben Carson Uses Empowerment Message in Bid to Sway Black Voters
    28. The New Slavery

    +++

    Related articles

    Rate this:

    #13AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #14AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #15AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #1865 #2015 #AbrahamLincoln #AfricanAmericans #AmericanSettlers #AnnieDavis #CheapLabour #CivilWarAmendments #ColouredPeople #DonaldTrump #EmancipationProclamation1863_ #JimCrowLaws #Maryland #MexicanBorder #Negro #NewWorld #PioneersOfNorthAmerica #PotterStewart #RacialDiscrimination #RacialSegregation #ReconstructionPeriod #Segregation #SexTrafficking #Slavery #USCivilRightsActOf1875 #UnitedStatesConstitution #WhitePeople #WhiteRace

  10. 150 Years after the 13th Amendment

    After the United States civil war, in 1865 the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were approved by Congress and ratified.

    What seems so natural, so obvious and simple was not so simple in the New World. it took a long time before the majority was willing to accept it was wrong in every sense.

    13th Amendment of the nited States Constitution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:


    Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

     

    But lots of pioneers who came from Europe and liked those cheap labour-forces did not want to have those “monkies” like they were often called, being part of their normal co-habitats.

    Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad looking at an album of photographs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, based on congressional acts, which gave the president authority to confiscate rebel property and forbid the military from returning slaves of rebels to their owners. Being liberated from their masters those Negroes started to create their own free businesses. Only addressing the rebelling southern states the proclamation did not resolve the issue of slavery for the nation as a whole. It was thought the Thirteenth Amendment (the first of the three so-called “Civil War Amendments“) would bring a solution for all coloured people, prohibiting slavery throughout the country. To extend the rights of citizenship to all people regardless of race or colour the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were added.

    Congress enacted a number of statutes to enforce the provisions of the Civil War Amendments, but by the end of the nineteenth century, most of those statutes had been overturned by the courts, repealed, or nullified by subsequent legislation.

    Segregation of the races in schools, public accommodations, public transportation, and various other aspects of public life, was honoured for a long time after the amendment was written.

    It has taken many man years before that all persons could have full and equal enjoyment of public inns, parks, theatres, and other places of amusement, regardless of race or colour.  Even today, anno 2015, we see that in the United states there are still many states or regions where the white people are not so happy with those with a darker skin. In several regions it is still more difficult for a coloured man to find work than for a white man.

    1904 caricature of “White” and “Jim Crow” rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow’s legal pretense that the races be “separate but equal” under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment {John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.}

    The Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 by an 8–1 vote, holding that Congress had exceeded its authority to enforce the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court held that private discrimination against African Americans did not violate the Thirteenth Amendment’s ban on slavery. Following this decision, several northern and western states began enacting their own bans on discrimination in public places. But many other states did the opposite: they began codifying racial segregation and discrimination in laws that became known as the Jim Crow laws. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.

    Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Potter Stewart (1915–1985)

    Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority, turned to the Thirteenth Amendment and observed that it was adopted to remove the “badges of slavery” and that it gave Congress power to effect that removal. Stewart wrote:

    Congress has the power under the Thirteenth Amendment rationally to determine what are the badges and the incidents of slavery, and the authority to translate that determination into effective legislation…. [W]hen racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too is a relic of slavery.

    Normally this 13° amendment also enables Congress to pass laws against sex trafficking and other modern forms of slavery, but the sex trafficking is still a very flourishing business, though some part may come under threat when Donald Trump shall be able to get a firm wall between the Mexican border with increased controls.

    “At the bus station in Durham, North Carolina.” May 1940, Jack Delano. Deutsch: “An der Bushaltestelle, Durham, North Carolina.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Français : “A la gare routière, Durham, Caroline du Nord.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Español: “En la estación de autobuses, Durham, Carolina del Norte.”, Mayo de 1940, Jack Delano. Italiano: “Alla fermata dell’autobus, Durham, Carolina del Nord.” Maggio del 1940, Jack Delano. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was a long overdue step in the long road the Americans continue to walk in their efforts to address and uproot the systemic injustices embedded into their society. Still today we can see there too many people being forced to terrible inhuman conditions.

    Having politicians speaking arrogantly about other coloured and other cultured people makes it that other Americans do not see any harm in using those people as cheap labour and treating them as scum. This week in Europe we once more got to see and hear how a man with lots of money could point his finger to those whom he considered to be cullings and scourings which were just there to be used outside the United states of America to produce cheap products for the American White supremacy.

    In the Republican primary the material or essence of those amendments from 150 years ago are at large.

    In Europe many people, like me, were afraid the first black president of America would have been put in the grave soon. It worked out differently, for the good. Though lots of good ideas were retained by the republicans, America may be proud of the work Barack Obama still could establish with all that counteraction.

    Standing in the United States Capitol today, President Obama reflected on the history of the progress which was made in the United States of America — hard-fought, hard-won, incomplete, but always possible.

    Watch his remarks here about the century and a half of freedom and about the stealing of men, women and children from their homelands, separating husbands from wives and parents from children:

    *

    *

    As many made clear at the time of its ratification, the 13th Amendment was not a final step, but rather the first step in making real the promise that all men are created equal. Read the letter that Annie Davis, an enslaved woman living in Maryland, wrote to President Lincoln asking if she was free after he had signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He never replied, but the answer was no. It would take an amendment to Maryland’s constitution — and the 13th Amendment — to ensure that she and all enslaved people in the U.S. were free in the eyes of the law.

    “President Lincoln understood that if we were ever to fully realize that founding promise, it meant not just signing an Emancipation Proclamation, not just winning a war. It meant making the most powerful collective statement we can in our democracy — etching our values into our Constitution.”

    The 13th Amendment: 150 Years Later, President Obama Reflects on the Abolition of Slavery 9 December 2015

    “We would do a disservice to those warriors of justice — Tubman and Douglass, and Lincoln and King — were we to deny that the scars of our nation’s original sin are still with us today. We condemn ourselves to shackles once more if we fail to answer those who wonder if they’re truly equals in their communities, or in their justice systems, or in a job interview. We betray the efforts of the past if we fail to push back against bigotry in all its forms.”

    “For however slow, however incomplete, however harshly, loudly, rudely challenged at each point along our journey, in America, we can create the change that we seek.

    “All it requires is that our generation be willing to do what those who came before us have done: to rise above the cynicism and rise above the fear, to hold fast to our values, to see ourselves in each other, to cherish dignity and opportunity not just for our own children but for somebody else’s child. To remember that our freedom is bound up with the freedom of others — regardless of what they look like or where they come from or what their last name is or what faith they practice…

    “That is our choice. Today we affirm hope.”

    +

    Preceding

    Coming closer to the end of 2015 and the end for Donald Trump as presidential candidate

    Vatican against Opponents of immigration

    ++

    Additional reading

    1. Stand Up
    2. Consequences of Breivik’s mass murder
    3. Religion, fundamentalism and murder
    4. Believing in God part of being American for Discriminating Americans who feel discrimiated
    5. Why I’m Angry
    6. A last note concerning civil rights

    +++

    Further related articles

    1. Obama-McCain-latina. June 15, 2008
    2. White Australian Panel Fails To Grasp The Concept Of Racism In Discussion About The Word “Negro”
    3. “Adding Insult With Significant Physical Injury”: The 2016 Campaign Joke That’s No Longer Funny — Just Violent
    4. Donald Trump, the Great Wall of China … and a little history
    5. Trouble on the border?
    6. America’s Berlin Wall
    7. Think it’s time to admit Donald Trump is right about Mexico but of course you won’t…
    8. Trump proposes increase of fees on Mexican visas to build Mexico border wall
    9. We Already Have a Wall, Mr. Trump
    10. “Donald Trump’s hot minute at the US-Mexico border”
    11. Trump: Border Patrol Union Backed Out Because They Were ‘Petrified’ To Say What’s Happening At Border
    12. Border Patrol Union In Texas Backs Out Of Meeting With Donald Trump
    13. Donald Trump fights back
    14. Why the Donald is dangerous
    15. “Sinvergüenza”: Trump, Bush Don’t Care That ‘Anchor Baby’ Isn’t ‘Politically Correct’
    16. Democrates Hope Race Across US-Mexico Border Will Ease Building Tension Over Trade
    17. Refugees on Our Doorstep
    18. The Draft Riots of 1863
    19. How well do you know your American history?
    20. The Emancipation Proclamation
    21. Emancipation Proclamation
    22. Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address
    23. More thoughts on The Civil War rebroadcast
    24. 5 Things You May Not Know About Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation : Sarah Pruitt
    25. If Slavery Is Not Wrong, Nothing Is Wrong
    26. Hallowed Ground Retained
    27. Ben Carson Uses Empowerment Message in Bid to Sway Black Voters
    28. The New Slavery

    +++

    Related articles

    Rate this:

    #13AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #14AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #15AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #1865 #2015 #AbrahamLincoln #AfricanAmericans #AmericanSettlers #AnnieDavis #CheapLabour #CivilWarAmendments #ColouredPeople #DonaldTrump #EmancipationProclamation1863_ #JimCrowLaws #Maryland #MexicanBorder #Negro #NewWorld #PioneersOfNorthAmerica #PotterStewart #RacialDiscrimination #RacialSegregation #ReconstructionPeriod #Segregation #SexTrafficking #Slavery #USCivilRightsActOf1875 #UnitedStatesConstitution #WhitePeople #WhiteRace

  11. 150 Years after the 13th Amendment

    After the United States civil war, in 1865 the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were approved by Congress and ratified.

    What seems so natural, so obvious and simple was not so simple in the New World. it took a long time before the majority was willing to accept it was wrong in every sense.

    13th Amendment of the nited States Constitution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:


    Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

     

    But lots of pioneers who came from Europe and liked those cheap labour-forces did not want to have those “monkies” like they were often called, being part of their normal co-habitats.

    Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad looking at an album of photographs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, based on congressional acts, which gave the president authority to confiscate rebel property and forbid the military from returning slaves of rebels to their owners. Being liberated from their masters those Negroes started to create their own free businesses. Only addressing the rebelling southern states the proclamation did not resolve the issue of slavery for the nation as a whole. It was thought the Thirteenth Amendment (the first of the three so-called “Civil War Amendments“) would bring a solution for all coloured people, prohibiting slavery throughout the country. To extend the rights of citizenship to all people regardless of race or colour the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were added.

    Congress enacted a number of statutes to enforce the provisions of the Civil War Amendments, but by the end of the nineteenth century, most of those statutes had been overturned by the courts, repealed, or nullified by subsequent legislation.

    Segregation of the races in schools, public accommodations, public transportation, and various other aspects of public life, was honoured for a long time after the amendment was written.

    It has taken many man years before that all persons could have full and equal enjoyment of public inns, parks, theatres, and other places of amusement, regardless of race or colour.  Even today, anno 2015, we see that in the United states there are still many states or regions where the white people are not so happy with those with a darker skin. In several regions it is still more difficult for a coloured man to find work than for a white man.

    1904 caricature of “White” and “Jim Crow” rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow’s legal pretense that the races be “separate but equal” under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment {John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.}

    The Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 by an 8–1 vote, holding that Congress had exceeded its authority to enforce the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court held that private discrimination against African Americans did not violate the Thirteenth Amendment’s ban on slavery. Following this decision, several northern and western states began enacting their own bans on discrimination in public places. But many other states did the opposite: they began codifying racial segregation and discrimination in laws that became known as the Jim Crow laws. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.

    Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Potter Stewart (1915–1985)

    Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority, turned to the Thirteenth Amendment and observed that it was adopted to remove the “badges of slavery” and that it gave Congress power to effect that removal. Stewart wrote:

    Congress has the power under the Thirteenth Amendment rationally to determine what are the badges and the incidents of slavery, and the authority to translate that determination into effective legislation…. [W]hen racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too is a relic of slavery.

    Normally this 13° amendment also enables Congress to pass laws against sex trafficking and other modern forms of slavery, but the sex trafficking is still a very flourishing business, though some part may come under threat when Donald Trump shall be able to get a firm wall between the Mexican border with increased controls.

    “At the bus station in Durham, North Carolina.” May 1940, Jack Delano. Deutsch: “An der Bushaltestelle, Durham, North Carolina.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Français : “A la gare routière, Durham, Caroline du Nord.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Español: “En la estación de autobuses, Durham, Carolina del Norte.”, Mayo de 1940, Jack Delano. Italiano: “Alla fermata dell’autobus, Durham, Carolina del Nord.” Maggio del 1940, Jack Delano. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was a long overdue step in the long road the Americans continue to walk in their efforts to address and uproot the systemic injustices embedded into their society. Still today we can see there too many people being forced to terrible inhuman conditions.

    Having politicians speaking arrogantly about other coloured and other cultured people makes it that other Americans do not see any harm in using those people as cheap labour and treating them as scum. This week in Europe we once more got to see and hear how a man with lots of money could point his finger to those whom he considered to be cullings and scourings which were just there to be used outside the United states of America to produce cheap products for the American White supremacy.

    In the Republican primary the material or essence of those amendments from 150 years ago are at large.

    In Europe many people, like me, were afraid the first black president of America would have been put in the grave soon. It worked out differently, for the good. Though lots of good ideas were retained by the republicans, America may be proud of the work Barack Obama still could establish with all that counteraction.

    Standing in the United States Capitol today, President Obama reflected on the history of the progress which was made in the United States of America — hard-fought, hard-won, incomplete, but always possible.

    Watch his remarks here about the century and a half of freedom and about the stealing of men, women and children from their homelands, separating husbands from wives and parents from children:

    *

    *

    As many made clear at the time of its ratification, the 13th Amendment was not a final step, but rather the first step in making real the promise that all men are created equal. Read the letter that Annie Davis, an enslaved woman living in Maryland, wrote to President Lincoln asking if she was free after he had signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He never replied, but the answer was no. It would take an amendment to Maryland’s constitution — and the 13th Amendment — to ensure that she and all enslaved people in the U.S. were free in the eyes of the law.

    “President Lincoln understood that if we were ever to fully realize that founding promise, it meant not just signing an Emancipation Proclamation, not just winning a war. It meant making the most powerful collective statement we can in our democracy — etching our values into our Constitution.”

    The 13th Amendment: 150 Years Later, President Obama Reflects on the Abolition of Slavery 9 December 2015

    “We would do a disservice to those warriors of justice — Tubman and Douglass, and Lincoln and King — were we to deny that the scars of our nation’s original sin are still with us today. We condemn ourselves to shackles once more if we fail to answer those who wonder if they’re truly equals in their communities, or in their justice systems, or in a job interview. We betray the efforts of the past if we fail to push back against bigotry in all its forms.”

    “For however slow, however incomplete, however harshly, loudly, rudely challenged at each point along our journey, in America, we can create the change that we seek.

    “All it requires is that our generation be willing to do what those who came before us have done: to rise above the cynicism and rise above the fear, to hold fast to our values, to see ourselves in each other, to cherish dignity and opportunity not just for our own children but for somebody else’s child. To remember that our freedom is bound up with the freedom of others — regardless of what they look like or where they come from or what their last name is or what faith they practice…

    “That is our choice. Today we affirm hope.”

    +

    Preceding

    Coming closer to the end of 2015 and the end for Donald Trump as presidential candidate

    Vatican against Opponents of immigration

    ++

    Additional reading

    1. Stand Up
    2. Consequences of Breivik’s mass murder
    3. Religion, fundamentalism and murder
    4. Believing in God part of being American for Discriminating Americans who feel discrimiated
    5. Why I’m Angry
    6. A last note concerning civil rights

    +++

    Further related articles

    1. Obama-McCain-latina. June 15, 2008
    2. White Australian Panel Fails To Grasp The Concept Of Racism In Discussion About The Word “Negro”
    3. “Adding Insult With Significant Physical Injury”: The 2016 Campaign Joke That’s No Longer Funny — Just Violent
    4. Donald Trump, the Great Wall of China … and a little history
    5. Trouble on the border?
    6. America’s Berlin Wall
    7. Think it’s time to admit Donald Trump is right about Mexico but of course you won’t…
    8. Trump proposes increase of fees on Mexican visas to build Mexico border wall
    9. We Already Have a Wall, Mr. Trump
    10. “Donald Trump’s hot minute at the US-Mexico border”
    11. Trump: Border Patrol Union Backed Out Because They Were ‘Petrified’ To Say What’s Happening At Border
    12. Border Patrol Union In Texas Backs Out Of Meeting With Donald Trump
    13. Donald Trump fights back
    14. Why the Donald is dangerous
    15. “Sinvergüenza”: Trump, Bush Don’t Care That ‘Anchor Baby’ Isn’t ‘Politically Correct’
    16. Democrates Hope Race Across US-Mexico Border Will Ease Building Tension Over Trade
    17. Refugees on Our Doorstep
    18. The Draft Riots of 1863
    19. How well do you know your American history?
    20. The Emancipation Proclamation
    21. Emancipation Proclamation
    22. Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address
    23. More thoughts on The Civil War rebroadcast
    24. 5 Things You May Not Know About Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation : Sarah Pruitt
    25. If Slavery Is Not Wrong, Nothing Is Wrong
    26. Hallowed Ground Retained
    27. Ben Carson Uses Empowerment Message in Bid to Sway Black Voters
    28. The New Slavery

    +++

    Related articles

    Rate this:

    #13AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #14AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #15AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #1865 #2015 #AbrahamLincoln #AfricanAmericans #AmericanSettlers #AnnieDavis #CheapLabour #CivilWarAmendments #ColouredPeople #DonaldTrump #EmancipationProclamation1863_ #JimCrowLaws #Maryland #MexicanBorder #Negro #NewWorld #PioneersOfNorthAmerica #PotterStewart #RacialDiscrimination #RacialSegregation #ReconstructionPeriod #Segregation #SexTrafficking #Slavery #USCivilRightsActOf1875 #UnitedStatesConstitution #WhitePeople #WhiteRace

  12. 150 Years after the 13th Amendment

    After the United States civil war, in 1865 the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were approved by Congress and ratified.

    What seems so natural, so obvious and simple was not so simple in the New World. it took a long time before the majority was willing to accept it was wrong in every sense.

    13th Amendment of the nited States Constitution. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:


    Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

     

    But lots of pioneers who came from Europe and liked those cheap labour-forces did not want to have those “monkies” like they were often called, being part of their normal co-habitats.

    Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad looking at an album of photographs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, based on congressional acts, which gave the president authority to confiscate rebel property and forbid the military from returning slaves of rebels to their owners. Being liberated from their masters those Negroes started to create their own free businesses. Only addressing the rebelling southern states the proclamation did not resolve the issue of slavery for the nation as a whole. It was thought the Thirteenth Amendment (the first of the three so-called “Civil War Amendments“) would bring a solution for all coloured people, prohibiting slavery throughout the country. To extend the rights of citizenship to all people regardless of race or colour the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were added.

    Congress enacted a number of statutes to enforce the provisions of the Civil War Amendments, but by the end of the nineteenth century, most of those statutes had been overturned by the courts, repealed, or nullified by subsequent legislation.

    Segregation of the races in schools, public accommodations, public transportation, and various other aspects of public life, was honoured for a long time after the amendment was written.

    It has taken many man years before that all persons could have full and equal enjoyment of public inns, parks, theatres, and other places of amusement, regardless of race or colour.  Even today, anno 2015, we see that in the United states there are still many states or regions where the white people are not so happy with those with a darker skin. In several regions it is still more difficult for a coloured man to find work than for a white man.

    1904 caricature of “White” and “Jim Crow” rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow’s legal pretense that the races be “separate but equal” under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment {John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.}

    The Supreme Court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 by an 8–1 vote, holding that Congress had exceeded its authority to enforce the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court held that private discrimination against African Americans did not violate the Thirteenth Amendment’s ban on slavery. Following this decision, several northern and western states began enacting their own bans on discrimination in public places. But many other states did the opposite: they began codifying racial segregation and discrimination in laws that became known as the Jim Crow laws. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.

    Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Potter Stewart (1915–1985)

    Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority, turned to the Thirteenth Amendment and observed that it was adopted to remove the “badges of slavery” and that it gave Congress power to effect that removal. Stewart wrote:

    Congress has the power under the Thirteenth Amendment rationally to determine what are the badges and the incidents of slavery, and the authority to translate that determination into effective legislation…. [W]hen racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too is a relic of slavery.

    Normally this 13° amendment also enables Congress to pass laws against sex trafficking and other modern forms of slavery, but the sex trafficking is still a very flourishing business, though some part may come under threat when Donald Trump shall be able to get a firm wall between the Mexican border with increased controls.

    “At the bus station in Durham, North Carolina.” May 1940, Jack Delano. Deutsch: “An der Bushaltestelle, Durham, North Carolina.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Français : “A la gare routière, Durham, Caroline du Nord.”, Mai 1940, Jack Delano. Español: “En la estación de autobuses, Durham, Carolina del Norte.”, Mayo de 1940, Jack Delano. Italiano: “Alla fermata dell’autobus, Durham, Carolina del Nord.” Maggio del 1940, Jack Delano. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    The ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was a long overdue step in the long road the Americans continue to walk in their efforts to address and uproot the systemic injustices embedded into their society. Still today we can see there too many people being forced to terrible inhuman conditions.

    Having politicians speaking arrogantly about other coloured and other cultured people makes it that other Americans do not see any harm in using those people as cheap labour and treating them as scum. This week in Europe we once more got to see and hear how a man with lots of money could point his finger to those whom he considered to be cullings and scourings which were just there to be used outside the United states of America to produce cheap products for the American White supremacy.

    In the Republican primary the material or essence of those amendments from 150 years ago are at large.

    In Europe many people, like me, were afraid the first black president of America would have been put in the grave soon. It worked out differently, for the good. Though lots of good ideas were retained by the republicans, America may be proud of the work Barack Obama still could establish with all that counteraction.

    Standing in the United States Capitol today, President Obama reflected on the history of the progress which was made in the United States of America — hard-fought, hard-won, incomplete, but always possible.

    Watch his remarks here about the century and a half of freedom and about the stealing of men, women and children from their homelands, separating husbands from wives and parents from children:

    *

    *

    As many made clear at the time of its ratification, the 13th Amendment was not a final step, but rather the first step in making real the promise that all men are created equal. Read the letter that Annie Davis, an enslaved woman living in Maryland, wrote to President Lincoln asking if she was free after he had signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He never replied, but the answer was no. It would take an amendment to Maryland’s constitution — and the 13th Amendment — to ensure that she and all enslaved people in the U.S. were free in the eyes of the law.

    “President Lincoln understood that if we were ever to fully realize that founding promise, it meant not just signing an Emancipation Proclamation, not just winning a war. It meant making the most powerful collective statement we can in our democracy — etching our values into our Constitution.”

    The 13th Amendment: 150 Years Later, President Obama Reflects on the Abolition of Slavery 9 December 2015

    “We would do a disservice to those warriors of justice — Tubman and Douglass, and Lincoln and King — were we to deny that the scars of our nation’s original sin are still with us today. We condemn ourselves to shackles once more if we fail to answer those who wonder if they’re truly equals in their communities, or in their justice systems, or in a job interview. We betray the efforts of the past if we fail to push back against bigotry in all its forms.”

    “For however slow, however incomplete, however harshly, loudly, rudely challenged at each point along our journey, in America, we can create the change that we seek.

    “All it requires is that our generation be willing to do what those who came before us have done: to rise above the cynicism and rise above the fear, to hold fast to our values, to see ourselves in each other, to cherish dignity and opportunity not just for our own children but for somebody else’s child. To remember that our freedom is bound up with the freedom of others — regardless of what they look like or where they come from or what their last name is or what faith they practice…

    “That is our choice. Today we affirm hope.”

    +

    Preceding

    Coming closer to the end of 2015 and the end for Donald Trump as presidential candidate

    Vatican against Opponents of immigration

    ++

    Additional reading

    1. Stand Up
    2. Consequences of Breivik’s mass murder
    3. Religion, fundamentalism and murder
    4. Believing in God part of being American for Discriminating Americans who feel discrimiated
    5. Why I’m Angry
    6. A last note concerning civil rights

    +++

    Further related articles

    1. Obama-McCain-latina. June 15, 2008
    2. White Australian Panel Fails To Grasp The Concept Of Racism In Discussion About The Word “Negro”
    3. “Adding Insult With Significant Physical Injury”: The 2016 Campaign Joke That’s No Longer Funny — Just Violent
    4. Donald Trump, the Great Wall of China … and a little history
    5. Trouble on the border?
    6. America’s Berlin Wall
    7. Think it’s time to admit Donald Trump is right about Mexico but of course you won’t…
    8. Trump proposes increase of fees on Mexican visas to build Mexico border wall
    9. We Already Have a Wall, Mr. Trump
    10. “Donald Trump’s hot minute at the US-Mexico border”
    11. Trump: Border Patrol Union Backed Out Because They Were ‘Petrified’ To Say What’s Happening At Border
    12. Border Patrol Union In Texas Backs Out Of Meeting With Donald Trump
    13. Donald Trump fights back
    14. Why the Donald is dangerous
    15. “Sinvergüenza”: Trump, Bush Don’t Care That ‘Anchor Baby’ Isn’t ‘Politically Correct’
    16. Democrates Hope Race Across US-Mexico Border Will Ease Building Tension Over Trade
    17. Refugees on Our Doorstep
    18. The Draft Riots of 1863
    19. How well do you know your American history?
    20. The Emancipation Proclamation
    21. Emancipation Proclamation
    22. Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address
    23. More thoughts on The Civil War rebroadcast
    24. 5 Things You May Not Know About Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation : Sarah Pruitt
    25. If Slavery Is Not Wrong, Nothing Is Wrong
    26. Hallowed Ground Retained
    27. Ben Carson Uses Empowerment Message in Bid to Sway Black Voters
    28. The New Slavery

    +++

    Related articles

    Rate this:

    #13AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #14AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #15AmendmentToTheUSConstitution #1865 #2015 #AbrahamLincoln #AfricanAmericans #AmericanSettlers #AnnieDavis #CheapLabour #CivilWarAmendments #ColouredPeople #DonaldTrump #EmancipationProclamation1863_ #JimCrowLaws #Maryland #MexicanBorder #Negro #NewWorld #PioneersOfNorthAmerica #PotterStewart #RacialDiscrimination #RacialSegregation #ReconstructionPeriod #Segregation #SexTrafficking #Slavery #USCivilRightsActOf1875 #UnitedStatesConstitution #WhitePeople #WhiteRace

  13. Largest main campus parking garages of the Big Ten

    The following list identifies the largest main campus parking garages of Big Ten Conference (a.k.a. Big 18) universities — Illinois Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Ohio State, Oregon, Penn State, Purdue, Rutgers, UCLA, USC, Washington and Wisconsin.

    For those reading this post from outside the United States, the Big Ten Conference maintains its old name even though it has more than ten (currently 18) member schools.

    Mowatt Garage at Maryland – Source: facebook.com

    A minimum of 200 parking spaces was required for inclusion on the list. The list does not include privately owned parking garages nor those garages located at branch campuses outside the home city of the main campus. Some of these schools have a medical center at or adjacent to the main campus for which data is also included.

    Peace!

    ——-

    1-2. Parking Structure #4: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA and Parking Structure #8: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA = 2,900 spaces

    3. Grand Avenue Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 2,238 spaces

    4. Oak Street Ramp: University of Minnesota/Minneapolis = 2,165 spaces

    Oak Street Ramp at University of Minnesota – Source: med.umn.edu

    5. Wexner Medical Center Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 1,910 spaces

    6. Parking Structure #2: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA = 1,900 spaces

    7. Central Plaza Garage (underground): University of Washington/Seattle = 1,789 spaces

    8. 17th & R Garage: University of Nebraska/Lincoln = 1,715 spaces

    17th & R Garage at University of Nebraska – Source: sampson-construction.com

    9. Downey Way Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 1,713 spaces

    10. Parking Structure #1: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA = 1,700 spaces

    11. West Campus Deck (2021): Penn State/State College, PA = 1,653 spaces

    West Campus Deck at Penn State – Source: the ljc.com

    12. Mowatt Lane Garage: University of Maryland/College Park = 1,582 spaces

    13-14. McCutcheon Drive Garage (1990/2005): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN and Parking Structure #3 N&S: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA= 1,560 spaces

    15-16. Northwestern Avenue Garage (1975/1986): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN and East Campus Deck: Penn State/State College = 1,535 spaces

    17. Garage B4: University of Illinois/Champaign, IL = 1,450 spaces

    18. Shaw Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing = 1,400 spaces

    19. Royal Street Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 1,345 spaces

    20. Shrine Structure (2017): USC/Los Angeles, CA

    Shrine Structure at USC: Source: today.usc.edu

    21. Washington Street Ramp: University of Minnesota/Minneapolis = 1,297 spaces

    22. Lane Avenue Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 1,296 spaces

    23. Grant Street Garage (1995): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN = 1,285 spaces

    24. Arena Ramp (2026): University of Iowa/Iowa City = 1,259 spaces

    Arena Ramp in Iowa City – Source: iowaregents.edu

    25. Figueroa Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 1,240 spaces

    26. 4th Street Ramp (1991): University of Minnesota/Minneapolis = 1,224 spaces

    27. East River Ramp (2000): University of Minnesota/Minneapolis = 1,200 spaces (some sites refer to 1,919 spaces)

    28. Gateway Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 1,176 spaces

    29. Flower Street Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 1,152 spaces

    30. University Street Garage (1969/1989): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN = 1,130 spaces

    31. Old Cannon Garage (2022): Ohio State/Columbus = 1,128 spaces

    Old Cannon Garage at Ohio State: Source: fdc.osu.edu

    32. Parking Structure #38: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA = 1,050 spaces

    33. Wood Street Garage (1981): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN = 1,000 spaces

    34. 9th Avenue East Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 991 spaces

    35. Jefferson Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 990 spaces

    36. McCarthy Structure: USC/Los Angeles, CA = 988 spaces

    37. Hawkeye Ramp (2025): University of Iowa/Iowa City = 983 spaces

    38. Wharton Center Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing = 980 spaces

    39. Neil Avenue Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 978 spaces

    40. Kellogg Center Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing = 974 spaces

    41. P2 Medical Center Garage: University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 972 spaces

    42. Tuttle Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 965 spaces

    43. Parking Structure #32: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA = 900 spaces

    44. Arps Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 892 spaces

    45-47. Harrison Street Garage (2012): Purdue University/West Lafayette, IN; Trowbridge Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing; and Parking Structure #18 (1975): UCLA/ Los Angeles, CA = 850 spaces

    Harrison Street Garage at Purdue – Source: gateprecast.com

    48. Nittany Deck: Penn State/State College, PA = 844 spaces

    49. SAFEAUTO Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 826 spaces

    50. P1 Medical Center Garage – University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 822 spaces

    51. Ohio Union South Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 790 spaces

    52. Stadium Drive Garage: University of Maryland/College Park = 780 spaces

    53-54. Grand River Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing and Wall Street Garage (2014): University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 730 spaces

    Grand Avenue Ramp at MSU – Source: wginc.com

    55. Millrace Drive Garage (2009): University of Oregon/Eugene = 640 spaces

    56. 21st Avenue Ramp: University of Minnesota – West Bank/Minneapolis = 695 spaces

    57. Parking Ramp 2 (underground): University of Iowa/Iowa City = 651 spaces

    58. Northwest Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 643 spaces

    59. 12th Avenue Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 642 spaces

    60. Fee Lane Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington = 640 spaces

    61. Outpatient Care Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 631 spaces

    62-63. Forrest Avenue Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington and East Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington = 630 spaces

    Forest Avenue Garage at Indiana University – Source: wginc.com

    64. Ohio Union North Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 604 spaces

    65. Linden Drive Ramp: University of Wisconsin/Madison = 601 spaces

    66-68. Stadium Drive Garage: University of Nebraska/Lincoln; Parking Structure #3: UCLA/Los Angeles, CA; and South Campus Garage: University of Washington/Seattle = 600 spaces

    69. Atwater Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington = 570 spaces

    70. Pugh Deck: Penn State/State College, PA = 544 spaces

    71. P3 Medical Center Garage: University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 531 spaces

    72. Ann Street Garage (2006): University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 530 spaces

    73. North Campus Garage: Northwestern University/Evanston, IL = 500+ spaces

    74. Triangle Garage (underground): University of Washington/Seattle = 475 spaces

    75. University Drive Ramp: University of Wisconsin/Madison = 463 spaces

    76. Henderson Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington = 450 spaces

    77. Poplars Garage: Indiana University/Bloomington = 445 spaces

    78. Regents Drive Garage: University of Maryland/College Park = 439 spaces

    79. College Avenue Deck: Rutgers University/New Brunswick, NJ = 430 spaces

    80. P4 Medical Center Garage: University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 425 spaces

    81. North Campus Ramp: University of Iowa/Iowa City = 415 spaces

    82. Grainger Hall Garage (underground): University of Wisconsin/Madison = 410 spaces

    83. Garage E15 (2023): University of Illinois/Champaign = 409 spaces

    E15 Garage at University of Illinois: Source: claycorp.com

    84. HUB Parking Deck: Penn State/State College, PA = 395 spaces

    85. South Campus Garage: Northwestern University/Evanston, IL = 370 spaces

    86. Memorial Union Ramp: University of Iowa/Iowa City = 340 spaces

    87-88. 13th Avenue Garage (2011): University of Oregon/Eugene and Parking Structure #7 (underground): UCLA/Los Angeles ~ 300 spaces

    89. Fluno Center Garage (underground): University of Wisconsin/Madison = 290 spaces

    90. West Lane Avenue Garage: Ohio State/Columbus = 280 spaces

    91. Lake & Johnson Ramp: University of Wisconsin/Madison = 260 spaces

    92. North Park Street Ramp: University of Wisconsin/Madison = 246 spaces

    93. Palmer Garage: University of Michigan/Ann Arbor = 240 spaces

    94. Church Street Garage (underground): University of Minnesota/Minneapolis = 234 spaces

    Need more information:

    Division Street Deck (uc): Rutgers University/New Brunswick, NJ

    HEDCO Garage (2009): University of Oregon/Eugene

    Padelford Garage: University of Washington/Seattle

    Parking Structure #32: UCLA/Los Angeles

    Parking Structure #35: UCLA/Los Angeles

    Parking Structure #37 (underground): UCLA/Los Angeles

    Parking Structure #39 (underground): UCLA/Los Angeles

    Harrison Ramp: Michigan State/East Lansing

    SOURCES:

    #1 #18 #2 #3 #32 #35 #37 #38 #39 #4 #7 #8 #BigTen #cities #colleges #design #education #geography #history #landUse #parking #parkingDeck #parkingGarages #parkingRamps #parkingStructures #planning #schools #transportation #universities

  14. CW: Scientists in the Natural Life Sciences - Long List to Scroll!

    Scientists in the Natural Sciences - Life Sciences

    • Published (not necessarily in field)

    Please Message for Additions, Deletions or Edits

    Animal Behaviour
    Anderson, Chris @c_n_anderson
    Arnold, Sarah EJ @sejarnold
    Caspar, Kai R @nomascus
    Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier @fxdm
    Jones, Nick AR @NickARJones
    Koene, Joris M @jkoene
    Kohn, Gregory M @gregorykohn
    LeBoeuf, Adria @Adria
    Leighton, Gavin M @GMcLeanLeighton
    López Díez, Juan José @Tremoneta
    McElligott, Alan G @amcell
    Nordquist, Rebecca @renordquist
    Pavlic, Theodore P @tedpavlic
    Pyle, Greg @gregpyle
    Réale, Denis @denisrealeMTL
    Rosvall, Kimberly A @kimrosvall
    Schalz, Sabrina @sabrinaschalz
    Schürch, Roger @schuemaa
    Seppänen, Janne-Tuomas @janneseppanen
    Sievert, Thorbjörn @volephd
    Social Cognition Lab @ComparativeCognition
    Thompson, Danielle L @scottishseabird
    Umbers, Kate DL @kateumbers
    Warrington, Miya H @MiyaWarrington
    Wilde, Joe A @joeawilde

    GitHub Animal behaviour

    Astrobiology
    Malaska, Michael J @mike_malaska
    Méndez, Abel @profabelmendez
    Wade, Brian D @astrobrian

    Behavioural Science
    Aly, Mariam @mariam
    Bernard, Paquito @PaquitoBernard
    Cummins, Jamie @jamiecummins
    Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier @fxdm
    Fisher, Simon E @ProfSimonFisher
    Gaudeul, Alexia @agaudeul
    Holcombe, Alex O @alexh
    Hollands, Gareth J @GJHollands
    Kominsky, Jonathan F @jfkominsky
    Lee, Kangjoo @kangjoolee
    Lukas, Dieter @DieterLukas
    Nityananda, Vivek @viveknityananda
    Peterson, Jared JT @jtpeterson
    Plonsky, Ori @Oplonsky
    Reimers, Stian @steer_rhinos
    Reinbergs, Erik @ereinbergs
    Sinclair, Alyssa H @sinclair_allie
    Smaldino, Paul E @psmaldino
    Steve, aka Tusok @Stegosaurus
    Waber, Ben @bwaber

    Biochemistry
    Danielson, U Helena @HelenaDanielson
    del Alamo, Diego @ddelalamo
    Dodge, Gregory J @GERG
    Fallon, Timothy R @photocyte
    Feijs-Žaja, Karla LH @KFeijs
    Gatto, Laurent @lgatto
    Gaullier, Guillaume @Guillawme
    Hancock, Sarah @sarahehancock
    Hoffmann, Tobias @tobias1hoffmann
    Konrad, David @dbkonrad
    Mendes, Pedro @gepasi
    Merz, Alexey Jarrell @merz
    Popescu, Gabriela K @PopStarLab
    Prothiwa, Michaela @prothiwa
    Ramirez, Ana S @asramirez
    Rao, Rajini @madamscientist
    Rebeaud, Mathieu MJE @mathieu_rebeaud
    Rosaleny, Lorena E @LorenaRosaleny
    Shropshire, Dylan J @ShropshireJD
    Wietek, Jonas @JWietek
    Williamson, David John @quokka

    Bioinformatics
    Alikhan, Nabil-Fareed @happykhan
    Aninta, Sabhrina Gita @sagitaninta
    arli aditya Parikesit @arli
    Bayer, Philipp @PhilippBayer
    Cain, Scott @scottcain
    Coassin, Stefan @stncsn
    Cock, Peter JA @pjacock
    Constantinides, Bede @bede
    Fallon, Timothy R @photocyte
    Fellows Yates, James A @jfy133
    Friedberg, Iddo @iddux
    Greer, Phil J @pgreer
    Hall, Megan C @ScienceisWhere
    Hancock, John M @jmhancock
    Jambor, Helena @helenajambor
    Jensen, Lars Juhl @larsjuhljensen
    Lampa, Samuel @shl
    Lexa, Matej @matej_lexa
    Lindenbaum, Pierre @yokofakun
    MaClean, Dan @ [email protected]
    Mahmoudian, Mehrad @Mehrad
    Mäklin, Tommi @themaklin
    Marsh, James W @marshomics
    Maurizio, Paul L @paul
    Nelson, Chase W @chasewnelson
    Peltzer, Alexander @alex_peltzer
    Porter, Teresita M @DNAdataPhile
    Reck, Rebecca M @RebeccaEE
    Retchless, Adam C @adamr
    Ribeiro Dantas, Marcel da Câmara @mribeirodantas
    Ryan, Feargal J @feargal
    Schalz, Sabrina @sabrinaschalz
    Schuster-Böckler Benjamin @bensb
    Stamm, Reto @retostamm
    Stévant, Isabelle @IsabelleStevant
    Thompson, Drew K A @drew_kt
    Topolsky, Ivan @dryak
    Tzovaras, Bastian Greshake @gedankenstuecke
    Visconti, Alessia @alesssia
    Visentin, Luca @MrHedmad
    Wakeham, David @wakehamAMR
    Waterhouse, Robert @rmwaterhouse
    Wein, Samuel @samweingamgee
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937
    Willighagen, Egon @egonw
    Zakour, Nouri Ben @genomiss
    Ziemann , Mark D @mdziemann

    find.sciences.social Bioinformatics
    GitHub Bioinformaticians 

    Biology
    Ahmed, Javed @curiocritters
    Bauer, Nicholas @BioTurboNick
    Bergstrom, Carl T @ct_bergstrom
    Birney, Ewan @ewanbirney
    Bowman, Sarah EJ @XtalMaker
    Brabant, Craig @mutillidae
    Clare, Elizabeth L @ProfBatGirl
    Delpierre, Julien @JulienDelpierre
    Denton, Marianne E @MarianneDenton
    Fallon, Timothy R @photocyte
    Feldwick, Mark @MarkIngs
    Field, Katie J @katiefield4
    Fisher, Diana O @Diana_mammalecology
    Gross, Michael @proseandpassion
    Hanson, Mark A @MarkHanson
    Hedreen, Rebecca @delibrarian
    Heilveil, Jeffrey S @nigronia
    Hendricks, Michael @mhendricks
    Jones, Dillon @dillonthebiologist
    Kalinić, Jelena @zrnopameti
    Kane, Emily A @TheKaneLab
    Kidd, Simon @SimonKidd1
    Kugler, Elisabeth C @KuglerElisabeth
    Levin, Michael @drmichaellevin
    Lowell, Sally @CellySally
    Marsh, Anke @MarshScapes
    Morris, Edward R @Edrmorris
    O'Connell, Timothy J @tinosaurs
    Pfau, Russell S @rspfau
    Plested, Andrew @andrewplested
    Pyle, Greg G @gregpyle
    Retchless, Adam C @adamr
    Riskin, Daniel K @riskindan
    Rosvall, Kimberly A @kimrosvall
    Royle, Stephen J @steveroyle
    Schreiber, Sebastian @SebastianSchreiber
    Scott, Eric R @LeafyEricScott
    Smaldino, Paul E @psmaldino
    Sochacki, Paul @RebelGeek99
    Tan, Fayth Hui @fungalpals
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937
    Vellutini, Bruno C @bruvellu
    Williamson, David John @quokka

    Fedi.Directory Biology 
    Trunk Biology 

    Biomaterial Science
    Hashemi, Nicole @NicoleHashemi
    Kovács, Ákos T @EvolvedBiofilm
    Kumar, Rahul @theresearch
    Levato, Riccardo @RicLevato
    Shah, Furqan A @furqanshah

    Biomedical Science
    Aldrich, Chris @chrisaldrich
    Argyropoulos, Christos @ChristosArgyrop
    Caufield, Harry @jhc
    Cordova, Gonzalo @gcordova
    Etchevers, Heather @Etche_homo
    Fisher, Simon E @ProfSimonFisher
    Gilchrist, Jeffrey @jeffgilchrist
    Glazier, Amelia @ameliaglazier
    Hamilton, Bruce A @bahome
    Hoffmann, Tobias @tobias1hoffmann
    Konrad, David @dbkonrad
    MacPhee, Daniel J @dmacphee
    Maurizio, Paul L @paul
    Perry, Trevor T @ttpphd
    Porter, Andrew P @Retropz
    Schermer, Bernhard @cilib
    Snook, Adam E @adamsnookphd
    Stiles, Katherine E @KatherineStiles
    Winkler, Tilo @twinkler
    Woodgett, James @jwoodgett

    Botany
    Barker, Michael S @MikeBarker
    Blanco, Summer @mellamosummer
    Coiro, Mario @Lepidodendron
    Decombeix, Anne-Laure @ALDecombeix
    Holstein, Norbert @dr_norb
    Kiely, Jules @Palaeojules
    Kiryushkin, Alexey S @Alex_Kiryushkin
    Lydon, Susannah J @susieoftraken
    Mach, Jennifer M @jennifermach
    Neves, Danilo M @daniloneves
    Rollinson, Emily J @ejrollinson

    Fedi.Directory Botany 
    GitHub Plant Science Community

    Cell Biology
    Budjan, Christoph @cbudjan
    Brickman, Joshua M @Cooperativity
    Burke-Kleinman, Jonah @jonahbk
    Byron, Adam @adambyron
    Carlton, Peter M @pmcarlton
    Carpenter, Anne E @DrAnneCarpenter
    Duncan, Mara C @MCDuncanLab
    Gaboriau, David @dgaboriau
    Glazier, Amelia @ameliaglazier
    Glotzer, Michael @mglo
    Gomes, José Eduardo @JoseEdGomes
    Henriques, Ricardo @HenriquesLab
    Kelley, Megan Elizabeth @MeganEKelley
    Kennard, Andrew @askennard
    Lehmann, Johannes @johannes_lehmann
    Leterrier, Christophe @christlet
    Lowell, Sally @CellySally
    Lüders, Jens @LudersLab
    MacPhee, Daniel J @dmacphee
    McCutcheon, John @mcsymbiont
    Merz, Alexey Jarrell @merz
    Ogden, Stacey K @lab_ogden
    Rohn, Jennifer L @JennyRohn
    Royle, Stephen J @steveroyle
    Schermer, Bernhard @cilib
    Schneitz, Kay @kay
    Shropshire, Dylan J @ShropshireJD
    Thakur, Dhananjay P @dhananjaythakur
    Twelvetrees, Ali @dozenoaks

    Developmental Biology
    Cardona, Albert @albertcardona
    Clark, Erik @ErikClark
    Delpierre, Julien @JulienDelpierre
    Etchevers, Heather @Etche_homo
    Eve, Alex @amjeve
    Fisher, Simon E @ProfSimonFisher
    Lowell, Sally @CellySally
    MacPhee, Daniel J @dmacphee
    Rayon, Teresa @t_rayon
    Reindl, Eva @Miss_Daffodil
    Schneitz, Kay @kay
    Stévant, Isabelle @IsabelleStevant
    Veraksa, Alexey @veraksa

    Ecology
    Anderson, Christopher @c_n_anderson
    Arnold, Sarah EJ @sejarnold
    Aylward, Frank O @foaylward
    Bahlai, Christie @cbahlai
    Barker, Michael S @MikeBarker
    Benham, Phred M @TheSaltySparrow
    Bolker, Ben M @bbolker
    Bommarco, Riccardo @bommarco
    Bourg, Amandine @eco_amandine
    Brabant, Craig @mutillidae
    Brignoli, Gino @gino
    Corman, Victor Max @vmcorman
    Delph, Lynda @LyndaDelph
    Dorador, Cristina @criordor
    Eisen, Jonathan @phylogenomics
    English, Holly M @hollyenglish
    Enquist, Brian J @bjenquist
    Field, Katie J @katiefield4
    Fisher, Diana O @Diana_mammalecology
    Friesen, Christopher P @friesen5000
    Gogarten, Jan F @communities
    Heger, Tina @tinaheger
    Heilveil, Jeffrey S @nigronia
    Honorio, Romain @RomainH
    Huber, Dezene PW @dezene
    Hufkens, Koen @koen_hufkens
    Kirk, Holly @DrHollyKirk
    Knell, Robert J @robknell
    Knudson, Alexander H @Knudson_H
    Kovács, Ákos T @EvolvedBiofilm
    Kristensen, Nadiah Pardede @nadiah
    Kühn, Ingolf @IngolfKuehn
    Lavers, Jennifer L @SeabirdSentinel
    Lockwood, Ben R @benlockwood
    Mast, Joy Nystrom @jnmast
    McGlinn, Daniel J @danmcglinn
    McGlynn, Terrence P @hormiga
    Moreau, Corrie S @CorrieMoreau
    O'Connell, Timothy J @tinosaurs
    Oliveras Menor, Imma @ioliverasmenor
    Ollerton, Jeff @JeffOllerton
    Özgen-Xian, Ilhan @ioezg
    Pausas, Juli G @jgpausas
    Pomeranz, Justin PZ @PZ_ecology
    Porter, Teresita M @DNAdataPhile
    Ralph, Peter L @petrelharp
    Réale, Denis @denisrealeMTL
    Rillig, Matthias C @mrillig
    Ross, Noam @noamross
    Schreiber, Sebastian @SebastianSchreiber
    Schürch, Roger @schuemaa
    Scott, Eric R @LeafyEricScott
    Sievert, Thorbjörn @volephd
    Souchay, Guillaume @GSouchay
    Sponheimer, Matt @spon
    Stowell, Dan @danstowell
    Sullivan, Jon J @joncounts
    Tzovaras, Bastian Greshake @gedankenstuecke
    Virgo, Nathaniel @Nathaniel
    Warrington, Miya H @MiyaWarrington
    Weintraub, Michael N @mnweintraub
    White, Seth @OccupyRivers
    Yannelli, Florencia A @floryannelli

    Fedi.Directory Ecology 

    Entomology
    Arnold, Sarah EJ @sejarnold
    Bommarco, Riccardo @bommarco
    Brignoli, Gino @gino
    Cardona, Albert @albertcardona
    Fossen, Matthew @mattfossen
    Friesen, Christopher P @friesen5000
    Hobern, Donald @dhobern
    Honorio, Romain @RomainH
    Huber, Dezene PW @dezene
    Knudson, Alexander H @Knudson_H
    McCann, Sean @ibycter
    McElrath, Thomas C @monotomidae
    McGlynn, Terrence P @hormiga
    Moreau, Corrie S @CorrieMoreau
    Musetti, Luciana @DrLu_Musetti
    Pomeranz, Justin PZ @PZ_ecology
    Schürch, Roger @schuemaa
    Strepsipzerg, Max Aubry @StrepsipZerg
    Umbers, Kate DL @kateumbers
    Wild, Alexander @alexwild

    Fedi.Directory Entomology 

    Genetics
    Albert, Victor A @PlantEvoGenomics
    Aninta, Sabhrina Gita @sagitaninta
    Carlton, Peter M @pmcarlton
    Chen, Ko-Fan @kofanchen
    Clark, Erik @ErikClark
    Coassin, Stefan @stncsn
    Davison, Angus @snailman
    Delph, Lynda @LyndaDelph
    Derringer, Jaime Lane @geneforanarchy
    Etchevers, Heather @Etche_homo
    Fisher, Simon E @ProfSimonFisher
    Gebhard, Christian @basepair
    Glotzer, Michael @mglo
    Gomes, José Eduardo @JoseEdGomes
    Gunter, Chris @girlscientist
    Hamilton, Bruce A @bahome
    Johnsson, Martin @mrtnj
    Konda, Prathyusha @prats
    Lenski, Richard E @RELenski
    MacDonald, LE Marcia @marcia
    Marsh, James W @marshomics
    Maurizio, Paul L @paul
    Munafò, Marzia @munafomarzia
    Neher, Richard @richardneher
    Perez-Posada, Alberto @apposada
    Pfau, Russell S @rspfau
    Racimo, Fernando @FerRacimo
    Ralph, Peter L @petrelharp
    Ross-Ibarra, Jeffrey @jrossibarra
    Schneitz, Kay @kay
    Shropshire, Dylan J @ShropshireJD
    Slotte, Tanja @tanjaslotte
    Tomasson, Michael H @tomasson
    Umbers, Kate DL @kateumbers
    Viñuela, Ana @AnaVinuela
    Vitalis, Renaud @renaud_vitalis

    Immunology
    Barber, Matthew F @bioBarber
    Barnkob, Michael B @mikebarnkob
    Beeton, Christine @christinebeeton
    Bhattacharyya, Roby @roby
    Caspi Tal, Michal @ImmunoFever
    Cruickshank, Sheena Margaret @Sheencr
    Flies, Andrew S @WildImmunity
    Guthmiller, Jenna @JennaGuthmiller
    Halama, Niels @halama_immuno
    Hanson, Mark A @MarkHanson
    Konda, Prathyusha @prats
    Kovács, Ákos T @EvolvedBiofilm
    Martinez, David R @davidrmartinez
    Maurizio, Paul L @paul
    Merz, Alexey Jarrell @merz
    Pollara, Gabriele @gpollara
    Rohn, Jennifer L @JennyRohn
    Slack, Emma Wetter @mucosal_immunology_ethz
    Snook, Adam E @adamsnookphd
    Thomas, Rachel L @math_rachel
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937

    Marine Science
    Andrews, Samantha @oceanoculus
    Burdett, Heidi L @HLBurdett
    Currie, Warren JS @DrPlanktonguy
    de Froe, Evert @EvertFroe
    Fröhberg, Nico @NicoFroehberg
    Gustafsson, Jonas @jonasgus
    Hauck, Judith @jhauck
    Llewellin, Katherine @DolphinSeeker
    Ospina-Alvarez, Andres A @andresospina
    Quinn, Kaylin @KaylinQ
    Thrash, Cameron J @jcamthrash

    Microbiology
    Barber, Matthew F @bioBarber
    Benaud, Nicole @DrNic
    Bhattacharyya, Roby @roby
    Blazanin, Michael @mikeblazanin
    Breitbart, Mya @virome_girl
    Casas Ciria, Francisco Javier @cientounero
    Constantinides, Bede @bede
    Crits-Christoph, Alexander @alexcc
    Dorador, Cristina @criordor
    Eisen, Jonathan @phylogenomics
    Flores, Anthony R @pedIDDoc
    Guthmiller, Jenna @JennaGuthmiller
    Hopkins, KL @theamrdoc
    Hughes, Lee E @LeeHughesTx
    Hume Adam J @adam_hume
    Kieser, Silas @silask
    Kolb, Steffen @Kolb2022
    Kormas, Konstantinos @kkormas
    Kovács, Ákos T @EvolvedBiofilm
    Lerer, Vanda @drlerer
    Marsh, James W @marshomics
    Méric, Guillaume @guillaume
    Merz, Alexey Jarrell @merz
    Moller, Abraham G @guofu
    Mutalik, Vivek K @vivek_mutalik
    Osborn, Mark @MicrobialLife
    Pariente, Nonia @npariente
    Pollara, Gabriele @gpollara
    Rasmussen, Angela @Angie_rasmussen
    Retchless, Adam C @adamr
    Rohn, Jennifer L @JennyRohn
    Ryan, Feargal J @feargal
    Sadoine, Mayuri @MayuriSadoine
    Salter, Susannah J @zannah_du
    Singer, Andrew C @oxonandrew
    Small Things Considered @STCmicrobeblog
    Snook, Adam E @adamsnookphd
    Sochacki, Paul @RebelGeek99
    Stephen, Abish S @astephen
    Thrash, Cameron J @jcamthrash
    van Schaik, Willem RJL @wvschaik
    van Vlie, Arnoud @dutchscientist
    Wade, Brian D @astrobrian
    Wakeham, David @wakehamAMR
    Weigel, Christoph @christoph_STCmicrobeblog
    Weintraub, Michael N @mnweintraub
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937
    Wolfson, Eliza @eliza_coli

    Molecular Biology
    Birney, Ewan @ewanbirney
    Breitbart, Mya @virome_girl
    Brickman, Joshua M @Cooperativity
    Briggs, David C @xtaldave
    Carlton, Peter M @pmcarlton
    Coassin, Stefan @stncsn
    Ericsson, Sterling @sterlingericsson
    Grøftehauge, Morten K @drgroftehauge
    Hancock, John M @jmhancock
    Högberg, Björn @bjorn_hogberg
    Jensen, Lars Juhl @larsjuhljensen
    Kupferschmidt, Kai @kakape
    MacPhee, Daniel J @dmacphee
    Mangan, Mary @mem_somerville
    Maya-Mrschtik, Michaela @mimrma
    Munafò, Marzia @munafomarzia
    Ogden, Stacey K @lab_ogden
    Popescu, Gabriela K @PopStarLab
    Porter, Teresita M @DNAdataPhile
    Royle, Stephen J @steveroyle
    Twelvetrees, Ali @dozenoaks
    Tyka, Mike @mtyka
    Veraksa, Alexey @veraksa
    Verger, Alexis @AVerger
    Walmarth, Phillip A @pwilmart
    Weigel, Christoph @christoph_STCmicrobeblog
    Wein, Samuel @samweingamgee
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937

    Structural Biology
    Gaullier, Guillaume @Guillawme

    Mycology
    Field, Katie J @katiefield4
    Lerer, Vanda @drlerer
    Rillig, Matthias C @mrillig
    Stajich, Jason @hyphaltip
    Weir, Bevan S @bevan

    Ornithology
    Baillie, Stephen R @StephenRBaillie
    Benham, Phred M @TheSaltySparrow
    Blight, Louise K @procellaria
    Elphick, Chris S @Ssts
    Fournier, Auriel MV @RallidaeRule
    Hammer, Sjúrður @sjurdur
    Harter, Lauren B @lbharter
    Iwaniuk, N Andrew @brainsevolve
    Kirk, Holly @DrHollyKirk
    Kohn, Gregory M @gregorykohn
    Lavers, Jennifer L @SeabirdSentinel
    O'Connell, Timothy J @tinosaurs
    Oswald, Krista N @BabblingKrista
    Thompson, Danielle L @scottishseabird
    Toms, Michael P @MikeToms
    Weber, Andrew @drewweber

    Virology
    Aylward, Frank O @foaylward
    Breitbart, Mya @virome_girl
    Corman, Victor Max @vmcorman
    Eckerle, Isabella @EckerleIsabella
    Emerman, Michael @memerman
    Erasmus, Jesse H @Jesseerasmus
    Ghafari, Mahan @mghafari
    Hodcroft, Emma B @firefoxx66
    Kamil, Jeremy P @macroliter
    Katzourakis, Aris @ariskatzourakis
    Lerer, Vanda @drlerer
    Mackay, Ian M @mackayim2022
    Martinez, David R @davidrmartinez
    Meyer, Björn @meyer
    Mohr, Emma @Mohr_lab
    Mutalik, Vivek K @vivek_mutalik
    Nelson, Chase W @chasewnelson
    Rasmussen, Angela @Angie_rasmussen
    White III, Richard Allen @raw937

    Zoology
    Boehly, Thibault @thibhly
    Caspar, Kai R @nomascus
    English, Holly M @hollyenglish
    Kirk, Holly @DrHollyKirk
    Knell, Robert J @robknell
    O'Connell, Timothy J @tinosaurs
    Sakamoto, Manabu @drmambobob
    Sievert, Thorbjörn @volephd
    Umbers, Kate DL @kateumbers

    More extensive lists on Mastodon can be found exploring the following

    Fedi.Directory - Science & Humanities
    find.sciences.social - Find Academics on Mastodon
    GitHub - Academics on Mastodon Lists
    TrueSciPhi - Curated science, philosophy, and mathematics lists covering podcasts, Mastodon, and Bluesky
    Trunk - allows you to mass-follow a bunch of people

    (Click to access Formal, Natural (Applied & Physical) & Social Sciences)

    (See Index for More Hashtags)

    #SciFedi #Scientists #FediScientists

  15. CW: Scientists in the Natural Applied Sciences - Long List to Scroll!

    Scientists in the Natural Sciences - Applied Sciences

    • Published (not necessarily in field)

    Please Message for Additions, Deletions or Edits

    Agricultural Science
    Birge, Traci @TraciInFinland
    Bommarco, Riccardo @bommarco
    Cardinael, Rémi @remicardinael
    Ehlers, Melf-Hinrich @Melf
    ETH Zürich @crop_science_eth
    Finger, Robert @robertfinger
    Hepworth, Craig @floridafruitgeek
    Kniss, Andrew R @AK
    Lynch, Megan @ml
    Malek, Žiga @zigamalek
    Morris, Ed R @Edrmorris
    Nordquist, Rebecca @renordquist
    Parent, Essi @essi
    Plieninger, Tobias @plieninger
    Rodriguez, Carolina @CRodriguez
    Schulze, Christoph @qris
    Schwerdtner, Ulrike @UliSchwerdtner

    Biophysics
    Bagley, Bryce Allen @babagley
    Batalha, Natalie M @nbatalha
    Benedetti, Fabrizio @scienceFab
    Bonsma-Fisher, Madeleine @mbonsma
    Delpierre, Julien @JulienDelpierre
    Dmitrieff, Serge @dmitrieff
    Etienne, Jocelyn @jocelyn_etienne
    Giorgino, Toni @giorginolab
    Haase, Albrecht @neurophysics
    Kennard, Andrew @askennard
    Michieletto, Davide @dmichiel
    Lew, Matthew D @lewlab
    Meesters, Christian @rupdecat
    Meyer, Carola @carbonwoman
    Neher, Richard @richardneher
    Plested, Andrew @andrewplested
    Popescu, Gabriela K @PopStarLab
    Rowland, David James @drdrowland
    Sadoine, Mayuri @MayuriSadoine
    Schwarz, Ulrich Sebastian @UlrichSchwarz
    Tyka, Mike @mtyka
    Wallace, Mark I @markianwallace

    GitHub Biophysicists 

    Biotremology
    López Díez, Juan José @Tremoneta

    Climate Science
    Brettschneider, Brian @Climatologist49
    Campbell, Micheline @michcampbell
    Cobb, Kim @coralsncaves
    Gironella, Fritzi G @fagg
    Gleick, Peter @petergleick
    Gowan, Evan J @DrEvanGowan
    Hawkins, Ed @ed_hawkins
    Hayhoe, Katharine @kathhayhoe
    Ilyina, Tatiana @TatianaIlyina
    Karmalkar, Ambarish @akarma
    Labe, Zach M @ZLabe
    LeGrande, Allegra Nicole @atthenius
    Marelle, Louis @louismarelle
    Mottram, Ruth @Ruth_Mottram
    Pollice, Robert @robpollice
    Rahmstorf, Stefan @rahmstorf
    Thoman Jr, Richard L @AlaskaWx
    Van de Velde, Jorn @jornvdv

    Climatology
    Barnes-Keoghan, Ian @ibk
    Dupont, Claire @Cladupont
    Lucht, Wolfgang @W_Lucht
    Wagner, Gernot @gwagner

    @ClimateMigration Follows & boosts Climate Science experts

    Engineering
    Aldrich, Chris @chrisaldrich
    Barba, Lorena A @labarba
    Berry, Carlotta A @drcaberry
    Ellison, Doug @doug_ellison
    Gill, Kevin M @kevinmgill
    Hale, Steven J @drstevenhale
    Hashemi, Nicole @NicoleHashemi
    Hulse, Daniel @Daniel_Hulse
    Hurkat, Skand @skandhurkat
    Kruger, Justin D @jdavidnet
    Subramanian, R @subu_caps

    AeroSpace Engineers
    Cothern, Kyle @Risknc
    Dubos, Gregory @astroptere
    Ellison, Doug @doug_ellison
    Hutt, Jason T @jathhutt

    Chemical Engineers
    Krawczyk, Paweł @kravietz
    McNeill, V Faye @vfmcneill
    Meekins, Benjamin H @meekinslab

    Environmental Engineers
    Haas, Charles @ProfCharlesHaas
    Parent, Essi @essi
    Scriven, David @David_Epithet
    Walker-Franklin, Imari @calimari

    Software Engineers
    Brooker, Marc @marcbrooker
    Emir, Burak @burakemir
    Famelis, Michalis @mfamelis
    Hubbard, Philip @philiphubbard
    Mueller-Roemer, Johannes S @JSMuellerRoemer
    Pavlic, Theodore P @tedpavlic
    Ralph, Paul @paulralph
    Sacerdote, David @dsacer
    Santander-Vela, Juan de Dios @juandesant
    Zaslavsky, David @diazona

    Systems Engineers
    Bean, Keri @PlanetaryKeri
    Reck, Rebecca M @RebeccaEE
    Santander-Vela, Juan de Dios @juandesant
    Van Bossuyt, Douglas Lee @douglasvb

    Fedi.Directory Engineering 
    Trunk Engineering 

    Environmental Science
    Brander, Susanne M @smbrander
    Büchau, Yann @nobodyinperson
    Feldwick, Mark @MarkIngs
    Glückler, Ramesh @rglueckler
    Gusmão, Felipe @fgusmao
    Hart-Davis, Damon @DamonHD
    Jehn, Florian Ulrich @florianjehn
    Jones, Oliver AH @Dr_Oli_Jones
    Killam, Daniel @dantheclamman
    Mann, Michael E @MichaelEMann
    Manuel, Ivan Ruiz @IvanRManuel
    McKinney, Zeke J @ZekeMD
    Osborn, Mark @MicrobialLife
    O'Shea, Bethany @DrBethRocks
    Parent, Essi @essi
    Pomeranz, Justin PZ @PZ_ecology
    Pyle, Greg @gregpyle
    Ruiz Manuel, Ivan @IvanRManuel
    Sigmund, Gabriel @GabrielS
    Sims, Kerry @DrKerryS
    Sultana, Farhana @farhanasultana
    Tate, Brandon K @brandontate
    Torkelson, Jaclyn @DesertAndReef
    Walker-Franklin, Imari @calimari
    Weintraub, Michael N @mnweintraub
    Zourek, Leonard @leonardzourek

    Trunk Environmentalists 

    Environmental Toxicology
    Feldwick, Mark @MarkIngs
    Hammer, Sjúrður @sjurdur
    Pyle, Greg @gregpyle
    Reichman, Suzie M @SuzieReichman
    Whitehead, Andrew @andrewwhitehead

    Epidemiology
    Alwan, Nisreen A @nisreen
    Bassani, Diego G @dgbassani
    Bastian, Hilda @hildabast
    Basu, Arindam @arinbasu1
    Baxter, Nancy @enenbee
    Bazaco, Michael @MCBazacoPhD
    Bergstrom, Carl T @ct_bergstrom
    Bolker, Ben @bbolker
    Borrell, Luisa N @lborrell
    Chiong, Winston @winstonchiong
    D'Angelo, Nico @nicod
    Fagherazzi, Guy @gfaghe
    Feldman, Ryan @EMPoisonPharmD
    Fontenelle, Leonardo Ferreira @lffontenelle
    Funk, Sebastian @sbfnk
    Ghafari, Mahan @mghafari
    Gonsalves, Gregg @gregggonsalves
    Handel, Andreas @andreashandel
    Hernan, Miguel @MiguelHernan
    Hill, Edward M @EdMHill
    Hyde, Zoë @DrZoeHyde
    Jamal, Alainna J @alainnajj
    Kinney, Gregory L @mycotropic
    Kline, David @DavidKline
    Kucharski, Adam @adamjkucharski
    Ley, Sylvia @sylvialey
    Meesters, Christian @rupdecat
    Mekaru, Sumiko @Sumiko_Mekaru
    Moss, Rob @rob_models
    Murray, Eleanor J @epiellie
    Newman, Kira L @KiraNewmanMDPhD
    Pearce, Neil @nepearce
    Peiper, Nicholas C @doctorpipes
    Polis, Chelsea B @cbpolis
    Salemi, Jason L @JasonSalemi
    Schrom, John @johnschrom
    Sesay, Cecirahim @cecirahim
    Smith, Tara C @aetiology
    Tennant, Peter WG @pwgtennant
    Thelwall, Simon @simonthelwall
    Tobin, Martin D @martin_tobin
    Wakeham, David @wakehamAMR
    Wallace, Katrine @EpidemiologistKat
    Walsh, Michael @EpiDoctor

    Genetic Epidemiology
    Hodcroft, Emma @firefoxx66
    Meesters, Christian @rupdecat
    Retchless, Adam C @adamr
    Tobin, Martin D @martin_tobin

    Wildlife Epidemiology
    Shriner, Susan A @SusanAShriner

    Fedi.Directory Epidemiology  

    Evolutionary Science
    Albert, Victor A @PlantEvoGenomics
    Anderson, Chris @c_n_anderson
    Arnold, Sarah EJ @sejarnold
    Aylward, Frank O @foaylward
    Barber, Matthew F @bioBarber
    Barker, Michael S @MikeBarker
    Benham, Phred M @TheSaltySparrow
    Bergstrom, Carl T @ct_bergstrom
    Blazanin, Michael @mikeblazanin
    Bolker, Ben @bbolker
    Clarke, John T @jclarkepaleo
    Constantinides, Bede @bede
    Corman, Victor Max @vmcorman
    Davison, Angus @snailman
    Débarre, Florence @flodebarre
    Delph, Lynda @LyndaDelph
    Eisen, Jonathan @phylogenomics
    Enquist, Brian J @bjenquist
    Fisher, Diana O @Diana_mammalecology
    Ghafari, Mahan @mghafari
    Gogarten, Jan F @communities
    Grau-Bové, Xavier @xgrau
    Gregory, T Ryan @TRyanGregory
    Hakala, Sanja @SanjaHakala
    Hancock, John M @jmhancock
    Hartberg, Yasha @yasha
    Iwaniuk, N Andrew @brainsevolve
    Jarochowska, Emilia @Emiliagnathus
    Kane, Emily A @TheKaneLab
    Katzourakis, Aris @ariskatzourakis
    Kellie, Dax J @daxkellie
    Kennard, Andrew @askennard
    Knell, Robert J @robknell
    Knudson, Alexander H @Knudson_H
    Koene, Joris M @jkoene
    Kovács, Ákos T @EvolvedBiofilm
    Kristensen, Nadiah Pardede @nadiah
    LeBoeuf, Adria @Adria
    Leighton, Gavin M @GMcLeanLeighton
    Lenski, Richard @RELenski
    Louvel, Guillaume @GullumLuvl
    Lukas, Dieter @DieterLukas
    McCutcheon, John @mcsymbiont
    Meuthen, Denis @DenisMeuthen
    Moreau, Corrie S @CorrieMoreau
    Neher, Richard @richardneher
    Nelson, Chase W @chasewnelson
    Osmond, Matthew @mmosmond
    Ralph, Peter L @petrelharp
    Schreiber, Sebastian @SebastianSchreiber
    Ross-Ibarra, Jeffrey @jrossibarra
    Schürch, Roger @schuemaa
    Sheard, Catherine @sheardcat
    Shropshire, Dylan J @ShropshireJD
    Simon, Alexis @alxsim
    Slotte, Tanja @tanjaslotte
    Sponheimer, Matt @spon
    Stajich, Jason @hyphaltip
    Strepsipzerg, Max Aubry @StrepsipZerg
    Szala, Anna @anna
    Tzovaras, Bastian Greshake @gedankenstuecke
    Vlieger, Leon @inqbiol
    Warrington, Miya H @MiyaWarrington
    White, Rhys Thomas @Rhys
    Yoder, Jeremy B @jby

    Fedi.Directory Evolutionary Biology 

    FoodScience
    Hammann, Simon @simonhammann
    Kupferschmidt, Kai @kakape

    Genomics
    Albert, Victor A @PlantEvoGenomics
    Aninta, Sabhrina Gita @sagitaninta
    Bayer, Philipp @PhilippBayer
    Benham, Phred M @TheSaltySparrow
    Breitbart, Mya @virome_girl
    Clare, Elizabeth L @ProfBatGirl
    Coassin, Stefan @stncsn
    Constantinides, Bede @bede
    Davison, Angus @snailman
    Eisen, Jonathan @phylogenomics
    Fisher, Simon E @ProfSimonFisher
    Friedberg, Iddo @iddux
    Gebhard, Christian @basepair
    Grau-Bové, Xavier @xgrau
    Gregory, T Ryan @TRyanGregory
    Guhlin, Joseph @josephguhlin
    Gunter, Chris @girlscientist
    Hamilton, Bruce A @bahome
    Hancock, John M @jmhancock
    Johnsson, Martin @mrtnj
    Katzourakis, Aris @ariskatzourakis
    Kieser, Silas @silask
    Konda, Prathyusha @prats
    Lenski, Richard @RELenski
    Louvel, Guillaume @GullumLuvl
    MacLean, Dan @danmaclean
    McCutcheon, John @mcsymbiont
    Mäklin, Tommi @themaklin
    Maurizio, Paul L @paul
    Meesters, Christian @rupdecat
    Mutalik, Vivek K @vivek_mutalik
    Neher, Richard @richardneher
    Nelson, Chase W @chasewnelson
    Pembleton, Luke W @lwpembleton
    Phinney, Brett S @UCDProteomics
    Porter, Teresita M @DNAdataPhile
    Racimo, Fernando @FerRacimo
    Ross-Ibarra, Jeffrey @jrossibarra
    Salter, Susannah J @zannah_du
    Schuster-Böckler Benjamin @bensb
    Stajich, Jason @hyphaltip
    Tobin, Martin D @martin_tobin
    Viñuela, Ana @AnaVinuela
    Vlieger, Leon @inqbiol
    Walmarth, Phillip A @pwilmart
    White, Rhys Thomas @Rhys
    Yoder, Jeremy B @jby
    Zakour, Nouri Ben @genomiss

    GitHub Palaeogenomicists 

    Library & Information Systems
    Brown, Leah @leahdriel
    Chalifour, Joshua @owlyph
    Cockett, Rowan @rowan
    Costas Comesana, Rodrigo @rodrigocostas
    DeRosa, Robin @actualham
    Deschaine, Anne @aehdeschaine
    Dudek, Jonathan @jo_dudek
    Eickhoff, Carsten @carsten
    Fedorak, Lisa @FedorakIndexing
    Gerdes, Thomas @ThomasGerdes
    Goldberg, Julie @Julie
    Hauschke, Christian @hauschke
    Hedreen, Rebecca @delibrarian
    Horton, Laurence @laurencehorton
    Karcher, Sebastian @adam42smith
    Keegan, Brian C @bkeegan
    Levine, Kendra K @kklevine
    Macgregor, George @g3om4c
    Monnin, Jenn @msjennmo
    Nazarovets, Serhii @serhii
    Nyhan, Kate @kdnyhan
    Odell, Jere D @jaireeo
    Ramshaw, Veronica @verolynne
    Schomberg, Jessica @schomj
    Seifried, Rebecca M @rmseifried
    Shirazi, Roxanne @roxanneshirazi
    University of Groningen Library @Bibliothecaris
    Ward, Kestrel @KestrelSWard
    Wuttke, Ulrike @uwuttke
    Ziegler, Sophie @Sophie

    Trunk Librarians 

    Medicine
    Alwan, Nisreen A @nisreen
    Argyropoulos, Christos @ChristosArgyrop
    Bakke, Håkon Kvåle @BakkeHK
    Barber, Carolyn @cbarbermd
    Barnkob, Michael B @mikebarnkob
    Basu, Arindam @arinbasu1
    Baxter, Nancy @enenbee
    Bhattacharyya, Roby @roby
    Briscoe, Joshua @jcbriscoe
    Casas Ciria, Francisco Javier @cientounero
    Corman, Victor Max @vmcorman
    Crystal, Ruth Ann @catchthebaby
    Delaney, Brendan C @bcdelaney1
    Feldman, Ryan @EMPoisonPharmD
    Flores, Anthony R @pedIDDoc
    Fontenelle, Leonardo Ferreira @lffontenelle
    Funk, Sebastian @sbfnk
    Gebhard, Christian @basepair
    Halama, Niels @halama_immuno
    Jamal, Alainna J @alainnajj
    Johansen, Michael @mike_johansen
    McKinney, Zeke J @ZekeMD
    Mohr, Emma @Mohr_lab
    Newman, Kira L @KiraNewmanMDPhD
    Nguyễn, Bích-Mây @bicmay
    Pollara, Gabriele @gpollara
    Schwartz, Ilan S @GermHunterMD
    Steinbach, Daniel @danielsteinbach
    Stone, Judy @drjudystone
    Tomasson, Michael H @tomasson
    Topolsky, Ivan @dryak
    Trebach, Joshua D @jtrebach

    Critical Care
    Barthélémy, Romain @rombarthelemy

    Fedi.Directory Health and Medical 
    followlists.online Anaesthetist/Anesthesiologist Critical Care 
    followlists.online Infectious Diseases & #IDMastodon 
    followlists.online Medical AI 
    GitHub Medical AI
    Trunk Medicine 

    NeuroScience
    Agrawal, Niket @niketagrawal
    Aly, Mariam @mariam
    Barbour, Boris @BorisBarbour
    Bellec, Pierre @pierre_bellec
    Brembs, Björn @brembs
    Cardona, Albert @albertcardona
    Case, Sami @samilcase
    Chiong, Winston @winstonchiong
    Desrochers, Theresa M @DesrochersLab
    Duvelle, Éléonor @elduvelle_neuro
    Elsilä, Lauri @laurielsila
    Garside, Danny @da5nsy
    Gellersen, Helena M @helenagellersen
    Hall, Megan C @ScienceisWhere
    Haun, Andrew M @amhaun
    Hoffman, Kari L @karihoffman
    Hofmann, Ulrich G @kraweel65
    Hyseni, Fjola @fjola
    Iwaniuk, N Andrew @brainsevolve
    Jékely, Gáspár @jekely
    John, Yohan J @DrYohanJohn
    Kachlicka, Magdalena @mkachlicka
    Kanev, Jacob @jkanev
    Karashchuk, Lili @lili
    Karmarkar, Uma R @uma_karma
    Leterrier, Christophe @christlet
    Lindsay, Grace W @Neurograce
    Miller, Earl K @ekmiller
    Moleman, Peter @MolemanPeter
    Negwer, Moritz @moritz_negwer
    Ngiam, William XQ @will_ngiam
    Olsen, Rosanna @RosannaOlsen
    O’Mara, Shane @shaneomara
    Popescu, Gabriela K @PopStarLab
    Schultz, Simon R @neuralengine
    Seuntjens, Eve @EveSeuntjens
    Sinha, Manisha @manisha
    Sutterer, Matthew J @mjsutterer
    Thakur, Dhananjay P @dhananjaythakur
    Timberlake, Ben @ByBenTimberlake
    van Bree, Sander @sandervanbree
    Wu, Wayne @attninaction

    GitHub Neuroscience 

    Pharmacology
    Bartos, Piia @piiabartos
    Case, Sami @samilcase
    Elsilä, Lauri @laurielsila
    Faradilla, Meutia @meutiafaradilla
    Feldman, Ryan @EMPoisonPharmD
    Konrad, David @dbkonrad
    Moleman, Peter @MolemanPeter
    Rutz, Adriano @adafede
    Wilkins, Justin J @justinwilkins

    Pharmacometrics
    Smith, Mike K @MikeKSmith
    Wilkins, Justin J @justinwilkins

    Physiology
    Caspar, Kai R @nomascus
    Glazier, Amelia @ameliaglazier
    Hoffman, Kari L @karihoffman
    Olson, Christopher R @ChristophROlson
    Schumacher, Michael A @schumacher
    Tomasson, Michael H @tomasson
    Umbers, Kate DL @kateumbers
    Wayne, Nancy L @nancylwayne

    Psychiatry
    Anderson, Chase TM @ChaseTMAnderson
    Briscoe, Joshua @jcbriscoe
    Eckert, Anna-Lena @eckertal
    Lam, Raymond W @DrRaymondLam
    Lee, Kangjoo @kangjoolee
    Reeder, Michael @admin
    Turban, Jack L @jackturban
    Urgelés, Diego @urgeles

    followlists.online Psychiatrists 

    Scientific Computing
    Eickhoff, Carsten @carsten
    Frost, Jarvist Moore @Jarvist
    Jambor, Helena @helenajambor

    Computational Biology
    Andreani, Virgile @Armavica
    Argyropoulos, Christos @ChristosArgyrop
    Bahlai, Christie @cbahlai
    Carpenter, Anne E @DrAnneCarpenter
    Clark, Chase M @chasingmicrobes
    Fagherazzi, Guy @gfaghe
    Gatto, Laurent @lgatto
    Gómez-Dans, José @jgomezdans
    Hauck, Judith @jhauck
    Hill, Edward M @EdMHill
    Hoffman, Kari L @karihoffman
    Hubbard, Philip @philiphubbard
    Hyseni, Fjola @fjola
    Jarosz, Wojciech @wjarosz
    Jessen, Walter @wj
    John, Yohan J @DrYohanJohn
    Kanev, Jacob @jkanev
    Kedzierska, Kasia Zofia @kzkedzierska
    Kucharavy, Andrei @andrei_chiffa
    Louvel, Guillaume @GullumLuvl
    MaClean, Dan @danmaclean
    Mendes, Pedro @gepasi
    O'Donnell, Cian @cian
    MacLean, Dan @danmaclean
    Meesters, Christian @rupdecat
    Mendes, Pedro @gepasi
    Moore, Jason H @moorejh
    Moss, Rob @rob_models
    Ross, Noam @noamross
    Scott, Eric R @LeafyEricScott
    Sinha, Manisha @manisha
    Stévant, Isabelle @IsabelleStevant
    Stowell, Dan @danstowell
    Viscownti, Alessia @alesssia
    Winkler, Tilo @twinkler

    Climate Modelling
    Easterbrook, Steve @steve
    Ilyina, Tatiana @TatianaIlyina

    Fedi.Directory Data Visualisation 

    Soil Science
    Cardinael, Rémi @remicardinael
    Moorberg, Colby J @ColbyDigsSoil
    Schymanski, Stanislaus J @schymans
    Schwerdtner, Ulrike @UliSchwerdtner

    Taxonomy
    Brabant, Craig @mutillidae
    Brignoli, Gino @gino
    De Vivo, Mattia @mdv
    Hobern, Donald @dhobern
    Musetti, Luciana @DrLu_Musetti
    Plazi Species @plazi_species

    Toxicology
    Feldman, Ryan @EMPoisonPharmD
    Trebach, Joshua D @jtrebach

    Veterinary Medicine
    Firth, Clair @Buxton_Vienna
    MacPhee, Daniel J @dmacphee
    Mekaru, Sumiko @Sumiko_Mekaru
    Nordquist, Rebecca @renordquist
    van Vlie, Arnoud @dutchscientist
    Voss, Sarah J @Sarah_J_Voss
    Wakeham, David @wakehamAMR

    More extensive lists on Mastodon can be found exploring the following

    Fedi.Directory - Science & Humanities
    find.sciences.social - Find Academics on Mastodon
    GitHub - Academics on Mastodon Lists
    TrueSciPhi - Curated science, philosophy, and mathematics lists covering podcasts, Mastodon, and Bluesky
    Trunk - allows you to mass-follow a bunch of people

    (Click to access Formal, Natural (Life & Physical) & Social Sciences)

    (See Index for More Hashtags)

    #SciFedi #Scientists #FediScientists

  16. Daily(ish) #SmallPress #books - from #NovaScotia publishers: Adventures in Bubbles and Brine: What I learned from Nova Scotia's masters of fermented foods - craft beer, cider, cheese, sauerkraut and more by Philip Moscovitch (Formac Publishing) & Brain Storms: My Life with a Brain Tumour—A Family Doctor’s Memoir by Sharon McCutcheon (Nimbus Publishing). See alt-text.

    #DSPBposts #bookstodon #NSarts #bookish #BookSky #booktok #booksta #bookstagram #booklovers #BooksWorthReading

  17. @junpenglao @henri_pesonen Others from the Aalto Bayesian workflow group joining the BayesComp are (say hello to them, too!)
    - Andrew Johnson (edit: oh no, he's sick and can't come)
    - Anna Riha
    - David Kohns
    - Leevi Lindgren
    - Meenal Jhajharia @meenaljhajharia
    - Niko Siccha @Nikosiccha
    - Noa Kallioinen
    - Teemu Säilynoja
    - Yann McLatchie

    #BayesComp2023 #Bayes #MCMC

  18. #SourceOfTheDance

    The Mountain Goats, "Solidarity Forever"
    Billy Bragg and friends, "Union Maid" from Pete Seeger's 90th
    John McCutcheon, "Labor Day"

    Isaac Bonewits and Friends, "Avalon is Rising"

    Going out on Stradivarious, "Jigs Set for Maypole Dancing"

    #StaySafe and #BlessedBe!

  19. #SourceOfTheDance

    The Mountain Goats, "Solidarity Forever"
    Billy Bragg and friends, "Union Maid" from Pete Seeger's 90th
    John McCutcheon, "Labor Day"

    Isaac Bonewits and Friends, "Avalon is Rising"

    Going out on Stradivarious, "Jigs Set for Maypole Dancing"

    #StaySafe and #BlessedBe!