#educateyourself — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #educateyourself, aggregated by home.social.
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"There are only two genders! It's basic biology!" is the shows you stopped learning in 2nd grade equivalent of "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb! It's basic science / history!"
#trans-rights #educate-yourself #literacy #science #history #biology #trans-ally #gender #thomas-edison #invention #education -
"There are only two genders! It's basic biology!" is the shows you stopped learning in 2nd grade equivalent of "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb! It's basic science / history!"
#trans-rights #educate-yourself #literacy #science #history #biology #trans-ally #gender #thomas-edison #invention #education -
"There are only two genders! It's basic biology!" is the shows you stopped learning in 2nd grade equivalent of "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb! It's basic science / history!"
#trans-rights #educate-yourself #literacy #science #history #biology #trans-ally #gender #thomas-edison #invention #education -
"There are only two genders! It's basic biology!" is the shows you stopped learning in 2nd grade equivalent of "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb! It's basic science / history!"
#trans-rights #educate-yourself #literacy #science #history #biology #trans-ally #gender #thomas-edison #invention #education -
"There are only two genders! It's basic biology!" is the shows you stopped learning in 2nd grade equivalent of "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb! It's basic science / history!"
#trans-rights #educate-yourself #literacy #science #history #biology #trans-ally #gender #thomas-edison #invention #education -
No wonder "western/european" astrology is so backwater (even not) science. Dearest people, know where the dirt spins from and to.
Regulus has been on regular meetings with ANTARES (not aldebaran) since atleast 1979. Regulus has to be from the eastern hemisphere to meet Djyestha from the southern hemisphere.
#EducateYourSelf #KnowYourDjyestha #AxiomAndVectors
Death of Israel => "The End of Colonial Capitalism"
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No wonder "western/european" astrology is so backwater (even not) science. Dearest people, know where the dirt spins from and to.
Regulus has been on regular meetings with ANTARES (not aldebaran) since atleast 1979. Regulus has to be from the eastern hemisphere to meet Djyestha from the southern hemisphere.
#EducateYourSelf #KnowYourDjyestha #AxiomAndVectors
Death of Israel => "The End of Colonial Capitalism"
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On the Greenland front, two bits worth your time.
First is an image of the letter Trump apparently sent.
Second is a five minute video of Peter Zeihan, one of my favorite geopolitical thinkers, on why getting Greenland would be stupid. It's the kind of argument you listen to and any sane person would go "okay, that'd be a stupid idea".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFNqCZCDkXA
Feel free to share broadly.
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On the Greenland front, two bits worth your time.
First is an image of the letter Trump apparently sent.
Second is a five minute video of Peter Zeihan, one of my favorite geopolitical thinkers, on why getting Greenland would be stupid. It's the kind of argument you listen to and any sane person would go "okay, that'd be a stupid idea".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFNqCZCDkXA
Feel free to share broadly.
-
On the Greenland front, two bits worth your time.
First is an image of the letter Trump apparently sent.
Second is a five minute video of Peter Zeihan, one of my favorite geopolitical thinkers, on why getting Greenland would be stupid. It's the kind of argument you listen to and any sane person would go "okay, that'd be a stupid idea".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFNqCZCDkXA
Feel free to share broadly.
-
On the Greenland front, two bits worth your time.
First is an image of the letter Trump apparently sent.
Second is a five minute video of Peter Zeihan, one of my favorite geopolitical thinkers, on why getting Greenland would be stupid. It's the kind of argument you listen to and any sane person would go "okay, that'd be a stupid idea".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFNqCZCDkXA
Feel free to share broadly.
-
On the Greenland front, two bits worth your time.
First is an image of the letter Trump apparently sent.
Second is a five minute video of Peter Zeihan, one of my favorite geopolitical thinkers, on why getting Greenland would be stupid. It's the kind of argument you listen to and any sane person would go "okay, that'd be a stupid idea".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFNqCZCDkXA
Feel free to share broadly.
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He's #educating #people, making them smarter. What if their eyes open up? Can't have that. Let's do something. #EducateYourSelf
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I really appreciate how these videos helps me understand how far we as a nation are from becoming a happy healthy nation. #EndTheAmericanOligarchy #EmpathyIsASuperpower #EducateYourself #CapitalismIsDestroyingOurCountry #Mama'sDon'tLetYourBabiesGrowUpToBeCowboys youtu.be/h319j80oOYM?...
Unearned Privilege Can Stunt E... -
Was sollten Menschen, die sich noch nie näher mit Rassismus auseinandergesetzt haben, wissen bzw. lesen?
Wenn man vielleicht nicht direkt mit postcolonial studies oder Frantz Fanon einsteigen will?
Fand diesen Text von der @bpb als Übersicht nicht schlecht https://www.bpb.de/themen/rassismus-diskriminierung/rassismus/520683/geschichte-des-rassismus/
Frage für alle, die im Zuge der Opposition zu #Merz sich etwas mehr zu dem Thema aneignen möchten. Und auch für mich, da ich mich nie wirklich tief und systematisch da gebildet habe.
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Was sollten Menschen, die sich noch nie näher mit Rassismus auseinandergesetzt haben, wissen bzw. lesen?
Wenn man vielleicht nicht direkt mit postcolonial studies oder Frantz Fanon einsteigen will?
Fand diesen Text von der @bpb als Übersicht nicht schlecht https://www.bpb.de/themen/rassismus-diskriminierung/rassismus/520683/geschichte-des-rassismus/
Frage für alle, die im Zuge der Opposition zu #Merz sich etwas mehr zu dem Thema aneignen möchten. Und auch für mich, da ich mich nie wirklich tief und systematisch da gebildet habe.
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Was sollten Menschen, die sich noch nie näher mit Rassismus auseinandergesetzt haben, wissen bzw. lesen?
Wenn man vielleicht nicht direkt mit postcolonial studies oder Frantz Fanon einsteigen will?
Fand diesen Text von der @bpb als Übersicht nicht schlecht https://www.bpb.de/themen/rassismus-diskriminierung/rassismus/520683/geschichte-des-rassismus/
Frage für alle, die im Zuge der Opposition zu #Merz sich etwas mehr zu dem Thema aneignen möchten. Und auch für mich, da ich mich nie wirklich tief und systematisch da gebildet habe.
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Historical Connections: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek & Jan Vermeer
From Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
The first person to describe a cell was Robert Hooke, whom we last encountered squabbling with Isaac Newton over credit for the invention of the inverse square law. Hooke achieved many things in his sixty-eight years — he was both an accomplished theoretician and a dab hand at making ingenious and useful instruments — but nothing he did brought him greater admiration than his popular book Microphagia: or Some Physiological Descriptions of Miniature Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses, produced in 1665. It revealed to an enchanted public a universe of the very small that was far more diverse, crowded, and finely structured than anyone had ever come close to imagining.
Among the microscopic features first identified by Hooke were little chambers in plants that he called cells because they reminded him of monks' cells. Hooke calculated that a one-inch square of cork would contain 1,259,712,000 of these tiny chambers, the first appearance of such a very large number anywhere in science. Microscopes by this time had been around for a generation or so, but what set Hooke's apart were their technical supremacy. They achieved magnifications of thirty times, making them the last word in seventeenth-century optical technology.
So it came as something of a shock when just a decade later Hooke and the other members of London's Royal Society began to receive drawings and reports from an unlettered linen draper in Holland employing magnifications of up to 275 times. The draper's name was Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Though he had little formal education and no background in science, he was a perceptive and dedicated observer and a technical genius.
To this day it is not known how he got such magnificent magnifications from simple handheld devices, which were little more than modest wooden dowels with a tiny bubble of glass embedded in them, far more like magnifying glasses than what most of us think of as microscopes, but really not much like either. Leeuwenhoek made a new instrument for every experiment he performed and was extremely secretive about his techniques, though he did sometimes offer tips to the British on how they might improve their resolutions.[40][40] Leeuwenhoek was close friends with another Delft notable, the artist Jan Vermeer. In the mid-1660s, Vermeer, who previously had been a competent but not outstanding artist, suddenly developed the mastery of light and perspective for which he has been celebrated ever since. Though it has never been proved, it has long been suspected that he used a camera obscura, a device for projecting images onto a flat surface through a lens. No such device was listed among Vermeer’s personal effects after his death, but it happens that the executor of Vermeer’s estate was none other than Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the most secretive lens-maker of his day.
#science #biology #history #microscopic #Vermeer #Antoni-van-Leeuwenhoek #1600s #17th-century #microbiology #historical-connections #the-clementine-compendium #fun-facts #the-more-you-know #educate-yourself #Bill-Bryson #A-Short-History-of-Nearly-Everything #quotes #books #cellular-biology #scientific-observations -
Historical Connections: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek & Jan Vermeer
From Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
The first person to describe a cell was Robert Hooke, whom we last encountered squabbling with Isaac Newton over credit for the invention of the inverse square law. Hooke achieved many things in his sixty-eight years — he was both an accomplished theoretician and a dab hand at making ingenious and useful instruments — but nothing he did brought him greater admiration than his popular book Microphagia: or Some Physiological Descriptions of Miniature Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses, produced in 1665. It revealed to an enchanted public a universe of the very small that was far more diverse, crowded, and finely structured than anyone had ever come close to imagining.
Among the microscopic features first identified by Hooke were little chambers in plants that he called cells because they reminded him of monks' cells. Hooke calculated that a one-inch square of cork would contain 1,259,712,000 of these tiny chambers, the first appearance of such a very large number anywhere in science. Microscopes by this time had been around for a generation or so, but what set Hooke's apart were their technical supremacy. They achieved magnifications of thirty times, making them the last word in seventeenth-century optical technology.
So it came as something of a shock when just a decade later Hooke and the other members of London's Royal Society began to receive drawings and reports from an unlettered linen draper in Holland employing magnifications of up to 275 times. The draper's name was Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Though he had little formal education and no background in science, he was a perceptive and dedicated observer and a technical genius.
To this day it is not known how he got such magnificent magnifications from simple handheld devices, which were little more than modest wooden dowels with a tiny bubble of glass embedded in them, far more like magnifying glasses than what most of us think of as microscopes, but really not much like either. Leeuwenhoek made a new instrument for every experiment he performed and was extremely secretive about his techniques, though he did sometimes offer tips to the British on how they might improve their resolutions.[40][40] Leeuwenhoek was close friends with another Delft notable, the artist Jan Vermeer. In the mid-1660s, Vermeer, who previously had been a competent but not outstanding artist, suddenly developed the mastery of light and perspective for which he has been celebrated ever since. Though it has never been proved, it has long been suspected that he used a camera obscura, a device for projecting images onto a flat surface through a lens. No such device was listed among Vermeer’s personal effects after his death, but it happens that the executor of Vermeer’s estate was none other than Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the most secretive lens-maker of his day.
#science #biology #history #microscopic #Vermeer #Antoni-van-Leeuwenhoek #1600s #17th-century #microbiology #historical-connections #the-clementine-compendium #fun-facts #the-more-you-know #educate-yourself #Bill-Bryson #A-Short-History-of-Nearly-Everything #quotes #books #cellular-biology #scientific-observations -
Historical Connections: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek & Jan Vermeer
From Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
The first person to describe a cell was Robert Hooke, whom we last encountered squabbling with Isaac Newton over credit for the invention of the inverse square law. Hooke achieved many things in his sixty-eight years — he was both an accomplished theoretician and a dab hand at making ingenious and useful instruments — but nothing he did brought him greater admiration than his popular book Microphagia: or Some Physiological Descriptions of Miniature Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses, produced in 1665. It revealed to an enchanted public a universe of the very small that was far more diverse, crowded, and finely structured than anyone had ever come close to imagining.
Among the microscopic features first identified by Hooke were little chambers in plants that he called cells because they reminded him of monks' cells. Hooke calculated that a one-inch square of cork would contain 1,259,712,000 of these tiny chambers, the first appearance of such a very large number anywhere in science. Microscopes by this time had been around for a generation or so, but what set Hooke's apart were their technical supremacy. They achieved magnifications of thirty times, making them the last word in seventeenth-century optical technology.
So it came as something of a shock when just a decade later Hooke and the other members of London's Royal Society began to receive drawings and reports from an unlettered linen draper in Holland employing magnifications of up to 275 times. The draper's name was Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Though he had little formal education and no background in science, he was a perceptive and dedicated observer and a technical genius.
To this day it is not known how he got such magnificent magnifications from simple handheld devices, which were little more than modest wooden dowels with a tiny bubble of glass embedded in them, far more like magnifying glasses than what most of us think of as microscopes, but really not much like either. Leeuwenhoek made a new instrument for every experiment he performed and was extremely secretive about his techniques, though he did sometimes offer tips to the British on how they might improve their resolutions.[40][40] Leeuwenhoek was close friends with another Delft notable, the artist Jan Vermeer. In the mid-1660s, Vermeer, who previously had been a competent but not outstanding artist, suddenly developed the mastery of light and perspective for which he has been celebrated ever since. Though it has never been proved, it has long been suspected that he used a camera obscura, a device for projecting images onto a flat surface through a lens. No such device was listed among Vermeer’s personal effects after his death, but it happens that the executor of Vermeer’s estate was none other than Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the most secretive lens-maker of his day.
#science #biology #history #microscopic #Vermeer #Antoni-van-Leeuwenhoek #1600s #17th-century #microbiology #historical-connections #the-clementine-compendium #fun-facts #the-more-you-know #educate-yourself #Bill-Bryson #A-Short-History-of-Nearly-Everything #quotes #books #cellular-biology #scientific-observations -
Historical Connections: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek & Jan Vermeer
From Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
The first person to describe a cell was Robert Hooke, whom we last encountered squabbling with Isaac Newton over credit for the invention of the inverse square law. Hooke achieved many things in his sixty-eight years — he was both an accomplished theoretician and a dab hand at making ingenious and useful instruments — but nothing he did brought him greater admiration than his popular book Microphagia: or Some Physiological Descriptions of Miniature Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses, produced in 1665. It revealed to an enchanted public a universe of the very small that was far more diverse, crowded, and finely structured than anyone had ever come close to imagining.
Among the microscopic features first identified by Hooke were little chambers in plants that he called cells because they reminded him of monks' cells. Hooke calculated that a one-inch square of cork would contain 1,259,712,000 of these tiny chambers, the first appearance of such a very large number anywhere in science. Microscopes by this time had been around for a generation or so, but what set Hooke's apart were their technical supremacy. They achieved magnifications of thirty times, making them the last word in seventeenth-century optical technology.
So it came as something of a shock when just a decade later Hooke and the other members of London's Royal Society began to receive drawings and reports from an unlettered linen draper in Holland employing magnifications of up to 275 times. The draper's name was Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Though he had little formal education and no background in science, he was a perceptive and dedicated observer and a technical genius.
To this day it is not known how he got such magnificent magnifications from simple handheld devices, which were little more than modest wooden dowels with a tiny bubble of glass embedded in them, far more like magnifying glasses than what most of us think of as microscopes, but really not much like either. Leeuwenhoek made a new instrument for every experiment he performed and was extremely secretive about his techniques, though he did sometimes offer tips to the British on how they might improve their resolutions.[40][40] Leeuwenhoek was close friends with another Delft notable, the artist Jan Vermeer. In the mid-1660s, Vermeer, who previously had been a competent but not outstanding artist, suddenly developed the mastery of light and perspective for which he has been celebrated ever since. Though it has never been proved, it has long been suspected that he used a camera obscura, a device for projecting images onto a flat surface through a lens. No such device was listed among Vermeer’s personal effects after his death, but it happens that the executor of Vermeer’s estate was none other than Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the most secretive lens-maker of his day.
#science #biology #history #microscopic #Vermeer #Antoni-van-Leeuwenhoek #1600s #17th-century #microbiology #historical-connections #the-clementine-compendium #fun-facts #the-more-you-know #educate-yourself #Bill-Bryson #A-Short-History-of-Nearly-Everything #quotes #books #cellular-biology #scientific-observations -
Historical Connections: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek & Jan Vermeer
From Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
The first person to describe a cell was Robert Hooke, whom we last encountered squabbling with Isaac Newton over credit for the invention of the inverse square law. Hooke achieved many things in his sixty-eight years — he was both an accomplished theoretician and a dab hand at making ingenious and useful instruments — but nothing he did brought him greater admiration than his popular book Microphagia: or Some Physiological Descriptions of Miniature Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses, produced in 1665. It revealed to an enchanted public a universe of the very small that was far more diverse, crowded, and finely structured than anyone had ever come close to imagining.
Among the microscopic features first identified by Hooke were little chambers in plants that he called cells because they reminded him of monks' cells. Hooke calculated that a one-inch square of cork would contain 1,259,712,000 of these tiny chambers, the first appearance of such a very large number anywhere in science. Microscopes by this time had been around for a generation or so, but what set Hooke's apart were their technical supremacy. They achieved magnifications of thirty times, making them the last word in seventeenth-century optical technology.
So it came as something of a shock when just a decade later Hooke and the other members of London's Royal Society began to receive drawings and reports from an unlettered linen draper in Holland employing magnifications of up to 275 times. The draper's name was Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Though he had little formal education and no background in science, he was a perceptive and dedicated observer and a technical genius.
To this day it is not known how he got such magnificent magnifications from simple handheld devices, which were little more than modest wooden dowels with a tiny bubble of glass embedded in them, far more like magnifying glasses than what most of us think of as microscopes, but really not much like either. Leeuwenhoek made a new instrument for every experiment he performed and was extremely secretive about his techniques, though he did sometimes offer tips to the British on how they might improve their resolutions.[40][40] Leeuwenhoek was close friends with another Delft notable, the artist Jan Vermeer. In the mid-1660s, Vermeer, who previously had been a competent but not outstanding artist, suddenly developed the mastery of light and perspective for which he has been celebrated ever since. Though it has never been proved, it has long been suspected that he used a camera obscura, a device for projecting images onto a flat surface through a lens. No such device was listed among Vermeer’s personal effects after his death, but it happens that the executor of Vermeer’s estate was none other than Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the most secretive lens-maker of his day.
#science #biology #history #microscopic #Vermeer #Antoni-van-Leeuwenhoek #1600s #17th-century #microbiology #historical-connections #the-clementine-compendium #fun-facts #the-more-you-know #educate-yourself #Bill-Bryson #A-Short-History-of-Nearly-Everything #quotes #books #cellular-biology #scientific-observations -
#world #USA #EU #CANADA #EVERYONE 1. work on your #independence from the #system make as much as possible yourself: from #water to #food to #electricity to everything, every dollar every euro invested your own #independence is a buck well INVESTED
2. #wethepeople #boycott the consumer #economy no #Amazon no #eBay #nospending except in local small stores a #smallrevolution #consumer #Blackout on #28thfebruary, are you in? demands: #fairpay, #fairtaxation: demand #taxheavens to be closed, either everyone pays taxes or no one, #educateyourself #USA is losing 175 billion per year https://infosec.exchange/@Linknation/113976222560735279
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#world #USA #EU #CANADA #EVERYONE 1. work on your #independence from the #system make as much as possible yourself: from #water to #food to #electricity to everything, every dollar every euro invested your own #independence is a buck well INVESTED
2. #wethepeople #boycott the consumer #economy no #Amazon no #eBay #nospending except in local small stores a #smallrevolution #consumer #Blackout on #28thfebruary, are you in? demands: #fairpay, #fairtaxation: demand #taxheavens to be closed, either everyone pays taxes or no one, #educateyourself #USA is losing 175 billion per year https://infosec.exchange/@Linknation/113976222560735279
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#world #USA #EU #CANADA #EVERYONE 1. work on your #independence from the #system make as much as possible yourself: from #water to #food to #electricity to everything, every dollar every euro invested your own #independence is a buck well INVESTED
2. #wethepeople #boycott the consumer #economy no #Amazon no #eBay #nospending except in local small stores a #smallrevolution #consumer #Blackout on #28thfebruary, are you in? demands: #fairpay, #fairtaxation: demand #taxheavens to be closed, either everyone pays taxes or no one, #educateyourself #USA is losing 175 billion per year https://infosec.exchange/@Linknation/113976222560735279
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Hey folks! Are you--or someone you know--struggling to pay for #textbooks? Can't find the citation you need? Is that article you wanna read behind a paywall?
Well, that's tough but try to avoid doing anything shady like visiting the following sites:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://www.smartquantai.com/
https://unpaywall.org/
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/
https://www.sci-hub.st/
https://libgenesis.net/
https://archive.org/All URLs presented here stripped of tracking info just in case you accidentally click on one. Which you shouldn't. Buy your textbooks and pay the paywall. After all, if you don't support the #Oligarchs then they won't support #education. Trust me #TextbookSavings aren't worth cheating as you try to #educateyourself.
Oh! And don't bypass your campus's network monitoring by using https://www.torproject.org/download/
As the poet said: "fuck the game, don't let the game fuck you."
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Hey folks! Are you--or someone you know--struggling to pay for #textbooks? Can't find the citation you need? Is that article you wanna read behind a paywall?
Well, that's tough but try to avoid doing anything shady like visiting the following sites:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://www.smartquantai.com/
https://unpaywall.org/
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/
https://www.sci-hub.st/
https://libgenesis.net/
https://archive.org/All URLs presented here stripped of tracking info just in case you accidentally click on one. Which you shouldn't. Buy your textbooks and pay the paywall. After all, if you don't support the #Oligarchs then they won't support #education. Trust me #TextbookSavings aren't worth cheating as you try to #educateyourself.
Oh! And don't bypass your campus's network monitoring by using https://www.torproject.org/download/
As the poet said: "fuck the game, don't let the game fuck you."
-
Hey folks! Are you--or someone you know--struggling to pay for #textbooks? Can't find the citation you need? Is that article you wanna read behind a paywall?
Well, that's tough but try to avoid doing anything shady like visiting the following sites:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://www.smartquantai.com/
https://unpaywall.org/
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/
https://www.sci-hub.st/
https://libgenesis.net/
https://archive.org/All URLs presented here stripped of tracking info just in case you accidentally click on one. Which you shouldn't. Buy your textbooks and pay the paywall. After all, if you don't support the #Oligarchs then they won't support #education. Trust me #TextbookSavings aren't worth cheating as you try to #educateyourself.
Oh! And don't bypass your campus's network monitoring by using https://www.torproject.org/download/
As the poet said: "fuck the game, don't let the game fuck you."
-
Hey folks! Are you--or someone you know--struggling to pay for #textbooks? Can't find the citation you need? Is that article you wanna read behind a paywall?
Well, that's tough but try to avoid doing anything shady like visiting the following sites:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://www.smartquantai.com/
https://unpaywall.org/
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/
https://www.sci-hub.st/
https://libgenesis.net/
https://archive.org/All URLs presented here stripped of tracking info just in case you accidentally click on one. Which you shouldn't. Buy your textbooks and pay the paywall. After all, if you don't support the #Oligarchs then they won't support #education. Trust me #TextbookSavings aren't worth cheating as you try to #educateyourself.
Oh! And don't bypass your campus's network monitoring by using https://www.torproject.org/download/
As the poet said: "fuck the game, don't let the game fuck you."
-
Hey folks! Are you--or someone you know--struggling to pay for #textbooks? Can't find the citation you need? Is that article you wanna read behind a paywall?
Well, that's tough but try to avoid doing anything shady like visiting the following sites:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://www.smartquantai.com/
https://unpaywall.org/
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/
https://www.sci-hub.st/
https://libgenesis.net/
https://archive.org/All URLs presented here stripped of tracking info just in case you accidentally click on one. Which you shouldn't. Buy your textbooks and pay the paywall. After all, if you don't support the #Oligarchs then they won't support #education. Trust me #TextbookSavings aren't worth cheating as you try to #educateyourself.
Oh! And don't bypass your campus's network monitoring by using https://www.torproject.org/download/
As the poet said: "fuck the game, don't let the game fuck you."
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CW: CW: Hateful Iconography *FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES*
Know what hate looks like so you can stop it.
Learn to hear the Dog Whistles.
#EducateYourself #usa #Progressive #leftist #currentevents #antifa #antifascist #fyp #help #iconography #mutualaid
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CW: CW: Hateful Iconography *FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES*
Know what hate looks like so you can stop it.
Learn to hear the Dog Whistles.
#EducateYourself #usa #Progressive #leftist #currentevents #antifa #antifascist #fyp #help #iconography #mutualaid
-
CW: CW: Hateful Iconography *FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES*
Know what hate looks like so you can stop it.
Learn to hear the Dog Whistles.
#EducateYourself #usa #Progressive #leftist #currentevents #antifa #antifascist #fyp #help #iconography #mutualaid
-
CW: CW: Hateful Iconography *FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES*
Know what hate looks like so you can stop it.
Learn to hear the Dog Whistles.
#EducateYourself #usa #Progressive #leftist #currentevents #antifa #antifascist #fyp #help #iconography #mutualaid
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The phrase "knowledge is power" takes on a profound significance these days, as we observe an unsettling trend among students who, driven by the currents of popular opinion and social media, are engaging in "protests" fueled by misinformation and, disturbingly, anti-Semitism.
It is critical to step back and consider the true essence and responsibility that comes with this power.
True empowerment comes from the ability to think critically, to differentiate between opinion and fact, and to understand the historical and cultural contexts of the issues at hand.
Engaging with knowledge is about building a more informed, empathetic, and cohesive society. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to strive for a deeper understanding and to use our voices not just to speak, but to speak truth.
As you navigate through the noise, remember: your voice is your power, but it's your responsibility to ensure it’s powered by truth and understanding.
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The phrase "knowledge is power" takes on a profound significance these days, as we observe an unsettling trend among students who, driven by the currents of popular opinion and social media, are engaging in "protests" fueled by misinformation and, disturbingly, anti-Semitism.
It is critical to step back and consider the true essence and responsibility that comes with this power.
True empowerment comes from the ability to think critically, to differentiate between opinion and fact, and to understand the historical and cultural contexts of the issues at hand.
Engaging with knowledge is about building a more informed, empathetic, and cohesive society. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to strive for a deeper understanding and to use our voices not just to speak, but to speak truth.
As you navigate through the noise, remember: your voice is your power, but it's your responsibility to ensure it’s powered by truth and understanding.
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The phrase "knowledge is power" takes on a profound significance these days, as we observe an unsettling trend among students who, driven by the currents of popular opinion and social media, are engaging in "protests" fueled by misinformation and, disturbingly, anti-Semitism.
It is critical to step back and consider the true essence and responsibility that comes with this power.
True empowerment comes from the ability to think critically, to differentiate between opinion and fact, and to understand the historical and cultural contexts of the issues at hand.
Engaging with knowledge is about building a more informed, empathetic, and cohesive society. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to strive for a deeper understanding and to use our voices not just to speak, but to speak truth.
As you navigate through the noise, remember: your voice is your power, but it's your responsibility to ensure it’s powered by truth and understanding.
-
The phrase "knowledge is power" takes on a profound significance these days, as we observe an unsettling trend among students who, driven by the currents of popular opinion and social media, are engaging in "protests" fueled by misinformation and, disturbingly, anti-Semitism.
It is critical to step back and consider the true essence and responsibility that comes with this power.
True empowerment comes from the ability to think critically, to differentiate between opinion and fact, and to understand the historical and cultural contexts of the issues at hand.
Engaging with knowledge is about building a more informed, empathetic, and cohesive society. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to strive for a deeper understanding and to use our voices not just to speak, but to speak truth.
As you navigate through the noise, remember: your voice is your power, but it's your responsibility to ensure it’s powered by truth and understanding.
-
The phrase "knowledge is power" takes on a profound significance these days, as we observe an unsettling trend among students who, driven by the currents of popular opinion and social media, are engaging in "protests" fueled by misinformation and, disturbingly, anti-Semitism.
It is critical to step back and consider the true essence and responsibility that comes with this power.
True empowerment comes from the ability to think critically, to differentiate between opinion and fact, and to understand the historical and cultural contexts of the issues at hand.
Engaging with knowledge is about building a more informed, empathetic, and cohesive society. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to strive for a deeper understanding and to use our voices not just to speak, but to speak truth.
As you navigate through the noise, remember: your voice is your power, but it's your responsibility to ensure it’s powered by truth and understanding.
-
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1PXY7OKpLX/?igsh=MWw5cWdrejhwaGZqag== “While you have been shopping for the perfect gift, Israel has killed six children every hour.” Boycott the brands that are funding #genocide #boycottdior #boycottchanel #boycottloreal over 20,000 people in #gaza were killed this fall/winter season #educateyourself on #genocide #christmasiscancelled “You are invited to stop shopping while the bombs are dropping” #educateyourselfongenocide #showsolidaritywithpalastine #supportpalastine #stopthegenocide Dont be complicit in the #genocide of #gaza #mustwatch #watchthis
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https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1PXY7OKpLX/?igsh=MWw5cWdrejhwaGZqag== “While you have been shopping for the perfect gift, Israel has killed six children every hour.” Boycott the brands that are funding #genocide #boycottdior #boycottchanel #boycottloreal over 20,000 people in #gaza were killed this fall/winter season #educateyourself on #genocide #christmasiscancelled “You are invited to stop shopping while the bombs are dropping” #educateyourselfongenocide #showsolidaritywithpalastine #supportpalastine #stopthegenocide Dont be complicit in the #genocide of #gaza #mustwatch #watchthis
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https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1PXY7OKpLX/?igsh=MWw5cWdrejhwaGZqag== “While you have been shopping for the perfect gift, Israel has killed six children every hour.” Boycott the brands that are funding #genocide #boycottdior #boycottchanel #boycottloreal over 20,000 people in #gaza were killed this fall/winter season #educateyourself on #genocide #christmasiscancelled “You are invited to stop shopping while the bombs are dropping” #educateyourselfongenocide #showsolidaritywithpalastine #supportpalastine #stopthegenocide Dont be complicit in the #genocide of #gaza #mustwatch #watchthis
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https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1PXY7OKpLX/?igsh=MWw5cWdrejhwaGZqag== “While you have been shopping for the perfect gift, Israel has killed six children every hour.” Boycott the brands that are funding #genocide #boycottdior #boycottchanel #boycottloreal over 20,000 people in #gaza were killed this fall/winter season #educateyourself on #genocide #christmasiscancelled “You are invited to stop shopping while the bombs are dropping” #educateyourselfongenocide #showsolidaritywithpalastine #supportpalastine #stopthegenocide Dont be complicit in the #genocide of #gaza #mustwatch #watchthis
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https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1PXY7OKpLX/?igsh=MWw5cWdrejhwaGZqag== “While you have been shopping for the perfect gift, Israel has killed six children every hour.” Boycott the brands that are funding #genocide #boycottdior #boycottchanel #boycottloreal over 20,000 people in #gaza were killed this fall/winter season #educateyourself on #genocide #christmasiscancelled “You are invited to stop shopping while the bombs are dropping” #educateyourselfongenocide #showsolidaritywithpalastine #supportpalastine #stopthegenocide Dont be complicit in the #genocide of #gaza #mustwatch #watchthis
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@EllaTravelsLove RT by @badiucao: Send it to all your woke friends. #educateyourself https://nitter.hongkongers.net/EllaTravelsLove/status/1728682435993342176#m