Forwarded from Piazzale Loreto Reload
I hate copyright law and copyright lawyers so fucking much it's unreal. i do not possess the language to express my hate for these people. if I could reify such hate the universe would implode under its staggering mass, it would be enveloped into a ultra massive black holes, obliterating existence as we know it
Forwarded from r_Damnthatsinteresting
Forwarded from Syndiegram (Public Universal FiberSinthe (They/Them))
YouTube
The Man Who Exposed Amazon
The Gravel Institute is launching a new series to supplement our explainer videos: mini-documentaries on the struggles of workers in our stagnating, highly unequal economy. This video focuses on Chris Smalls, an Amazon warehouse employee who exposed their…
Forwarded from /r/latestagecapitalism
Forwarded from /r/latestagecapitalism
Forwarded from /r/latestagecapitalism
Forwarded from Daily Science to all
ScienceAlert - Latest
Humans Shaped Life on Earth For 12,000 Years, And It Wasn't All Doom And Destruction
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
Humans Shaped Life on Earth For 12,000 Years, And It Wasn't All Doom And Destruction
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
ScienceAlert
Humans Shaped Life on Earth For 12,000 Years, And It Wasn't All Doom And Destruction
There's a pervasive notion in our society that nature is something outside, over there, other, from what we are as humans.
Forwarded from SolarPunk
"Our study found a close correlation between areas of high biodiversity and areas long occupied by Indigenous and traditional peoples," said Max Planck Institute archeologist Nicole Boivin.
University of Maine anthropologist Darren Ranco noted that while indigenous people manage around 5 percent of the world's lands that currently contain 80 percent of the world's biodiversity, they have been excluded from management and access in protected areas like the US National Parks.
These findings make it clear that we need to empower Indigenous, traditional, and local peoples who know their lands in ways science is only just beginning to understand, explained Ellis.
University of Maine anthropologist Darren Ranco noted that while indigenous people manage around 5 percent of the world's lands that currently contain 80 percent of the world's biodiversity, they have been excluded from management and access in protected areas like the US National Parks.
These findings make it clear that we need to empower Indigenous, traditional, and local peoples who know their lands in ways science is only just beginning to understand, explained Ellis.