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mintally divastated

@fabledquill / fabledquill.tumblr.com

sensitive soul

"The sleeping giant of the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has stirred.

In the past month, an avalanche of anti-pollution rules, targeting everything from toxic drinking water to planet-heating gases in the atmosphere, have been issued by the agency. Belatedly, the sizable weight of the US federal government is being thrown at longstanding environmental crises, including the climate emergency.

On Thursday [May 18, 2023], the EPA’s month of frenzied activity was crowned by the toughest ever limits upon carbon pollution from America’s power sector, with large, existing coal and gas plants told they must slash their emissions by 90% or face being shut down.

The measure will, the EPA says, wipe out more than 600m tons of carbon emissions over the next two decades, about double what the entire UK emits each year. But even this wasn’t the biggest pollution reduction announced in recent weeks.

In April, new emissions standards for cars and trucks will eliminate an expected 9bn tons of CO2 by the mid-point of the century, while separate rules issued late last year aim to slash hydrofluorocarbons, planet-heating gases used widely in refrigeration and air conditioning, by 4.6bn tons in the same timeframe. Methane, another highly potent greenhouse gas, will be curtailed by 810m tons over the next decade in another EPA edict.

In just a few short months the EPA, diminished and demoralized under Donald Trump, has flexed its regulatory muscles to the extent that 15bn tons of greenhouse gases – equivalent to about three times the US’s carbon pollution, or nearly half of the entire world’s annual fossil fuel emissions – are set to be prevented, transforming the power basis of Americans’ cars and homes in the process...

If last year’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), with its $370bn in clean energy subsidies and enticements for electric car buyers, was the carrot to reducing emissions, the EPA now appears to be bringing a hefty stick.

The IRA should help reduce US emissions by about 40% this decade but the cut needs to be deeper, up to half of 2005 levels, to give the world a chance of avoiding catastrophic heatwaves, wildfires, drought and other climate calamities. The new rules suddenly put America, after years of delay and political rancor, tantalizingly within reach of this...

“It’s clear we’ve reached a pivotal point in human history and it’s on all of us to act right now to protect our future,” said Michael Regan, the administrator of the EPA, in a speech last week at the University of Maryland. The venue was chosen in a nod to the young, climate-concerned voters Joe Biden hopes to court in next year’s presidential election, and who have been dismayed by Biden’s acquiescence to large-scale oil and gas drilling.

“Folks, this is our future we are talking about, and we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity for real climate action,” [Michael Regan, the administrator of the EPA], added. “Failure is not an option, indifference is not an option, inaction is not an option.” ...

It’s not just climate the EPA has acted upon in recent months. There are new standards for chemical plants, such as those that blight the so-called "Cancer Alley" the US, from emitting cancer-causing toxins such as benzene, ethylene oxide and vinyl chloride. New rules curbing mercury, arsenic and lead from industrial facilities have been released, as have tighter limits on emissions of soot and the first ever regulations targeting the presence of per- and polyfluoroalkylsubstances (or PFAS) in drinking water.” ...

For those inside the agency, the breakneck pace has been enervating. “It’s definitely a race against time,” said one senior EPA official, who asked not to be named. “The clock is ticking. It is a sprint through a marathon and it is exhausting.” ...

“We know the work to confront the climate crisis doesn’t stop at strong carbon pollution standards,” said Ben Jealous, the executive director of the Sierra Club.

“The continued use or expansion of fossil power plants is incompatible with a livable future. Simply put, we must not merely limit the use of fossil fuel electricity – we must end it entirely.”"

-via The Guardian (US), 5/16/23

i wanna go on a rant about centaurs but idk if im up for drawing the illustrations this rant needs

i’m just gonna use photos.

HERE’S MY BIGGEST ISSUE WITH CENTAURS THAT I SEE DONE MOST FREQUENTLY: THE HORSE PART IS TOO BIG.

‘but roach, horses are big. if you have a human-sized human half and horse-size horse half of course it’s going to be an awkward mis-match.’

no! the thing is that gigantasaurus horses are a really recent, modern, rich bitch status symbol kind of horse and have warped the popular conception of how big a horse is, or should be. like, look at this horse:

a friesian horse. this is the SUV of horses. it’s a huge, intimidating status symbol that consumes so many resources it’s not actually very good at sports or utility or even being a vehicle. it mostly does dressage, which is kind of like horse dancing. this is not a normal size of horse.

this is a clydesdale. it’s a carthorse. it was built to pull extremely heavy wagons in a straight line and, importantly, to look like hot shit while doing so. it is also not a normal size of horse.

this is a belgian draft horse. it also pulls heavy loads, traditionally plows, stumps, rocks, timber, and as such it’s disconcertingly buff. that huge neck and massive shoulders give it enough strength to haul the shit out of anything you can wrap a chain around, but again, it is nowhere near a normal horse.

this is a mustang, a horse designed to be ridden for significant periods of time and over significant amounts of land, for herding cows, for not being too fussy, delicate, or high maintenance. note how much smaller it is than the purpose-built superhorses up there.

and this….

this is a Przewalski’s horse, a mongolian wild horse. i don’t think they’re the exact ancestor of domestic horses, but they’re pretty darn close. mongolian domesticated horses are still built very similarly, and they’re about the size of a bike.

for most of history, horses have been about this big. the romans rode horses this size. mongolian nomads ride horses this size–the mongolian derby is the longest in the world.  they can basically carry their own body weight for hours at a time, and a team of them can pull thousands of pounds of gear. a horse this size might look like a dinky toy compared to carthorses, drafthorses, dressage horses, even american trail horses. but it’s actually a standard and extremely functional size for a horse.

and if you want to draw a centaur that doesn’t look like a toothpick stuck into a log, it’s the size of horse you should be looking at.

THANK YOU, YES

My book The Highwayman, a graphic adaptation of Alfred Noyes’ poem, has finally arrived! 

A generalized paper shortaged caused an unfortunate delay as it took over a month for new stock to be delived to the printing company. However it was worth the wait though because this paper has a pleasant natural texture and a warm slightly creamy colour which makes the illustrations look as if they were drawn directly on it, rather than printed (The photos don’t show this as much as I’d like)!

I’m in the process of preparing all the orders! I’ve also started working on the signed copies (as seen above with the horse on the right page) and I realize there are few things more daunting than drawing on a book knowing you can’t just scrap and restart.

While I intend to furnish it more in the future with art prints and other work, know that if you missed out on the campaign, you can purchase one of the copies left on my recently opened online shop!

btw I am little by little changing my blog appearance and may eventually change the name bc I just got a teaching job! ✌️ so dw it's still me, and if we're mutuals but not connected anywhere else, hmu for other spots to find me :)) I just want to keep this my little shitposting sanctuary

This is a completely unoriginal observation, but Turlough is possibly the weirdest companion ever in terms of vibes. Like, he’s out here having uncomfortable sexual tension with everyone, regardless of gender, he’s incredibly fatalistic and sarcastic, he’s so incredibly incompetent at assassinating the Doctor despite being trained as a soldier on Trion…like, he’s so weird, he’s not anywhere near my favorite companion, but he lives rent-free in my head because he makes no sense but also all of the sense at the same time

just seen someone criticize the divine comedy by saying that it's not relatable which is of course incommensurably stupid because relatability should never be the only criterion through which one can judge the validity and quality of a piece of work &c but also. just because you tedious unimaginative losers have never been on a journey to hell and purgatory with your long dead favorite writer doesn't mean others haven't. happened to me

WHO PUT THIS IN THE TAGS

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by the way, if anybody following me is interested in cosplay, making prop replicas, sewing their own clothes etc then you should definitely check out this Humble Bundle of how-to-cosplay books

it has basically everything a cosplayer (or somebody adjacent to costuming) might want, and then some -- i'm talking sewing, fitting, making foam armours, wig styling, smocking, tailoring, etc etc etc there's seriously loads of different books, and it's at a pay-what-you-want rate, PLUS it helps to support myself & charity (you can even choose where your money goes)

the bundle is only on sale until the 18th of May 2023 so get it while you can & signal boost so other cosplayers & costumers can see!!!

“In The Wee Free Men, the village has a tradition of burying a shepherd with a piece of wool on his shroud, so that the recording angel will excuse him all those times during lambing when he failed to attend church — because a good shepherd should know that the sheep come first. I didn’t make that up. They used to do that in a village two miles from where I live. What I particularly liked about it was the implicit loyalist arrangement with God. Americans, I think, sometimes get puzzled by people in Ireland who call themselves loyalists yet would apparently up arms against the forces of the crown. But a loyalist arrangement is a dynamic accord. It doesn’t mean we will be blindly loyal to you. It means we will be loyal to you if you are loyal to us. If you act the way we think a king should act, you can be our king. And it seemed to me that these humble people of the village, putting their little piece of wool on the shroud, were saying, “If you are the God we think you are, you will understand. And if you are not the God we think you are, to Hell with you.” So much of Discworld has come from odd serendipitous discoveries like that.”

—  - Terry Pratchett, “Straight from the Heart, via the Groin,” A Slip of the Keyboard (via thelonelyskeptic)

vegans would rather wear plastic head to toe than benefit from symbiotic relationships we've had with animals for thousands of years

Time for my worst veganism take: plastic is made of dinosaurs and is therefore an animal product