Szescstopni

@Szescstopni@circumstances.run
501 Followers
629 Following
14.7K Posts

Old white guy living in the #wetlands of #Polesia (#Polesie in Polish) in #EasternPoland. Surrounded by #bogs and #forests, trying not to fuck up surrounding nature too much.

Taking care of a small pack of #dogs (most of them rescue dogs) – #IdąPsięta.

#RuralBroadband provider by accident. Starting a small #LoRaWAN project to monitor our wetlands. Now also learning #Meshtastic. Coding, mostly in #Python. Luddite.

#Atheist. I don't *believe* in #science – science is our defence against belief.

I try to check facts before I toot.

Fuck nazis.

Dog and wetlands pictures on PixelFed https://pixel.pol.social/szescstopni
I sometimes toot in Polish – jebać nazistów.

Zdolny, ale leniwy.

Moved here from my first instance https://qoto.org/@szescstopni where I've been since November 2022.

I haven't deleted my Twitter, for good reasons, but I'm not using it anymore. https://twitter.com/szescstopni

net flicks and chill

was telling kid that birch is generally accepted as an European substitute for Japanese oak for bokutō swords, having similar softwood properties of denting without splintering and resisting breaking on impact etc. kid asked, what about Brazilian woods?

I said I don't know—lots of people made ipê swords but ipê is one of the "ironwoods", super hard, meaning it will shatter and will shatter badly, so it's in the same category as ebony, beautiful wooden swords that are for swinging alone but not for fighting. and I said if I wanted to look up good woods maybe I would check what were historical woods for tacapes/bordunas—heavy clubs used by various different indigenous peoples in the Amazon and Atlantic, many of them suspiciously sword-shaped.

turns out it's actually quite hard to find out reliable info on what premodern tacapes were made of (a common difficulty with indigenous things), but I found on Parellada 2017 that the Xetá from my home state used "alecrim" wood for weapons, which was surprising for me because I only know the word as the Portuguese for "rosemary" (from the Arabic, إِكْلِيل, more like "crown" or "garland"). thought I myself didn't know that, the word is also used for a couple different native trees, and I think Parellada means Holocalyx balansae aka alecrim-de-campinas, Guanari: ybyra-pepe. According to Remade it's a dense wood good for billiard clubs and tool handles, so it fits
https://www.remade.com.br/madeiras-exoticas/324/madeiras-brasileiras-e-exoticas/alecrim

(the Xetá/Héta are a Tupian folk that the farmer colonisers genocided all the way down to 8 survivors in the barbaric, remote historical past of the 1950s).

> At the Paraná Museum, the 9 bordunas, "aura haimbé", are oar-shaped in alecrim, with length varying between 78 to 135cm,, width 16 to 23cm, with the widest part hardened with hot coals. The wooden surface was polished with ipê bark, ash and water, giving it a rusty brown tint (Fernandes, 1959, 1961; Kozák et al., 1981). Kozák documented narratives, later illustrated, of these bordunas used for fighting. The handle could be used in daily life to grind jerivá fruit or pound meat meal...

other sources say that the oar shape—BDSM people would surely call this a paddle—is specific to the Xetá, and was used as a sort of multi-tool; you could dig roots with it, or hit against trees for percussion communication, etc.

The UK Environment Agency has some tips for the public to help conserve water, including

> Deleting old emails to reduce pressure on data centre servers

I kid you not.

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/england-faces-5-billion-litre-public-water-shortage-by-2055-without-urgent-action

England faces 5 billion litre public water shortage by 2055 without urgent action

England faces 5 billion litre a day shortfall for public water supplies by 2055 – and a further 1 billion litre a day deficit for wider economy.

GOV.UK

Reposting this because now I know her name.

FIFA let Trump walk off with their trophy. Every Republican in office let Trump walk off with their integrity. MAGAs let him walk off with their Medicaid, just a lot of them don't know it yet.

In a world full of cowards and sycophants, be a Rebecca Torres. 👏🏼

#ICE #California #resist #fascism #Trump

Bit o’ Átl'ka7tsem/Howe Sound eye candy.

#photography

How many parked (unused) domains do you own? I have an idea and want to know if my assumption is correct.

Boost generously, please.

None
1-5
6-10
Over 10
Poll ends at .
Prefixing my “go fuck yourself” response w/ “please” because there’s no need to be hostile in the work place.

well hello, I would really like to #getFediHired

I have 7 years of experience at Microsoft in cloud infrastructure, focusing on Kubernetes and devOps with additional experience around databases, front end, algorithm design.

I am a skilled technical communicator and used to working across teams and even across companies. I have experience teaching people new to or experienced with technical topics.

Documentation and maintenance are passions of mine, and I want to ensure that not only do shiny new systems get built, but that they are documented, maintained, and can be monitored.

I've done considerable work in LGBTQ+ and accessibility education and love to find the places where these topics shine a light on technology.

Please reach out with leads. I am happy to send my resume on request.

(US, remote work pls!)

#fediHire #fediHired

I have just read the following from a friend in Wales. Sue, a veteran of Greenham Common, is in her late 70s & in poor health; & yet has been subject to arrest & imposition of unreasonable bail conditions, while her partner was subject to a raid on their home by police at 3am.

Her crime? To protest peacefully in defence of the right to protest.

The United Kingdom & its constituent parts have become, under a Labour government, a police state.

#Starmer must go. #Cooper must go.

×

via Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16eDx3zoA2/

NPR - The year red-blooded patriotic American high-school jocks replaced migrant farm workers!

The year was 1965. On Cinco de Mayo, newspapers across the country reported that Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz wanted to recruit 20,000 high schoolers to replace the hundreds of thousands of Mexican agricultural workers who had labored in the United States under the so-called Bracero Program.

(1/15)

Started in World War II, the program was an agreement between the American and Mexican governments that brought Mexican men to pick harvests across the U.S. It ended in 1964, after years of accusations by civil rights activists like Cesar Chavez that migrants suffered wage theft and terrible working and living conditions.

(2/15)

But farmers complained — in words that echo today's headlines — that Mexican laborers did the jobs that Americans didn't want to do, and that the end of the Bracero Program meant that crops would rot in the fields.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz cited this labor shortage and a lack of summer jobs for high schoolers as reason enough for the program. But he didn't want just any band geek or nerd — he wanted jocks.

(3/15)

"They can do the work," Wirtz said at a press conference in Washington, D.C., announcing the creation of the project, called A-TEAM — Athletes in Temporary Employment as Agricultural Manpower. "They are entitled to a chance at it." Standing beside him to lend gravitas were future Baseball Hall of Famers Stan Musial and Warren Spahn and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown.

(4/15)

Over the ensuing weeks, the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture, and the President's Council on Physical Fitness bought ads on radio and in magazines to try to lure lettermen. "Farm Work Builds Men!" screamed one such promotion, which featured 1964 Heisman Trophy winner John Huarte.

Local newspapers across the country showcased their local A-TEAM with pride as they left for the summer.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(5/15)

Wirtz's scheme seemed to work at first: About 18,100 teenagers signed up to join the A-TEAM. One of them was 17 year old Randy Carter, a junior at the now-closed University of San Diego High School, an all-boys Catholic school in Southern California.

(6/15)

Students from across the country began showing up on farms in Texas and California at the beginning of June. Carter and his 24 classmates were assigned to pick cantaloupes near Blythe, a small town on the Colorado River in the middle of California's Colorado Desert.

(7/15)

He remembers the first day vividly. Work started before dawn, the better to avoid the unforgiving desert sun to come. "The wind is in your hair, and you don't think it's bad," Carter says. "Then you go out in the field, and the first ray of sun comes over the horizon. The first ray. Everyone looked at each other, and said, 'What did we do?' The thermometer went up like in a Bugs Bunny cartoon. By 9 a.m., it was 110 degrees."
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(8/15)

Garden gloves that the farmers gave the students to help them harvest lasted only four hours, because the cantaloupe's fine hairs made grabbing them feel like "picking up sandpaper." They got paid minimum wage — $1.40 an hour back then — plus 5 cents for every crate filled with about 30 to 36 fruits. Breakfast was "out of the Navy," Carter says — beans and eggs and bologna sandwiches that literally toasted in the heat, even in the shade.

(9/15)

The University High crew worked six days a week, with Sundays off, and they were not allowed to return home during their stint. The farmers sheltered them in "any kind of defunct housing," according to Carter — old Army barracks, rooms made from discarded wood, and even buildings used to intern Japanese-Americans during World War II.

(10/15)

Problems arose immediately for the A-TEAM nationwide. In California's Salinas Valley, 200 teenagers from New Mexico, Kansas and Wyoming quit after just two weeks on the job. "We worked three days and all of us are broke," the Associated Press quoted one teen as saying. Students elsewhere staged strikes. At the end, the A-TEAM was considered a giant failure and was never tried again.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(11/15)

Randy Carter is now in his 70s, a member of the Director's Guild of America who has notched some significant credits during his Hollywood career. Administrative assistant on The Conversation. Part of the casting department for Apocalypse Now. Longtime first assistant director on Seinfeld. Work on The Blues Brothers, The Godfather II and more.

(12/15)

He and his classmates still talk about their A-TEAM days at every class reunion. "We went through something that you can't explain to anyone, unless you were out there in that friggin' heat," he says. "It could only be lived."

But he says the experience also taught them empathy toward immigrant workers that Carter says the rest of the country should learn, especially during these times.

(13/15)

"There's nothing you can say to us that [migrant laborers] are rapists or they're lazy," he says. "We know the work they do. And they do it all their lives, not just one summer for a couple of months. And they raise their families on it. Anyone ever talks bad on them, I always think, 'Keep talking, buddy, because I know what the real deal is.' "
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Excerpted from NPR: The Salt
Archive August 23, 2018

(14/15)

"When The U.S. Government Tried To Replace Migrant Farmworkers With High Schoolers"
by Gustavo Arellano

Photo: San Diego high school students await a bus ride to Blythe, Calif., to go pick cantaloupes in the summer of 1965.

They were recruited as part of the A-TEAM, a government program to replace migrant farm workers with high school students.

Courtesy of the San Diego Union-Tribune (15/15)

@paninid

,,, ICE will never have the guts to come to WI-03: it's republican as hell, except for Eau Claire proper and maybe La Crosse.

All those Mexicans doing the scut work on those dairy farms: the farmers make sure they're fed and housed and the Mexican stores on London Street - it's hard work but those farmers are not assholes.

What we need - and do not have - is an "Ir y venir" == a come-and-go visa. Let them work, let them return to their homes - and come back.

@paninid

I'm glad that you posted this. I learned things. It is a helpful perspective. The truth is that farm workers are doing specialized labor and not being paid for it in addition to being judged as unskilled.

But I worry that we are all focusing on the idea that this is a plan that won't work

Because it also sounds like a way to kill a lot of people who already have problems that make working full time a challenge.

And the thing is, sure a bunch of other ppl might die because suddenly the system falls apart and there are food shortages. But fascists don't care about that.

@paninid

“even buildings used to intern Japanese-Americans during World War II” !!!

Oh, the horrors!!!

/s

@paninid Picking melons. In a desert. Can this be real? Well, yes, it (apparently still) is.

What a hell-made landscape. Field boundaries on a north-south, east-west grid. No sympathy for the land, no compromise with it, just rape.

Via https://www.google.com/maps/place/Blythe,+CA,+USA/@33.6028946,-114.5884659,3518m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x80d121436bd112e7:0x2c6ac2ec5ab225ae!8m2!3d33.6177725!4d-114.5882607!16zL20vMHIzZl8?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI1MDcwOS4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D

Bevor Sie zu Google Maps weitergehen

@paninid The image depicts the interior of a bus filled with passengers. The bus has rows of seats with luggage racks above. The passengers are seated, with some wearing hats, including a cowboy hat. The bus appears to be from an earlier time period, suggested by the style of clothing and the black and white photograph. The passengers are dressed in casual attire, with some wearing short-sleeved shirts and hats. The bus is crowded, with passengers seated closely together. The luggage racks are filled with various items, indicating a long journey. The overall atmosphere is one of travel and movement.

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energy used: 0.135 Wh

@paninid This is a fascinating slice of #history that I had never come across until today. Thank you for sharing this!
@paninid
I’m all for this for our MAGA friends.
MAGA-TEAM — Asshats in Temporary Employment as Agricultural Manpower

@paninid

Thank you for sharing this.
I believe I found the original source of the material. It's a little longer and goes into some additional details. I think more people should know about this!

When The U.S. Government Tried To Replace Migrant Farmworkers With High Schoolers
https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/07/31/634442195/when-the-u-s-government-tried-to-replace-migrant-farmworkers-with-high-schoolers

@paninid An excellent thread. No one but immigrant workers will do those backbreaking tasks.
@paninid that would ruin their form for months.
@paninid didn't work so well did it