Jesus H
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 16:17 last edited by
I feel like doing one here with a modern twist:
“Let’s remember that, prior to NY Jews and Italians invaded, this was the land of the indigenous Florida Cracker…”
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 16:19 last edited by
Couple injuns too.
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 16:20 last edited by
Land Ack is probably the stupidest idea every. Every square inch of this planet has been conquered or seized at one time or another.
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 16:38 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 17:10 last edited by
I paid for it, it's my land now, lets celebrate and embrace that.
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:15 last edited by
I’m surprised that more indigenous people haven’t taken them up on the land acknowledgment and try to take back buildings.
“But you just said…”
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:23 last edited by
Oh, so we're just gonna draw an arbitrary line at when so-called "humans" encroached on native squirrel and deer lands? Fucking speciests.
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:35 last edited by
Real estate rules change over time.
If you want to see how real estate works now, just keep your eye on the president.
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:39 last edited by Renauda 2 May 2025, 18:49
I am very happy to acknowledge that the land on which my house stands, was once safeguarded under the great Laurentide ice sheet during the last Ice Age. I thank the Lauentide ice sheet for receding and giving the land up so that thousands of years later a family home could be built on the site.
There, that wasn’t so difficult..
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:42 last edited by
I have a presentation at a University, tomorrow. Should I start with a land acknowledgement?
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wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 18:43 last edited by
"I acknowledge this is land. (points to ground) And this is air! (points to sky) And this is your handsome speaker! (points to self)"
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I have a presentation at a University, tomorrow. Should I start with a land acknowledgement?
wrote on 5 Feb 2025, 20:50 last edited by@LuFins-Dad said in Jesus H:
I have a presentation at a University, tomorrow. Should I start with a land acknowledgement?
Yes.
Let us know how it goes. -
I am very happy to acknowledge that the land on which my house stands, was once safeguarded under the great Laurentide ice sheet during the last Ice Age. I thank the Lauentide ice sheet for receding and giving the land up so that thousands of years later a family home could be built on the site.
There, that wasn’t so difficult..
wrote on 6 Feb 2025, 00:15 last edited byI am very happy to acknowledge that the land on which my house stands, was once safeguarded under the great Laurentide ice sheet during the last Ice Age. I thank the Lauentide ice sheet for receding and giving the land up so that thousands of years later a family home could be built on the site.
There, that wasn’t so difficult..
So.. how does one make reparations to an ice sheet?
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I am very happy to acknowledge that the land on which my house stands, was once safeguarded under the great Laurentide ice sheet during the last Ice Age. I thank the Lauentide ice sheet for receding and giving the land up so that thousands of years later a family home could be built on the site.
There, that wasn’t so difficult..
So.. how does one make reparations to an ice sheet?
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wrote on 6 Feb 2025, 01:24 last edited by
I guess you'd have to round up all the water that used to be the ice, and re-freeze it. just make sure you sort out all the H2O molecules, you don't want to accidentally mix in never-frozen water with water that had the lived experience of being a glacier. They are not the same culturally and cannot coexist.
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wrote on 6 Feb 2025, 01:39 last edited by
Yes, I could see that. Sounds like some committee work with subsequent stakeholder group consultations and public communication strategy with clearly obfuscated and evolving targets is the way to go.
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I guess you'd have to round up all the water that used to be the ice, and re-freeze it. just make sure you sort out all the H2O molecules, you don't want to accidentally mix in never-frozen water with water that had the lived experience of being a glacier. They are not the same culturally and cannot coexist.
wrote on 6 Feb 2025, 02:24 last edited byThey are not the same culturally and cannot coexist.
All the dirty water will eventually leave on it's own.
And brand new water takes it's place every day.
According to NASA, approximately 1.35 trillion tons of water leave the atmosphere daily through precipitation, which is essentially the same amount that enters the atmosphere through evaporation, maintaining a balanced water cycle on Earth; meaning the amount leaving is roughly equal to the amount entering each day.
Key points about this:
Water cycle balance: The amount of water entering the atmosphere through evaporation is roughly equal to the amount leaving through precipitation, keeping the total water content in the atmosphere relatively constant.Small atmospheric water content: Although large amounts of water cycle through the atmosphere each day, the actual amount of water present in the air at any given time is a small fraction of Earth's total water supply.
Ocean dominance: Most of the evaporation and precipitation occurs over the oceans.