avengemymischief:

That awkward moment when two master assassins resort to hair pulling and biting

(Source: humanbeing001972978, via bethrwar)

futurescope:

Scientists to build $1 billion smart city where no one will live

The coolest town of all time is about to be built, and no one will live in it. A scientific ghost town that cost a billion dollars will soon be built in New Mexico as a testing ground for futuristic technologies. It won’t only look futuristic like this accidental ghost town, it actually will be.
The city, which will be built in Lea County, will test everything from intelligent traffic systems to next-generation wireless networks. A rendering of it is above.
Something about the idea of a city with self-driving cars going from place to place sans passengers is inherently creepy but also incredibly cool.
The Center for Innovation, Testing and Evaluation project will be about 15 square miles and is considered the first of its kind.
June 30 is the set date to begin building this incredibly frustrating city that feels like the biggest prank of all time. There’s no telling if people will be able to move in late, but here’s to hoping.

[via] [read more @foxnews] [CITE City] [Image Credit: CITE]

futurescope:

Scientists to build $1 billion smart city where no one will live

The coolest town of all time is about to be built, and no one will live in it. A scientific ghost town that cost a billion dollars will soon be built in New Mexico as a testing ground for futuristic technologies. It won’t only look futuristic like this accidental ghost town, it actually will be.

The city, which will be built in Lea County, will test everything from intelligent traffic systems to next-generation wireless networks. A rendering of it is above.

Something about the idea of a city with self-driving cars going from place to place sans passengers is inherently creepy but also incredibly cool.

The Center for Innovation, Testing and Evaluation project will be about 15 square miles and is considered the first of its kind.

June 30 is the set date to begin building this incredibly frustrating city that feels like the biggest prank of all time. There’s no telling if people will be able to move in late, but here’s to hoping.

[via] [read more @foxnews] [CITE City] [Image Credit: CITE]

iraffiruse:

frozach submitted

iraffiruse:

frozach submitted

(via etheread)

septagonstudios:

Ken Garduno

septagonstudios:

Ken Garduno

cabbagingcove:

Today in History - May 14

Ticrapo, Huancavelica Region, Peru, 1939

On May 14, 1939, a girl named Lina Medina became the youngest recorded mother in history, at 5 years, 7 months, and 17 days of age.

Originally thought to have a massive abdominal tumor that was growing at an alarming rate, Lina’s parents took her to the nearest hospital, where she was diagnosed as being seven months pregnant. The doctor who diagnosed her, Dr. Gerardo Lozada, took her to Lima, Peru, to a larger hospital, in order to have his diagnosis confirmed and to have Lina’s condition monitored.

One-and-a-half months later, a caesarean-section was performed on the small girl, and her son Gerardo Medina was born. He was named after the doctor who delivered him, and who mentored and provided medical care to both Lina and the boy, after the birth and through their young adulthood. Until he was 10-years-old, Gerardo was raised to believe that his mom was really his sister, but after incessant teasing at school one year, the doctor and Lina told him the truth. By most accounts, he was a normal child, and fairly bright. He died at age 40, of an unrelated bone cancer.

How did this happen?

Well, precocious puberty isn’t all that uncommon, but extreme precocious puberty is. Some children with extreme precocious puberty reach menarche (first menstruation) at nine months or younger, and if this condition is allowed to continue, the body develops to the point where a full-term pregnancy is completely possible. Today, hormone-suppressing drugs are available, and many of the complications of precocious puberty (both psychological and physical) are avoided, but the early versions of these medications were both dangerous and not terribly effective.

Lina had begun menstruating at eight-months-old, and began developing breast tissue at four-years-old. Though her hips had begun widening significantly beyond where they should be for a child her age, they were obviously nowhere near large enough to deliver a baby at just five-years-old.

Of course, this still leads to the question of who would impregnate a five-year-old. Her father was initially arrested on suspicion of incest and rape, but the charges were dropped due to a lack of evidence. Other possibilities included her mentally-deficient older brother, an uncle, or one of the village men, during an Andean fertility festival. Lina herself never gave a clear answer to who impregnated her, and it’s completely possible that she herself doesn’t know.

Lina Today

Lina Medina had a second son in 1972, almost 33 years after her first. She is still alive today, in a poor section of Lima, Peru, and lives with her husband Raul Jurado. Despite living in relative poverty, she refuses media and publicity as much as possible, and prefers her privacy over fiscal gain.

Read More about Lina Medina:

LINA MEDINA, MADRE A LOS CINCO AÑOS

Youngest Mother @ DamnInteresting

Youngest Mother? by Snopes

Time Magazine: Little Mother [similar case]

Calcutta Telegraph

All images from listed sources.

(via biomedicalephemera)

unwrittengirlspeaksout:

It’s too cute

unwrittengirlspeaksout:

It’s too cute

(Source: fearl3sss, via utterlyterrified)

Study shows that Negative Words Shut Down Higher Level Mental Processes.

anticapitalist:

The brain can unconsciously ‘decide’ to suppress negative information to minimize anxiety or mental discomfort, according to a new study.

Just as psychologists have previously discovered that people who are bilingual and subconsciously access their first language when they are reading in their second language, the latest findings suggest that the brain unconsciously shuts down the same access to a bilingual person’s native language when it encounters a negative word such as war, discomfort, inconvenience and unfortunate.

UK researcher who conducted the study, published Wednesday in the Journal of Neuroscience, believe that a specific unconscious brain reaction that blocks negative language inputs from reaching the part of the brain where primal reactions interact with higher mental processes by shutting down access to certain forms of knowledge. 

Experts say that people exhibit greater reaction to emotional words and phrases in their first language, explaining why some bilingual parents choose to speak to their children in their native tongue despite being fluent in the language of the country where they reside. 

Researchers also point out that anger, swearing or discussing intimate feelings has more power in a speaker’s native language, and emotional information processing is less powerful in the second language compared to the first language.

tl;dr Being mean to people makes you stupider. 

(via mindbabies)

2 weeks ago - 447