Caitlin Fox
Wellllll, I did just have "shut up" as my previous bio, and while that pretty much sums it up, I will go into a bit more detail now, I suppose. So here it goes: I'm 21, I laugh a lot and like to have conversations about a wide variety of things. Better? Eh?
8Qovs.png (PNG Image, 600 × 7330 pixels) PhysOrg.com - Science News, Technology, Physics, Nanotechnology, Space Science, Earth Science, Medicine. National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee. An art and design blog. Alchemy Electronic Dictionary: Find Out the Meaning of Arcane Words and Ciphers Instantly! To find out the meaning of a word, select the beginning letter: Or select the symbol for which you would like to see a definition: For Alchemy Lab website assistance, click ablution.
Generation Z. Terminology[edit] USA Today sponsored an online contest for readers to choose the name of the next generation after the Millennials.
In the article, Bruce Horovitz wrote that some might call the term "Generation Z" rather "off-putting" and a name that is "still in-the-running" for the next generation. Generation Y. Terminology[edit] Authors William Strauss and Neil Howe wrote about the Millennials in Generations: The History of America's Future, 1584 to 2069,[2] and they released an entire book devoted to them, titled Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation.[3] Strauss and Howe are "widely credited with naming the Millennials" according to journalist Bruce Horovitz.[1] In 1987, they coined the term "around the time 1982-born children were entering preschool and the media were first identifying their prospective link to the millennial year 2000".[4] Strauss and Howe use 1982 as the Millennials' starting birth year and 2004 as the last birth year.[5] Newsweek used the term Generation 9/11 to refer to young people who were between the ages of 10 and 20 years on 11 September 2001.
A DIY site for projects of protest and creative dissent. Share what you know... The Other 98% - Politics for the rest of us. SmartMeme : Index. Beautiful Trouble: A toolbox for revolution. The College of Tactical Culture. The College of Tactical Culture The College of Tactical Culture was a think tank on creative activism led by Stephen Duncombe and Steve Lambert at the Eyebeam Art and Technology Center in the Summer of 2009 .
CTC participants traded experiences in order to inform practices, build relationships, and create space for new projects and collaborations. Out of these meetings came the CTC Clinic and the School for Creative Activism. How can we measure the impact of our work? What lessons can we learn from popular culture? Yes Lab Projects. Center for Artistic Activism. The Yes Men. Environmental News and Information. STRANDBEEST. Pottermore: a unique online Harry Potter experience from J.K. Rowling.
God? Art. Political whatsis. Shopping. Pertaining to lesbians. Games. Blogs. Music. Food. Brain.