Saturday Cosplay Pictures

Here are some cosplay pictures to enjoy and inspire for your weekend!

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Random Humor for your Friday

Random humor to bring in the end of the work week…

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2,100-year-old king’s mausoleum discovered in China

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Archaeologists in China have discovered a mausoleum, dating back over 2,100 years, that contains three main tombs, including the tomb of Liu Fei (shown at bottom), the ruler of the Jiangdu kingdom in China.Photo courtesy Chinese Archaeology

A 2,100-year-old mausoleum built for a king named Liu Fei has been discovered in modern-day Xuyi County in Jiangsu, China, archaeologists report.

Liu Fei died in 128 B.C. during the 26th year of his rule over a kingdom named Jiangdu, which was part of the Chinese empire.

Although the mausoleum had been plundered, archaeologists found that it still contained more than 10,000 artifacts, including treasures made of gold, silver, bronze, jade and lacquer. They also found severallife-size chariot and dozens of smaller chariots.

Excavated between 2009 and 2011, the mausoleum contains “three main tombs, 11 attendant tombs, two chariot-and-horse pits, two weaponry pits” and the remains of an enclosure wall that originally encompassed the complex, a team of Nanjing Museum archaeologists said in an article recently published in the journal Chinese Archaeology. The wall was originally about 1,608 feet long on each side. [See Photos of the Ancient Mausoleum and Artifacts]

The archaeologists said their work was a “rescue excavation,” as the site was threatened by quarrying.

Liu Fei’s tomb
A large earthen mound extending more than 492 feet once covered the king’s tomb, the archaeologists say. The tomb has two long shafts leading to a burial chamber that measured about 115 feet long by 85 feet wide.

When archaeologists entered the burial chamber they found that Liu Fei was provided with a vast assortment of goods for the afterlife.

Such goods would have been fitting for such a “luxurious” ruler. “Liu Fei admired daring and physical prowess. He built palaces and observation towers and invited to his court all the local heroes and strong men from everywhere around,” wrote ancient historian Sima Qian (145-86 B.C.), as translated by Burton Watson. “His way of life was marked by extreme arrogance and luxury.”

His burial chamber is divided into a series of corridors and small chambers. The chamber contained numerous weapons, including iron swords, spearheads, crossbow triggers, halberds (a two-handled pole weapon), knives and more than 20 chariot models (not life-size).

The archaeologists also found musical instruments, including chime bells, zither bridges (the zither is a stringed instrument) and jade tuning pegs decorated with a dragon design.

Liu Fei’s financial needs were not neglected, as the archaeologists also found an ancient “treasury” holding more than 100,000 banliang coins, which contain a square hole in the center and were created by the first emperor of China after the country was unified. After the first emperor died in 210 B.C., banliang coins eventually fell out of use. [Photos: Ancient Chinese Warriors Protect Secret Tomb of First Emperor]

In another section of the burial chamber archaeologists found “utilities such as goose-shaped lamps, five-branched lamps, deer-shaped lamps, lamps with a chimney or with a saucer .” They also found a silver basin containing the inscription of “the office of the Jiangdu Kingdom.”

The king was also provided with a kitchen and food for the afterlife. Archaeologists found an area in the burial chamber containing bronze cauldrons, tripods, steamers, wine vessels, cups and pitchers. They also found seashells, animal bones and fruit seeds. Several clay inscriptions found held the seal of the “culinary officer of the Jiangdu Kingdom.”

Sadly, the king’s coffins had been damaged and the body itself was gone. “Near the coffins many jade pieces and fragments, originally parts of the jade burial suit, were discovered. These pieces also indicate that the inner coffin, originally lacquered and inlaid with jade plaques, was exquisitely manufactured,” the team writes.

The adjacent tomb
A second tomb, which archaeologists call “M2,” was found adjacent to the king’s tomb. Although archaeologists don’t know who was buried there it would have been someone of high status.

“Although it was looted, archaeologists still discovered pottery vessels, lacquer wares, bronzes, gold and silver objects, and jades, about 200 sets altogether,” the team writes.

“The ‘jade coffin’ from M2 is the most significant discovery. Although the central chamber was looted, the structure of the jade coffin is still intact, which is the only undamaged jade coffin discovered in the history of Chinese archaeology,” writes the team.

More chariots and weapons
In addition to the chariot models and weapons found in the king’s tomb, the mausoleum also contains two chariot-and-horse pits and two weapons pits holding swords, halberds, crossbow triggers and shields. [In Photos: Early Bronze Age Chariot Burial]

In one chariot-and-horse pit the archaeologists found five life-size chariots, placed east to west. “The lacquer and wooden parts of the chariots were all exquisitely decorated and well preserved,” the team writes. Four of the chariots had bronze parts gilded with gold, while one chariot had bronze parts inlaid with gold and silver.

The second chariot pit contained about 50 model chariots. “Since a large quantity of iron ji (Chinese halberds) and iron swords were found, these were likely models of battle chariots,” the team writes.

Attendant tombs
A series of 11 attendant tombs were found to the north of the king’s tomb. By the second century B.C. human sacrifice had fallen out of use in China so the people buried in them probably were not killed when the king died.

Again, the archaeologists found rich burial goods. One tomb contained two gold belt hooks, one in the shape of a wild goose and the other a rabbit.

Another tomb contained artifacts engraved with the surname “Nao.” Ancient records indicate that Liu Fei had a consort named “Lady Nao,” whose beauty was so great that she would go on to be a consort for his son Liu Jian and then for another king named Liu Pengzu. Tomb inscriptions suggest the person buried in the tomb was related to her, the team says.

Kingdom’s end
During the second century B.C. China was one of the largest, and wealthiest, empires on Earth, however, the power of its emperor was not absolute. During this time a number of kings co-existed under the control of the emperor. These kings could amass great wealth and, at times, they rebelled against the emperor.

About seven years after Liu Fei’s death, the Chinese emperor seized control of Jiangdu Kingdom, because Liu Jian, who was Liu Fei’s son and successor, allegedly plotted against the emperor.

Ancient writers tried to justify the emperor’s actions, claiming that, in addition to rebellion, Liu Jian had committed numerous other crimes and engaged in bizarre behavior that included having a sexual orgy with 10 women in a tent above his father’s tomb.

The journal article was originally published, in Chinese, in the journal Kaogu, by archaeologists Li Zebin, Chen Gang and Sheng Zhihan. It was translated into English by Lai Guolong and published in the most recent edition of the journal Chinese Archaeology.

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Ice Bucket Challenge Humor

I appreciate people donating for ALS research and treatment no matter how.  As Eddard Stark would say, beware, ice bucket challenge memes are coming!

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The Firefly Named Serenity

If you do not know the terms “firefly”, “battle of serenity”, “browncoat”, or “fixin to do some misbehaving” then you have missed the best TV show that never finished it’s first season.  Watch Firefly on Netflix, then follow-up with “Serenity” the movie.  Fans are called “browncoats”.  Here is the layout of the ship for my fellow browncoats…

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What’s Your Poop Telling You? [infographic]

WARNING:  If discussing crap, poop, etc. offends you, skip this post…

July 19, 2014 |  by  |  Health

Although there have already been a few “look at your poop” infographics on this site before, it can never hurt to know more about your sh*%. Even though it’s a touchy subject, you have to get over it because as the popular book for children decrees, “Everybody Poops.” So if you can get past the initial awkwardness, you can find out a lot of information about your health simply by checking out your stool.

But before we get into that, just for those unfamiliar with American lingo, poop doesn’t always mean what you think it means. This video is a hilarious confusion of the word taken literally rather than figuratively. Poop sometimes means you’re tired. Don’t ask me why, but the words poop and pooper have become synonymous with being a tired or unmotivated individual somewhere in the last century.

Enough of the semantics, what pearls of wisdom can one gleam from examining your own stool? Well, first determine the texture. Is it watery? Hard? Fluffy? Sticky? Lumpy? Each of these conditions have a very specific indication of your diet/health. For example, if you are pooping nuggets that are nut-shaped, chances are that you’re lacking some much needed fiber and hydration. Other factors to consider are the hue and color of your stool.

So next time you are in the bathroom going no. 2, be sure to check your poopy! For your health!

Healthworks-Poop-Infographic

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New capsule hotel in Japan signals the end of uncomfortable airport bench naps

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Would you nap in a capsule?9h nine hours hotel

Nine Hours hotel, the Japanese pod hotel, is expanding into the airport market with the opening of a new location at Tokyo Narita Airport.

Suffer from a long layover no more. These cozy capsules are roomy enough for a great night’s sleep—but not much else.

The new Nine Hours was built in a garage close to the airport and is within easy walking distance to the airport’s Terminal 2, according to the Daily Mail. Aside from giving weary travelers with layovers a place to rest their head, the hotel positions itself as a great place to stay for people with an early flight to catch.

Like the Kyoto outpost, the new pod hotel has separate areas for men and women, with 71 chambers for men and 58 for women. Each futuristic looking “room” measures about three feet high and six and a half feet long, so it might not be big enough to accommodate the average NBA player.

The first “pod-style” hotels opened in Osaka in 1979, but this is the first to open within close proximity to an airport.

At $38 for a full nine hours—or about $15 rented hourly, this might be a pretty pricey nap but guests can also take advantage of the facility’s shower and common lounge to freshen up before a long flight.

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Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Cute dogs to cheer up the beginning of your week.

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Fisherman finds 1-in-30-million calico lobster, donates it to New Hampshire aquarium

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Ellen Goethel, a marine biologist and owner of the Oceanarium said calico lobsters are the “second most rare lobster” in the world, after albino lobsters.AP

A fisherman has caught a rare lobster that’s bright orange with dark blue spots.

Josiah Beringer found the calico lobster in one of his traps on July 23 in the mouth of New Hampshire’s Hampton Harbor. He donated the 1.5-pound, 5-year-old male lobster to the Explore the Ocean World Oceanarium in Hampton.

Beringer tells the Portsmouth Herald the lobster was found in an area known as Washerwoman Rock, an area between two rocks that gets its name from its “really rough” and “washing machine”-like waters.

The aquarium’s Ellen Goethel says calico lobsters are the second rarest in the world, after albino lobsters. She says the spots are the result of a genetic pigmentation mutation occurring in 1 in every 30 million to 50 million lobsters.

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Ebola – The Nightmare Grows

I don’t know why the mainstream media and memes are mocking concerns over Ebola.  The disease has spread to several West African countries, primarily in Liberia.  (Liberia is named after liberation and its Capitol of Monrovia after President Monroe.  It was formed by repatriation of American slaves.)  As of now, over 2,000 people are known to be infected, and over 1,300 have died.  Of that number, 170 dead are hospital workers, including the leading Ebola researcher.

There are now clinics and hospitals where Ebola patients lay on their beds but they are abandoned because all the nurses and doctors have died.  Can you imagine? It’s like the opening scene of The Walking Dead.  You wake up alone in a hospital of dead people with bodies strewn about.

Hemorrhagic fever is a rare RNA virus that causes blood vessels and organs to liquefy and you bleed out every orifice including eyes, nose, mouth, etc.  Ebola has a 60-90% mortality rate and it is no fun for those who survive and suffer damage from the virus.  Unfortunately, those with Ebola can go up to 21 days before showing symptoms.

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People keep saying, oh, you can only get it by touching body fluids.  If it is that hard to contract, how come all the medical specialists on Ebola are dead despite wearing protective gear?  Locals are refusing to burn the dead and everything they have contacted.  If you bury an Ebola victim, when the ground is wet or it rains, the virus will drift into the water strata, infecting wells and local water sources.  The feces, urine, sweat, coughing, clothing, items touched by victims, all have Ebola on them.

A non-symptomatic person can for three weeks touch others, contaminate everything they touch, use toilet facilities and spread the virus into the sewage system and water strata, etc.  Viruses are not removed in water purification systems as they are too small.  Now they are quarantining the most affected areas.  Experts expect that everyone within the quarantine areas will die.  As a result, military forces are setting up road blocks to shoot anyone trying to escape the area.

Two victims are being treated in the Emory University Hospital in Atlanta in the United States.  Rumors are that the husband of the nurse has already been quarantined for accidental contact with his wife.  In Spain, a Catholic Priest returned home, unaware he had been infected and died after arriving home.

The only cure for an outbreak of Ebola is quarantine and burning all exposed materials.  The treatment is simply trying to fight the symptoms of the disease.  There is an experimental RNA vaccine and treatment that uses human RNA grown in tobacco plants.  However, there is still no evidence this will work.  In fact, the top Ebola scientist died in Liberia despite taking the treatment.

So yes, be worried.  There are still people flying to and from this area who might be infected.  They are asking them questions, like, “have you been near someone infected?”  Knowing that to answer yes means being quarantined and near certain death in an area with no more health care providers alive will certainly induce most to lie to get the hell out of there.

Now, there is rioting in infected areas, where what little help they might receive is being destroyed.  (See Article below).  Please join me in praying for all those affected.  Also, join me in telling our leaders to stop allowing people to travel all over the world after being in outbreak areas.

 

Mob Destroys Ebola Center In Liberia Two Days After It Opens

Fear and denial of the deadly virus are pervasive in Liberia. The mob exponentially increased the risk in one of the country’s biggest Ebola hot spots. posted on Aug. 16, 2014, at 2:43 p.m.

Women beckon to the family of Makasha Kroma, who was waiting at the transit facility for confirmation she had Ebola. John Moore / Getty Images

MONROVIA, Liberia — This morning Makasha Kroma shivered with fever. Her head still hurt; that hadn’t gone away. And she was vomiting a lot.

That’s why she’d ended up here, at a holding center where people suspected to have Ebola wait, in a dark classroom, for the results of their tests. These things — headache, fever, vomiting — are the early signs.

Ebola is transmitted through bodily fluids. It has no treatment, besides hydration, no cure, no proven vaccine. Since February, it’s ravaged West Africa, infecting more than 2,000 people in four countries and killing more than 1,100.

Kroma came to the West Point holding center with her sister, her three children, a cousin named Bindu, and two other family members. They are all women, or girls — most caregivers in Liberia are — and they washed Kroma’s clothes, fed her rice, wiped down her body, and cleaned up her vomit with a rag and some chlorine.

Those are the kinds of chores that give you Ebola. And the girls had no gloves. All the gloves the Ministry of Health brought this place when it opened yesterday, all 150 of them, were gone by the middle of the night.

That’s when three people escaped. Because Sam Tarplah and his staff didn’t have any gloves, they couldn’t restrain the patients who wanted to flee. They could only plead.

“We begged them, told them people are coming tomorrow to help you,” Tarplah said. “But there was no way we could fight them.”

Two escaped by climbing the back wall, according to health care workers in a clinic next door. Another, a woman with five children, simply took off, Tarplah said.

Tarplah is a registered nurse who’s worked in health care in Liberia since 1989; he opened this holding center for the Ministry of Health on Thursday, and had eight patients. On Friday, before the escape, he had 29.

West Point is becoming a hot spot in a hot spot in the biggest Ebola outbreak in history. It’s an informal community, a “slum,” with no running water or toilets. People can live seven or more to a single dwelling, and the density is dangerous: A positive Ebola patient disappearing into the maze of metal shacks can be a public health horror story.

Today, things got even worse.

A man removes a child from the Ebola holding facility in West Point. John Moore / Getty Images

A mob descended on the center at around 5:30 p.m., chanting, “No Ebola in West Point! No Ebola in West Point!” They stormed the front gate and pushed into the holding center. They stole the few gloves someone had donated this morning, and the chlorine sprayers used to disinfect the bodies of those who die here, all the while hollering that Ebola is a hoax.

They ransacked the protective suits, the goggles, the masks. They destroyed part of Tarplah’s car as he was fleeing the crowd.

Jemimah Kargbo, a health care worker at a clinic next door, said they took mattresses and bedding, utensils and plastic chairs.

“Everybody left with their own thing,” she said. “What are they carrying to their homes? They are carrying their deaths.”

She said the police showed up but the crowd intimidated them.

“The police were there but they couldn’t contain them. They started threatening the police, so the police just looked at them,” she said.

And then mob left with all of the patients.

“They said, ‘The president says you have Ebola, but you don’t have Ebola, you have malaria. Get up and go out!’” Kargbo said.

“What’s going to happen when they come to our clinic? In two to five days?” Kargbo asked, referencing the early period when newly infected patients begin to show their first symptoms. “We’re going to turn them around” and send them to a different hospital, she said.

Kargbo said the staff at the clinic have no protective gear. They were already afraid about treating possible Ebola patients, and the riot means more infections as escaped sick patients infect their families, and as looters sleep on mattresses where the Ebola-infected have died.

“We can’t let them turn around and come back and infect us,” Kargbo said. “I have four sons. I am a single mother. I’m not going to let that happen to my children. I’m not going to let anybody infect me, to die of the disease and leave my children.”

Tolbert Nyenswah, the assistant minister of health, told BuzzFeed on Thursday they intend to quarantine all of West Point, a serious measure that would require meticulous planning and heavy security.

Nyenswah could not be reached for comment on today’s riot or its effect on the quarantine plan.

Bindu, the 22-year-old who had been quarantined in the center while caring for her dying cousin, told BuzzFeed this morning that the family wouldn’t leave before Kroma got her results. They wanted to follow the rules and stay as safe as possible.

But that didn’t mean they wanted to be stuck in there — no cell phone, no electricity, no visitors, surrounded by strangers vomiting and collapsing and dying on the floor in front of them.

“We just want to go home,” she said through a window.

Now nobody knows where she, or the dying Kroma, has gone.

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