Perfect
(NDT Facebook)
Shortly after he finished filming on the opulent set of Baz Luhrmann’s ‘The Great Gatsby,’ Joel headed off to the Jordanian desert to begin training for 'Zero Dark Thirty.' With a heavy dose of mock horror, he said that it was quite a shock to his delicate system:
“An experience like ‘Gatsby’ really spoils you because you are treated like a king. You’re given a big trailer, someone brings fresh flowers to your trailer, there are dates and walnuts and coconut water in your fridge … really living large.“
Then, when he suddenly found himself roughing it in the torrid desert, “sharing a cubicle with five other guys, half of them military, and carrying 50-60 kilos of equipment … It was like, 'Baz! Come and save me!’ You get a reality check."
Opinion is really the lowest form of human knowledge. It requires no accountability, no understanding. The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another’s world. It requires profound purpose larger than the self kind of understanding.
Plato, The Republic (via fyp-philosophy)
Interesting
Do you know anyone prone to pleonasm?
Read the full definition here: http://www.dictionary.com/wordoftheday/2016/11/16?param=social
Method of teaching.. method of communication
“I came to America when I was six years old. Mom said she brought us here so that we’d have opportunities in life. She said that back in the Bahamas, it’s only the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots.’ She wanted us to have more choices. But I don’t think she fully understood how things work here. She was a news reporter back in the Bahamas. But the only job she could get here was taking care of oldpeople. My dad could only work construction. We moved to four different states just so they could find work. They always told me, ‘Just study hard in school and everything will work out fine.’ So that was my plan. I got all A’s up until the 11th grade– except for one B in math. My goal was to get top twenty in my class, then go to college, then get a degree, and then get a job. I realized the truth my senior year. My guidance counselor told me I couldn’t get a loan. I couldn’t get financial aid. Even if I could find a way to pay for school, I probably couldn’t get a job. I felt so mad at everyone. There were some kids who completely slacked off in school, but even they were going to college. I started having panic attacks. My dad told me not to worry. He called me a ‘doubting Peter.’ He invited all his friends over to a fish fry to help raise money. And he did get $3,000. But that wasn’t enough. So I searched really hard on the Internet and found the Dream.us scholarship. My mom was so excited when I got it. They’re paying for me to go to Queens College. Now my mom’s really scared again because DACA got revoked. She’s crying all the time at work. I try to tell her that no matter what happens, we’re not going to die. We just might have to start over.”
Being the only audience member at a panel, the grad student pities everyone in the room.
Kootenai Falls, Montana by Liang Ge
“I want to empower women through dance. I think you can build confidence through movement. When a woman starts moving her body, and becomes comfortable with herself, and realizes that she can do the steps — it connects back to life. Because all of life is movement. Technically we’re dancing every day. And it doesn’t matter how you look. It matters how you move.”