Avatar of POOHEAD189

Status

Recent Statuses

11 days ago
Current This week I am both moving, and am somewhat sick, so there shall be delays on posts. Apologies!
4 likes
23 days ago
Making out for a few minutes solves many problems
4 likes
24 days ago
Finally home and will post for my partners asap!
1 like
25 days ago
I started ATLA late, around Covid. But I love the first series and think TLoK is pretty good despite some problems
4 likes
26 days ago
I never notice someone's post count until I see (ignore post count) and then I totally look at it, out of habit and curiosity.
8 likes

Bio






About Me








Name: Ben
Username: The one and only. Dare I say?
Age: 33
Ethnicity: Mixed
Sex: Male
Religion: Christian (Nondenominational)
Languages: English, Japanese (Semi-fluent & learning), I also know some Scots Gaelic, Quenyan (Elvish), and Miccosukee (My tribal tongue)
Relationship Status: Single (Though generally unavailable unless I find I really enjoy someone).






Current Projects/Freelance work

  • I am a voice talent and script writer for Faerun History
  • I have a much smaller personal Youtube channel that I use to make videos on various subjects. Only been making videos for 2 years, but it's growing!
  • I'm the host of a Science Fiction & Fantasy Podcast where I interview authors of the genre.




Interests (Includes but is not limited to)

  • Writing/Reading (Love writing and I own too many books)
  • Video Games (Been a gamer for close to 23 years now)
  • Working Out/Martial Arts (Wing Chun/Oyama Karate mostly. Some historical swordplay as well.)
  • History (Military History is my specialty)
  • Zoology
  • Art (Mostly Illustrations. Used to be good. Am picking it back up)
  • Voice Acting/Singing
  • Tabletop Gaming (Started late in the game. Been at it for 3 years. I was the kid who bought the monster manuals and D&D books just for the lore for the longest time. I've played 3.5e, 5e, Star Wars D20, Edge of the Empire, PF, and PF2.)
  • Weaponry of all kinds
  • Anime (mostly action/shonen. DBZ & YYH being my favorites)
  • Movies (Action/War/Drama films being my go-to)
  • Music (Rock of all kinds, as well as historical folk songs, sea shanties, pub songs, a bit of classical music, etc)
  • Guitar (am learning to play, but being left handed makes it challenging)
  • There's more but if you care enough you can PM me :P




Roleplay F.A.Q.

  • Fantasy, Sci Fi, and Historical are my genres. Fantasy being my favorite and Sci Fi/Historical being close seconds.
  • Advanced / Nation / 1x1 / Casual (only in certain circumstances)
  • I generally write at the 'Advanced Level' meaning 4+ Paragraphs with good grammar.
  • I am usually busy with many projects and RPs, but if you wish to do a 1x1 with me, you'll need to present your case. Those I already do it with have my trust as a Roleplayer.
  • I love many, many fictional universes so me trying to list them all is an effort in futility!






Me

Most Recent Posts

"Tremendous." Neil replied in an extravagant and ostentatious accent. He almost felt like he was in one of the holodisks he sometimes viewed back before he joined the crew when he actually had free time. Ancient humans of the 'Victorian' kingdom dealing with savages at the edge of the known world. Well, at least when he appeared before the tribesman, they only gawked at him a bit before he was sure they were not going to stick him like a pig.

Once Taya stumbled out of the ship with a bag, a few of the tribesmen turned around, spears leveled. She squeaked and nearly dropped the sack. Neil was nimble enough to catch the drooping bag and help her yank it level again. "Nothing to see here. No firewater here." He said, hand in the air to halt anyone coming closer.

"Thank you," she whispered, nervously glancing about. "Do things like this always happen with you two?"

Neil placed his hands in his pockets, giving the fierce spears and wild eyed stares from the locals a cursory look. "...I'm noticing a pattern."

With a wave of the lead one's spear, the small band of hunter gathers and the three Highlander crew members made their way deeper into the temporal forest, soon looking a bit more like a subtropical or even tropical jungle as they moved. Mostly the tribespeople seemed to look outwards, as if expecting some sort of attack. Neil was hoping that they just felt awkward looking at the crew and decided to look elsewhere. Not that he wasn't against excitement, but he had just gotten out of a lot of hairy situations. Oddly enough, the alien mark on his palm from his and Junebug's first mission was itching a bit.

Within the hour, the treeline thinned, and though the area before them was still forested with copses of trees and brush, there were islands of stone and wood that rose out of the ground between them. Primitive ziggurats with oddly alien pictographs chiseled at their sides dominated the low river valley they now found themselves entering. A stout stream flowed across a Grand plaza, filled with trees with surprisingly spaced out and neatly swiped dirt travel paths. On second inspection, the stone and wood ziggurats did not go high in the air. Maybe three stories, and soon they found smaller huts. But it was impressive nonetheless. They sometimes crossed under small roadways of vine bridges above them, and disturbingly, there were times when corpses hung by their impaled wrists and naval cavities swayed lightly below some trees, being picked at by the local birds.

It was past the Plaza and over the river on one of the vine bridges when they made it to what looked like a meeting hut. It was circular and made of wood, and upfront there was a guardsmen who seemed to give a disapproving look to the leading tribesmember, before fingers were pointed at Junebug and the others. Immediately they were allowed inside, where they found a few slaughtered beasts strung up, some still bleeding. There was a firepit in the center.

It took Neil just until this moment to think of it. Yes, the settlement of city they had just walked through was not impressive by his standards, but it was impressive for these people. Yet, it looked nearly deserted. He had seen only a few dozen other villagers since they had come here, other than the close to two dozen who led them. He wasn't good with demographics, but he expected there to be thousand or two people here, not a few hundred.

What happened here?
@Penny

I got the flu atm but once I can concentrate you will be judged.
<Snipped quote by POOHEAD189>

I remember when that happened. BBC was following that herd for one of their Planet Earth series, don't remember which variant (or if it made the cut, I mean, that's sad shit).

It's absolute horseshit to link that to climate change. Genetic diversity in a global population of 600k is very homogenized (am I using that word right? It's an inbred species). They're vulnerable to pathogens and they caught one. Shit happens. To their credit, the real actual scientists who were on the scene said as much at the time. Apparently, now, someone's throwing that whole mass-death onto the altar of climate change, and the people who are pulling that BS are the reason why I'm skeptical of every climate-change headline ever. Because they're lying.


That is literally not what the article says, and the article does not have a political agenda I do not believe. It was a harmless bacteria that is common to the animal, and the humidity caused the bacteria that is usually in their respiratory tract to get into their bloodstream where it did not belong.

And while I did not get a degree in zoology, I wanted to and was going to if my university had such a degree, but it's been a fancy of mine since I was a wee lad and I can safely say that plenty of species have come back from the brink of a thousand animals and did not have any debilitating inbreeding, such as the American Bison. It only caused some small problems and was mostly a worry. But there are many well known animals on earth that have a population of 10-20,000 and inbreeding is not an immediate threat. 600,000 is quite a large number for a megafauna.

Edit: Though a quick search does show me that the Saiga are noted to not have a lot of genetic diversity due to a population bottleneck in the Pliestocene, which kinda leads me to believe that maybe it is a factor of both.
@SleepingSilence I do believe this will be circular, because you posted something from Breitbart.

First off, science is not opinion. It is tested. Yes, science evolves. But it is based on understanding, trial and error, and controlled experiments. You have to admit that there is something to this climate change thing, when literally the entire fucking world entered the Paris Agreement except Trump. I don't even say 'the U.S.' because many people here are still disagreeing with him. But you need to admit that beyond any opinion or political affiliation, if the entire planet except a certain political party agreed that CO2 emissions are dangerous, there needs to be something to that.

Let's just talk science for a moment. In 2016, September I believe, we reached a CO2 level of 400 parts per million. Usually that is supposed to be the high in the summer. Usually it lowers in autumn to about 380 or 390 PPM (not to mention it was 180 PPM in the Industrial revolution) because the cooling climate with the trees and plants not having wilted yet, absorbs a lot of the carbon dioxide in the air.

In 2016 September, our CO2 did not lower below 400 PPM, which was a milestone that pretty much the entire scientific community thought was concerning, other than conservative platforms.

The last time there was this much carbon in the air, the oceans were 80 feet higher than they are now. Couple that with our deforestation, and it is literally 2+2=4.

P.S. I also was not defending Bill Nye, just like how I am not for Hillary even though I am against Trump. However it would be good to note that while he was a mechanical engineer first and an avid inventor, he did earn a few honorary degrees and was vice president of the planetary society with multiple patents and support from various united states science committees. I would trust him over a bachelor's political science 'website owner' any day.
@SleepingSilence By 'biased' links, I meant about all of them were Trump or Conservative reported sites. I'd like some data that has no bias. And while you might not think Trump or Conservatives are guilty of any Russian conspiracy, I would think you would agree that they are very biased on their own agendas and lie often. Not that liberals are much better, and Bill Nye, while he hasn't ever changed his science (from what I can tell), he does now remain silent on certain issues like gender chromosomes so as not to upset some of the far radicals of the LGBT community, so he isn't a saint I concede.

Look, Marc Morano has a bachelor's degree in political science, with no degree in any scientific field. His wiki page. And not only did you post a video of him arguing against an actual scientists, but you also used the website this non scientist uses to prove facts that he cannot prove. Marc is a political tool for Rush Limbaugh and other conservatives.

Look, the united states has been a left vs right field for a very long time, but it has increased its polarization in the past few years. Let me give you an example.

You don't find states more conservative than Alabama. My highschool science teacher often said "America is the greatest country on the planet," as most good americans would claim. Yet to him CO2 emissions causing the rapid growth of climate change was no more debated than the boiling temperature of water. I even remember us watching a clip of the "I am Legend" movie with Will Smith's character driving around in his fast car in the abandoned city, and him using that as an example saying "Now, he can blow off those carbon emissions from his car because he is one of the last people on the planet. The problem is with the population growth and how many people are giving off CO2."

My conservative as hell science teacher in 2008 and 2009 had no doubt that climate change was real, and was rapidly growing hotter due to CO2. And while the country was somewhat polarized then, it was less so than it is now. People choose the facts they want now. I haven't found any climate change denier, scientist or no (and most are not) that aren't conservatives, while I have found plenty of climate change scientists on every spectrum of the political sphere.

To be more specific in your last question however, the CO2 emissions are speeding up the process in a dangerous rate. It is not the only factor, no. But it's the unnatural swiftness of the climate rising. This is why much of the coral reefs are dying the past few years. This is why sea levels are rising much quicker than most have anticipated. Hell, I just found this article about how, due to the sudden change in humidity, a normally harmless bacteria has now killed off two thirds of the world's Saiga, because of climate change. Literally 200,000 animals dropped dead over the course of a few days back in 2015, as the world grows hotter.

Here is a non american link, to show all of the factors that affect climate change. Humans are on there, as well as currents, locations of mountains, etc.

So we won't at least take note of this. Just a bunch of denials.
Alright.



@SleepingSilence So despite myself I actually looked at your climate change links and video.
You do know that every source you linked was biased, and that Marc Morano has literally no scientific expertise and has been called the 'Climate Change Misinformer of the Year' a few years back, and that Bill Nye caught him in pigeon holding the facts like, 2 minutes into your video.

Do you actually try to look up unbiased facts or do you look up facts that adhere to your preferred world view? And that is a legit question, I am not trying to be an ass to you.
Welcome to the guild^^
*snaps* Dammit
@Gardevoiran I admit I do not know how to permalink.
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