OKAY I WROTE A WHOLE POST AND THEN TUMBLR DELETED IT SO THIS IS ROUND 2 (and it’s gonna be worse than the og one was because I’m tired and lazy) SO I got really excited to see stuff about Cuba in the art museum because I might not be Cuban by blood but I did grow up on 8th street so I might as well be. Apparently in the 20th century Cuban maps were used as ways to influence people’s political views. In the “Florida Viva” map the Reagan quote basically translates to a bunch of yammer about freedom and opportunity for future generations, and it’s accompanied by a map of Cuba featuring the 6 pre-revolutionary provinces (even though the reality is that Cuba had been split into 15 by this point). It’s a really clear attempt at pandering to the Cuban-American population in order to get them to vote republican (which isn’t that hard tbh). The second map is a much darker and more grim look at Cuba’s situation, showing men’s and women’s prisons, concentration camps, and “state rehabilitation farms”. This map was clearly meant to get people angry, or at least convince them that the situation in cuba was and is dire, not something to be ignored for the sake of voter approval.
Okay this blog is almost officially dead but I’m keeping it alive for Professor Taylor who is now singlehandedly responsible for its life (lol hi) BUT ANYWAYS today I dragged my friends back to frost science because they love me and science and helping me finish my community science events. The first picture is of some devil rays (which I was previously just calling manta rays because I don’t know anything about marine life) and mahi-mahi, both of which are native to our South Florida ecosystems (and can be found specifically in the Gulf Stream aquarium)! The bottom picture was taken right before we watched “To Space and Back” at the planetarium, I didn’t want to take a picture during the actual film but I did learn that a lot of the technology that helps keep us alive (like pace makers) or simply provides us with our everyday conveniences (like the satellites that provide our cell phone service and internet connection) comes from projects that NASA has come up with as some part of our journey into space, and it’s been repurposed to make our daily lives easier! (Sorry I ramble but I really really like the museum and also fun facts)!!)
another fun fact: jellyfish don't really swim, they float around and get carried by currents!!! (these came from the gulf stream in the atlantic!!!)
apparently the chinese thought that painting goldfish was good luck because jinyu (goldfish) was a pun on jin (gold) and yu (jade). none of these pictures are of that but it's something cool i learned.
i hear a frog outside……….. i wish i could see what he looked like.
artist rendition
i wish i was on drugs rn
when people say my name im like. cant believe i exist
you can really tell when people lose that spark for you
the traveller
The Path through the Irises. Artist: Claude Monet (French, Paris 1840–1926 Giverny)
the water lily pond claude monet 1899
weird how dysfunctional families on t.v. end up having some of the best bonds