Page 1 of 17

Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 6:40 pm
by JackRiddler
Possibly the most successful RI thread is "Images Only, no captions, no words."

Sometimes I gotta comment!

So this is the thread for commenting on said images.

RULES:
You may not post an image here unless it's quoted from the Images Only thread. Always post images there first if you want to comment here. When taking an image from Images Only, use Quote function so we see who posted it.


Voila, the first:



Do you guys know what this is? It's evolution creating pornography for bees. No kidding, the bees go nuts for this flower, they fly over and hump it. But it's not their sex, it's the flower's.

Some species of bee, I learned from xkcd.com of all places, are extinct and known to scientists only thanks to the evidence of flowers like this one.

Mind blowing, n'est-ce pas?

.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 8:12 pm
by MacCruiskeen
JackRiddler wrote:pornography for bees


It's got an inflatable-doll's mouth. (Plus a jester's hat, presumably to show that the joke is on the bees.)

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 9:51 pm
by JackRiddler
Yes, I saw. It looks like a Pokemon.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 1:23 pm
by Iamwhomiam
Great idea, Jack. Thanks.

Commenting upon Allegro's photo, I too, see a jester's hat, but it's sitting atop a duckling's head. The duckling being a rolly-polly toy-like creation, wearing a black vest and pants with his little yellow duckling feet sticking out, caught with beak agape at the moment of realization after contemplating 'reality' we are all illusions to others.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 1:45 pm
by brainpanhandler
JackRiddler » Fri Sep 20, 2013 8:51 pm wrote:Yes, I saw. It looks like a Pokemon.


Pokemon? How old are you jack?

Clearly it's an evil motley jester grimace from McDonaldland .

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 3:53 pm
by JackRiddler
brainpanhandler » Sun Sep 22, 2013 12:45 pm wrote:
JackRiddler » Fri Sep 20, 2013 8:51 pm wrote:Yes, I saw. It looks like a Pokemon.


Pokemon? How old are you jack?

Clearly it's an evil motley jester grimace from McDonaldland .


Hm, though I'm 48 and have little personal interest in these matters, I know (in rough chronological order) Pokemon, Finding Nemo, Maroon 5 and have seen all the Potter movies in the theater. How did this happen?

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 3:57 pm
by seemslikeadream
Image


Image


Andrew Gough - The Hidden Hive of History - Megalithomania 2012 preview
The Hidden Hive of History is about the forgotten god of the ancients: the sacred honey bee. Andy's talk explores a sacred tradition that has existed for over 100 million years. Sadly, the honey bees survival has been threatened by modern man, and its once hallowed legacy has been vanquished in the honeycomb of time. The Hidden Hive of History is an fascinating talk about a god who lived amongst the dinosaurs and who was venerated by every epoch in history. Those who embraced its many life affirming offerings flourished. Those who didn't perished. This god was known to the Mayans as the 'saviour god', although most ancient lands venerated it as a goddess; equal to, if not more revered than, the Mother Goddess. The Egyptians bestowed the title of their Kings with its name and used the god's image in their cartouches. The Greeks believed that their leaders were kissed on the lips by the god at birth, and dedicated their most sacred temple and Oracle in its honour. His talk will reveal new insights into Atlantis, the fabled labyrinth of Knossos, the Sphinx, as well as the genesis of religion, politics, the illuminati, and the mysterious seafarers whose hallucinogenic concoctions enabled them to become the drug lords of the ancient world, and rulers of souls in the afterlife.

Andrew is Chairman of The Rennes Group, Europe's longest running research society dedicated to the mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau, and former Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Sciences. He has also made significant contributions to the bestselling books, The Dan Brown Companion and the The Ancient Code, where he writes about the Sacred Honey Bee. Andrew is an experienced TV presenter has made several documentaries, including the soon to be released, The Truth Behind King Arthur for National Geographic. He also stars in the Warner Brothers esoteric thrillers, The Stone and Paranormal Haunting: The Curse of the Blue Moon Inn, each of which are released in 2011. http://www.andrewgough.com


Andrew Gough - The Hidden Hive of History - Megalithomania 2012 preview

Andrew Gough -- The Hidden Hive of History: The Forgotten God of the Ancients

Red Ice Radio - Andrew Gough - Hour 1 - The Sacred Veneration of the Honeybee

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 4:52 pm
by Allegro
She's cute, isn't she! Which was Allegro's horticultural post of a portraiture for this, right here, as a smiley esprit de corps type a thing without the invitation :hihi:, Certainly.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Mon Sep 30, 2013 9:51 am
by seemslikeadream
The Sixth Mass Extinction Is Upon Us: Can Humans Survive?
By Good German on September 30, 2013 in News

Annalee Newitz writes at the Daily Beast/Newsweek:

Over the past four years, bee colonies have undergone a disturbing transformation. As helpless beekeepers looked on, the machinelike efficiency of these communal insects devolved into inexplicable disorganization. Worker bees would fly away, never to return; adolescent bees wandered aimlessly in the hive; and the daily jobs in the colony were left undone until honey production stopped and eggs died of neglect. Colony collapse disorder, as it is known, has claimed roughly 30 percent of bee colonies every winter since 2007.

If bees go extinct, their loss will trigger an extinction domino effect, because crops from apples to broccoli rely on these insects for pollination. At the same time, over a third of the world’s amphibian species are threatened with extinction, and Harvard evolutionary biologist and conservationist E.O. Wilson estimates that 27,000 species of all kinds go extinct per year.

Are we in the first act of a mass extinction that will end in the death of millions of plant and animal species across the planet, including us? Proponents of the “sixth extinction” theory believe the answer is yes.

Our planet has been through five mass extinctions before. The dinosaur extinction was the most recent, but hardly the most deadly: dinosaurs were among the 76 percent of all species on earth that were extinguished, but 185 million years before that, there was a mass extinction so devastating that paleontologists have nicknamed it the Great Dying. At that time, 95 percent of all species on the planet were wiped out over a span of roughly 100,000 years.

The climate change that occurred during the Great Dying—most likely involving megavolcanoes that erupted for centuries in Siberia—was similar to the one our planet is undergoing right now. Regardless of whether humans are responsible, the sixth mass extinction on earth is going to happen. We have ample evidence that earth is headed for disaster, from elevated rates of extinction among birds and amphibians to superstorms and the recent Midwestern drought, corroborating the idea that we might be living through the early days of a new mass extinction.

Assigning blame is less important than figuring out how to prepare for the inevitable and survive it—not just as humans alone on a world gone to hell, but along with the planet’s myriad ecosystems as well. The long-term goal for Homo sapiens as a species right now should be to survive for at least another million years. It’s not much to ask. As we know, a few species have survived for billions of years, and many have survived for tens of millions. Our ancient ancestors started exploring the world beyond Africa over a million years ago and lived through harsh conditions while another human group, the Neanderthals, did not. This isn’t just because we are lucky. It’s because as a species we are extremely cunning when it comes to survival. And so it seems fitting to pick the next million years as the first distant horizon where we’ll set our sights.

There are, of course, things we can do in the short term to help us along: modeling natural disasters and pandemics; building cities that are safer and more sustainable; bringing food sources closer to home. Key, too, is controlling our carbon output. But beyond that we’re going to have to use all our technological know-how to make dramatic changes to the planet we live on—and then to find ways of escaping it to build cities on the moon and on other planets. Ultimately, our future is among the stars.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Oct 04, 2013 10:46 pm
by minime
Image

The Dude: "Fuckin' Congress, Man."

Walter: "A three-ring goddamn circus, I can tell you that much. Not the United States of America I grew up in, that's for damn sure. Just another reason Barack Hussein Obama is unfit to lead this country."

The Dude: "Oh, this is just classic. Classic Washington, D.C. Absolutely fucking classic."

Walter: "A pretty convenient distraction from Benghazi, don't you think?"

Donny: "Huh? Shutdown?"

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Oct 04, 2013 11:25 pm
by JackRiddler
Wow. minime, did you think of that? It's perfect!

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Fri Oct 04, 2013 11:29 pm
by minime
JackRiddler » Fri Oct 04, 2013 10:25 pm wrote:Wow. minime, did you think of that? It's perfect!


It flows, doesn't it?

"Shut the fuck up, Donny."

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 2:37 pm
by Iamwhomiam
Regarding this photo:

Wayne Sperling is shown in this undated handout photo provided by the Denver District Attorney's Office. Sperling and Lorinda Bailey, accused of starving their four sons and keeping them in squalid conditions, are due in court to face charges Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2013. The couple have each been charged with four counts of felony child abuse. The boys are ages 2, 4, 5 and 6. An affidavit says they weren't toilet trained, had no schooling and spoke in "their own language" of grunts to each other. Authorities found the children living in a residence full of cat and human feces, urine, and flies. All have been placed in protective care. (Denver District Arttorney's Office)

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 2:52 pm
by Wombaticus Rex
I fixed that image code so that it's going to the .jpg instead of the .php server.

Re: Comments On Images Only Thread

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 3:08 pm
by Mask
Iamwhomiam » Tue Oct 08, 2013 7:37 pm wrote:Regarding this photo:

Wayne Sperling is shown in this undated handout photo provided by the Denver District Attorney's Office. Sperling and Lorinda Bailey, accused of starving their four sons and keeping them in squalid conditions, are due in court to face charges Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2013. The couple have each been charged with four counts of felony child abuse. The boys are ages 2, 4, 5 and 6. An affidavit says they weren't toilet trained, had no schooling and spoke in "their own language" of grunts to each other. Authorities found the children living in a residence full of cat and human feces, urine, and flies. All have been placed in protective care. (Denver District Arttorney's Office)


This story reminded me of this thread.