Friday, June 1, 2012

The New Summer Designs(?)

For the past year that I've had this blog, it's had many redesigns. During the first few months, I couldn't really decide on a logo. I tried many, including the whole name in a rectangle, the initials to the right of a vertical line and then the name spelled out in lowercase letters. For the Fourth of July last year, I swept the logo in red, white, and blue to give it that patriotic feel.

The Constitutional Referendum

As the summer months roll around, people take the time to relax. Most take vacations, some travel around, and others just hang around. Due to the economic conditions of the day, my family and I hang around. And I take great advantage of it by surfing the internet, cyber-stalking people, and watching episodes of Monk. But one thing that I do everyday is sleep. 

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

In Japan...

 This post is rated 18+ with S for scenes of softcore pornography

The U.S. is a fucked-up nation. Seriously, we are. We love to fuck-- or at least see it. The U.S. is the number one consumer of pornography in the world. Second to us are the Japanese. The U.S. is a country of 300 million. Japan is half-our size but almost consumes as much pornography as we do. That means that there are countless genres of pornography. And in this video, this is one that's probably not available here in the United States.

 Another video, via VBS.tv, talks about a niche in the Japanese market: senior porn. Porn marketed for those above the age of 65. And it's growing. Enjoy... and... seriously... the old guy gets naked. How 'bout them apples?

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Going Under the Knife II


This post is rated 16+ with MT and O for graphic photographs
that show the dissection of an animal and that material might
be found offensive to some.

Anatomy is a science of structure. A science of the how the bodies of animals and humans are structured how they function. As humans, we learn by doing, and this deed is something necessary to be done in order to know the structures of animals-- and later, ourselves. It advances not only our understanding when our pets or animals become sick, but it helps us to learn how to operate on them-- and again later-- on ourselves.

In this post, we will see the dissection of an adult cat. In this, as the last post, I asked the question whether the dissection-- let alone the photographing-- was ethical. Some gave me a "yes," others gave me a "no." I particularly believe that it is ethical in photographing the dissection. To dissect the animal is another case to be determined later, although, as pointed out in this PETA article, there are better ways to learn without killing first. 

And in case you are wondering, the teacher did give an alternative assignment for those who did not feel they were able (or capable) to dissect a cat.