BRADKELLYESQUE



I am a writer of fictions, James A. Michener Fellow, jailhouse teacher, Internet flaneur, Theta Wave enthusiast, hip-hop devotee, fight fan, engineer, and cat lover. To the left you will find things that have something or nothing to do with some of these.

Contact me bradwkelly@gmail.com



SOME WRITINGS:

Blue Like A Fake Place on TV [Short Story]

The Lizard Man's More Inconvenient Truth [Profile]

The Insomnia Jones Method in Midwestern Gothic for some duckets.

The Greatest Parachute Jumper in Aerospace History in Barnstorm [Short Story]

Einstein's Riddle, 20xx in Cobalt

OTHER THINGS:
A podcast I did with the illustrious Kevin Kautzman.
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  • Mary sailed/all the way to love …

    • 5 months ago
  • “We’re all just walking each other home.” 
    ― Ram Dass

    • 5 months ago
    • 1 notes
  • (via thebloodof793)

    Source: ejakeldoor
    • 5 months ago
    • 32616 notes
    • 5 months ago
    • 5 months ago
    • 5 months ago
  • sunisup:

This is a series of maps charting the shrinkage of Native American lands over time, from 1784 to the present day.  Made because I was having trouble visualizing the sheer scale of the land loss, and reading numbers like “blah blah million acres” wasn’t really doing it for me.  The gif is based on a collection of maps by Sam B. Hilliard of Louisiana State University.  You can see the original map here.
For those who do prefer dealing in numbers, here are some:

By 1881, Indian landholdings in the United States had plummeted to 156 million acres. By 1934, only about 50 million acres remained (an area the size of Idaho and Washington) as a result of the General Allotment Act* of 1887. During World War II, the government took 500,000 more acres for military use. Over one hundred tribes, bands, and Rancherias relinquished their lands under various acts of Congress during the termination era of the 1950s.
By 1955, the indigenous land base had shrunk to just 2.3 percent of its original size.

—In the Courts of the Conqueror by Walter Echo-Hawk
* The General Allotment Act is also known as the Dawes Act.
Edit: Got rid of some of the fold lines and discoloration on the gif.  *is anal*

    sunisup:

    This is a series of maps charting the shrinkage of Native American lands over time, from 1784 to the present day.  Made because I was having trouble visualizing the sheer scale of the land loss, and reading numbers like “blah blah million acres” wasn’t really doing it for me.  The gif is based on a collection of maps by Sam B. Hilliard of Louisiana State University.  You can see the original map here.

    For those who do prefer dealing in numbers, here are some:

    By 1881, Indian landholdings in the United States had plummeted to 156 million acres. By 1934, only about 50 million acres remained (an area the size of Idaho and Washington) as a result of the General Allotment Act* of 1887. During World War II, the government took 500,000 more acres for military use. Over one hundred tribes, bands, and Rancherias relinquished their lands under various acts of Congress during the termination era of the 1950s.

    By 1955, the indigenous land base had shrunk to just 2.3 percent of its original size.

    —In the Courts of the Conqueror by Walter Echo-Hawk

    * The General Allotment Act is also known as the Dawes Act.

    Edit: Got rid of some of the fold lines and discoloration on the gif.  *is anal*

    Source: sunisup
    • 5 months ago
    • 9355 notes
    • 6 months ago
    • 6 months ago
  • oxane:

glitch_skull by letloosethelambs
bitmap glitch

    oxane:

    glitch_skull by letloosethelambs

    bitmap glitch

    (via 2headedsnake)

    Source: oxane
    • 6 months ago
    • 640 notes
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