Libellés

14.10.17

Texto - "Puta que Pariu"

Résultat de recherche d'images pour "image filhos da puta"
E, subitamente, ligaram a lua. A paisagem inerte assim ficou, mas com pálido e cinzento luar recortando estranhas silhuetas…

Ao longe ouvia-se o uivar de animais : cães perdidos, lobos vadios… ?

Contemplando a via láctea, sentindo o ar delicadamente sereno e morno, até imaginei um universo maravilhoso e colorido onde morrer poderia ser o acordar de um sonho lindo ;

Infelizmente acordei…

E deparou-se-me o mundo habitual, feito de violência, trafulhice, mentiras, tudo sustentado por alarves manipulando seres com alavancas tipo pénis em formato xxl, ou maior... com que violam incautos  (ou não), la p'ra os lados dos "chefes" improváveis e de FDP reais que grassam  no Pais que é nosso…

E pensei, porque me veio à memoria, (eu que sou filosofo a mais), e porque de vez em quando penso, a frase brasileira de que tanto gosto : “Puta que pariu” ou no rectângulo continental : FodÅ-SSSSE !!!

14-10-2017



JoanMira     

Astronomy picture of the day - 2017 October 14 - All-Sky Steve

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
 the highest resolution version available.
All-Sky Steve 
Image Credit & CopyrightAlan Dyer, Amazingsky.com, TWAN
Explanation: Familiar green and red tinted auroral emission floods the sky along the northern (top) horizon in this fish-eye panorama projection from September 27. On the mild, clear evening the Milky Way tracks through the zenith of a southern Alberta sky and ends where the six-day-old Moon sets in the southwest. The odd, isolated, pink and whitish arc across the south has come to be known as Steve. The name was given to the phenomenon by the Alberta Aurora Chasers Facebook group who had recorded appearances of the aurora-like feature. Sometimes mistakenly identified as a proton aurora or proton arc, the mysterious Steve arcs seem associated with aurorae but appear closer to the equator than the auroral curtains. Widely documented by citizen scientists and recently directly explored by a Swarm mission satellite, Steve arcs have been measured as thermal emission from flowing gas rather than emission excited by energetic electrons. Even though a reverse-engineered acronym that fits the originally friendly name is Sudden Thermal Emission from Velocity Enhancement, his origin is still mysterious.