#philadelphia
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livefromphilly · 2 days ago
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plants-and-swords · 10 months ago
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Fuck it- northeast philly miku, heavily influenced by the women in my life
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gwydionmisha · 1 day ago
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NO Kings Round Up: Published 6/15/25
I can't even come close to covering this properly.
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backonmybullsht · 2 days ago
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Happy No Kings Day to my fellow Americans! I’ve got my signs and I’m ready to yell!
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t13shoots · 2 days ago
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animentality · 6 months ago
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reasonsforhope · 3 months ago
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"Claire Cao was only a senior in high school when she saw a vital need in her community — and filled it. 
In 2024, the teenager spent her time outside of school volunteering at Blanchet House, a Portland-based nonprofit that serves people experiencing homelessness through food donations, clothing drives, and mental health assistance programs. 
As she logged hours as a Blanchet House student ambassador, Cao soon realized how difficult it was for community members to keep track of shelter openings, rotating food service programs, and available mental health resources. 
“During one afternoon meal service, I met Dano, an unhoused man who shared his struggles with accessing basic services like food and shelter,” Cao said in a recent press release. 
“Left disconnected from essential services, Dano described his struggles of not knowing where to go or which shelters had available beds.”
Combining her love for technology, law, and public policy, Cao pulled available resources into a database and created the ShelterBridge app, which connects users to shelters and services in their area. 
“ShelterBridge wasn’t simply inspired by Dano — it was inspired by the realization that access to resources is a fundamental need that we, as a community, can do a better job of providing,” Cao emphasized. 
“I wanted to use my skills to build something that could bridge that gap, ensuring that no one falls through the cracks simply because they don’t know where to turn for help.”
In addition to linking users to services in their area, the app also has a rating system similar to Yelp. This system allows people to leave star ratings and reviews on shelters, food services, hotlines, and legal aid. 
The ratings not only help users differentiate between services in their area — but they also provide invaluable feedback to the nonprofits, organizations, and government programs that service them. 
“We've been asking for an app like this for a number of years now,” Scott Kerman, executive director of Blanchet House, told Portland news station KGW.
In mid-January, Cao won the 2024 Congressional App Challenge in Oregon’s First District for her work with ShelterBridge — outcompeting 12,682 student submissions. 
Since the app first launched, Cao and her growing ShelterBridge team — which includes enterprising high schoolers and college students from across the nation — have expanded services to California, Philadelphia, Seattle, Los Angeles, and North Carolina. 
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“Claire and the team she’s working with deserve all the credit in the world because they're doing something that frankly nobody else has really stepped up to do,” Kerman said. 
“To have the kind of technology that we use every day with hotels and other kinds of reservations [to] help people get into safe, supportive and dignified shelter would be a game changer for our community.”
Although the app started as a class project, Cao said ShelterBridge’s success has far surpassed her expectations. 
“I do hope to keep it up,” she told Oregon outlet KOIN 6 News, as she looked ahead to college and beyond. “I’ve made a lot of efforts to expand it to other cities as well — and it’s something I can mostly do from a computer or my laptop at home.”
-via GoodGoodGood, March 21, 2025
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kropotkindersurprise · 1 year ago
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May 4, 2024 - CNN writes about how the mean anti-genocide protesters silenced a lone counter-protester at the University of Pennsylvania:
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How did they silence him, you ask? They drew a circle around him in chalk, and labeled it "Designated Dingus Area":
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livefromphilly · 1 day ago
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theonion · 1 month ago
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Saying that his designs felt oddly familiar as he was drafting them, urban planner William Reston confirmed Monday that while envisioning a revitalized downtown for Des Moines, IA, he had absentmindedly laid out the preexisting city of Philadelphia. “I was just thinking about putting the city’s main art museum and premier university on opposite banks of the river when all of a sudden it hit me: This is Philly!” Reston said after his project-stalling blunder, during which he gave Des Moines a sports complex with three major venues, 24 square blocks of colonial-era architecture, and a centrally located City Hall topped by a statue of a prominent regional historic figure.
Full Story
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undeadfillum · 7 months ago
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Philly Market walks
Kentmere 100
Pentax Espio 120SW
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political-us · 3 months ago
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Philadelphia | 07/03/2025
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kooldewd123 · 4 months ago
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i think it's lame that philadelphia police don't let eagles fans climb on the lampposts. let them have some whimsy. all americans have the god-given right to use public infrastructure as their own personal jungle gym at any given moment. there is nothing more american than drunkenly climbing up a lamppost wearing a philadelphia flag as a cape because your sports team won and/or lost a game. we are being held back from the beautiful future the founding fathers envisioned for us.
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respectissexy · 4 months ago
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This is officially the Haters' Superbowl not just because of Kendrick but because the good people of Philadelphia are known for being haters. The haters prevailed tonight. Long live haters.
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