Researcher T-Shirts
Description: Do you like to investigate haunted locations and hunt ghosts? This professional ghost hunter motif bears the saying "I used to have money - now I have ghost hunting equipment". A cool design for every ghost investigator and paranormal investigator for the next ghost hunting.
Description: Real Girls Go Ghost Hunting - Ghosts Paranormal Researcher
Real Girls Go Ghost Hunting - Ghosts Paranormal Researcher T-Shirt
by killowcka
$16 $23
Description: The United States Antarctic Research Program (USARP) has operated in Antarctica since 1959, sending teams of scientists down south every Austral Summer to discover new information about the frozen continent. My grandfather was one-such explorer, and he worked in Antarctica throughout the early years of the 1960s. One of the greatest gifts I ever received was his old exploration parka, emblazoned with the logo of the USARP. The logo speaks of adventure, danger and exploration in the most isolated part of the world. Whenever you don one these exploration-inspired pieces of clothing or write in your USARP-styled notebook, you can celebrate the endeavour and the ingenuity of the brave men and women who have made Antarctica their home.
Description: Please Make Common Sense And Critical Thinking Great Again, speaks for itself. Must research and learn to think for yourself.
Please Make Common Sense And Critical Thinking Great Again T-Shirt
by Rosemarie Guieb - Gifts Decor
$23
Description: If you've ever viewed the night sky -- and seen a planet, galaxy, nebula, or moon -- then you've caught the stargazing bug, and it's time to let the world know with this cool telescope shirt. Bonus points if you're an astronomer, researcher, or scientist! Featuring a vintage style design, this telescope tshirt makes the perfect gift for any fan of outer space, astronomy, and stars.
Description: Welcome to NIH: Not In a Hurry, where groundbreaking research meets government-induced stagnation! In a world where scientists push boundaries, the only thing moving slower than the grant approval process is Congress itself. Thanks to special interest groups with an aversion to facts, science is now taking a backseat to political theater. While researchers strive for medical breakthroughs, life-saving vaccines, and technological advancements, policy roadblocks and funding freezes ensure that progress remains optional, unless, of course, it aligns with the agenda of those in charge. From slashed budgets to peer review purgatory, academics are left wondering: Is the research too radical, or is reality just too inconvenient?