Three Goblin Art
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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Kiana Khansmith
Today's Document
RMH

blake kathryn

#extradirty
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d e v o n
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
trying on a metaphor

tannertan36
One Nice Bug Per Day
styofa doing anything
hello vonnie
🪼
Sade Olutola
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
seen from Bangladesh

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from Brazil

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seen from Canada
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@2grapes
Reblog if you need this energy
source
Can’t Risk it
manifestations ✨
Fa sho
life is good again (ordered something online)
life is bad again (account was charged)
LIFE IS GOOD AGAIN (PACKAGE ARRIVED)
penis unbelievable, penis inconceivable, the true form of the penis will never be perceivable
It’s all well and good and valid to say “Don’t make fun of this privileged group because this non privileged group might think you’re talking about them” but a part of me is also like what if we don’t bully people for things out of their control?
Like I’ve seen people say things like “Don’t call men ugly because trans men/trans women/mlm might be affected by it!” and like as a trans mlm maybe just like… don’t… insult the way men look? Because they’re people?
Like cishet men need to be made aware of their privilege and held accountable for their actions for sure. But also like… maybe don’t give random strangers body issues?
Today I also saw a post that seemed to be saying “Don’t make fun of fat men because that will affect fat people that aren’t men” but like… fat cis men also deserve to be okay with being fat too. Like I’m aware that they have privilege that non cis men don’t. I know. But like… cis fat men see these things, and have body issues, and get affected by it. They do.
Once again the advice of the day is: don’t be an asshole!
She is giving us a LOOK
is this princess leia?
not gonna lie i’m pretty uncomfortable like all the time
every single line in hamlet goes hard how did shakespeare manage to pour so much raw fucking power into one piece of literature god damn
Foreigners tend to assume that the big cultural confusions between Australians and most other countries are gonna be based on our food, or social services, or weather, or weird animals. But it’s never that. In my experience, the real cultural confusions re: Australians are about The Respect Thing almost one hundred per cent of the time.
? I realize im proving your point but what
The broader Australian culture doesn’t, as a whole, have status-based respect. Some individual groups might, because they’ve brought it from other cultures they’re involved in, but the general culture doesn’t. There’s no sense that your boss or scout leader or the guy in charge of your country deserves more respect than you, or that you should behave differently to them than you would to any random person you know similarly well. (The very rare exceptions include ritualised settings, such as courtrooms, and for some reason the fact that children use “Miss/Ms/Mr” honourifics for teachers at school.)
I don’t mean Australians are a “stick it to the man, fight back against those in power” kind of people – we’re generally not. And I don’t mean we have a “we’re going to do the status thing but pretend we don’t and pretend to all be equal in mixed company” thing that middle-class Americans do. I mean the status-respect system does not exist, and if you try to use it, it weirds people the fuck out at best, and insults them at worst. Treating someone most countries would say is ‘above’ you differently in Australia is basically telling that person that you hate them; it’s saying “I’m forced to interact with you due to our current circumstances but I don’t see you as a person and won’t grant you the basic respect of treating you like an equal”. (When I was in America, I was constantly suppressing the instinct that random service people were sassing me because they overuse honourifics and were so keen to help me.)
This makes interacting with foreigners really baffling in a lot of circumstances. In university, my international friends would often describe Australians as “friendly, but very rude”. They thought we were all arseholes because of the way we spoke to our PhD supervisors and soforth, and wouldn’t believe us when we explained that our behaviour was respectful and that being deferential would be weird and awkward and insulting to them. Learning Japanese had a similar problem; everyone in the class could get the concept of different levels of formality and deference in language, ans was happy to memorise the usage of various words for Japanese people, but using them on each other was super weird, and we’d only ever use the most casual form of anything unless specifically instructed otherwise by the teacher.
The reason I’ve been thinking of this lately is because I’ve recently become aware that a lot of countries have like… a special respect for their country’s leaders? I don’t just mean “yeah, that guy makes the rules”, but that having that office makes them better than everyone else, somehow. Which I expect from countries with royal families, because Tradition, but I’ve recently found that Americans feel this way about their President, too. (Except the current one, who seems to be enough of a dick to break the system.) Like, if six Americans were in an aeroplane that was going down and there was only one parachute and one of the Americans was A Generic Non-Trump President, it’s just assumed that that guy gets the parachute? Like he’s automatically the life worth saving over the others, and they’d just give up their chance in favour of him? And that’s so weird to me. An Australian prime minister would have a 1 in 6 chance at the parachute; however the people decided, “this guy happens to be the leader of the country” wouldn’t be a factor.
When Americans don’t like a President, they usually feel the need to work in how he’s “not my president”, either through sheer denial, or by finding some way he’s theoretically illegitimate (different ways votes are counted, wild conspiracy theories about birth country, etc.), and while making sure those rules are obeyed IS extremely important, I’ve recently noticed that part of the motivation seems to be that they’re invested in whether he’s Really The President because being the President somehow makes someone Special rather than just a normal dick who’s been put in charge of the group project. (You see the same thing in “THIS IS TRUMP’S AMERICA!”, like him becoming President gives him superpowers or something).
This is getting off-topic. Point is, in Australia you can run into the Prime Minister and ask him to help you fix your phone and if he’s not busy but refused to help you out he’d be kind of a dick; of course he should help you out. And if I walk into your restaurant and you act like I’m a movie star and you’re going to be super attentive to my every need because I’m The Customer, I’m gonna get creeped out. We’re suspicious and insulted by what most people in the world consider to be basic manners, and vice versa. And it makes interacting with foreigners super weird because I always feel like they’ve got some invisible heirarchical flowchart in the back of their minds that I don’t.
You can see this is how everyone is referred to or addressed by their first name (except for school teachers which we do refer as mr or ms, but personally I don’t see it more as respectful as convenient but i digress).
The prime minister is ‘scomo’, you refer to friends parents by their first names (which I found very weird when I first moved to Aus), we refer to our uni professors by their first names, our bosses etc. everyone is afforded the same level of respect down to the very base level of the title we give them. There’s no calling your elders sir or ma’am, that would be condescending for both parties, there’s no referring to people in higher authority through their title. Like the thought of even referring to a politician just by their last name is kind of weird, it’s always ‘Tony Abbot’, ‘Malcom Turnbull’ etc. like first names r important and universally used.
the reason Cancel Culture exists is because people have realised the power they have onto others
the reason Cancel Culture doesn’t work is because fans don’t like to feel guilty for supporting someone horrible, and if we’re talking about reality, there are famous people who hold a higher privilege than other famous people which results in them not being “cancelled”
and the reason Cancel Culture annoys so many of us is because people Cancel problematic people rather than guilty people. being problematic (annoying and stupid) doesn’t equal to breaking the law and basic human decency (being a p*do, being racist, etc)
it’s 2020. can we please learn the difference and start getting rid of people who don’t deserve an ounce of the power you’ve given them?
This plus cancel culture is bad bc it ignores and ruins the opportunity for growth. People who r problematic or hold disagreeable opinions aren’t going to bother trying to change if we ignore growth or deny them the chance to grow. People/ society can’t get better if we immediately vilify every little mistake, bc there is a difference between cancelling someone and forcing them to acknowledge their wrongs and do better.
This is why peacefully protesting is a mugs game. The state ain’t peaceful
This is because the police view the #BLM movement as an attack against them. This is because racism is so deeply ingrained into the police institution and culture. This is because they view it as an us vs. them, as lives against lives. This is what they mean when they say blue lives matter- they want to protect themselves from all moral responsibilities. They are perpetuating a sickening organisation that protects itself internally against any form of opposition. These people are protesting because black lives are being taken by police and the police are responding by immediately jumping at the chance to reciprocate protestation with violence. Their actions prove everything the BLM movement is about and it is absolutely disgusting to see- but here they can finally justify it as a response to a ‘riot’. ACAB.
as the french say, merci goku
THE FACT THAT THERE’S PEOPLE WHO ARE AFRAID OF SNAKES MAKES ME SO SAD I MEAN
look again
U don’t... live in Australia
what books were you assigned to read in a class that you still hold a violent and bitter grudge against
for me it’s into the wild and the scarlet letter
@honeycombtower
I was not expecting to see my exact answer in your tags 😂😂😂 this website is so American. Ik weet niet meer waarom ik zo'n afkeer had tegen het verhaal. Ik kon het gewoon niet uitstaan.