[Tweet from Molly Jong-Fast @ MollyJongFast "I can't believe it's 2019 and we're fighting about vaccines (they're good), the earth (it's not flat), the climate (it's warming) and nazis (they're bad)."
dirt enthusiast

oozey mess

blake kathryn
noise dept.

Love Begins

izzy's playlists!

shark vs the universe
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
AnasAbdin
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KIROKAZE

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art
One Nice Bug Per Day
Show & Tell
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NASA
ojovivo
RMH
macklin celebrini has autism

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@captioning-action
[Tweet from Molly Jong-Fast @ MollyJongFast "I can't believe it's 2019 and we're fighting about vaccines (they're good), the earth (it's not flat), the climate (it's warming) and nazis (they're bad)."
[Tweet from Lekxaye @ WitchsHex
"These two things are simultaneously true:
1) Bad people can and do improve themselves and deserve to have the ability to do so.
2) Even if a person improves, people who they've hurt are not required to forgive them or give them another chance to be in their lives."]
[tweet from Crutches&Spice♿ @Imani_Barbarin that reads “You don’t know more about disabled people than disabled people.
Thank you for coming to my TedTalk.”]
Support disabled trans people (img source)
[image description: white text reading “support disabled trans people” over the trans flag with a stick figure depiction of a person in a wheelchair on it.
the trans flag is five strips, blue, pink, white, then pink & blue again. /end image description]
[image of a tweet by @DanielLaw1998 saying
“Disabled parking should only be valid during business hours 9 to 5 Monday to Friday.
I cannot see any reason why people with genuine disabilities would be out beyond these times.”
reply by @JenLRossman says “We’re disabled, Daniel, we’re not werewolves.”]
“being disabled isn’t an excuse for you to not to do [activity]”
[Image description: screenshot of the definition “disabled” that reads “dis·a·bled / adjective / (of a person) having a physical or mental condition that limits movements, senses, or activities.”]
gee willikers karen! it’s like i have a condition that limits my activities!!
♿reminders ♿
ID: nine pastel pink panels with brown-ish lineart illustrations and text in a thin font below each of them
[first row] First panel: illustration of a cane with three flowers on it Text: MOBILITY AIDS ARE NORMAL
Second panel: illustration of three flowers with three leaves sticking out Text: DISABLED BODIES ARE NOT PUBLIC PROPERTY
Third panel: illustration of a palm with an X symbol Text: DON’T TOUCH THEM WITHOUT PERMISSION
[second row] First panel: illustration of a brain with two flowers and a bold question mark Text: STOP YOUR CURIOSITY
Second panel: illustration of a disabled person symbol with a standing person symbol next to it Text: RESPECT DISABLED PEOPLE
Third panel: illustration of a lock surrounded by flowers Text: DISABLED PEOPLE HAVE A RIGHT TO PRIVACY
[last,third row] First panel: illustration of three bold question marks Text: DON’T ASK INTRUSIVE QUESTIONS
Second panel: illustration of an open eye Text: DON’T STARE
Third, last panel: illustration of two hands shaking each other with three flowers on them Text: SUPPORT DISABLED PEOPLE
make posts about disability accessible
[ID: collection of tweets from Amanda Hackwith @ajhackwith reading
“If you’re fuzzy on why changes to the ADA is such a big deal, I get it. I’m keenly aware of what being abled blinds you to. I’m here to introduce you to the thing that dominates my husband and I’s life: Logistics. Hey. Abled friends. This thread is for you. #HR620
Disclaimer: I am not physically disabled. My husband is. He has used a wheelchair since birth. I’m using ‘we’ in here because that’s how we’ve experienced it, and this is shared with his permission. OK? Ok.
The reality of living with a disability is Logistics. We don’t just do something. You figure out if we CAN do something. And then try to chase down the secret hidden puzzle of how WE do it. Because, I guarantee you, we are the exception. We are always the Exception.
So: join us. We leave home. We don’t call for an accessible taxi because that will take an hour. We can’t take a zipcar because there’s no hand controls. Walking through the door is Logistics.
We take a bus, praying that no one else with a wheelchair, walker, baby carriage, grocery bag, or big-ass backpack has already taken up the two accessible spots on the entire bus. Two. If so, we’re out of luck.
Or we take a hip, tech-will-set-us-free rideshare. There is no accessible option in the app. We pray that the ride that comes won’t drive off when they see a chair. That the folding chair will fit.
Maybe we walk home. We fought city hall for neighborhood curb cuts last year! Only fancy condo construction has torn them out again. For months. So we walk in the gutter of a busy industrial street.
We see a show. We can’t buy tickets online. We have to call to see if one of the five accessible seats in the theatre is available. There’s only one ‘companion’ seat. We aren’t expected to have friends.
We book a hotel. We have to investigate how crappy the accessible room is. (It’s usually a less desirable retrofitted room.) How a ‘normal’ room is laid out. If we can ‘get away’ with being treated as normal. For once.
We fly. We introduce ourselves to the attendants. We PROMISE we won’t be a bother. That we won’t need assistance. That we won’t need to rely on the rickety chair they want to strap him to, Hannibal-style. We make the attendants nervous.
We fly. We successfully board, but the bathroom is twenty feet to the back of the plane. We don’t have our chair. We hope we don’t need to pee for the next nine hours.
We want to do a fun tour of a new city/country/landmark. We spend hours calling tour companies, emphasizing how low fuss we are, how independent we are, how we’re one of the ‘cool’ disableds, if only they have room to fold his chair with the luggage. We promise to be good.
We want to eat at a special restaurant. It’s in a historical building. We crawl on our knees and throw the chair up the stairs to eat there anyway. There are stairs and there are stares. We are everyone’s free entertainment.
We eat at a restaurant. It’s accessible, sure! Just call ahead and Jimbob will throw a board across the steps for you to roll up. Or there’s an accessible entrance! It’s the loading ramp, out back. Through the pee-soaked alley and trash cans. Can’t miss it.
We eat it a restaurant. It’s totally accessible! Except for the bathroom upstairs. You can hold it until we get home, right honey?
Work has a social event. It’s held at one of the above ‘trendy’ restaurants. But HR totally apologizes, okay? Be cool. We can be cool.
We want to go home. We become invisible to taxis. He hangs back until I flag one down and glare the driver into submission.
W apartment hunt. All the cute ground floor dog-friendly units are lofts with stairs. All the accessible units have been rented out to able-bodied people because ‘no one wants them’.
We apartment hunt. The ‘large’ bedroom doesn’t leave enough room to either side of the bed for a wheelchair to sit. The glitzy new apartments have bathroom doors too small to get through.
We apartment hunt. The building is totally accessible! Except for that one tiny step. In the common room. To all the amenities you’re paying for.
And this is important: We are white, educated, financially secure, fairly young and healthy aside from the wheelchair. In other words: BEST CASE SCENARIO. We literally are operating and interacting with the ADA on every privilege we can manage.
If you’re surprised by what I’ve said, keep in mind the majority of the disabled community has it so much worse. With so much less resources. Even WITH the existing ADA. #HR620
No imagine how much worse, more hostile, the world will be if every target of discrimination had to ask each business, in writing, one at a time, to please not break the law. And they have 90 days to ignore them. And another 180 after that. Every restaurant. Every store. #HR620
Imagine you had to beg every business to allow you to exist. Imagine people complaining about ‘nuisance lawsuits’ and ‘support peacocks’ to you. Your existence is a nuisance. Your existence is over legislated. Your existence is unnecessary. Now call your damn senators. #HR620 “
/end ID]
As disabled members of the lgbt community we should be celebrating marriage equality, right? but unfortunately us disabled people who rely on government support to survive risk losing everything and becoming totally financially reliant on our partners if we marry or even move in together.
sources: x x
Image is a Twitter thread. It begins with a tweet from Annie Segarra - @annieelainey.
They are replying to @neonfiona.
It reads: "But also when we use "marriage equality" remember that we don't really have full marriage equality until disabled people on government aid can get married without consequence of losing their needed aid/care.
Many disabled people have to choose between marrying the person they love or their basic survival needs. Guess which one hey are forced to choose?
Most Americans don't even know it's a thing but pretty sure it's also a UK thing too, not sure abt other places but it's likely.
The assumption is prety much if a disabled person gets married then their partner should be taking care of them."
It breaks to a reply thread from Jonathan Hume - @IamMrJ.
It reads: "You: omg marriage Equality™¡!
Reality: Disabled people who cannot work and want to marry need to give up their indepent income and become entirely reliant on their partner, which is not only dangerous but puts us in further poverty unless we marry someone loaded.
Just to explain this in a little more detail since people have asked.
If a person claiming income-based ESA marries someone earning over £16k (iirc) a year, tey lose their income entirely.
If two non-disabled/can-work ect people marry, their incomes combine.
Thus if two people earning £20k married, their income wuld be £20k per person.
If an ESA claimant married someone earning £20k, the income would be £10k per person.
Granted that living costs don't scale linearly, but the disabled partner is entirely reliant on their partner providing that £10k.
Note that after housing costs, the minimum income of a decent quality of life is £11k.
The system is built in such a way that it's safer (both froman abuse and quality of live perspective) and financially more sensible for disabled people to not marry.
If a disabled person needs to leave their partner for whatever reason they will have no independent income.
The universal credit changes means it takes 6+ weeks to get paid when starting a new claim.
Non-disabled people don't have to ask their partner to reduce their income-per-person by 50%.
If you're marrying someone on a good income then it's inconsequential, but most of us won't be.
And that's why it's unfair. The system makes us a financial burden."
Here it is: Best stuff first
Extremely handy if you follow a lot of people and hate missing anything good.
Best Stuff First moves the best stuff on your dashboard—mhm!—right up to the top.
It’s rolling out this week on iOS and Android, and comes with this Help Center article.
Thanks! ✌️
Head’s up folks! Tumblr decided to shit the bed and go non-chronological!
This bullshit is being rolled out this week and it’s going to be default!
Ah yay, another feature to deactivate immediately!
here’s the text about it being default and how to turn it off but in an accessible format… “By default, we put stuff you seem to like most at the top of your dashboard in the app. If you’d prefer a chronological feed, you can turn it off:
Tap the account icon (the little human).
Tap the gear wheel icon.
Tap “Global settings” (iOS) or “General settings” (Android).
Tap “Dashboard preferences.”
Turn off “Best stuff first.”
We’ll still sprinkle some recommended posts around your dashboard, but they’ll have labels like “Since you’ve been gone” and “In your orbit” so you know why they’re there.“
I spent like 15 hours on this.
*impressed slow clap*
This was ridiculously pleasing to read out loud.
This is a legitimately fine poem. I say so with my BA in English and Philosophy and my PhD. It’s DAMN HARD to write something like this. Be impressed, yo.
this is DOCTOR SEUSS levels of word and rhyme alchemy
[image shows a screen shot of a Tumbler ask. demondaze asks user facts-i-just-made-up: can you explain how crackers are made? Answer:
First the cracker batter baker bakes a cracker batter batch,
then the cracker batter mixer door will open and unlatch
so the batter mixer nozzle can descend onto the patch
where the cracker batter spreads out for the nozzle to attach.
When the cracker mixer nozzle sprays the cracker batter spray
and the cracker batch emulsion lies a-soaking in its haze
then the cracker batter mixer starts to stir up all the glaze
that the final cracker stacker needs to lubricate the way.
Once the cracker stacker handle stacks the cracker batter squares
then the cracker batter’s hardened into double stacks of pairs.
Now the cracker separator breaks the crackers in the stackers
so the wrappers on the stackers fit the finished stacking crackers.
Then they’re distributed to Wal-Mart.
end ID.]
Don’t tolerate neo nazis. Don’t let anyone defend them.
[An image of a screen capped Tweet by Alicia Mayer @RealAliciaMayer. 7:25 PM - 3 Sep 2017. 50431 Retweets. 104401 Likes.
Reads: “’Letter of the Week’? or ‘Letter of the goddamn YEAR’?”
It is an image of a newspaper article titled: Letter of the week: what is wrong with you? [text following the semi-colon italicized.] Written by Jonna Ramey. Salt Lake City.
The article reads:
I am a 67-year-old American white woman. My parents enlisted in World War II to fight fascism. They both served: my mother was a nurse, my father navigated bombers. They lost friends in that bloody war so that all the world could be free of fascism. They did not fight so that some white people could claim supremacy or that Nazis could openly walk the streets of America.
White person to white supremacist person: What is wrong with you?
People of European heritage are doing just fine in the world. They run most of the world's institutions, hold much of the world's wealth, replicate as frequently as other humans. You're not in any danger here. The world is changing, that's true. otherrs want a piece of that pie. they work for it, strive for it ad earn it. Technology (robotics) is having a greater offset on your job prospects than immigrants. Going forward tackling corporate control and climate change will need all of our attntion, ideas and energy. Put down your Tiki torches and trite flags and get involved in some real work.
By the way, the world won the war against Nazi fascism in the 1940s, just as America won the war against the Confederacy in the 1860s. Aligning with two lost causes just labels you as profound losers.
And finally, white person to white person: Like my parents before me, I will not stand idly by nor give up on my rights or the rights of other Americans becasue you think you are better than some of us. It doesn't work that way. All Americans stand shoulder to shoulder against your hatred and bigotry.]
The international chain of smack talk!
website | facebook | twitter | instagram | shop
[Image is a comic titled “’It’s All Greek to Me’ Around The World.” The title panel is a woman throwing her hands in the air and saying, “Wat?” The air is full of Greek letters.
Each subsequent panel has a person throwing their hands in the air while someone talks to them. The speech bubbles have a random selection of letters from the language supposedly being spoken. The background and clothes correspond to the country they’re in.
James Chapman - soundimals.com
When something sounds like nonsense, you might say “it’s all Greek to me” and every language makes fun of another one!
In Italian, people say “this is Arabic to me” (per me è arabo)
But in Arabic*, it’s “Am I speaking Hindi?” (*specifically Egypt) (^See note)
In Hindi, the saying goes “am I speaking Persian?” (क़्या मैं फ़ारसी नोल रहा हूं)
And in Persian, they say “I don’t understand Greek” (^See note)
In Greek, some people say “am I speaking Turkish?” (mostly in Cyprus) ( Εγ τούρτζ́ικα που μιλάς)
In Turkish, it goes “I am French to this” (olaya fransiz kaldim)
In French, they say “It’s Hebrew” (c’est de l’hébreu)
But in Hebrew, “It’s Chinese to me” (^^See note)
In Chinese, they say “It’s Ghost-Script” (鬼副符) [speech bubble has a scared ghost saying “Boo!”]
And as we all know, ghosts just say [image of two ghosts saying “Wooooooo”]
end id]
^Note: I think the Arabic is badly done. I can’t copy it. All the Arabic letters are separated and confusing.
^^Note: The Hebrew appears to have been reversed - written left to right. I couldn’t reproduce it.
In general, the translations may be inaccurate. The Greek possibly says ‘torture’ instead of ‘Turkish’?
You got this :)
Image caption begins. First image is salmon pink text on a white background that says, 'Just take a deep breath.' The second image has the same background and text colors, and says, 'Get back up.' The final panel also has a white background and salmon-pink text. It reads, 'You got this.' Image caption ends.
via [x]
[Loni (Literary_zealot) Tweeted: “It’s a privilege to just laugh with your friends and say, ‘There’s always Canada’. Not everyone has that option.”
Coffee Spoonie replies: Literally, Disabled folx cannot immigrate to Canada. They don’t get that I cannot ‘lol move to Canada!’, bc Canada doesn’t want my crip ass.”]
This is something a lot of people are not aware of. Canada will deny people permanent residency on the basis of certain health conditions if they cause ‘stress’ on the healthcare system (or if they are a danger to public health or safety). It’s an attempt to prevent people taking advantage of Canada’s universal healthcare, but unfortunately even if someone is immigrating for legitimate reasons, there’s a good chance they’ll be denied (it may be overlooked at times, but that doesn’t change that a family of refugees could be denied immigration if a kid has down syndrome)
We’ve still got a lot of shit to work on here
Many countries have similar laws.
New Zealand does.
iirc so does the UK
“an attempt to prevent people taking advantage of Canada’s universal healthcare” i know people will argue economics and all but if someone has a need to “take advantage of” this country’s healthcare, they have a need to immigrate here. healthcare is a right, despite the way it’s treated as a privilege.
Holy shit, this is huge news for me. I’m planning to move there in 2-3 years. I need to do some research. Thank you for posting and sharing this info.
Reminder to every one that there are VERY few places you can immigrate to from the United States with out an advanced degree, a job, and a set amount in provable savings. Immigrating anywhere is never easy and requires large amounts of planning.
I love dis.
[image description]: a silver button with the disabled emblem on it in blue. Someone has attached a pink sticky note to the sticker with a drawing of a fish tail on it, aligned such that it looks like the person in the wheelchair symbol has a mermaid tail.
Hello there; I've recently been trying (and not remembering a good chunk of the time, but I do sometimes) to describe the images on stuff I post or reblog. It is surprisingly difficult to describe stuff well; do you have any advice on how to do it? Is it better to give a half-assed description than none at all?
Sorry for not getting to this ask sooner! I’m sure those that see your posts are appreciative of the effort. It takes time to really remember to put captions and things, especially if you are used to not ‘needing’ to put them so to speak.
I personally think it is better to have a ‘half-assed’ description as you say, than to have none at all. At least that way screen readers are able to translate the general idea you are trying to get across. Which is better than having no feedback to give.
The other mods may have other ideas to add on to this, and any followers are welcome to as well but what usually works for me when I’m describing pictures and gifs at first is I try to write it like how I would tell it on a phone call with someone who is not looking at it, and then transcribe like it is a script that actors have to read to know what they are about to bring from paper to real life. So a form of reverse engineering.
Somtimes the best thing to get better at doing this is to just gather up a few posts and practice. Include what you think is important, and omit what isn’t so you’re not describing something at length, but rather something quick.
For example:
[Gif of an animated cat with a black ear. It takes a couple steps before sitting down and giving a big yawn. It then falls over, asleep.]
Sometimes it is harder with gif sets, but if you treat it with its core actions, and or speech that is what you should be focusing on.
I hope this helps!
- Mod Cecil.