what day is it
always fucking some day or another around here

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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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Kaledo Art
tumblr dot com
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

JVL

Andulka
cherry valley forever
Xuebing Du
we're not kids anymore.

PR's Tumblrdome
Game of Thrones Daily
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
wallacepolsom
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess

if i look back, i am lost

#extradirty
Stranger Things

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Indonesia

seen from Switzerland
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

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@clapifyoulikeme
what day is it
always fucking some day or another around here
AYYYY WELCOME
Thank you, technically it's welcome back, I was here 2009-2016.
Literally how do I see my notes
Where are my notifications on here
so what's up
what are we doing here
Jewish author Laura Silverman is being harassed by neo-Nazi Trump supporters on GoodReads. If you have time, please show her some love on Twitter or the GoodReads page for her novel.
Even if all you have time to do is click Like on some of the positive posts, it helps.
Tumblr what have you become.
Likable
My affection for Hillary Clinton is hard to explain. It wins no fights and earns you no friends to admit it: Actual warmth, even protectiveness, toward this impossible, frustrating, contradictory, polarizing, disappointing woman. My finding Hillary intensely “likable” is weird, and I admit it. It doesn’t signify universal approval of her decisions. I can and do disagree with Hillary Clinton, regularly and strongly. But some part of me also hopes that Hillary Clinton is having a nice day.
I’ve come to believe that, in some ways, saying nice things about Hillary Clinton is a subversive act. I spent much of this year working on a long project on how women are demonized in the media. Hillary Clinton was a fairly large part of that story – she had to be; if you want to talk “women that people hate,” she’s kind of unavoidable – and I spent a while sorting through Clintoniana, dating back to the early ‘90s, to find nasty things people had said about her, or common narratives about her personality. It wasn’t pretty – the worst stuff for Hillary was way worse than I’d expected, and there was way more of it than I expected to find – but it was also illuminating, in some key ways. I got a better sense of the pressures that she has to live with, and how they’ve informed her decisions.
I also realized that, unless you really take a look at those pressures, the narrative around Hillary Clinton’s “likability” is doomed to be inaccurate, in some way. She might even be very easy to dislike, if you weren’t looking at those narratives, or if you underestimated their severity. But, in my experience, trying to parse Hillary Clinton without also parsing Hillary-Hate is like trying to drink water without touching the glass. As long as you refuse to deal with the container, the actual substance tends to stay permanently out of reach.
Keep reading
when you remember that the best drama of the year isn’t up for tonight’s emmys
I was giving some lectures in Germany about the death penalty. It was fascinating because one of the scholars stood up after the presentation and said, ‘Well you know it’s deeply troubling to hear what you’re talking about.’ He said, ‘We don’t have the death penalty in Germany. And of course, we can never have the death penalty in Germany.’ And the room got very quiet, and this woman said, ‘There’s no way, with our history, we could ever engage in the systematic killing of human beings. It would be unconscionable for us to, in an intentional and deliberate way, set about executing people.’ And I thought about that. What would it feel like to be living in a world where the nation state of Germany was executing people, especially if they were disproportionately Jewish? I couldn’t bear it. It would be unconscionable. And yet, in this country, in the states of the Old South, we execute people - where you’re 11 times more likely to get the death penalty if the victim is white than if the victim is black, 22 times more likely to get it if the defendant is black and the victim is white - in the very states where there are buried in the ground the bodies of people who were lynched. And yet, there is this disconnect.
Bryan Stevenson (We Need to Talk About Injustice)
(And then we fly the confederate flag over our government buildings, and wear it on our shirts, and put stickers of it our cars.)
It’s something I really don’t know the answer to, other than I think it’s OK. At the end of the day, there’s nothing wrong about not being married. Having a marriage and a good family and children is a blessing. But I don’t think I’m a defective person by any means.
Lindsey Graham’s moving defense of being single
Damn you, Lindsey, for making me feel feelings for you.
(via dooeytwo)
I would feel more feelings for him if he weren’t meanwhile saying that gay people shouldn’t be allowed to have that blessing and *are* defective.
My neighbors are better than your neighbors.
Nope.
Abby had jury duty. I considered ways I might be helpful.
She's so sweet.
I just put this on Facebook and am waiting for the tears to roll in
This is magnificent.
(ATTN: clapifyoulikeme)
-glorifies theocracy
-not in the torah
-promotes gambling
-the hasmoneans were highly problematic
-conflicting transliterations
-high in cholesterol
-cultural appropriation of gift-giving traditions
-celebrates capitalism (and chocolate capitalism)
-latkes are hard to make and then your...
Important stuff.
what no but for real i need to know how where what
Picture one of my (Southern, surprise surprise) friends posted on Facebook.
My response:
"Traditionally and historically" being the key words here.
In the 60s, particularly after Johnson (a Democrat) signed the Civil Rights Act, Southern Democrats fled the Party. The South, aka the home of slavery, and a place where people were still being brutally lynched, went from solid Democrat to solid Republican pretty much instantly. Check out the maps of election results in 1956, 1960, and then 1964, the year the Civil Rights Act was signed. It's not a coincidence.
The racists were less driven by party than by location. If the Democrats were going to be progressive on racial issues, then Southerners were going to stop being Democrats. Racists were happy to go with whichever party was going to be more racist, and starting in the 1960s the Republican Party decided it would be them.
If anyone has any nonpartisan (as opposed to "Extremely Pissed Off Right Wingers) links on the subject, they would be much appreciated.