
roma★

izzy's playlists!
One Nice Bug Per Day
taylor price
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
trying on a metaphor
No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Discoholic 🪩
Game of Thrones Daily

@theartofmadeline
NASA

ellievsbear

oozey mess
hello vonnie

Origami Around

Kaledo Art
$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH

seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from Romania

seen from United Kingdom
seen from T1
seen from Sweden

seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Romania
seen from Finland
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Greece
seen from United States
@coalmind
can you imagine being THIS cool
Context.
WHY IS THE CONTEX EVEN BETTER?!
Why do Protestants and Catholics hate each other and try to kill each other in Ireland?
It’s a common misconception that The Troubles (the conflict/war in Northern Ireland from the 1960s-1998) was about religious hatred between Catholics and Protestants.
It was actually not about religion. It was about colonialism.
To understand, you need to know a little about Irish history.
Starting from the 1500s, the British began a program of systematic, intense colonisation of Ireland. Native Irish people were driven off their land, which was then settled by British people. The northern part of the island was particularly heavily settled, to the point that about half the population was made up of British settlers.
At the time, the vast majority of British people (and therefore the British settlers) were Protestant, while the vast majority of Irish people were Catholic.
As the centuries passed, the native Irish population and the descendants of the British settlers did not integrate. They lived largely separately.... attending separate schools, living in separate communities... and worshiping separate religions.
Religion became one of a handful of “markers” (along with language, cultural practices, etc) to identify whether someone was a native Irish person, or a descendent of the British settlers.
Laws were established that systematically discriminated against Catholics (who were mostly Irish) in favour of Protestants (who were mostly descendants of British settlers). These were in effect in Northern Ireland until the latter part of the 1900s. They meant that Irish Catholic people were denied equal access to education, housing/land ownership, and political representation. This was known as the Protestant Ascendency.
In the 1960s, a Civil Rights Movement began in Northern Ireland. It was inspired by the African American movement in the US. Irish people marched and held protests for their rights. This Civil Rights Movement came to an end when British soldiers fired live ammunition into a peaceful protest in Derry, an event known as Bloody Sunday.
Following Bloody Sunday, tensions between the two main groups in Northern Ireland (Irish people/“Catholics”, and the descendants of British settlers/“Protestants”) escalated dramatically and the region descended into violence. The Troubles had begun.
Of course, when the British press was reporting on the sudden civil war that had erupted in one of their territories (Northern Ireland) they glossed over the fact that... you know... they caused it, by colonising Ireland, displacing it’s population and then systematically oppressing the Irish for centuries.
Colonial powers don’t really like to acknowledge the effects of their colonialism.
So instead, the British media simplified the situation by calling it a religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants. And other countries, who don’t know any better, caught on and also portrayed it as a conflict between Catholics and Protestants.
But in reality, religion was not the root cause of the conflict- it was colonialism.
We gon talk about the Orange Order being a majorly fucked up masonic-style institution sworn to uphold Protestant Ascendancy and is thriving to this day?
How the 11th Night bonfires and 12th of July parades that still happen every year are specifically designed to intimidate anyone outside of the Protestant community, targeting mainly the Irish?
How the Order still supports and is supported by unionist paramilitaries, and heavily influences the political field of Northern Ireland (the DUP mainly)?
The Orange Order is essentially the British version of the KKK. Except it's accepted as a cultural thing and not outlawed at all.
I know people whose fathers are Orangemen. My Irish friend, Sorcha, dated a protestant guy once and went round to his house. His father didn't say a word to her. Just came in and hung up his Orangemen's uniform over the door to intimidate her.
I've only lived in Belfast for 6 years but I still can't get the image out of my head of a bonfire being built in a carpark 5 mins from my flat, 3 storeys high and adorned with effigies to be burnt on the 11th Night:
A painting of the Pope
Placards of Irish and other non-british politicians
Palestinian flags (cause a lot of prods here identify with the stuff the Israeli government are doing)
Flags of countries from where resident immigrants hail (especially Eastern Europe)
And a big Irish flag with the initials KAT spray painted onto it. You know what that stands for? 'Kill All Taigs' (Taig being a slur for Catholic nationalists/the Irish).
This shit still happens in the UK today. But the colonialism of Ireland or the history of the Troubles isn't taught in English schools. We learn about the civil rights movement in the US and are taught to think 'boy I'm glad our country is so progressive now'. And the literal civil war that raged until the late 90s in a province still part of the UK is swept under the rug. Only thing widely associated with the Troubles in England is the IRA bombings in London. Nobody from my English circles knew that Unionist paramilitaries even exist, most notably the Ulster Volunteer Force and Ulster Defence Association. They're not exactly secret, with murals and flags decorating working class protestant communities across NI.
The Troubles was a civil war caused by colonialism, downplayed as 'troubling times'.
It's no wonder NI has the highed rates of mental illness and suicide in the UK. Not only is the NHS desperately underfunded, with virtually no aid for mental health, people from here either live with the trauma of a fucking war or had to grow up in the aftermath.
To back up what @thechangelingmedusa said...
Here are a couple of photos of an 11th July bonfire from this year (trigger warning for xenophobia and anti-Irish imagery)...
That’s an effigy of a lynched Irishman. The sentiments of the people celebrating the 11th July with this bonfire are communicated loud and clear
An Irish flag with K.A.T. written on it. This stands for “Kill All Taigs” (Taig being a slur for an Irish person). Notice how they’ve also written “Keep Antrim tidy”. Antrim is a county of Northern Ireland... You can draw your own conclusions as to what they mean by “keeping it tidy”.
That’s just one bonfire, hundreds of these are burnt every year on the 11th of July.
Statistics on mental illness in Northern Ireland:
- Rates of mental illness in Northern Ireland are 25% higher than in England
- Rates of suicide in Northern Ireland are almost double that of the rest of the U.K. and of the Republic of Ireland
- Rates of self-harm are significantly higher in Northern Ireland compared to the rest of the U.K. and the Republic of Ireland
- A 2011 study found that 8.8% of people in Northern Ireland suffered from PTSD. At the time, that meant Northern Ireland had the highest rate of PTSD in the world
Help/support
Mental illness helplines in Northern Ireland
Crisis and mental health support during COVID
Aware NI
MindWise
made a comic about what I call the Third Cup Mistake, a mistake I make once a week without fail
Squimsh
my favorite picture ever is the one that says “HELL IS FULL, BITCH” and then it has the national suicide prevention hotline on it. it makes me smile every time
THIS ONE!!!!
I wonder who made these! I have this one saved:
Chaotic Good
*slamming my fists on table* I NEED MORE!!!! MORE!!!!
If anyone has the skeleton apologizing for triggering someone, I’d like that for my collection, please.
Here!
Plus some more^^
ME ME ME
Gangster Popeye, the inventor of this style and artist behind several of these pieces (I’m not sure about all of them, though they appear to be her style) is a Salvadorean trans woman. Her Patreon is here.
What do you do for a living?
Suffer
im so excited for post+ we haven’t had a poorly thought out and embarrassingly implemented feature in so long it’ll be like a birthday
Little babys will ALWAYS gather under a warm place like this. Anything small will.
If you are short enough, you might wake up under a bird...
This legitimately changed me. Like the course of my life has been altered after viewing this
*sits down*
dont you think its weird. dont you think its weird that the space race last time was two of the biggest powers in the world. and now its a handful of rich men. dont you think its weird they can afford that. dont you think its bad that rich men can afford the same things as the government.
dont you think its weird that while the world is suffering and poverty is everywhere, where there's wars and climate change and human pain and homelessness. the same month I've watched people die on the news from unbearable heat and unprecedented flooding. that a rich handful of men are going to space, causing more carbon emissions. dont you think its weird that instead of putting their vast amount of money to use for good they're using it to find a way off the planet theyre destroying.
dont you think its really fucking weird.
out: gender reveal party
in: gender repeal party
[ID: Laura Jane Grace grinning and burning her birth certificate live on stage /end ID]
god this will always be such a huge mood
ya being kafkaesque isn’t about turning into a bug it’s about how if you turned into a bug your boss would still be like “ok but we’re short staffed can u still come in”