consuming media like
Jules of Nature

ellievsbear
KIROKAZE
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Noah Kahan

blake kathryn
we're not kids anymore.

#extradirty
Keni
The Bowery Presents
The Stonewall Inn
untitled
wallacepolsom
art blog(derogatory)
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
d e v o n
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
No title available

Love Begins
seen from Colombia
seen from Ireland

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
@femmedaltia
consuming media like
Collins is gone.
Namaygoosisagagun First Nation/Collins has burned to the ground. The entire community is nothing but ashes after being quickly consumed by wildfires. They did not have any support from emergency services, and no one offered aid. The community saved themselves by escaping into boats because no one came.
Mishkeegogamang and Cat Lake have lost power. Families are ending up in shelters with nothing. Armstrong, Lac La Croix, Whitesand, Gull Bay, Lac des Mille Lacs are currently in the fires path and all members are being evacuated.
All this loss, all this devastation, and it was entirely preventable.
After steadily underfunding wildland firefighting and purposefully excluding Indigenous wildland firefighters and Indigenous wildfire organizations from wildfire operations, firefighter training, decisionmaking, and resource exchanges, in 2025, Doug Ford slashed the forest firefighting budget.
It's hard to ignore his decision to cut funding and leave us out of adequate fire training (even though we've lived with forest fires for thousands of years—far longer than settlers have been in Canada—and made sure fires like the ones we're all seeing today were prevented through kinisitotēn) when, despite making up less than 5% of the population, we account for 42% percent of all wildfire evacuations in Canada.
And when we are successfully evacuated, we face discrimination and racism—like Kashechewan—because it's always been easier to blame us than it is to blame the true culprit: denialism, corportate greed, and colonization.
The people of Collins and every other impacted community deserve better.
Right now, the AFN is currently accepting donations to help Collins First Nation. If you're able to, please consider donating.
ONWA (Ontario Native Women's Association) is another great place to donate to. They have outreach vans going to motels and inns and offering food, water, resources, and cultural support to those impacted by the wildfires.
Other places to consider donating to are Mikinakoos Emergency Fund, Red Cross, True North Aid, Indigenous Climate Action. You can also send donations directly to Whitesand First Nation via e-transfer ([email protected]) and they request that you add your full name in the e-transfer comment section to receive a tax receipt.
*Before sending money, verify that the appeal appears on an official First Nation, Tribal Council or registered charity channel.
If you can't offer financial support, please consider donating items of need. Moontime Connections is currently accepting drop-off donations. If you live in the Thunder Bay area, Namaygoosisagagun Health Office is also taking in donations! They can also bemailed to Superior Inn Hotel & Conference Centre at 555 West Arthur Street, Thunder Bay, ON, P7E 5P8.
items needed are: food, diapers, medical masks, men’s and women’s joggers (all sizes), children’s clothing (newborn to size 14), children’s shoes, summer clothing, men’s clothing, toiletries (lotion, Vaseline, toothpaste, toothbrushes, shampoo, conditioner, soap, deodorant, etc.), strollers, adult depends-all sizes, dog & cat food
wīya ispīh iyiniw-kiskīyihtamowin pasikōpayiki kāwi askiy ta-iyihyīmakan
JURASSIC PARK (1993) Dir. Steven Spielberg
“ok lets do warm up sketch”
“oh..”
Warning: Major spoilers
Title: Her Vision is Mine
Editor: Moonpie AMVs (@moonpie1220)
Dedicated to: Seasaltmemories
Song: Delilah
Artist: Florence + the Machine
Anime: Princess Tutu
Category: Character profile/Drama
we are gonna be vacuuming up this post for the next five years
People of tumblr, I believe in you. I trust you to make the right choice. I truly believe we can make this a reality. We have the power. We can achieve anything we put our minds to.
We CAN make Count Binface the next Tumblr sexyman.
Spoon in the shape of a fish. Carved from some Sycamore I found just outside Wivenhoe, Essex.
op i love your fish so much i made it a png
they are now a school of fish
horse
a tribute piece to the late @qinni.
i hope you’re finally able to rest among the stars.
✨ Before and After Gif Challenge - Steve Harrington Edition ✨
So, it's been a while since I've done one of these. I've been stockpiling my favourite gif colouring psd's, and as you can guess, there was a lot of Steve, so he's getting his own special before and after set 💜 I'm gonna tag some of my awesome gifmaker mutuals under the cut, there's absolutely no pressure if you don't wanna take part. You can also find previous versions I've done of this challenge here 💜
Eli McMullen (American, 1992) - Solitude (2025)
JURASSIC PARK (1993) Dir. Steven Spielberg "Just think of it as... kind of a big cow."
Rest in peace to this legend
Sorry we really went from free the nipple, take back the night, slut walks, and ending gender/sex segregation in sports being fucking milquetoast feminism 101 concepts to fucking girl dinner and "I just worry about fairness if we let trans girls play against cis ones" and "it was right of that woman to call the cops on a black man for existing near here in public during the day time because men are all violent monsters" and "radical feminism isn't transphobic we just need to kill all men including trans ones those oppressive traitors" and I will legit never be able to be normal about it. What the FUCK happened. I'd say I wonder what the feminists of my youth would say about this but I'm one and lemme tell ya I want to throw up. Go fucking read bell hooks or do something else useful please because all of this learned helplessness, gender essentialism, and transphobia dressed up as feminism is actively holding us back.
I have pretty much this entire post in my drafts, so thank you OP for making it instead.
PBS and NPR were never beholden to the US government.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting was created so that the US government could fund public media without public media being influenced by the government. It was a private non-profit funded by the government, not a part of the government itself. This is by design. This was a good thing. It meant that even small local TV and radio stations, could afford to create media for the public good, without government influence.
This meant TV and radio stations for poor communities. For non-english speaking communities. For rural communities. For minorities. It meant that free and accessible media could be created for everyone, even if the government didn't like it.
That's why conservatives defunded it.
Because if they couldn't control it, and if it helped the people they hated, then they would have to destroy it. Do you really think that a fascist government would defund their own propaganda machine?
Not only is the idea that PBS before being defunded was propaganda wrong, but ignores the fact that defunding it is going to have long-term negative effects on vulnerable communities.
OP of the post in the screenshot called me an idiot and blocked me for pointing this out. So I'm setting the record straight. The CPB was never our enemy.
So, I think there are some important things I should address.
First: The show in question, PBS Origins, has been running since 2017. They have been focusing on these sorts of topics the entire time. This is not the first time the channel has discussed the US government's role in genocide and slavery. It's not the first time it has criticized the US government. It is also not the only shown on PBS to have ever done so.
Second: People have considered PBS and NPR to have a left-wing bias for a long time, even before it was defunded. That's why conservatives wanted it defunded, and why they had been trying to defund it for decades.
Third: PBS and NPR did a lot more than history and politics. Weather reports, local news, children's programming, cooking shows... Something like PBS Origins, even an episode as provocative as the one in the OP, would pass under the radar of most people, especially because it doesn't usually play on TV. (It's made primarily for YouTube)
Third: Defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting was not an easy task. It took decades to finally pass a bill doing so. It was not something the government could just do at the drop of a hat if PBS did something the current government didn't like.
And, finally, and most importantly I think: The Corporation for Public Broadcasting funded the creation of radio and TV programming in underrepresented communities, such as Native American communities, rural communities, poor communities, non-English speaking communities, etc. Not only does that mean these communities were able to create programming relevant to them, but those programs were also sent to other stations which could be broadcast. And thus the political opinions and discussions of issues that affected them could be shared. So, even if the big productions were being influenced by the funding from the government, the small independent yet still funded by the CPB broadcasters made up for it (IMO) by making the opinions of underrepresented communities more visible.
Georg Erler (1871–1950), “Death and the Maiden, Tightly Embraced”
etching, c. early 20th century — source
Settle a bet.
Who wins in a fight?
Kronk
Gaston
soooo true bestie
NO ONE GETS THEIR ASS BEAT IN A POLL LIKE GASTON