hunk of parmesan: i'm getting so small! đ keep going! i wonder if i can get even smaller đŻ
microplane, getting more and more delirious with lust as my knuckles get closer to it: he's ruight

Discoholic đȘ©

oozey mess
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

shark vs the universe
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Andulka

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
taylor price
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Origami Around
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occasionally subtle

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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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@iamnottoph
hunk of parmesan: i'm getting so small! đ keep going! i wonder if i can get even smaller đŻ
microplane, getting more and more delirious with lust as my knuckles get closer to it: he's ruight
Digital circus' biggest problem is that it was written to be a niche show aimed at weird analytical queers with actual media literacy and it accidentally blew tf up and hit the mainstream and a bunch of people who have never had a second thought about anything got into it
This show isn't for people who watch marvel movies it's for the people doing 3 hour video essays about Utena or some shit
Digital circus: hey let's discuss existentialism, what makes someone human, how to cope with loss and regret, and the hedgehog's dilemma. you've all read I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream, right?
Digital circus audience: what
this is not an original observation by any means, but itâs infuriating to see people casually throw around the argument that pre-colonial societies all had these expansive and accepting gender norms, and their evidence for this is from anthropologists who âdiscoverâ trans women existed throughout history and proclaim look! this culture has an ambiguous third gender of cross-dressing [slur that hasnât been used in fifty years]. itâs so beautiful how primitiveâuh, I mean pre-colonial societies had so many mysterious and diverse genders
yeah yeah rainbow capitalism is bad and whatever but like. when I was a child, being pro gay was not the popular or lucrative choice. I'm happy that times have changed.
I miss rainbow capitalism. I do. I miss when it felt like public opinion was still pro gay. I understand it was always an empty gesture, but it mattered in a sense of knowing how socially acceptable being queer is. If that makes sense.
I agree!
And also, this feeling is why queer activists spent so much energy criticising rainbow capitalism. It WAS always an empty gesture, and it WAS always going to vanish the moment companies perceived it as a hinderance to maximized profits, or even just as not a HELP to those profits. It was always going to vanish out from underneath us at the moment we needed it most, which is why the criticism, in queer theory circles, was not "people who are reassured of their safety by this are stupid and wrong" but "companies that do this are still not our friends and cannot be trusted to do the right thing unless we hold them accountable to what that is, so we shouldn't let down our guard just because they're doing the right thing at this moment."
I think that, like with a lot of complex theory/praxis ideas, a lot of people just felt ashamed of their emotional response to rainbow capitalism once it was pointed out that rainbow capitalism was more "canary in coal mine" rather than actual advocacy or civil rights protection, and were unable to engage with the real premise of what that might mean for us all as social trends evolved and changed.
I'm not saying that people should change their minds about missing rainbow capitalism on that emotional security level. Not at all, I feel very similarly. But I do think people should reconsider engaging with queer theory critiques of rainbow capitalism because THAT'S where the conversation about how to manage without it now have been happening for decades. You don't have to reinvent the wheel, and reading theory isn't like reading a tumblr post where someone is just using words according to vibes, they're having real and grounded conversations about what to DO about a complicated thing happening.
This article might be a nice place to start, as it shares my perspective that watching rainbow capitalism falter is emotionally devastating, even if it isn't unexpected.
This Pride Month, do your part to lend LGBTQI+ people the support we need to thrive in resistance to oppression and, ultimately, organize to
getting re-followed here by girls who got termed is so strange. i'm glad you like me enough to remember me and follow me again, and i'm glad to see you again and get to re-follow you. but i'm sad you have to. i'm sad this is such a common occurrence
Before coming out I used to work at a mental health crisis line. There were so many problems with this place, that I will probably talk about some other time, but generally stemming from issues relating to social class and demographics more broadly.
90% of the volunteers were wealthy retired neurotypical cishet white women. That meant that for basically every call these people received there was a pre-existing power dynamic where the caller was well below the call-handler, and the call was consequently handled totally paternalistically, never with any sense that the volunteer might actually have something to learn from the caller. The similarity to the typical patient-GP/PCP dynamic was really striking.
Most of the callers were prisoners, homeless, or people who had recently stopped taking anti-psychotic meds. I think many of the volunteers enjoyed the feeling of the power dynamic that was obvious in these calls. If you spend most of your social time with people of the same high social class as you, I guess you might find it refreshing to encounter people who remind you that you've actually done well out of life, only from a safe distance and through a phone ofc.
We also got a lot of trans callers. Hearing how the volunteers talked to these callers was a really radicalising experience. "Why do you think you're a woman?" "Why do you think you enjoy wearing women's clothing?" "Is there a sexual component to it? Maybe something that happened in your childhood?" "What do the other girls at school think about you calling yourself a boy?", plus the obvious constant misgendering and pronoun "mix-ups", saying, "Oh sorry, miss, your voice sounds like a man's so it's confusing."
People would say this stuff during training too, and the people training us would say it was correct. It's not like they were letting their bigotry cause them to deviate from policy, bigotry was the policy. I remember there was one senior volunteer who was a retired cis lesbian police officer, and I asked her about handling trans callers and she just repeated back all the same bigoted nonsense everyone else thought (at the time I put that down to her being a cop, not being aware back then that being a cis lesbian is no guarantee at all of an absence of transphobic views.)
It didn't take long for me to start getting reprimanded for having too much empathy for the callers. I was an unusual volunteer in that I had actually been in the same position as a lot of the callers. I was trans (albeit not out yet), I was frequently suicidal, I had been on anti-depressants (incredibly I was the only volunteer out of around 150 with that experience), I had experienced CSA and domestic abuse, I had lived through times when I had a zero bank balance, I had eaten food out of a bin because I had no money, I had been heavily addicted to alcohol and nicotine.
It meant I normally had some commonality with all the callers that I could use to make sure I was talking to them in the way I would've wanted to be talked to, i.e. as an equal. I would actually let the caller direct the conversation rather than directing it myself (which was the policy), I would show genuine interest in their story, I wouldn't tell them to hurry up because there were other callers with "real problems". After a while, I couldn't handle it and I just left, not because of the stress of dealing with the callers, but the stress of dealing with the other volunteers.
And now many years later I often see queer groups near me directing people to this crisis hotline in case of emergency, and I always have to make a fuss to get them to remove it as a categorically non-safe institution. But it's so well-known and respected where I live (by people who have never used it, but they are typically the ones in positions of power ofc) that it can be really hard to get people to believe it is actually that bad.
i wonder if i'll still have a blog tomorrow when i wake up!!!! it looks like posts are getting deleted right off my blog so idkkkkkkkkkkkk
well that didn't take long, less than an hour. @staff do you wonder why we loathe you?
please note that none of you would have seen this if I hadn't reblogged it because I believed her. can you please believe me that it happens so much more often than you hear about? the only rare thing here is that it's too obvious to miss.
me: *googling what kind of bike helmet i should get*
search result 1, AI-generated article: Since the dawn of time, humans have wondered what kind of bike helmet is best for protecting their cranium and lower intestine. In the event that you find yourself with a bike helmet, you must find a way to save your family. Therefore, we have compiled a list of qualities to look for. First, sodium content is of great importance when biking your helmet.
search results 2, 3, and 4: sponsored ads for bike helmets on amazon
search result 5, reddit thread: bikeaholic363736: hey guys, do any of you have experience with the windslapper 30g helmet from spronklegear?
spokejunkie666: it's probably the best helmet on the market right now. if you're not using the windslapper you might as well just be riding your bike into a woodchipper
handlebar_hamburglar: idiot. we've had this thread a hundred times. don't the mods enforce the repost ban anymore? OP, don't listen to spokejunkie. the windslapper is the leading cause of death in the netherlands
Reblogging this manually. Op doesn't want credit for fear of being terminated.
Like even without having been terminated ourself there's 4 or 5 girls we try and keep track of whose blogs get deleted every week or every day or every few hours, and from them we see at LEAST a couple dozen more who r in the same situation, and all for like. Being too open about having youthlib beliefs or being age regressors or into "weird" kinks or just watching anime or all kinds of other excuses. Or realistically, for being transfem and thus already someone ppl seek out reasons to hate and attack, and just being the girls unlucky enough to catch the ire of ppl who think they're the punisher. And this is all stuff that completely slips under the notice of the broader website even among ppl who might notice when a big popular trans woman gets deleted, or who might've heard abt the big banwave the other month, or whatever. Bc these girls don't get the privilege of being officially reinstated or having their new blog last long enough to gain hundreds or even thousands of followers again. And seeing it all play out like this every day for months makes u kinda wish staff would all drop dead
twin daughters yuri is sacred to the himejoshi mom
IN THE LAST FIVE MINUTES??
i better scroll down and see some of those nazi blogs terminated
i better scroll down
and see some of those nazi
blogs terminated
Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.
Literally got deactivated within the last eight minutes :|
my lord. the two statues you commissioned are finally complete. yeah, the double-order with the vast and trunkless legs of stone and the shattered visage. i like to think we captured the sneer of cold command pretty well. it's a really thought-provoking piece my lord. very deconstructionist. i'm sure that even a traveller a thousand years from now could take one look at it and instantly recognise it must have come from an artistically enlightened culture
Iâm sorry I support all jokes but cave johnson would not be supportive of trans women
Due to a recent accident in the labs, the boys downstairs have found a way to turn men into women. Amazing breakthrough, and we wish you all luck on your transition. And your job hunt. Youâre all fired. Sorry boys, nothing against you. We just donât need women around here trying to clean up the lab while the men are trying to do real work. Cave out.
please god watch this right now
The editing of this video is hysterical and genius- they switch between so many editing styles to reflect exactly what kind of thing they're going for in each segment its GREAT.
i'd rather every single person on earth have free, reliable, easily accessible, and judgment free access to hrt, even if they regret taking it later, than have one single trans person kill themselves because they can't access or afford or are prevented from taking hrt!!!! i'll forcefem a thousands cismen before i let one trans girl die!!!!
Once when I was in undergrad, someone described something as âproblematicâ in class and our professor was like, âThatâs cool, but âproblematicâ doesnât really mean anything. It means that the thing youâre describing has a problem, and in and of itself thatâs not bad. Art, especially, should always have problems, or else itâs not interesting and not art, either. It sounds like youâre trying to say that this is bad, but you donât want to say âbad.â Is that right?â
So from then on whenever one of us called something problematic, he would make us talk it out until we could name the âbadâ thing we were hinting at. In this particular class, 7/10 it was some type of oppression, and the remainder was like, âIâm uncomfortable because this is very new/confusing/pushing boundaries that made me feel safe.â
Once we stopped calling things âproblematicâ and stopping at that, class got way more interesting and... we all had to say, like, âthatâs racistâ or âthatâs misogynisticâ or âew capitalism grossâ out loud, which a lot of us had never done in a classroom before. Or we had to be like, âUhhh... Iâm not sure whatâs so bad?â and confront our own beliefs and that was maybe even more useful.
Anyway. Whenever I see the word problematic, I canât help but think of this professor being like, âGood starting point, now letâs get specific.â I think when we have to commit to saying âthatâs ___â it requires a lot more careful thought about the truth and impact and complexities of whatever weâre claiming. Sometimes there really is some bullshit afoot, and also sometimes itâs art, and it should be full of problems, because thatâs what art is.