for me, it's more like water off a pomeranians back
cherry valley forever
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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bliss lane
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almost home
will byers stan first human second
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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@inconjuncts
for me, it's more like water off a pomeranians back
I feel like simply calling JK Rowling a transphobe isn't strong enough anymore. Like. This is not your grandpa calling you by your deadname at a restaurant kind of transphobic. This is her wanting to eradicate all trans people (with an extra special hatred towards trans women specifically). This is her trying just that by personally funding transphobic hate groups with millions to push around laws in the UK. It is not hyperbolic to call her a dangerous, genocidal maniac.
It's not about cancelling a problematic writer. It's about literally trying to save lives by denying her as much money and power as possible.
stop calling it a girl dinner and call it by its formal name: Fend For Yourself dinner in an ingredients household
this site ain't so bad. it's something to do in the mornings while ur bread toasts, right? ^_^
going on a hike and eating an energy bar that has been flattened into sedimentary rock
“I don’t think I can overestimate how important The Piano is for me in hindsight. It sits on my funny old CV like a medal on my chest. It wasn’t my film. It was Jane’s. I wasn’t the star of the film. That was Holly. But there is honour to be found in the second fiddle. Or fourth. No-one notices you much, you don’t get nominated for things. But you served. I was there in an important feminist film. I was there on the front line in an important New Zealand film. Neither of these labels does the film justice. It’s a work of art. And look, that tiny little figure in the fabric – see down there on the right – that’s me. It’s a film that will always have a place in cinema history. And I served in it.”
- Sam Neill (from his memoir “Did I Ever Tell You This?”)
may you have the loyalty of Homer, the patience of Marge, the whimsy of Bart, the curiosity of Lisa, and the stoicism of Maggy
Somewhere between art school and getting paid to make things, every hobby started auditioning for a job.
I didn't notice it happening until a small sketchbook in the Kröller-Müller Museum reminded me what I'd lost.
My newest essay isn't really about drawing. It's about permission. Permission to make something that doesn't have to become anything.
Read the whole article on The Wandering Muse on Substack
“24th Street Intersection” (1977) ◹ Wayne Thiebaud
Sydney Star Observer (June, 1993)
People who are like, viciously against prison abolition confuse me. I'll admit that, in the end, I also struggle to imagine a world in which, even when nobody has any reason to, someone or another won't act in a way that could only be solved with restricting their autonomy. But people who would act in such a way, even when all their needs and wants are taken care of, in a society that has methods of healing and retribution that isn't punishment, are exceedingly rare. People will do unreasonable things, even in a perfect world, but the amount of people who will do unreasonable things repeatedly with no way of stopping them are astronomically rare.
Best case scenario, we find a way around this issue and the number of people in prison is 0 (a way around that doesn't involve killing people, I will clarify). Worst case scenario, we don't, but the vast majority of people who would be in prison now most likely did not act in the way that originally got them in trouble and, in the scenario they still did, had ways of making up for that and doing better that does not involve punishment (which exasperates the issue). Its a win-win either way, but since prison abolitionists don't have a magic solution for every problem people are willing to throw away the whole concept, even when working towards that goal will only lead to benefits even if it is never 100% achieved.
I feel like this sort of thing maps over (nearly) identically to psych abolition, mainly because psychiatry is a carceral in itself. It is an extension of the prison system.
"What about the ~violent evil schizophrenics/murderers/rapists/sociopaths/etc~" has never been a productive question, because it misunderstands the whole concept at its very basis. "Restricting autonomy is inhumane, we should work towards a world that does not restrict autonomy as much as possible" has always been the thesis.
You get it.
Cicada, Stages of Conventionalization
Hugo Froelich, Keramic Studio Magazine, 1905