in case you're wondering what the greatest AMV of all time is, it's this one from 2008.
y'all need to watch this this pride month
Stranger Things
occasionally subtle

★

if i look back, i am lost
cherry valley forever
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
dirt enthusiast
RMH

Janaina Medeiros

⁂

shark vs the universe

No title available
Acquired Stardust
Sade Olutola

Discoholic 🪩
Claire Keane

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
we're not kids anymore.
d e v o n
Jules of Nature

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from United Kingdom
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seen from China
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@itshopefeather
in case you're wondering what the greatest AMV of all time is, it's this one from 2008.
y'all need to watch this this pride month
I remember when I was younger, anytime I watched a movie where the characters have to kill a scary monster/alien, I always thought the act of killing it was intended to be part of the horror. Like there’s this amazing creature that we’ve never seen before, and maybe under different circumstances we could’ve coexisted with it, but it’s trying to attack you and you have to defend yourself, but by destroying it you also destroy the ability to ever understand it and that’s sad and is supposed to make you feel conflicted.
It was not until well into my adulthood that I realized most people do not have complicated feelings about movies where people have to kill a scary alien monster, nor is that necessarily meant to be part of the narrative (unless it very obviously is). They just want the scary thing to die because it’s scary. I don’t have a real conclusion to this I just started thinking about it for some reason.
I always felt I couldn't possibly be upset about dying to an alien monster because proof of otherwordly life is exactly what it'd take for me to die happy
KICK THE CAN!
Let’s play the biggest game of kick the can on the internet.
To kick the can, reblog it. I wanna see how long this can go on for.
the oldest reblogs for this post that i can find are from january 2nd of 2013. this can has been getting kicked around tumblr for almost 13½ years now
And yet somehow this is my first time kicking it!
ID. photo of an open tin can. End ID.
not sure what to put as the caption but. yeah!!!!
Here’s my take on this.
Intersex bodies do not need correcting, intersex bodies are not unnatural. Intersex people deserve autonomy.
Stop nonconsensual intersex surgeries.
Bird dragons 🦜☀️
saw someone including "Mandate of Heaven" as one of those christian terms tumblr likes to use to sound profound. which i get where you're coming from but t☝️hat one is chinese
holdon
what the fuck is going on in this site's backend
happy pride
A comic about cavemen.
Do you want to see the oats I have in my pocket? Let me show you-
(oats blow away in the wind)
it takes 10 layers of the water filter to completely drown a tumblr screenshot if anyone was wondering
compilation of drawings for a vaphne kingdom AU (loosely inspired by sword and the scoob, and the "greece is the word" ep from be cool, scooby-doo) something i was doing last year with @artistic-mathematics :D
This Pride Month, let us advocate for and support our trans men and transmasculine siblings—not as an afterthought, not as a footnote, but as a necessity.
Transandrophobia is real. It is documented. It is the discrimination, shaming, harassment, and alienation specifically faced by trans men and transmasculine individuals.
This is not a hierarchy. This is not an attack on trans women. This is a data point.
Trans men face systemic discrimination before, during, and after transition. The visibility paradox means that as they become less visible as queer, they do not become less oppressed—the oppression just changes shape.
Trans men are routinely shamed, told to "reflect on their misogyny," and dismissed simply for being male. This shaming impacts mental health, self-image, and access to care.
Radical feminists and trans feminists who dismiss transandrophobia need to reflect. The problem is not feminism. The problem is specific actors who have decided that transmisogyny is the only axis of trans oppression worth naming. Both things are true.
Trans women face transmisogyny.
Trans men face transandrophobia.
Acknowledging one does not erase the other.
The silencing of transmasculine voices follows documented patterns:
"You're not really oppressed, you're just men now."
"Your trauma doesn't count."
"You're betraying womanhood."
"Be quiet and listen to transfems."
These are not neutral statements. These are silencing mechanisms.
Trans men deserve to be heard and seen—not as a threat, not as traitors, but as people navigating a specific, intersectional form of oppression.
This Pride Month, I am not asking you to celebrate them.
I am asking you to stop erasing them.
Listen. Believe. Reflect.
Then do better.
— Dr. Kusuke Saiki
PS. I have sources:
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-49509-2_9
https://thesocietypages.org/girlwpen/2011/09/21/transgender-employment-experiences/
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-12633-9_9
https://www.newstatesman.com/ideas/2025/02/transfeminism-radical-feminism-toryn-glover-essays
https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2025/01/masculinity-is-crippling-society-could-trans-men-be-the-key-to-changing-that/
imagine someone thinking of you and buying you flowers
ok now imagine a horse as a skeleton with a blue fire mane
the horse ! It’s bringing you flowers !
(To the tune of Rasputin): BLEH BLEH DRACULA, KING OF TRANSYLVANIA, HE IS A BAT AND ALSO A MAN
Beats you to death with hammers
YAYAYAYAY