I forgot this hellscape existed
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@lilyisamess
I forgot this hellscape existed
This is art
If I caption this āI can haz cheezburger?ā do you think the fabric of time and space will rip and weāll be flung violently back into our own past?
At this point being flung back that far might well be worth it.
can you please leave me alone I need a minute to be diabolical in my room alone
i deserve to be called baby bc im baby, thank u for coming to my ted talk
I am given a lecture about leaving him alone for one (1) day
Such an angry little storm cloud.
You deserve his scolding!!! How could you??
You can never leave again
Can we consider how many people Toph caused internal bleeding and broken bones?
oh honey they are fully dead
No but Toph was a professional earthbending wrestler with the power to feel the whole human body at once through vibrations with enough accuracy to tell lies. She knows exactly how much pressure the human body can take before important things start breaking or Iāll go buy a hat for the sole purpose of eating it.
oh, sure. she doesnāt care though. sheās 12 and sheās thriving and she loves to murder
Aang: I have to defeat Ozai, but I donāt think I can murder anyone
Toph: I can do it.
Aang:
Toph: Iāve killed like 20 people since we met
Aang:
Sokka:
Katara:
Toph: I mean you guys have killed a bunch of people too
Aang: what no I havenāt Iāve never killed anyone!
Toph: twinkletoes you pick people up and drop them and blow them into walls. katara hits people with water hard enough to throw them to the ground and encases them in ice. Zukoās straight-up throwing fire at people. Sokka hits people with a club.
Katara:
Aang:
Sokka:
Toph: when you hit people really hard they often die. I mean, I feel it every time. not counting the head trauma and frostbite that probably means they die later.
Toph: ā¦.did you guys not know you were killing people?
Zuko: I mean I wasnāt going to bring it up but sheās right
Toph: I thought we were all doing it on purpose!
Zuko: itās all in self-defense, itās not like weāre going out of our way to kill people, but these things happen. Sometimes people have to die to protect everyone else. I thought you understood that already
Katara:
Sokka:
Aang:
Aang:
Aang: *extremely loud airbender scream*
[AangĀ looks to all the other Avatars]
[All of them but Kyoshi avoid his eyes]
Kyoshi - I donāt see what the problem is
Itās an earthbender thing
aang: Oh wisdom of Avatars past, advise me on how to defeat Ozai
kiyoshi: sometimes you gotta murder a bitch, kid. donāt know what else to tell you
aang:
aang: can I talk to a differentĀ ancestor please? maybe one not so down with murder?
rip to the freaks but i love getting vaccinated i wanna be immune to everything thank u very much ā¤ļø
RIHANNA + RUDE BOY (2009)
Iām about 90% sure the economy is never gonna āimproveāĀ
this is capitalism in itās final form
this is it honeyĀ
except, you know, those companies that do a charitable thing for every thing they sell
thatās kinda new and interesting. benevolent capitalism
Pay attention, class: This is what it looks like when one is unwilling to consider new information.
Itās not new information, though. Itās misinformation.
First, itās not that new.
Did you know that there was a time in U.S. historyāwhich is by definition recent historyāwhen a corporation was generally intended to have some sort ofĀ public interestĀ that they served? I mean, thatās the whole point of allowing corporations to form. Corporations are recognized by the commonwealth or state, and this recognition is not a right but a privilege, in exchange for which the state (representing the people) is allowed to ask, āSo what does this do for everyone else?ā
The way the economy is now is a direct result of a shift away from this thinking and to one where a corporation is an entity unto itself whose first, last, and only concern is an ever-increasing stream of profits. What youāre calling ābenevolent capitalismā isnāt benevolent at all. Itās a pure profit/loss calculation designed to distract fromānot even paper over or stick a band-aid onāthe problems capitalism creates. And the fact that youāre here championing it as ābenevolent capitalismā is a sign of how ell itās working.
Letās take Toms, as one example. The shoe thatās a cause. Buy a pair of trendy shoes, and a pair of trendy shoes will be given away to someone somewhere in the world who canāt afford them.
Thatās not genuine benevolence. Thatās sellingĀ you, the consumer, on the idea thatĀ youĀ can be benevolent by buying shoes, that the act of purchasing these shoes is an act of charity. The reality is that their model is an inefficient means of addressing the problems on the ground that shoelessness represents, and severely disrupts the local economies of the locations selected for benevolence.
(Imagine what it does to the local shoemakers, for instance.)
The supposed act of charity is just a value add to convince you to spend your money on these shoes instead of some other shoes. Itās no different than putting a prize in a box of cereal.
Heck, you want to see how malevolent this is?
Go ask a multinational corporation that makes shoes or other garments to double the wages of their workers. Theyāll tell you they canāt afford it, that itās not possible, that consumers wonāt stand for it, that youāll drive them out of business and then no one will have wages.
But the fact that a company can give away one item for every item sold shows you what a lie this is. A one-for-one giving model represents double the cost of labor andĀ materials for each unit that is sold for revenue. Doubling wages would only double the labor.
So why are companies willing to give their products away (and throw them away, destroy unused industry with bleach and razors to render them unsalvageable, et cetera) but theyāre not willing to pay their workers more?
Because capitalism is the opposite of benevolence.
āCharityā is by definition exemplary, above and beyond, extraordinary, extra. āCharityā is not something that people are entitled to. You give people a shirt or shoes or some food and call it charity, and youāre setting up an expectation that you can and will control the stream of largesse in the future, and anything and everything you give should be considered a boon from on high.
On the other hand, once you start paying your workers a higher wage, youāre creating an expectation. Youāre admitting that their labor is more valuable to you than you were previously willing to admit, and itās hard to walk that back.
Plus, when people have enough money for their basic needs, theyāre smarter and stronger and warier and more comfortable with pushing back instead of being steamrolled over. They have time and money to pursue education. They can save money up and maybe move away. They can escape from the system that depends on a steady flow of forced or near-forced labor.
So companies will do charitable ābuy one, give oneā and marketing ābuy one, get oneā even though these things by definition double the overhead per unit, but they wonāt do anything that makes a lasting difference in the standard of living for the people.
Capitalism has redefined the world so that the baseline of ethics is āHow much money can we make?ā and every little good deed over and above that is saintly.
But thereās nothing benevolent about throwing a scrap of bread to someone whoās starving in a ditch because you ran them out of their home in the first place.
This is one of the best anti-capitalist posts on the entire site.
Thatās not quite true. The reporter behind the story, Daphne Caruana Galizia, was murdered.
Not just murdered, that could have been coincidence.
She was murdered with a fucking car bomb.
Thatās not a botched robbery or a serial killer, thatās a professional assassination. Someone with money and political power, someone you might have voted for, planned and paid for this homicide.
An international group of journalists still collaborate to continue her work. Itās called The Daphne Project.
ābodies associated with cis women are harshly stigmatized, made taboo, and policed as part of misogyny, often in violent ways or with the threat of violenceā and ānot all women have vaginas and not everyone with a vagina is a womanā and ātrans peoplesā bodies are harshly stigmatized, made taboo, and policed as part of transphobia, often in violent ways or with the threat of violenceā are not mutually exclusive facts and in fact all of these things are deeply interlinked, and should not be used as gotchas! against each other
Your roommate is my sleep paralysis demon
āļøš
Hereās the thing about the air nomads.
I introduced a friend to ATLA a few nights ago, and they had only known two things about the entire show: the cabbage meme, and that Aang apparently wants to ride every large and dangerous animal he can possibly find. We got through the first five or so episodes, and my friend noted that Aang is exactly what a 12-year-old would be like if given godlike powers, and that this is literally just what he could do with airbending. He canāt even wield any of the other elements, and heās one of the most powerful people on the planet, because heās an airbender.
And that got me thinking.
This snippet from Bitter Work is one of the few pieces of concrete information we get about the airbenders, at least in ATLA. Iroh is explaining to Zuko how all four of the elements connect to the world and to each other.
Fire is the element of power, of desire and will, of ambition and the ability to see it through. Power is crucial to the world; without it, thereās no drive, no momentum, no push. But fire can easily grow out of control and become dangerous; it can become unpredictable, unless it is nurtured and watched and structured.
Earth is the element of substance, persistence, and enduring. Earth is strong, consistent, and blunt. It can construct things with a sense of permanence; a house, a town, a walled city. But earth is also stubborn; itās liable to get stuck, dig in, and stay put even when itās best to move on.
Water is the element of change, of adaptation, of movement. Water is incredibly powerful both as a liquid and a solid; it will flow and redirect. But it also will change, even when you donāt want it to; ice will melt, liquid will evaporate. A life dedicated to change necessarily involves constant movement, never putting down roots, never letting yourself become too comfortable.
We see only a few flashbacks to Aangās life in the temples, and we get a sense of who he was and what kind of upbringing he had.
This is a preteen with the power to fucking fly. Heās got no fear of falling, and a much reduced fear of death. Thereās a reason why the sages avoid telling the new avatar their status until they turn sixteen; could you imagine a firebender, at twelve years old, learning that they were going to be the most powerful person in the whole world? Depending on that child, that could go so badly.
But the thing about Aang, and the thing about the Air Nomads, is that they were part of the world too. They contributed to the balance, and then they were all but wiped out by Sozin. What was lost, there? Was it freedom? Yes, but I think thereās something else too, and itās just yet another piece of the utter brilliance of the worldbuilding of ATLA.
To recap: we have power to push us forward; we have stability to keep us strong; we have change to keep us moving.
And then we have this guy.
The air nomads brought fun to the world. They brought a very literal sense of lightheartedness.
Sozin saw this as a weakness. I think a lot of the world did, in ATLA. Why do the Air Nomads bother, right? Theyāre just up there in their temples, playing games, baking pies in order to throw them as a gag. As Iroh said above, they had pretty great senses of humour, and they didnāt take themselves too seriously.
But thatās a huge part of having a world of balance and peace.
Itās not just about power, or might, or the ability to adapt. You can have all of those, but you also need fun. You need the ability to be vulnerable, to have no ambitions beyond just having a good day. You need to be able to embrace silliness, to nurture play, to have that space where a very specific kind of emotional growth can occur. Fun makes a hard life a little easier. Fun makes your own mortality a little less frightening to grasp. Fun is the spaces in between, that canāt be measured by money or military might. Fun is what nurtures imagination, allows you to see a situation in a whole new light, to find new solutions to problems previously considered impossible.
Fun is what makes a stranger into a friend, rather than an enemy.
Fun helps you see past your differences.
Fun is what fuels curiosity and openmindedness.
Fun is the first thing to die in a war.
OP went and ended hard with the last line.
when the person you hate yells out the wrong answer in class.
i think the concept of a software install wizard is so cute⦠developers know the average person isnt comfortable running terminal commands so theyre like here!!! this wizard will do it for you <3 and weāre all like yay :) the wizard
I will never not share this when I come across it.
Working the same job with two different bosses, my god what a difference a boss can make to your morale and love of the job.