I blacked out in front of Sony Vegas and this appeared
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I blacked out in front of Sony Vegas and this appeared
The term proship was coined by a serial abuser / cult leader and you do not have to label yourself as one just because you like horror media, just so you know.
Like, you can believe in free speech and art without willfully aligning with people who proudly show their abuse material to children.
It's like saying you're republican but don't really follow a lot of their views. You're still aligning yourself with an overall corrupt group.
Tony Deal's New Book, ‘But that’s not true!’ is a ‘Modern Parable’ about U.S. Politics
LENOIR, N.C. – Tony Deal, a musician, writer, teacher and mediator from Caldwell County, N.C., has written a new book – “But that’s not true!” – that is a “modern parable” about the current state of U.S. politics. It is both a fable and allegory for young and old alike. It is Deal’s third book. It is illustrated by Tonja Smith of Morganton, N.C.
Deal describes the book as a “A modern fairy-tale when a brave young girl speaks truth to a king.” In the Preface, he shares, “Echoing Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes,’ this contemporary parable centers on a young girl whose simple, honest words spark a resistance against tyranny. It explores the timeless reality of how power corrupts – spreading through fear and favoritism until the people are silenced.”
He explains, “At its core, this is the story of an unscrupulous leader using falsehoods to dismantle the twin pillars of society: truth and trust. While readers may find striking parallels in today’s headlines, the message remains non-partisan and clear: our political landscape is starving for integrity. As a mediator, I have seen firsthand the consequences when truth becomes inconvenient. I hope this book will spark a vital conversation… a reminder that in our personal, professional, and political lives, we must speak the truth and be brave enough to say, ‘but that’s not true.’”
Deal shares that the protagonist, the young girl Ruth, is raised “in a prosperous land built on truth and trust, where children are taught about an invisible cloak bestowed at birth – a promise that honesty and integrity lead to happiness and security. For generations, a Council of Sages governs wisely, until an ambitious newcomer convinces them to make him King.
“The King rules through lies and manipulation, spinning elaborate falsehoods so repeatedly that citizens can no longer distinguish fact from fiction. He mocks the vulnerable, stokes fear of outsiders, and demands to be the sole authority on truth. Most leaders, fearing his retribution, remain silent.
“When the King rides through Brookcroft Village and falsely claims he was elected unanimously, nine-year-old Ruth – small, fearless, and raised to always tell the truth – shouts, ‘But that's not true!’ The crowd freezes. Enraged and humiliated, the King bans those four words, launches a campaign of retribution against Ruth's village, and eventually has her imprisoned in his castle tower.
“Her courage ignites a movement. ‘But that's not true!’ spreads from village to village. Citizens defy the King's decrees, burn his plaques, and demand the return of the sages. At his own birthday celebration, thousands shout him down mid-speech. Indeed, ‘But that’s not true’ became the unifying chant of the land.” Shortly after, the King slips out of his castle in the dead of night and vanishes.
The Spark that Ignited the Fable
Asked what sparked the notion to write the book, Deal reveals, “The coalition of my training in mediation and conflict resolution and seeing the consequences of people not telling the truth.” He explains, “When I grew up, truth was important in Sunday School and Boy Scouts. Everywhere we were taught this. Lawyers told the truth. Doctors told the truth. We had more community service organizations. Somewhere along the line, we’ve slipped into when truth doesn’t matter.” He says he believes this occurred following World War II and the prosperity that accompanied the post-war decades.
Pointing to current politicians, Deal observes, “There’s no shame. The don’t ‘lie,’ they ‘misspoke.’ What frustrates me is the people who won’t stand up and say ‘That’s not true.’ We need politicians to say ‘but that’s not true.’ They can learn from Ruth, he argues. “At nine-years-old, using power and truth, (she) ends up taking down a king.”
In short says Deal, “Truth and trust are the very foundations of cooperation between people. If there is not truth and trust you have no unity. If we’d all be truthful, trust one another and live by the Golden Rules, we’d eliminate many of our problems. There are 200 references to telling the truth in the King James version of the Bible!”
Asked how the King in his tale is able to convince people that truth-telling isn’t required, that only blind loyalty to him is required, Deal explains, “When the king starts lying so much, nobody knows the truth. They create their own truths. Yet, God created you with truth in your heart. They were debating truths.”
How people could turn from truths that have guided them for millennia, Deal offers, “Blind loyalty. You just won’t admit what you see.” He explains, “It is because of what I term fear or favor. People know it’s not true at some deep biological level. But because of fear or losing favor, some people want to keep that sort of person in power.”
He adds, “They are good people but they are afraid. Believing that your party is right comes from a desire for deeper relationships. It shows people want to belong.” He acknowledges, however, that some people will simply deny their senses in deference to party or cultist loyalty. Referring to the Jan. 6 2021 Insurrection, he says you have to ask, “What did you see with your eyes? Did you hear people screaming? What did you smell? Did you see blood?”
He muses, “It reminds me of honor codes in college, especially in small Christian colleges. If you violated it, you were suspended. It was the power of the honor code.”
These changing values in just a matter of decades are the result of Americans abandoning truth-telling, trust and the Golden Rule – from multiple traditions, Deal observes. “Religious texts of five major religions teach the importance of truth, trust and Golden Rule that are 3,000-years-old.”
“Look at our political world today. Politicians are less trusted than used car salesmen. Yet they are suppose to be our leaders, set examples, be the guiding light. But nobody trusts them. It’s both parties, it’s not one or the other.”
Two books in one
On the back cover, Deal writes, “For young readers: A fable about the virtues of trust and truth.” and “For adults readers: An accurate satire of today’s decisive politics.” In a recent interview, Deal elaborated on the concept of “But that’s not true!” being two books in one. He says, “For young people, if you read this as a fairy tale and didn’t know one dime about politics, you would find it an interesting storytelling story. Her bravery was punished by a king and led to a national movement and the king moving. For young people it’s a story about being truthful, being trustworthy. ‘But that’s not true’ would be a national rallying cry. Plain and simple, a children’s story.” He continues, “But for adults, the book is a satire of today’s politics.” He also characterized it as “art against tyranny.”
It’s a hopeful tale says Deal. Before the King, the county had been run by sages. In the end, a surprising person ends up being one of the sages after the King flees. Yet, notes Deal, “In the closing pages, the wise elder Ebeneezer offers a sobering reminder: the King's corruption left traces in everyone. Rebuilding a culture of honesty must be intentional and ongoing.”
Purchase the book
“But that’s not true!” is available online at SeedbedPress beginning Tuesday, June 9. It will also be available on Amazon. Check back to learn of opportunities to purchase the book locally. The price is $15.
Take Action
In the Afterword Deal writes, “Our political leaders—sworn to inspire, guide, and lead by example—are now trusted less than used car salesmen. In the hierarchy of public honesty, only paid lobbyists rank lower. Yet, whether paralyzed by fear or bought by favor, many leaders remain silent.” He continues that according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), “faith in our federal government has plummeted to 31%. This is well below the 50% threshold required to sustain a healthy society.” He explains, that as trust levels drop below 50%, cultures exhibit a sharp rise in:
Preference for authoritarian leaders
Intolerance for social and religious diversity
Blind partisanship (party over country)
Hostility toward competing political views
Extreme cultural ethnocentrism is
He concludes, “Truth is not a social nicety; it's the bedrock of civilization—a matter of national survival!”
Consequently, he asks his fellow citizens to take action, including suggesting four organizations that folks can work with and support. They are:
Indivisible: Website: indivisible.org,
No Kings Coalition: Website: nokings.org
50501 (FiftyFiftyOne): Website: fiftyfifty.one
Repairers of the Breach: Website: breachrepairers.org
© Michael M. Barrick, 2026.
Source: Tony Deal's New Book, ‘But that’s not true!’ is a ‘Modern Parable’ about U.S. Politics
happy pride
okay so spock (the alien in blue) essentially goes into heat. like literal heat like an animal. Anyway, spock’s in bloodlust in this episode and must go back to vulcan to have sex with his finace (or someone. but its supposed to be his fiance) or he’ll literally die. this is called pon farr and some backstory spock is half human and thought he wouldnt go through pon farr so he abandoned his HOT fiance to fuck around in space except oops pon farr happens so. he and kirk (in yellow getting his tits cut open, he’s also spocks captain and best friend) and their other friend mccoy go to vulcan so he can have sex with his fiance or get married or whatever so he doesn’t die. but then spock’s fiance (t’pring) is like no i dont want to marry spock i want to have him fight someone to death (which she can do) and spock at this point is fully in the ‘blood lust’ and is basically not in his right mind and doesnt get what’s happening. and t’pring picks kirk to be her ‘champion’ in the fight (her logic is that if spock dies in the fight she doesnt have to marry him and if kirk dies, spock will be so upset with her he won’t marry her anymore anyway). anyway kirk doesnt know that its a fight to the death and so he’s like of course i’ll do this fight if it’ll help spock and then he gets told it’s a fight to the death and he goes WHAT and right afterwards spock slices his titties open like in the gif. also eventually spock and kirk roll around in the sand and kirk fakes his death and THIS somehow knocks spock out of his blood lust and he goes back to the ship super sad bc he’s killed his ‘best friend’ only to discover kirk’s alive and we see one of his biggest smiles of the series (a big deal bc spock is vulcan and they dont show emotion). anyway this aired as the season opener in 1967. know your history and all that happy pride
star trek heritage post (June 1st, 2022)
Important note! Kirk does not fake his death. The ship’s physician, Dr. McCoy, slips Kirk a mickey. He passes out, and Spock thinks he’s killed him.
McCoy saves the day again. :D
Quality tags from @qemfd
Knowing that trans women of color started the movement in the united states and were literally immediately erased and excluded from what they started is the most deeply jading knowledge.
It is the original sin of the so-called queer community and it damns it from the cradle.
no white gay boy will ever reblog this, watch:
no white gay will reblog this
no white lgb person will reblog this
Without Stonewall, without the efforts of Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, the LGBTQ Community wouldn’t be where it is today. Don’t forget the roots, don’t forget the catalyst.
and then TERFs wanna be like, “hmm well the LGBT community existed before Stonewall!”
but like…Becky, of course LGBTQ+ people existed before Stonewall. We’ve all existed since the beginning of time. But the movement got a shock to its senses, a jump-start, a rocket-into-space when that glass shattered via Marsha P. Johnson, and when Sylvia Rivera was up on-stage protesting guess who was on the sidelines heckling her?
The same fuckers who won’t ever reblog or acknowledge this
My apologies to the original poster as I photo captured this post to add to the thread-I reposted this last year for pride and expect to repost it every year I have left-it’s our history people.
Marsha P. Johnson allegedly died of suicide in 1992, and her death was never investigated. Even I, a mere prole, could catch the “she was murdered” vibes from the circumstances surrounding the discovery of her body.
Without a trans black woman, LGBT+ rights would not exist. Never forget. Never “pay it no mind”.
R E M E M B E R
And whatever you do, don’t watch that awful movie Stonewall. Go watch a documentary on Marsha P. Johnson instead.
there’s a wonderful documentary on netflix called the death and life of marsha p. johnson! very powerful watch.
every white person ever should reblog this
Official graveyard post. +Bonus
✊🏿🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️
why do we never hear about this?
The POC members of our community are the foundation!!!!!!!!
Always up for helping spread some important history
Same, especially when it’s about one of my favorite historical figures
If your response to
"Why do you equate being nonbinary to being white?"
is
"I listen to music made by black people."
I'm going to assume you're also white and struggling really hard to hide your biases/white knight behavior...
tumblr is the funniest social media site to go viral on
on tiktok people will quit their jobs after going viral once but on here not only can any post get 50k notes, but if it does theres nothing you can do with it. theres no monetization or any transferable skills at all. you just made a funny post and people liked it and thats the start and end of your career
you could say "i left the stove on" with no context and it might break containment on here and people start tagging it with ships and kins and theres no way to delete it forever unless staff gets involved. your mistake will never go away but your claim to fame will instantly
its like yes im the pineapple werewolf guy but no one outside of here and like 5 posts on reddit will ever know what that sentence means. i could jump on tiktok and no one would know me. no one on youtube or facebook. this is my little corner of the internet and i will die here before i give up that title and when i do know i lost nothing in the process
exactly
you have to be kinder to people with memory issues.
you have to be kinder to people who are slow processors.
you have to be kinder to people who don't understand your jokes.
you have to be kinder to people who forget important dates.
you have to be kinder to people with cognitive decline.
you have to be kinder to people who were always this way, too.
you have to be kind. you have to be kind.
i go on instagram reels to observe the strange rituals
yk guys I think a lot of ppl when arguing against the death penalty go for a like "people don't deserve death, etc" view and I get why ppl argue for that I rly do! but it doesn't matter. I don't trust the government to do it, I don't trust them to decide who should die, I don't trust them to determine who is mentally competent, I don't trust them to not be bigoted and discriminatory in their practices, I don't trust them to have the right people, I don't trust them to execute it in a humanitarian way. and I've had discussions with ppl who otherwise have similar viewpoints to me in many ways but can think of people they think deserve to die, and I think if abolishing the death penalty is like, a super important cause to u the same way it is to me, the argument u use shouldn't be "well these people deserve to live" (although in some cases I think yeah the death penalty is done to people who totally don't "deserve it") because that's so subjective, it should be "do you trust the government to do it?" like, do you trust the people who cant even fill potholes on your road to determine who should and should not live
the thing is like men and men really cant be friends because the sex part does always get in the way like thats true. and i mean that like im actually dead serious about that
like have you ever seen two straight men attempt to be friends with each other but the gay sex they arent having is literally preventing them from the transformative healing power of friendship. this is real
i dont even mean this in a "they want to fuck each other" way (although many of them do and will never know it) i mean that like the fact that gay sex is even hypothetically possible between them makes it loom over their friendship like it genuinely haunts them that they could be having it. gay sex is the elephant in the room every time they attempt to be emotionally vulnerable with one another, every time they let a hug linger too long. they cannot address its existence and so there is always something in their way, preventing true connection. and that something is the gay sex. that they are not having. the elephant of gay sex
guys you gotta stop thinking of women in their 30s as elderly it’s just misogyny
you also gotta stop thinking about actual elderly women as lesser human beings. Youth is not a measure of one’s worth.
um so quick question you do know that the world isn’t divided into People Blindly Accepting Of Gender Roles and Smart Trans Ppl. the world isn’t divided into People In Romantic Relationships and Single Aros. the world isn’t divided into People Who Socialize Easily and Oppressed Autistics. the world isn’t divided into Enlightened Queer People and Stupid Misogynists. like you are aware of this ? i hope you are aware of this
Ownership meant a physical copy. Now you own nothing and can't find what you want across multiple streaming platforms.
Bring back headphones that plug in. Bring back expandable memory. Bring back owning media.
some people really do need to start reminding themselves that the answer to "why didn't the character just do [something entirely different]" is often simply "because then there wouldn't be a story"