[ID: Tags reading "we will live but god will we complain". End ID.]
Three Goblin Art
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Not today Justin
Game of Thrones Daily
trying on a metaphor

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AnasAbdin

izzy's playlists!
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pixel skylines
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
i don't do bad sauce passes

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kaledo Art
DEAR READER
Cosimo Galluzzi

roma★
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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@macroprotodon-cucullatus
[ID: Tags reading "we will live but god will we complain". End ID.]
If you’re not Jewish, you can kindly shut the fuck up about the following:
The Talmud
Zionism
What is or is not antisemitism
The word “goy/goyim”
Jumblr: Feel free to add more.
“bagels” (it’s not one if it isn’t boiled!!!)
also, what can and can’t go on a bagel
the 6 genders thing
lilith
hanukkah (under the context of how much they talk about it. IT ISN’T OUR BIG ONE. NOT EVEN CLOSE.)
@edithsweetithh?
if someone is a "real jew" or not (no zionists are not "not real jews" i am going to throw a brick at you)
What "Chosen People" means
Tikkun olam, and other "Jewish values"
Kol Isha, and the role/treatment of women in Orthodox communities
Niggun
Bris
How we treat converts as born Jews
• the range of skin colors, hair texture, and facial features among Israeli citizens, and how a hypothetical American would categorize them on sight with no other indicators if they were standing on a random street corner in America, provided they were also perfectly silent and accentless and wearing """generic""" Western clothing
• the Tetragrammaton (especially trying to figure out how it "should" be pronounced!)
just saw a 'comments' tab on someones blog you know where the following and likes tabs would be if enabled and it was just showing all the replies theyve made on peoples posts. this is fascinating when did this feature come out
EMERGENCY - ITS AUTO ENABLED!
if you've made replies on posts there is now a tab on your blog showing every post youve replied to and your reply.
if this is not what you want, either go to your blog and click comments and disable it from there or just go to your individual blogs setting pages. just change it from blue to grey if you dont want everyone to see your replies AND the post you're replying to
PLEASE BE ADVISED that it is set to disabled for blogs that have not made any replies but it will turn ON if you reply with that blog in the future.! i just tested it with my main, which was greyed out but it turned on the moment i left a test reply
figured i'd get the word out bc i have not seen a single mention of this and i'm sure there are plenty of people who maybe comment on things they don't want on display for everyone to see on their blog lol. you can still look at your replies with it toggled off just no one else can, like locking the following and likes list
so for some reason this feature was actually announced on the tumblr engineering blog. interesting choice not to reblog it to the staff or tumblr blog, esp considering they asked for user input on how to implement it, but i suppose considering the response to the last update maybe the replies would be too overwhelming...
so couple of clarifications. comments are disabled as default for primary blogs that have their likes disabled. they are seemingly enabled for all other blogs that have replied to posts
posts you comment on may show on your followers 'for you' page if you leave your replies publically available. they may, in the future, show in on your followers dashboard if your follower goes to their dash settings and enables this. apparently, if your likes are enabled, your followers can already see those on the dash if they've gone into preferences and selected to do so, which I was unaware of, and that seems to be disabled at default, but it's possible i disabled it previously and forgot about it ig
When people pay cowardly, half arsed lip service to supporting Jews and being against antisemitism, they might as well not bother.
"Oh, I love Jews, but Zionists and Israelis are not welcome here."
If your "support" for a minority group rests on members of the group loudly dismissing and condemning literally half of their people on the planet because of where they live, pretending that their connection to the land where their entire culture and traditions were born doesn't exist,denying centuries of historical facts and evidence in order to assuage the "river to the sea" brigade, or honestly expecting them to stay an eternal defenseless minority in countries that have, in living memory, almost wiped them out entirely because their self determination, strength, and ability to defend themselves in their homeland discomforts you, your "support" means fuck all.
am i doing this right? (happy shavuot <3)
eating ice cream to celebrate my undying liturgical covenant with Gd
where's that post that talks about how the chant "There is only one solution: Intifada revolution" is like, five calls to commit genocide against the Jews in a transparent PVC raincoat? I know I've seen someone saying it. They're right. They're right and it's appalling. I still can't believe that young adults (and older adults!) were/are marching through the streets actively demonstrating the truth of our parents' and grandparents' warnings that yes, it can happen here, again, now, in our civilized countries, in our enlightened age; that yes, Israel is going to have to absorb us while we can still get out; that yes, we are going to have to continue sending our children to serve in the IDF; that yes, if we don't fight like they'll exterminate us the moment we falter, then yes, they will.
Happy Shavuot 🌾💛
Celebrating the harvest, abundance, and our beautiful community. Thankful for all the little traditions that bring us back to each other every year. Chag sameach! 🥰
Copyright © 2026 Ketubah Ring. No reproduction, printing, resale, or use without permission.
genuinely can’t wait for Shavuot I love dairy so so so much and I’m sorry lactose intolerance/allergic Jews
also did anyone else think Noam’s backup dancers looked like little black and white cookies
u see it too
Thinking about Dr. Robby’s suicide ideation in the context of being a Jew in a post 10/7 world. Like… long time coworkers casually sharing blood libel. Patients hearing his full last name and thinking he’s someone to distrust or fear. A media that gaslights him about rising antisemitism even though the Pittsburgh Jewish community hasn’t recovered from Tree of Life. The creeping certainty that if he was murdered for being Jewish tomorrow, people wouldn’t mourn him. In fact, they’d say he deserved it.
And maybe that’s right, he starts thinking eventually. Maybe he does deserve it.
just in case 🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿🧿
Back in high school I remember being in a class called 'Facing History and Ourselves'. It was essentially a mélange of history and social studies with a focus on racism.
The class was an average size for the school, maybe 20 to 25 students. It was also a fairly good mix of ethnicities and races. I was however, the only Jew in the class. For that class we had to do a presentation on some racism related historical event or movement, so I chose the Holocaust (I had prior knowledge and access to first hand accounts). There were students in this high school class who told me they had not really known what the Holocaust was, just that it was something bad. Almost none of them had ever heard of kristallnacht. It shocked them that I couldn't tell them when I learned about it because I can't recall a time I didn't know. There was a Holocaust memorial on my Preschool/Kindergarten campus. We were told what it represented.
Tangent aside, I was the only Jew in this class, and it was common knowledge that I was Jewish. One day the teacher showed us a film. I can't remember the exact title or premise but it was about a white supremacist group and the man who ran it (I don't remember if it was about the KKK and David Duke, it was many years ago). What I do remember is being a depressed teenager with rock-bottom self esteem and sitting in this dark classroom watching a man smile and laugh as he proudly said that "No, Jews aren't rats. They're lower than that. They're bacteria. They're stupid and ugly and the world would be better off without them".
That was the point in the video I realized I was crying.
The teacher came over and told me to go to the office to sit and take some deep breaths. That I wasn't in trouble but I should go there to sit or read until the class was over. The woman at the office asked if I wanted to help her fold letters and stuff envelopes for a while to take my mind off of it, which did help. A few minutes before the end of class they told me to go back to the classroom so I could pick up my bag and books for my next class. When I entered the classroom everyone looked over (as one does when someone enters a classroom mid class). The video was over and they might have all been writing a reflection on it, I honestly don't remember.
What I do remember is the two or three Black students in the class all got up and walked over. They asked if I was okay. The girl put her hand on the back of my shoulder and rubbed slightly. I don't remember what I answered. But remember realizing, "Oh. They understand. They know what it's like. They know what it's like to hated for something you can't change. To be stripped of rights and killed within living memory." No one else got up. No one else asked.
After October 7th, after fire bombings, shootings, stabbings, and arsons, no one has ever asked "Hey, are you okay?" No friend, online or in person, Jewish or gentile, has ever asked me. And it gets harder every time. Another little bit of weight gets added to my heart and no one has ever stood up and said "Hey, that looks heavy. Let me help you with that." And they don't have to. It's not their job. It's not a kindness I'm expecting. But sometimes when it get's really heavy, I feel a phantom hand rubbing the back of my shoulder. I don't remember her name, but over a decade later she carries just a little bit of that burden.
Because kindness transcends time and space.
The humanitarian situation in Sudan has created an urgent need for coordinated relief efforts to save lives, rebuild infrastructure, and support Sudan’s vulnerable communities during this devastating period.
Help us save lives by providing essential aid to Sudanese communities affected by the crisis. Your contributions help deliver nutritious m
Old (2024) news piece about this charity:
International aid groups are struggling to provide relief across Sudan. Mohanad El Belal, co-founder of Khartoum Aid Kitchen, shares how som
And from this year (2026):
ESSB professor Michal Onderco and MISOC students nominate Khartoum Aid Kitchen for the Nobel Peace Prize, reports Erasmus Magazine.
I'm working with a person for the next few weeks, and we work together fine, but she keeps telling me about how Trump is going to rededicate America to Jesus sometime in mid-May, which will be a great blow to Satan, and also how (unrelatedly, I think) the economy is going to magically recover and everyone's mortgages and credit card debt will be paid and everyone will have enough money and They won't rob us anymore,
at which point I said "and uh, the people who say this... how do they feel about Jews?"
and she was appalled! She immediately said that she knew that the Holocaust was about destroying Jews (and that it was Satan's work), but she had never met a Jew-hater in her life!
okay.
also a few days ago she saw my chanukiya and exclaimed that it was the first time she'd seen one with wax on it. Believers, she informed me, keep Judaica in their houses (I guess as decorative items?) because Judaism is The Root. And I did not know what to say, because the words "cultural appropriation" are clearly not going to be helpful here.
It's motivation to work fast, I guess.
Never forget🇦🇲
I've noticed this weird thing where people hold up somebody else having read Mein Kampf as like... proof they're a Nazi, and maybe it's me, but i'm struggling really hard here with this, and I think that there are some probably not considered assumptions about how reading and exposure to ideas works in that idea.
Like, I find it just incredibly doubtful that most Nazis have ever read it, or that it would convince anyone of the merits of Nazism. And I want to be clear, here I'm saying this as somebody who read it as a teenager. I came out of that experience thinking that Germany was absolutely stupid for banning it on the idea that it was so dangerous that no one should ever read it, because the ideas in here were so terrible. I came out thinking that strategy does a lot of harm. Because yes, the idea is in here are so terrible, and also Hitler is so deeply incoherent and unpersuasive in expressing them. No one is going to be convinced by Mein Kampf, and the only people who do find it convincing were already convinced before they read it.
In fact I would go so far as to say I think we should be reading at least exerpts of Mein Kampf in high school history, because nothing demystifies Hitler, and dispells this common image of him as this evil genius pied piper, who bespelled Germany, like reading his paranoid, hate fueled, and I can't stress this enough, incoherent ramblings.
We treat Mein Kampf like it's the fucking necronomicon. When I read it in high school, the school librarian reported me to the vice principal. Everything about this experience told me that this book was dangerous that it was something I needed to treat very seriously. It didn't live up to the hype. I came away from reading it thinking that clearly nobody who supported the Nazis had ever read it. They might have owned it, it might have sat on their bookshelf, but they certainly never read it, because if they had they would have realized that Hitler wasn't just evil and completely detached from reality, he was also not very smart.
Now, admittedly I am a Jew and I was reading it in high school, because I wanted to know why somebody would want to kill all of my people. I was not going to be an easy audience to persuade under any circumstances. But the point is that I found reading Mein Kampf very valuable, if incredibly unpleasant. It gave me tremendous insight into how the Nazis saw themselves and the world and how they understood what they were doing. It helped me understand how something like the Holocaust comes to seem reasonable, and it helped me contextualize and understand a lot of the modern antisemitism that I have to deal with, epecially the conspiratorial varieties. It helped remind me of that great truth that almost nobody believes they are doing evil. No matter how evil what they are doing is, they believe themselves to be in the right.
I think we need to acknowledge that there are plenty of reasons to read Mein Kampf that do not include agreeing with Hitler or being willing to be persuaded by him. It is the straight from the horse's mouth explanation of Nazi ideology and anyone who wants to understand the Nazis and Hitler, has a reason to read it, and even reread it and study it.
I'd like to add this is not a modern observation with benefit of hindsight, even at the time of publication it was widely derided by the literary world for being self-contradicting, poorly written, and utterly lacking in basic political, economical and sociologial insight, despite it being heavily edited for presentation
But ultimately it did not matter, Mein Kampf wasn't meant to convince people, just validate people's already held prejudice.
Yeah, I mean, the thing that a lot of people don't seem to realize about Hitler and the Nazis is that the international opinion on him was basically that he was a clown, and until he was in power, the opinion of most German politicians and businessmen was that he was a clown. And this is by and large, because people who wanted to get to grips with who he was and form an opinion of him, understandably, read his published work, e.g. Mein Kampf.
This idea of him as this brilliant charasmatic manipulator really developed afterwards to try to justify the amount of power he attained and the amount of damage he was able to do. There were some people at the time who would talk about the German economic miracle, and this must mean he was a financial genius (he had good luck, good timing and a willingness to deficit spend lavishly on the military), but genuinely, most people paying attention to him were baffled because they were like, this guy is a clown! Haven't you read his book? He's a joke!
And I have this fairly simple thesis about people who cause terrible harm, which is that people tend to give them much more credit for intelligence than they have, because they want to believe that people who are able to cause that much destruction and misery have to be uniquely capable or genius, because it makes the world feel more stable if we pretend that kind of damage is hard to do. But it isn't hard at all if you have power. It doesn't take a genius to set everything on fire when you're in charge of the matches and gasoline.
-nods- See also: the people who want so badly to believe, right now, that everything Trump does is part of some kind of seventeen-layered master plan, everything that happens in the world is Trump's attempt to distract from something else... and meanwhile it's obvious that Trump is just bumbling from one disaster to another, constantly being upheld by people who find him useful or who want him to keep validating their bigotry.
The way I've always heard it, in some ways Hitler got into power BECAUSE he was a clown, and the German political establishment thought that would make it easy to control him.
We read excerpts from Mein Kampf in my high school history class. Just like we read justifications for slavery and philosophers who claimed women were lesser and a whole lot of other things which we then dissected. You must know the enemy in order to fight them. Which is screamingly obvious to anyone who doesn't believe in cooties as a moral system.
We also, of course, read accounts of the Holocaust by Jews and saw interviews of survivors and pictures of the camps that are eternally seared into my brain. We read Night because of course we read Night, everyone read Night in school then, since it was assumed teenagers were not toddlers. And we read slave memoirs like Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs.
I did have to leave class because I was crying so much when the teacher told us about things Mengele did. I was fifteen. This is fine. Contrary to our current ridiculous zeitgest, teenagers are not little bitty children. They must be exposed to the world. That includes a classmate breaking down because of the horrors of the world. "Preserving innocence" is another term for keeping people ignorant and easy to exploit. We must grow up.
If more people read Mein Kampf then maybe more people would recognize Nazi rhetoric when it's dressed up in lefty buzzwords.
Somebody left a comment on this post saying, "This thread was going so well until "lefty buzzwords", and I responded, and the person in question deleted their comment. ( which is why I don't have their name.And it's possible that the wording of the comment is not exactly what I put up there, but that is as best as I can remember and it's pretty close.)
But I am going to actually post the two comments I posted in response, because I think they are very worth seeing.
"The person who posted that much like me is a Jew, who has had over the last several years seen an explosion of antisemitism on the left from people who consider themselves leftists, who are accepted by other leftists, who are engaging in conspiratorial, violent antisemitism, similar to that expressed by Hitler and the Nazis. They have dressed it up in leftist language, "lefty buzzwords", as @knight-of-skyloft put it, but is the exact same kind of vicious, violent antisemitism we typically see from the right wing. And of course, there is a reason for this, because the Western left has decided that it is okay to make common cause with right wing movements as long as those movements are "anticolonialist" (against the colonialism the western left is willing to acknowledge)."
"It's been growing increasingly obvious before these last few years that there was a lot of antisemitism on the left, but it wasn't overt until October 7, 2023. The antisemitism on the right, has been overt and growing for a while, and now it's horrifyingly plain that the left wing is just as bad. @knight-of-skyloft is no right winger, merely a jew who has lived through the last two years and has witnessed the left fall into the same kind of batshit conspiratorial Jew-hate as the right. I'm sorry if you don't like us saying this, but actually no I'm not sorry. You need to stop pretending that anyone on your side is free from bigotry, because I sure as hell don't have that luxury."
The perception that Hitler was just a racist idiot clown, to be hated and disgusted by but not feared, was the reason most of my family on that side didn't actively try to flee Germany until after it was too late for Jews to get out. The only ones who survived were the ones who were paranoid enough to leave all their property behind and run towards a totally uncertain future long before the danger was truly undeniable.