Cosimo Galluzzi

★
Claire Keane
Peter Solarz
art blog(derogatory)
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
occasionally subtle
Today's Document
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
NASA
taylor price

blake kathryn

No title available
RMH

Product Placement
Not today Justin

Kaledo Art
Jules of Nature

Andulka

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@malandra-maurelle
An embroidery of the Wikipedia page for embroidery.
Have you ever felt the pain of loss? Have you lost someone close to you, someone dear to your heart? Have you lost a family member? I hope you haven’t, but for my family and me, it’s our daily reality. Every single day, without exaggeration, we lose someone we love.
Last week, I lost my uncle, my mother’s brother. He was walking down the street, just like anyone else, when he was struck by a missile from a drone. And today, we lost more loved ones—my uncle and his son. They were sitting together in a home that had already been destroyed by the Zionist war machine. Not only was the house obliterated, but its residents were killed as well.
I don’t think this genocide will stop here. Even at this moment, more people continue to die. The number of martyrs has exceeded 50,000, not including those still trapped beneath the rubble. We might be the next names added to the list of the dead.
Please, I beg you, save what’s left of us. Don’t just scroll past this post. Share it, and if you can, donate. Every donation you make can save an entire family from death.
**Humanitarian Support Request: Abdul Salam Al-Anqar** … Ahmed Alanqar needs your support for Help Abd AL Salam and his family get th
@serial-unaliver @2spirit-0spoons @schoolhater @vampiricvenus @tamamita @omegaversereloaded @beetledrink @anneemay @beserkerjewel @appsa @apas-95 @irangp @gaza-evacuation-funds @sabertoothwalrus @sayruq @spongebobssquarepants @officialspec @ot3 @rickybabyboy @paper-mario-wiki @postanagramgenerator @i-am-a-fish @extremelycursedimages @nabulsi @punkitt-is-here @whatcoloristhatcat @opencommunion @nyancrimew
Please all share it and tag your friends.
HELLO EVERYONE PLEASE DONT SKEP THIS AND READ IT TO THE END🙏..
I'm moatazalmziniy from Gaza I'm 18 years old and right now I will tell you my story..
Before this war I was live a beautiful and comfortable life but everything changed 💔..
As u can see here that's me before the war when I was live a normal life
And in the 17 November last year Israel did hit my house with bomb and the house get burned and I was in there and I couldn't get out and the fire did burn my body.. I will show some of things happen to me chest after this ...
As u can see that's my chest that I almost got killed by the fire but I lived but with so much pain..I didn't make this account for anything I just asking for help and tell u people do u care about us or we are not a human like you?💔
Hello everyone im Moataz Almzeiny from Gaza im 18years old, I will tell you my story… Alaa Alser needs your support for Donate to help Moata
If you care donate for me even anything can make it different 25$can let me collect the treatment 🙏🙏🍉
@90-ghost @el-infierno-esta-en-mi-mente @nabulsi27 @sar-soor @sayruq @queerstudiesnatural @appsa @communistchinaaesthetic @fairuzfakhira @neptunerings @just-browsings-world @apagou @akajustmerry @felsefekulubu @marnosso-blog @annoyingloudmicrowavecultist @tortiefrancis @flower-tea-fairies @tsaricides @riding-with-the-wild-hunt @vivisection-gf @belleandsaintsebastian @ear-motif @animentality @kordeliiius @brutaliakent @raelyn-dreams @troythecatfish @violet @the-bastard-king @tamaytandiran @4ft10tvlandfangirl @northgazaupdates2 @skatehani @awetistic-things @nightowlssleep @baby-girl-aaron-dessner @friendshapedplant @mangocheesecakes @commissions4aid-international
@rwuffles @mogai-sunflowers
A grassroot Initiative for 🍉- Join us
Sharing helps, even if you don't donate.
in recognition of World Down Syndrome Day on March 21
That looks fun
a wound is still a wound, even if it doesn't bleed anymore.
The Forgotten History of the World’s First Transgender Clinic
I finished the first round of edits on my nonfiction history of trans rights today. It will publish with Norton in 2025, but I decided, because I feel so much of my community is here, to provide a bit of the introduction.
[begin sample]
The Institute for Sexual Sciences had offered safe haven to homosexuals and those we today consider transgender for nearly two decades. It had been built on scientific and humanitarian principles established at the end of the 19th century and which blossomed into the sexology of the early 20th. Founded by Magnus Hirschfeld, a Jewish homosexual, the Institute supported tolerance, feminism, diversity, and science. As a result, it became a chief target for Nazi destruction: “It is our pride,” they declared, to strike a blow against the Institute. As for Magnus Hirschfeld, Hitler would label him the “most dangerous Jew in Germany.”6 It was his face Hitler put on his antisemitic propaganda; his likeness that became a target; his bust committed to the flames on the Opernplatz. You have seen the images. You have watched the towering inferno that roared into the night. The burning of Hirschfeld’s library has been immortalized on film reels and in photographs, representative of the Nazi imperative, symbolic of all they would destroy. Yet few remember what they were burning—or why.
Magnus Hirschfeld had built his Institute on powerful ideas, yet in their infancy: that sex and gender characteristics existed upon a vast spectrum, that people could be born this way, and that, as with any other diversity of nature, these identities should be accepted. He would call them Intermediaries.
Intermediaries carried no stigma and no shame; these sexual and Gender nonconformists had a right to live, a right to thrive. They also had a right to joy. Science would lead the way, but this history unfolds as an interwar thriller—patients and physicians risking their lives to be seen and heard even as Hitler began his rise to power. Many weren’t famous; their lives haven’t been celebrated in fiction or film. Born into a late-nineteenth-century world steeped in the “deep anxieties of men about the shifting work, social roles, and power of men over women,” they came into her own just as sexual science entered the crosshairs of prejudice and hate. The Institute’s own community faced abuse, blackmail, and political machinations; they responded with secret publishing campaigns, leaflet drops, pro-homosexual propaganda, and alignments with rebel factions of Berlin’s literati. They also developed groundbreaking gender affirmation surgeries and the first hormone cocktail for supportive gender therapy.
Nothing like the Institute for Sexual Sciences had ever existed before it opened its doors—and despite a hundred years of progress, there has been nothing like it since. Retrieving this tale has been an exercise in pursuing history at its edges and fringes, in ephemera and letters, in medal texts, in translations. Understanding why it became such a target for hatred tells us everything about our present moment, about a world that has not made peace with difference, that still refuses the light of scientific evidence most especially as it concerns sexual and reproductive rights.
[end sample]
I wanted to add a note here: so many people have come together to make this possible. Like Ralf Dose of the Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft (Magnus Hirschfeld Archive), Berlin, and Erin Reed, American journalist and transgender rights activist—Katie Sutton, Heike Bauer. I am also deeply indebted to historian, filmmaker and formative theorist Susan Stryker for her feedback, scholarship, and encouragement all along the way. And Laura Helmuth, editor of Scientific American, whose enthusiasm for a short article helped bring the book into being. So many LGBTQ+ historians, archivists, librarians, and activists made the work possible, that its publication testifies to the power of the queer community and its dedication to preserving and celebrating history. But I ALSO want to mention you, folks here on tumblr who have watched and encouraged and supported over the 18 months it took to write it (among other books and projects). @neil-gaiman has been especially wonderful, and @always-coffee too: thank you.
The support of this community has been important as I’ve faced backlash in other quarters. Thank you, all.
The Source, painting by ABeardedArtist
Rawa by RAMZI-FIRHAD
This artist on Instagram
They Come at Night by Zack Dunn
This artist on Instagram
Sand Tufas.