angel emojis, for when you're feeling incomprehensible and eldritch
h
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”
cherry valley forever
ojovivo

ellievsbear
we're not kids anymore.
đ

PR's Tumblrdome
Xuebing Du
wallacepolsom

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
d e v o n
macklin celebrini has autism
todays bird
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

No title available
sheepfilms
occasionally subtle

No title available
Monterey Bay Aquarium
seen from Italy

seen from Colombia
seen from China
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Belgium
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Belgium
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
@mysterysquid
angel emojis, for when you're feeling incomprehensible and eldritch
all the internet did was give him a place where he didnt have to worry about being punched in the face when he says what he thinks
âheâs not like that in real lifeâ just means âheâs not like that when there are repercussionsâ
I feel like too many people take that for granted. That somehow weâre allowed to be utterly rude offensive people towards each otherâŠAs long as thereâs no direct repercussions for being like such. I think a lot of people misjudge just what it means when someone acts utterly different when they know thereâs no laws holding them back, and what that says about them.
angel emojis, for when you're feeling incomprehensible and eldritch
Rebageling because although I know you all know that Superman was always an immigrant story, that last little bit about Clark finding solidarity in an immigrant community is wholesome an a new-to-me idea.
Renowned Feminist Philosopher Judith Butler Tears Transphobic Feminism Apart
Judith Butler says that J.K.Rowling and the transphobic TERFs do not speak for feminism at large.
If you havenât heard about Judith Butler before, here is a short summary: She is one of the most important gender theorists in modern times. Â
When right wing extremists despair about postmodern gender theory, she is probably one of the thinkers they are referring to (not that they have ever read her).Â
She has shown how social structures, language, the stories we tell and the roles we play strengthens the oppression and marginalization of women. In other words: For her gender is definitely a cultural and social phenomenon, and because of that she is on a collision course with the so-called âgender critical feministsâ (TERFs) who want to reduce gender to biological sex.
I strongly recommend that you read the recent New Statement interview with Butler, where she addresses the thinking and the tactics of TERFs in very clear terms. The interview is behind a paywall, but you should be able to access a couple of articles for free.
Still â in case you are locked out â here are some important excerpts.
She refuses to think of transphobic TERFs as mainstream feminists.
I want to first question whether trans-exclusionary feminists are really the same as mainstream feminists. If you are right to identify the one with the other, then a feminist position opposing transphobia is a marginal position. I think this may be wrong. My wager is that most feminists support trans rights and oppose all forms of transphobia.Â
So I find it worrisome that suddenly the trans-exclusionary radical feminist position is understood as commonly accepted or even mainstream.Â
I think it is actually a fringe movement that is seeking to speak in the name of the mainstream, and that our responsibility is to refuse to let that happen.Â
She dismisses J.K. Rowlingâs idea that allowing people to identify as they want will be a threat to women in womenâs bathrooms.
The feminist who holds such a view presumes that the penis does define the person, and that anyone with a penis would identify as a woman for the purposes of entering such changing rooms and posing a threat to the women inside. It assumes that the penis is the threat, or that any person who has a penis who identifies as a woman is engaging in a base, deceitful, and harmful form of disguise.Â
This is a rich fantasy, and one that comes from powerful fears, but it does not describe a social reality. Trans women are often discriminated against in menâs bathrooms, and their modes of self-identification are ways of describing a lived reality, one that cannot be captured or regulated by the fantasies brought to bear upon them.Â
She dismisses the idea that the term âtrans-exclusionary radical feministâ (TERF)Â is a slur.
I wonder what name self-declared feminists who wish to exclude trans women from womenâs spaces would be called? If they do favour exclusion, why not call them exclusionary? If they understand themselves as belonging to that strain of radical feminism that opposes gender reassignment, why not call them radical feminists?Â
My only regret is that there was a movement of radical sexual freedom that once travelled under the name of radical feminism, but it has sadly morphed into a campaign to pathologise trans and gender non-conforming peoples.Â
My sense is that we have to renew the feminist commitment to gender equality and gender freedom in order to affirm the complexity of gendered lives as they are currently being lived.
She does not accept the idea that the term gender can be defined once and for all, for example in reference to biology.
We depend on gender as a historical category, and that means we do not yet know all the ways it may come to signify, and we are open to new understandings of its social meanings.Â
It would be a disaster for feminism to return either to a strictly biological understanding of gender or to reduce social conduct to a body part or to impose fearful fantasies, their own anxieties, on trans women⊠Their abiding and very real sense of gender ought to be recognised socially and publicly as a relatively simple matter of according another human dignity.Â
She also says:
It is painful to see that Trumpâs position that gender should be defined by biological sex, and that the evangelical and right-wing Catholic effort to purge âgenderâ from education and public policy accords with the trans-exclusionary radical feministsâ return to biological essentialism.Â
It is a sad day when some feminists promote the anti-gender ideology position of the most reactionary forces in our society.
So there you have it: One of our leading feminist philosophers are comparing TERFs to the transphobic extremists of the right. And she is right to do so.
It is important to stress this: TERFs are not representative of feminism. They represent a toxic fringe movement that at this point in time does more to help right wing misogynists than women.Â
Judith Butler on the culture wars, JK Rowling and living in âanti-intellectual timesâ
Pink News has also covered this interview.
Butler criticized TERFs back in 2014, as well, as reflected in this interview.
Judith Butler: the backlash against âgender ideologyâ must stop
Photo: Adorno Preis
By the way, if youâve ever jumped into debating with radfems or other exclusionists, this is a must-read.
Look at how Butler is dissecting the TERF position. She isnât arguing on their terms - half the goal of exclusionists is to draw you into an argument over their false premise, in order to get you to legitimize their position. No, Butler is doing exactly the right thing, and pointing out their whole foundation is flawed. Her deconstruction of TERF ideology is most cutting because itâs effectively, concisely, and clearly explaining that the premise of their beliefs is wrong at every level - that what they propose is not for debate because it is fundamentally false.
Anyway, Iâm just absolute in adoration over how she talks about these topics. Sheâs not just tearing down TERF rhetoric, sheâs dismantling it with the precision of a master.
Really seconding this now that Iâve read the full interview, and I highly recommend y'all do the same. This is a masterclass in combating exclusionary rhetoric by dismantling the premise, which is precisely where it is most flawed and most in need of interrogation.
Itâs blessed it hear a respected philosopher saying what Iâve been saying for years. Some of these finer points get lost in Accepted Tumblr Rhetoric, and it really is worth hearing the nuances from someone whose job it is to think really hard about this shit.
Also, she identifies as non-binary, so sheâs getting this stuff right for non-binary people as well. Something a lot of yâall forget about and stuff up on when you focus on binary trans people.
ENOLA HOLMES (2020)
Everything about this movie makes me glee and I desperately hope the Amazing Brown Sisters can get the greenlight to adapt more books in the series.
Solar System Embroidery
Ophelie Trichereau on Etsy
I AM FUCKING SHOOK
Bunjy a question, do you think any cryptids could plausibly exist?
at least one cryptid definitely does exist in the sense that it was an actual creature who encountered and really freaked out a couple of humans- Mothman!
<art src- Tim Bertelink>
it was a barred owl.
see, owls have a really bright eyeshine at night, and in a really unusual color- blood red.Â
and barred owls have the brightest eyeshine of them all- so bright you could swear you were looking at the oncoming headlights of the Hellfire Express!Â
at close range, the eyeshine of a barred owl would be almost blinding- like shining a bright flashlight directly into those bicycle spoke reflector things. like this:
and wouldnât you know it, barred owls are found in the areas where Mothman was first sighted.
so what presumably happened was that several people had very close encounters with one or several barred owls, and the red hellfire glare of the owl was so bright that it made the owlâs eyes look the size of fucking softballs!
and since it was night and the owl was moving the shape of it was too indistinct to make out, so the humansâ brains extrapolated a body outline for this unknown creature that was MUCH bigger than the owl actually was! itâs also stupid difficult to judge distances in the sky at night so they may have thought the owl was further away when it was almost on top of them. and HEY PRESTO, A LEGEND WAS BORN.
but this doesnât mean that Mothman was never real, quite the contrary! Mothman is real in the only place that matters,,,, in our heartsÂ
support owl conservation efforts in your local area though, and you may someday see a Mothman of your own!
@thebibliosphere you married a night owl alright
Thatâs hysterical, because thatâs exactly what he says about me.
My gran told me about the time a barn owl started hunting in a graveyard near where she lived, and a lot of people were sure theyâd seen a ghost for a while before someone pointed out that nope, owl. (This was during the blackout, so no streetlights, light from windows, torches - on a moonless or overcast night youâd barely even see the owl, nevermind get a proper look at have a chance of identifying it.)
Special effects master, Ray Harryhausen, demonstrates animating a skeleton warrior from 1963âs âJason and the Argonautsâ. Check this blog!
dude is fast as shit
c... centipede dragon? millipede dragon?! :v
lil guys
I can verify this because I like, live out here and stuff, itâs pretty weird to watch the news call it a burning warzone every day
this is how propaganda works
Ah yes, because everyone knows, absolutely no onesâ lives or property are in danger until the entire city has been reduced to rubble.
Itâs literally like one block of downtown that itâs all focused in.
Few things have sustained more than a broken window or some graffiti.
Photos and videos of completely trashed buildings are including those that have been that way for years.
Stats on closures and financial losses are being confused with those related to covid-19.
The news keeps mentioning the same two or three little âfamily ownedâ businesses that got hurt in outbreaks of panic but canât seem to come up with any more than that.
Thatâs because downtown is dominated by places Starbuckâs, Rite-Aid, Target, Apple, Microsoft, Nordstrom Rack, Whole Foods, Menâs Warehouse, Payless, AT&T, Sprint, Doc Martenâs and other big chain brands.
Brands which themselves cost hundreds of people their livelihoods or homes when they came here, which people were already angry about before any of this happened.
This is in fact one of the fastest gentrified cities in America.
Oops, I forgot the scientology building got vandalized too. Poor babies.
And STILL, the most thatâs happened to the majority is a little graffiti.
Vandalism of business was already commonplace in a city where so much business was lost to gentrification, and the relationship between several major companies and its citizens already strained for very good reason. In fact, this isnât even a downtown location, but a beloved bowling alley people were hoping to see reopen a couple years ago:
And here it is now:
Damage to inanimate things such as property is an inevitability when large numbers of people are angry together. Itâs also undeniable that American law enforcement violates peopleâs rights every single day, people have protested that for generations without seeing it get better, and outrage over that is justifiable no matter whose bricks or plaster or linoleum gets caught in the crossfire. All media attention to âdamaged businessesâ is a distraction from what actually matters, on top of being ridiculously overblown.
Great crested newts, native across much of Europe
Photos by ropro
 I need more Jennifer Garner content
THE FUCKING CAT IM DEAD!!!!!!
PRECIOUS
When you get your cat a pet catÂ
(via)
Camouflage crew!
Get stick bugged, leaf butterflied, orchid mantised, and leaf bugged lol
Nobody called me but I showed up anyway.
What the hell even is the this post
Itâs the sins of humanity crying out to be known
The five boxing wizards jump quickly
Why zip along quick fam, just relax and vibe.
By Jove, my quick study of lexicography won a prize!
hey do you think you could expand a bit on separating the art from the artist? clearly youâve done it with jk rowling but what are your thoughts on it as a general idea?
Okay, but youâre not going to like the answer.
Hereâs the truth: you canât separate the art from the artist. Not entirely. HP Lovecraft was an incredibly talented, but much more incredibly racist man. It would nice to say you donât agree with his views but you can enjoy his works without that leaking in but.... well, Iâm afraid that would be misunderstanding his books entirely.
Consider, for a second, that Lovecraftâs works were horror stories about extradimensional creatures having mutant children with humans; they were about invasions from distant aliens; they were about the purity of quaint, white, American towns being tainted. Now consider how this may have all been influenced by the fact that he just simply despised anybody who wasnât white. Consider how his opinions on âmixing the racesâ might feed into this; consider why being unable to maintain the âpurityâ of white Americans was the scariest thing of all to him.
This extends to Rowling too.
I would love to say we can just acknowledge that she is an awful, racist, antisemitic, transphobic person and then say âbut at least her books are good,â because, well, they are, arenât they? I would say so, for sure. But to suggest that one can separate her from them is.... ridiculous, and itâs an insult to fans, can know and do better.
Consider why an antisemitic woman wrote about a species of goblins who live among us, but who for the most part keep to themselves and are maybe a little discriminated against on an individual level, but also hold all the cards, all the money, run the banks.
Consider why a racist woman would write about a species of slaves who loved being enslaved, who enjoyed working for no pay, and cleaning up after humans, with the only small caveat of that they didnât want to be beaten. Imagine that only the most radical of their species wanted to be free, and he still spent the rest of his life working for no pay and helping out a little white boy and his friends wherever he could. Consider why the only person in the story who thought they should be free, that they should have rights, was treated as an overzealous joke, who was acting against the wishes of those slaves who really LOVE being enslaved. Consider that Rowling went on to say that she kind of considers that girl to be black, now.
Consider why JK Rowling, an open and proud transphobe, wrote Rita Skeeter as having a large square jaw, thick âmanlyâ hands, and dressing incredibly gaudily with the most obvious fake nails and fake teeth and fake hair and fake everything. Consider why a woman who tweets about how trans women are âfoxes pretending to be hens to get in the hen houseâ might write this Rita Skeeter character to then illegally transform her body in order to spy on children.
Harry Potter is full of Rowlingâs bigotry, start to finish. Not even tangentially, like, âoh the goblins are bad, Rita Skeeter is bad, the house elves are bad, but most of itâs good!â because the deeper you dig and the longer you think the more you realise the entire story is based on her prejudices.
Harry Potter pretends to be an aracial story about found family, but if that were true, why are Harryâs distant ancestors important to who he is today even in the seventh book? Why does Harry have to live with his cousin and aunt and uncle? Because magic inherently prefers blood ties. Whilst Rowling was writing a story that seemed to say, âyour heritage is not that important and doesnât make you better than othersâ she was still writing a story about a boy who got all of his money through his bloodline, who was protected by living with his bloodline, no matter how evil, who was uniquely able to stop Voldemort because his bloodline passed down the invisibility cloak for generations and generations. Any step Harry takes he is compared to his perfect parents who were exactly like him â he looks just like his father, but he has his motherâs eyes, you know! â consider WHY a woman who is racist mightâve written a story like this. A story that on its surface, condemns a blood caste, but still in every step it takes, validates the idea that blood is thicker than water, and your geneological origin is what makes you special.
You can enjoy Harry Pottwr, of course you can. There are fantastic parts. I love a small group of teenagers deciding to become anarchist rebels and train to fight against fascism in secret. I love the murder mystery plots, I love how the series tells kids that itâs a good thing to be brave, and a good thing to fight injustice, and a good thing to challenge the government. But I cannot separate it from its author because it is such a product of its author. All of the structures of the world, the way things work in the universe, are drenched in Rowlingâs beliefs, her bigotries. Of course they are: she made them.
Again. This doesnât mean you cannot enjoy it. But I think we are past the day where we can pretend that disavowing a bigoted author is enough, and that that somehow separates the text from its bigotry. I think we are past the day where we can pretend that Harry Potter isnât a deeply, inherently bigoted piece of media. Even the bits we love. I think we are beyond the day where we can truthfully pretend to separate it from her, because she is present through all of it. We MUST recognise its flaws. We MUST admit that she is in every part of it.