Peugeot 203 Cabriolet (1951–1956)
Sade Olutola
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Claire Keane
Xuebing Du
Misplaced Lens Cap

titsay
Game of Thrones Daily
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Today's Document
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
tumblr dot com
ojovivo
occasionally subtle
$LAYYYTER
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

oozey mess

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almost home
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@padre-conceptual
Peugeot 203 Cabriolet (1951–1956)
25 years ago an unknown Chinese protester stood in front of a tank in defiance of the government. No one knows the identity of the man but he was given the nick name “Tank Man”. This is one of the most iconic photographs of the century.
It’s actually been 27 years now since the incident known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre occurred. The picture above, famously referred to as “The Tank Man” was actually taken on June 5, the day after the massacre. (Which honestly makes him the one of the bravest person, to go back and stand up to a regime after such a terrible event transpired)
So what happened? I’m gonna give the TL;DR version:
April 15, 1989. Hu Yaobang, a former Communist Party Chief dies.
Many people, including workers, laborer, students and some officials come to mourn. You see, those protestors were originally there to mourn, not protest.
Time passed and there were some hunger strikes, and protests, and a call for accountability and reform from the government.
Eventually, things went south, because the communist party doesn’t have time to deal with these sorts of “demands” and grievances.
Keep in mind, the people wanted not the end of the Communist Party, but for the party to stop with the official corruption, rule of law, and the gross monopoly of information and power.
Incidentally, China still suffers from all of these SAME problems to this day…
June 3, 1989. The massacre started at night to disperse the crowd. Many were shot, wounded, and killed.
June 4, 1989. Some of the parents of the protestors who never came home went looking for them. It was still total mayhem.
June 5, 1989. The iconic image of the tank man was taken. To this day, no one knows what became of this person.
Content Warning for video: blood
“Tell the world…”
I cannot stress how important it is that people remember and know about this event. Do you know how China responded? With lies and censorship.
Even now, in 2016, we do not have an official death toll on the Tiananmen Square Massacre, the Chinese government doesn’t even acknowledge the event as a “massacre”. And they weaves these cover stories of “counter revolutionaries trying to overthrow the government”. Therefore, the violence was necessary to ~protect~ the people. (Or some bullshit like that)
The amount of lying and censorship in China is, quite frankly, scary amazing. Tumblr, which somehow managed to fly under their radar, found itself being blocked in that country.
After all, tell a lie often enough and it becomes the truth.
And those who remember the incident in China? …………well, you tell me.
Please at least REMEMBER this tragedy. Untold innocent lives were lost, and a nation has been fed a lie for almost three decades now from their oppressive af regime.
I have never seen this video before.
What the fucking hell.
What the hell.
Tiananmen Square happened when I was seven, and let’s just say children have a really interesting way of interpreting information.
I just remember thinking it was a happy event, because all these people were out on the street, and at first the army were interacting with these people. And it almost looked like a festival because people were singing and talking, and hopeful. And then tv coverage for the events got cut off.
The blocking of the live coverage had all the adults anxious, nobody said anything for ages, I just remember my grandmother saying, “Just be glad your father isn’t in China, now.”
And that stuck with me to this day. Because yeah, if dad had been in China then he would have been in Beijing studying, he would have been on those streets with those other students.
It was the first time I knew that something horrible had happened to all those people I saw on the television. I don’t even remember how I knew that the army must have shot at the civilians, I just knew. Because when you grow up in China, especially in the 80s you knew there were things you don’t say, that you can’t express in a public forum, because that can get you and your family in trouble. You just knew, and it didn’t fucking matter if your were a child or an adult.
To this day I don’t remember how I found out what happened in Tiananmen Square, because the news covered it up, but people found out. My grandparents knew, my uncles and aunts knew. Extended family visited my grandparents, I remember people telling my mother not to mention my father’s name because my father was a Chinese Beijing University graduate, who had gone overseas. Because there were people who died in the protests that my dad knew.
And it was all just so frightening because nobody was telling me directly what was happening, but I just knew that all the people on the streets was probably dead.
Looking back on it, Tiananmen Square instilled in a me a life long distrust of governments, but especially the Chinese government. I’m ethnically Chinese but I never want to return to China, not even for a holiday, and this has been my attitude even before Xi Jinping took power. Because Tiananmen Square was a peaceful protest that ended up with the army using heavy artillery against their own people. How can you trust in a system, in a government like that? Because if my dad had delayed further studies overseas by two years he would have been one of those students, one of those fucking kids on the streets that would have died.
And you know, when the Umbrella movement was happening in Hong Kong I was deeply panicked and just anxious because I kept on thinking all those people, all those kids are going to be killed. And when that didn’t happen it was such a relief.
When I found out years later that Chinese people a few years younger than me didn’t know what happened in Tiananmen Square I was so fucking angry. I can’t even articulate the rage and the sheer tiredness of it all.
Dad and I talked about Tiananmen Square a few times through the years, broadly, politically, and at times with sheer rage on dad’s part. I don’t even know what I wanted to say, but just fuck this fucking regime.
I was In Hong Kong when Tiananamen Square Massacre happened. Hong Kong was still a British colony then and had full freedom of press, and its reporters were there recording live footage while trying to stay as long as possible when tanks rolled in and shots were fired, when students lay in blood and their fellow students piled the injured bodies on those wooden plank carts to get them to the hospitals, while asking the Hong Kongers who were there to support the movement to please remember that night and spread the story of the massacre far and wide, because they already knew they would be silenced, if not imprisoned or murdered.
That night, and in the upcoming months, Hong Kong was in perpetual tears, and in literal shock.
Hong Kongers were mostly Chinese, just south of the border with people traveling back and forth. It also shared a language, and so HKers could follow the whole movement and hear news that western media had little access to without the distorting effect of translations. And they followed very closely, because by then, Hong Kong was already scheduled to be returned to China in 8 years time. How the Chinese government dealt with the movement would be a sign of how it’d treat dissent, how it’d treat people who’re used to the idea and practice of freedom.
What they saw was deadly. Ugly. It broke the hearts of millions of Hong Kongers who trusted that The Chinese Government had left its Great Leap Forward, its Cultural Revolution days behind. Those who could leave, left. Everyday the airport was filled with families about to be torn apart, who decided to trade the life they had in one of the richest, most vibrant and freest city at the time with the unknown, just so their own children would have the freedom to speak their minds, to have a higher education and not to be seen as the enemy of the state because higher education always led to independent thinking, to questioning, to asking for a better government as those university students in Beijing in the spring and summer of 1989 did.
The heartbreak and fear was almost palpable in its intensity. Most HKers were refugees from China or 1st generation of them. Unlike the HK youths now protesting who are more generations removed, they felt much more connected to the people in China. They still saw themselves as Chinese, like those students in Beijing. They mourned. They cried and cried and cried. They wore black or white everyday like it was the death of their closest relatives. TV stations played these Tiananmen Square clips all day. I can still play many of them out of my memory, can still recite what the students and government officials said (for example, they didn’t use tear gas because they only had three), the songs played — I know every word of China’s national anthem for that reason; the students were singing it. They were patriotic. They demanded reforms because they wanted their country to do better. 8964 was and still is, etched in my psyche. It is just one of the long list of atrocities this government has done against its people, but this one, I was close enough to feel it.
China censored the June 4th Massacre quickly and thoroughly — if you believe China has censored queer material, for example, I’d say this — the extent of that censorship is not even close to what a true China censorship does. A true Chinese censorship is you can’t find the info, or a hint of that info anywhere. You can’t talk about it in a roundabout away. You can’t change some elements of time/place/person and pretend it’s fictional. It would literally ban the numbers 8,9,6,4 from search results, even though the searcher may really be just be interested in the numbers themselves. Whoever speaks of it may be sent to the police station for a “discussion”; their family would be sent, if the speaker is outside China; the speaker may be arrested, and may never be seen again.
The western worlds pretended to be enraged about the massacre for a while and soon forgot about it, kept its diplomatic relations with China and did business with its government as usual. UK returned Hong Kong to China as scheduled, on July 1st, 1997. The city has been the only place that insisted on the mourning the victims and had done so insistently, consistently for 30 years, holding a yearly candlelight vigil in Victoria Park until this year, when because of the protests, the Chinese government decided to not even pretend to honour the international treaty they signed that promised HK its freedom until 2047 anymore. They shut the vigil down in the name of the pandemic (there were <10 cases/day then). Still, some people risked being arrested to go to Victoria park and lit their candles.
The Chinese government fears HKers for this reason. They are outside their iron curtain / firewall but have always been close enough geographically, culturally and ethnically to know and more so, to care. And there’s nothing more a government like China’s fear than people who insist on remembering the truth. With the National Security Law in place in Hong Kong now, probably the yearly vigils can’t continue. To understand how insane that law is, by writing this reblog, by saying things that make you dislike the Chinese government, I’m already in violation of its Article 38. It doesn’t matter I’m writing it in a foreign country. It doesn’t matter I’m a foreign citizen. That law includes everyone on Earth.
Yes, that includes you. And you. And you. And you. They can arrest you for trying to overthrow the Chinese government if you pass the borders of Hong Kong.
Please help remember 8964 Tiananmen Square Massacre. That summer day, Beijing citizens asked Hong Kongers to please remember this event for them because they knew they wouldn’t be able to afford to remember it themselves. Now that Hong Kongers can’t afford to remember it anymore, I’m hoping that everyone who reads this to please remember it, for the students who perished only because they wanted their government to be better, for the Tank Man who, on his way home with his groceries, decided to stand in front of a tank all by himself because it was the right thing to do.
I mean, when people literally have to invent the date “May 35th” because “June 4th” is censored, you know that there’s something major that people in power don’t want to have discussed.
Uncropped photo shows the long, long line of tanks.
Four years ago:
Microsoft's Bing search engine showed no image results for the famous Tiananmen Square protester.
May 35th, 535, and VIIV have all been blocked search terms in China.
Chinese social media users resort to clever tactics to escape the Tiananmen Square massacre anniversary censorship dragnet.
The uncropped picture linked above, in case the post is deleted.
À la fenêtre du grenier... :)
Les oisillons ont éclos 💛 Ils sont hideux pour le moment, mais font cui-cui et semblent vifs.
Nobody will ever be able to write something as witty as "I'm a man of the cross and the double-cross". That was peak literature.
I was reading a really long essay recently about the sheer incomprehensible scale of violence that happened during World War II, and among other things, it reminded me that this isn’t the worst time to be alive for the general human population. I can very much picture people during WWII thinking it was the end of days, and for millions of people, it was. Up to 60-75 million people died during WWII, and that doesn’t count those who survived injuries, starvation, occupation, bombings, etc. Millions upon millions of people killed or mentally fucked up for the rest of their lives, and this was after the first World War! Imagine the psychological toll of going through two world wars. None of us really can, nor can we comprehend that body count. WWII was so bad that, just in terms of numbers regarding the death count, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were a drop in the bucket. Even the Holocaust didn't make up the majority of the death count, despite killing an insanely high amount of people at an insanely fast pace. It's hard to quantify the worst events in human history, but WWII has to be up there.
Obviously, a shit ton of scholarship has been written on the long-term effects of WWII both on individual societies and the world as a whole, so it's not like the war ended and then everything was fine and dandy, but the fact that human society continued to exist after that at all, and even thrive in some cases, is insane. It's just something to keep in mind as you're inundated with a constant stream of "nothing will ever get better" posts from people clinical depression posting on main. Things were so, so, so much worse not even 100 years ago.
Haruka Kawakami
A cat trying its best despite its limitations ↔ A tired cat
かわかみはるか
出来ないなりに頑張る猫⇔疲れた猫
Why is the first wolowoo book I see advertised in a big library during Pride month about a woman cheating on her girlfriend with a man... And according to reviews the girlfriend is super happy too because the cheating results in pregnancy and they can raise a baby... Of course, this hot mess was written by a man. What a surprise.
These people don't know how wolowoo relationships work. They think it's like a bestie picnic or something. If I had a wife who cheated on me and on top of that told me she was pregnant from it I'd invent lesbian sharia law.
“Therese turned around, and Carol’s beauty struck her like a glimpse of the Winged Victory of Samothrace.”
- The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith
I can’t begin to describe how good this phrase is because it’s such a specific feeling that I’m sure many lesbians who’ve stumbled across this statue in one of the world’s most famous museums have experienced.
Like, the statue itself is beautiful and striking. It engenders feelings of strength and otherworldly splendor whenever I see just an image of it.
Now imagine that you are an hour or more into a visit to the Louvre, having already seen rooms and rooms of impressive artwork. You think you are simply passing through a hallway to another wing of the museum when you glance to your right and see this statue -18 feet tall -at the top of a stair case. The presence of that statue is like the first time you see the ocean. I remember it as significantly as I remember seeing Stonehenge or the Colosseum.
If I ever feel that way when I look at a woman I will absolutely know that she’s the one.
this is just blatant misinformation?
The only breed of rabbit this big is the Flemish Giant and they nowhere close to extension.
Maybe they are going extinct in Spain but there native to the Netherlands and aren't even supposed to be in the wild
@scruffy-bunny No, the Spanish Giant is a rare, endangered breed (10–20 lbs) being rescued by nuns in Spain, created by crossing Flemish Giants with local Spanish brown rabbits.
neet I didn't know that!!
Wonder why it was so hard for me to find giant rabbits other than the Flemish Giant on Google
Most of them were eaten during the Spanish Civil War to fight famine; now there are about 35 with their respective offspring with the nuns of Saint Anthony of Padua; there are really very few living specimens today.
Riga, Latvia
Is there any movie that starts with a climbing scene and where someone doesn't fall and die? I have never watched that. Would be so nice to change things a bit; maybe they don't die, they just get into a fight and nothing is the same after, or they have packed bad snacks, or discover that climbing actually sucks/is not the same anymore, or if they insist on someone dying they can die of, idk, hypothermia. Surprise me a bit.
i get why people don't believe in marriage as a social construct but legally it is the best and easiest way to say "this is who i trust to take care of me when i can't take care of myself" and i'm so glad gay people fought for that right bc when shit gets scary at least i know im in good hands
Algo tan sencillo como el matrimonio permite que vayas a ver a tu esposa al hospital, que puedas coger la baja si no se encuentra bien y viceversa, que podáis tomar decisiones en el nombre de la otra y heredar con mucha más preferencia ante la ley. Eso sin ni siquiera tocar el tema de la hipoteca, los impuestos y los hijos. El derecho a matrimonio es fundamental, y cualquiera que te diga que "oooh no pasa nada si los gays no pueden casarse, el matrimonio es un trozo de papel, una ceremonia religiosa, a quién el importa, etc etc" es sencillamente un desinformado de cuidado, un homófobo o un idiota.
It's a problem when your sarcastic response is to be as polite as possible but your stress response is also to be as polite as possible.
so many women i know say that but genuinely don’t seem to care when they see a hairy man. but when they see my legs it’s an issue. there are also a lot of lesbians who prefer their gfs to shave, but at least they are honest about it. i don’t mind people disliking body hair, but it’s so stupid that straight women act as if they hate it on everyone when they clearly do not!
They know that they're sexist and hypocritical but since calling other women out on their bullshit is considered a massive blunder, they just lie and get away with it.
I've only known one straight woman who's been honest about it; she also told her boyfriend to cut his long hair because she was "not dating a chick", lol. She's not the only woman I know who's pressured a man to cut his hair. So they CAN give them grief about their appearance, they just refuse to do so if it doesn't go against gender norms.
Normie lesbians aren't nicer about this in my experience, but I'm originally Spanish so in other countries it might be different. I think anglospeaking countries accept gnc lesbians more.
Me : likes videos about science, art, funny kids, cute animals, music, people who are into cool crafts, home decor, old houses, country life
TikTok Algo : Might you be interested in plastic surgery, tradwife content, pageants for little girls, cosmetics, rage bait, men with podcasts, conspiracy theorists from flat earthers to Hollywood is ruled by demons?
Me : no?
TikTok : Ah that’s too bad. Racist videos about minorities ?
Me : 💀
Don’t get me started with Botox it’s a nightmare !!!
I constantly say I’m not interested and it comes back every now and then.
snapshot from one of Oscar’s memorial paintings i did last year!