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@plinythegamer
Even though it was dark out, and all the hot teens who kill people were locked in their chambers, I somehow managed to leave mine undetected, sliding my skinny little Polly Pocket body through the edges of my vaulted door. I moved Taylor Sw*ftly, heading towards the one place that gave me comfort in this hellhole of a prison: the library. Where no one ever went except for me because I'm different and quirky and like to lead. The library was off limits to prisoners, and even though it held all of Tic Tac's ancient history, for some reason it was uninteresting to everyone in the realm. But not to me. The smell of black mold and asbestos and 300-year old dust clouded my senses, welcoming me like a bouncer at a club as I made my way through the candle-lit fire hazard shelves. "Now I'm quite certain you're not supposed to be here" a silky low one hundred thousand dollar sounding voice called from behind my bony shoulder. I jumped, almost tripping over my silly little baby bird feet as I turned. The prince, who was not in his usual formal attire, but in a pair of Buzz Lightyear spaceship pajamas, was standing before me towering overly like the Hulk. The candle light danced across his chiseled jawline and his dark brown fusilli curls fell in front of sleepy blue orbs. It made Cornhole look almost…human. I gathered my shock, praying that the split second I faltered he didn't notice. But the way the corners or his mouth turned upward like the Cheshire Cat told me he did. "And I thought you couldn't read! But look at that, here we are," I said, hiding the ancient tome I had pulled from the shelf behind by stick thin body as I tried to casually move out of his gaze. He stepped closer, pressing his ice cube tray abs against my small frame and giant rack. His breath was warm and damp like a dog as he laced a large hand behind my waist grabbing onto the book in my hands. He smiled. His dentine teeth shining in the dark as his lapis lazuli eyes flicked to my mouth. "I could have you killed you know." My stomach slut dropped, aching for him to rip my insides open and wear me like a tracksuit. "Do it," I breathed. The words leaking out of me like an anxious girl with IBS. He growled, low and guttural, like he was about to devour me whole as he leaned into my uncooked linguine hair. "Tempting," he whispered, pulling back and taking the book from me in one quick swoop. "But I think I'll wait. Who knows what you'll get up to alive." He winked at me like a car salesman and moonwalked out the door, leaving me standing there star struck and empty-handed. What the hell was that??
yeah i drive the truck that isekais all those lonely 20yo NEETs and bored salarymen. it’s a really hard job. they keep sending me to workplace counselling after each hit. “it’s normal to feel guilt at ending someone’s life,” they say. how do i tell them that’s not what makes me feel guilty? “but it’s okay. he’ll live a better life in another world.” yeah, with 100 girls who could have lived normal lives but got drafted into being in these boring dudes’ harems. how many women’s lives have i ruined. and they don’t even know. they don’t even know
Sounds like you need "His Soul is Marching On to Another World; or, the John Brown Isekai" by CabbagePreacher, an actual fic on AO3 about famed abolitionist martyr John Brown getting isekaied to such a world and going on a rampage abolishing harems.
140 CHAPTERS?
Yes, this. A stunning number of people will default to "because it's illegal." Teaching an intro-level bioethics course will demonstrate real fucking fast that a lot of the population just lets legality stand in for morality.
you gotta excise every ounce of reaction from you and use your head n brains
If you're wondering how on earth you'd argue "cannibalism is bad" without "it's just disgusting and evil," I got you.
Let's start with a bizarre, but true, case.
There was a guy who posted to Reddit that he'd had to have his foot amputated. The foot was returned to him, and he and a few of his friends decided to Do Science, because this was a rare incidence where they could actually eat human flesh without having to kill or maim someone, and they cooked up his foot a couple of different ways and ate it.
Now I think this is weird as fuck, and kind of disturbing, but nobody was unnecessarily harmed in the making of this experiment, and I can respect the spirit of inquiry. If we wanted some information on what eating human flesh is like, this is a pretty good way to get it. (And yes, he did document their findings. I don't remember details but I do remember they found it extremely underwhelming, and unlike the common comparison, nobody said it tasted like pork.)
So: is cannibalism bad if it's flesh that's been surgically and necessarily removed from a consenting person, for example amputations, gender-affirming surgery leftovers, benign tumors, etc.? It's just going in the incinerator otherwise. Note, the question here isn't "would you, personally, partake in human flesh under these circumstances." It's "would this be bad."
Okay. I'm going to come down on the side of "meat is meat" here, just for the sake of demonstration (my actual answer is "I have no idea how I feel about this concept"). Okay. If we can verify the meat came from a necessary surgery, and that it's safe for human consumption (I would strongly recommend not eating a gangrenous body part, for example), we're going to say it's okay.
Now add a step.
What if it came from an unnecessary surgery? Say, a tummy tuck? How do we feel about this?
I feel a little iffy. I'm fat, and I know much of what could be removed from me wouldn't be tasty (fat without meat is just grease), but I could see some unethical surgeons pushing patients toward options they don't necessarily need--say, "you'll [possibly] need knee surgery in a few years, so let's go ahead and just replace it now. What? Your joint? For human bone marrow soup? Don't be ridiculous. [of course that's what I want it for.]"
I don't quite have an answer for whether I'd be okay with people being served human flesh from procedures like this. Let's get onto firmer ground and take it a step further.
What if the meat comes from an actively coerced surgery, for example, some rich bastard is willing to pay you ten grand to lose a couple of fingers for the sake of a rare new culinary experience?
No. I am 100% not okay with that. That feels akin to black market organ harvesting. You know full well none of the Musk kids would ever end up with only eight digits.
Okay. Let's back up a step.
How about meat from a corpse that was killed for the purpose, in which the person actively consented to their own killing due to terminal illness?
That feels pretty damn iffy again. I can't help but think of the MAID program in Canada that basically ended up as "oh, you're disabled? We can help you die." I guess maybe if you had a shortlist of acceptable diseases, like "you must have stage four cancer or Huntington's disease to qualify," and once again we run into "would unethical doctors deliberately claim a case was worse than reality in order to attempt to sell the corpse?"
Okay. Let's take a step forward again.
How about someone who wants to be killed and eaten as part of a fetish?
And here I have to draw a hard line. No. Because this is a paraphilia. This person can safely fantasize about being eaten, but past a certain point in real life there is no way for them to say "I changed my mind." You can't withdraw consent if you're bleeding out.
So what's the throughline with all the cases where I said "no" or "I'm not sure about this"?
They all involve the possibility, perhaps even the probability, of a vulnerable person being irreversibly taken advantage of.
Which raises the question, in the one case where I said "sure. Why not. Meat is meat," of whether that could also be a problem with those necessary surgeries. What if the surgeon could have saved that foot...but decided not to try quite as hard? If you need your gallbladder removed...well, can you be sure you need it removed?
Therefore, cannibalism is bad because it's inherently unequal. There's always the possibility of exploitation, and once it's done, there's no reset button. We can certainly make an argument for edge cases like survival cannibalism and, you know, the guy who ate his own foot, but as soon as a second person enters the equation there's doubt.
And so:
Let's not do that.
Also, just so we're clear: this was not a fun post to write. I don't think most people like putting themselves in the shoes of "so, how could one ethically commit cannibalism?" There's something very inherently discomforting about it. But the whole point here is to push past that discomfort, to ask the real questions.
You could fix some of these problems by making it illegal to sell or barter human meat. The only person who is allowed to claim body parts to eat is either the person whose body parts it was, or anyone they have duly authorized that after their death they may have those body parts.
This solves the "doctor really wants to eat you" problem... but it does not necessarily solve the problem of coercion. Could a dying person be coerced into turning down potential therapies by family members who would be allowed to eat their body when they die? Can't rule it out.
I think "allowed to eat your own body part that was amputated for medical reasons" is pretty straightforwardly okay. The doctor doesn't benefit from performing the amputation, and the only person who gets the benefit of eating the body part is the person who lost it. But eating people who are dead? Yeah, it's real hard to make absolutely sure there's no coercion involved to the living person to make sure family members get a chance to eat them once they're dead.
I'm just chiming in to say I think it's interesting we started with the obscure leg amputation example, and not, say, human placentas, which are eaten commonly enough that there's recipes online
Honestly that's because I forgot about the placentas. But it does add another layer: what about something that definitely, absolutely, no-possibility-of-this-being-a-hoax, is going to come out of you, and nobody even has to lose a body part? (Does it even count as human flesh? That's a whole other rabbit hole.)
I think its interesting that most of the problems you listed come down to like, regulation, instead of cannibalism itself. Which a few other people did point out but I find it as an interesting example of well meaning extrapolation that kind of loses the plot a bit. The conclusion of "eating human is bad because regulation of it on a commercial level would be basically impossible to do ethically" is a good conclusion about the ethics of widespread but its not the conclusion to the actually asked question. Which is the act of eating human flesh in of itself, something inherently wrong and what i think is the most important one that caused the above trip up on placenta. Where the line between what is cannibalism and what isnt is socially set.
Because if we get super technical, me biting my lip is cannibalism, me licking my papercut is cannibalism. If we go by the strictest definition of if it originated from a human its cannibalism, one could argue that breast milk is cannibalism despite literally being made to be drunk be our young due to it still being being consumption of something coming from a human body. On a societal level, we can acknowledge that sure, technically the might count or make jokes, but its not socially considered the same as eating someone's thigh. There's basically an invisible line where cannibalism goes from "normal" to "quirky" to "actually a problem"
Plus you have to consider in discussion that eating something that looks like a human directly and eating something that doesn't look human at all even if it is still human will get different answers. Even though the question is inherently the same i think you'll get very different answers between "can you eat a spoonful of your grandma's ashes because she wanted you to" and "can you eat a spoonful of grandma's cadaver because she wanted you to"
I don't really have a conclusion I just wanted to talk about how even something that seems as straightforward of cannibalism when it comes to "obvious moral questions" will still come with a lot of inherent societal bias thats interesting to dissect thats basically "how much human, is too much human"
And then while doing research into this i learned about the illegal china placenta trade so now any chance of this post ending in a rational way is fully out the window because that's WILD and VERY interesting as a part of this discussion i think and I kinda wish I knew how to pivot to that better but yeah, the theoretical black market placenta trade is real apparently.
Well, and that's the interesting thing about truly, consistently applying morals, is that the more consistent you are the more you realize "it depends" has to be a good answer, and then sometimes you have to draw a blanket over "it depends."
Like. As an example. Here's a guy, we'll call him John. Here's a lady, we'll call her Jane.
John kills Jane. This is murder, it is bad. Or is it? Because...
John kills Jane because he was fighting for control of a weapon she pulled on him, and she got injured on her own weapon. This is iffy. Let's look at the next step.
Jane pulled the weapon and John was just kinda...there, not doing much, and she threatened him. John is justified.
Jane pulled the weapon to defend herself because John attacked her. John just murdered her. This is bad.
John killed Jane entirely by accident while trying to avoid a careless motorcyclist and hitting her car instead. Someone was bad here, but it was neither Jane nor John. From their perspective, this is a tragedy.
John killed Jane because she had a terminal illness. This is iffy. Let's take it a step further.
John killed Jane because she had a terminal illness and said "I don't want to go through the next six months like this, it's already horrible and it's going to get worse, please bring me an overdose." This is Jane's choice. You and I may have different opinions here, but if he simply left her the pills and it was her decision to take them or she explicitly asked for help taking them, I would say he did nothing wrong.
John killed Jane because she had a terminal illness and he decided he'd do her a mercy. Jane had no say in whether this happened. This is bad.
John killed Jane because she was in the process of trying to commit a school shooting and it was her or a room full of kindergarteners. John's a fucking hero.
"It's wrong to kill someone."
Okay. But it depends, doesn't it? In some of these examples Jane wanted to die. In some it was a tragic accident and John would definitely prefer Jane were still alive (let's hope he has a good therapist). In some John is just an asshole. In at least one he was in a "what choice is there" situation where all the options were bad.
But it's significantly safer to draw a legal line of "all killing is bad and we can hash out the details in court" because otherwise you end up with everyone having a justification and walking away Scot-free. And likewise, while I personally think the example of assisted suicide is fine, I'd be extremely iffy and coming down on the side of "let's not" in real life because of things like the MAID program. Almost every single action, in a vacuum, is neutral. It's when you add context that they become right or wrong.
I DO think tumblr's dev team has been instructed to constantly implement new features and that's why they keep tweaking the UI in goofy ways. I imagine this is an upper management thing, so even if we say "well don't change anything and just maintain the status quo" they'll continue to make other changes anyway.
I will admit I REALLY like the recent improvements they've added to tumblr's search (you can exclude terms now!! you can search multiple tags!! and time frames!!) so it's not like they're incapable of adding useful features. it might be mutually beneficial for us as users if we were more vocal about things we want and don't want. Some features I'd like to see added:
spoilerable text
spoilerable images
the return of hover text!! remember when we had that?
ability to embed videos in reblogs
ANIMATED GIF ICONS!!!!!!!!!!!!
the ability to turn off other people's animated gif icons
the ability to filter original posts on a user's ENTIRE blog, not just a tag/search
more html support, like what if we could build tables
adding reactions to replies! I'm glad we can like them more but it'd be nice if we could take this further
embeddable tiktoks?? I don't even use tiktok but I remember trying to embed one in like 2020 and I'm surprised we still can't! even vines were able to be embedded
being able to search in your DMs. not being able to do this is why I tend to redirect mutuals to discord
MUTING USERS POSTS/COMMENTS WITHOUT BLOCKING THEM! just cause I don't want to see someone's posts doesn't mean I don't want us to never interact ever
a mutual-only dashboard feed
a feed for the blogs you're subscribed to
get rid of tumblr tv lmao I've literally never used it
"mark as read" button for communities without opening them
please dear god no AI shit unless it's a way for me to filter/block it easier
several of these I've submitted support tickets for under "feedback", and if there's anything you feel strongly about I suggest you do too!
he thinks he's being so smooth with his little face on my leg. i SEE you, villain
[ID: a sketchy digital comic showing a dog lying down with his head on a person's leg.
The first panel shows the dog looking at the person with big eyes and saying, "Hi I'm love you". The second panel is slightly closer as the dog says, "So Bmuch! Hi!"
The third panel widens to show a sandwich sitting on a side table. The dog is intently staring at the sandwich.
End ID]
stunning recreation of this tonight
ok, a sphynx might not be the BEST example of tom cheeks, but it's what I've got on hand. Here's Edgar shortly after being neutered:
He's still pretty cheeky up there.
Here he is a few weeks later:
You can see his cheeks have deflated a bit.
I'm unsure on his EXACT age, but I tentatively guessed him to be between 2-5 years old.
truly this post is reaching its intended audience
Flying is effortless, landing can be a little bit harder, Cornell Lab / DoC (northern royal albatross) (part 1)
There’s so much about this. The tumble itself is so irredeemably funny. The child stops asking for food and just stares in silence as the adult completely beefs it. The adult, absolutely ashamed, wandering off screen, refusing to make eye contact with the baby.
Perfect 10s all round.
It kind of fucks with me that somebody killed ötzi the iceman because ötzi himself is like whatever but the silent presence of human hands that drew back the string of the bow that shot the arrow that killed him is crazy. the idea that there were various people involved in that situation and while one of them has had his last hours painstakingly reconstructed and studied to no end, the others now only exist insofar that an arrowhead had to get into his shoulder somehow. imagine killing someone and then suddenly your entire existence is only a vague shadow implied by the fact that you killed them. much to consider
Testing the mummified bone marrow of ötzi to figure out his ancestry whole time there’s definitely another person, maybe more than one, standing in the room with us but I can never see or speak to them because I only know them through the assurance that they were there too in the form of one single arrowhead. I hate prehistory so much it’s unreal
I hate it too tbh
Brutal scenes playing out in real time
Has this been done before?
It’s always so funny when people come to that realization
i’m truly sorry to be the bearer of such grave news. how can i support you during this difficult time
Mosaic of gladiators fighting - source unknown
This 3rd-century AD mosaic from the House of the Gladiators in Kourion, Cyprus, depicts two fighters — Hellenikos and Margarites — sparring with blunt weapons. (Photo by Getty Images)
This 3rd-century AD mosaic from the House of the Gladiators in Kourion, Cyprus, shows the fighter Lytras being separated from his opponent by a referee. (Photo by Getty Images)
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These photos are from the article linked below. Here is an interesting excerpt from it:
The gladiators of ancient Rome are nearly always imagined as figures of perfect physical presence. They’re popularly pictured as lean, muscular and bronzed from their bouts under the Mediterranean sun.
But as classical historian Harry Sidebottom explains on the HistoryExtra podcast, the reality was far stranger, and more complex. Sidebottom, the author of Those Who Are About To Die: Gladiators and the Roman Mind, says that Roman gladiators were impossible to compare to professional athletes today. They were brutalised, scarred, physically lopsided and, as Sidebottom reveals, surprisingly well-padded.
A Roman diet designed for spectacle
But the work that went into achieving that adoration required more than fighting in the arenas. It was a full-time job, with a very specific diet that went along with it.
“A Roman gladiator was very much not the ripped Hollywood star we’ve come to know,” Sidebottom explains.
“They were fed a diet of something called sagina … barley and bean stew. It was carbohydrate rich and designed to build up a thick layer of subcutaneous fat, the idea being they can actually take a wound and bleed in an almost cinematic, visual way. But the blade won't hit any vital organs.
“So, gladiators were quite fat.”
The fact that fighters could bleed dramatically without dying too quickly was the whole idea, ramping up the spectacle of gladiatorial battles. The crowd wanted to see wounded fighters, not lifeless corpses.
“They also had a special drink,” say Sidebottom.
“They drank ash diluted in wine to build up calcium … forensic pathologists have looked at the skeletons and, yes, [the remains] have an abnormally high level of ash.”
Excavations at the gladiator cemetery in Ephesus in modern-day Turkey confirm this. Bone analysis shows unusually high calcium levels, which would have strengthened gladiators’ skeletons against impact.
Along with the food, it was an early form of sports nutrition.
Ancient Roman gladiators are often imagined as chiselled, bronzed heroes of the arena, akin to today’s top athletes. But the truth was far m
Art by XI ZHANG
Stephanie Foo, What My Bones Know: A Memoir of Healing from Complex Trauma
who fucking cares. has anyone here heard of cobra starship