Thunderbolts dir. Jake Schreier | 2025
styofa doing anything
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

★
i don't do bad sauce passes
Claire Keane
DEAR READER
NASA

titsay
Show & Tell
Today's Document
todays bird
Jules of Nature
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
Cosimo Galluzzi
cherry valley forever
Sweet Seals For You, Always
KIROKAZE
occasionally subtle
Three Goblin Art

seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Barbados

seen from United States

seen from Iraq
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@sansrainbow
Thunderbolts dir. Jake Schreier | 2025
Iron Lung (2026)
does this imply that the ocean is ketchup
Jensen Ackles as Soldier Boy THE BOYS (2022) | 3.07 – “Here Comes a Candle to Light You to Bed”
bakugou timeskip icons ♥︎
Time Lapse of the Land Taken From Native Americans
via reddit
I will reblog this EVERY GODDAMN TIME so people can understand how the US government taking more and more land from Natives is nothing new (even the land originally promised after being kicked off their original, sacred lands) and they NEED to be fucking stopped. They need to be held accountable for the destruction of our people not just then but also now.
#he was insane for this
PEDRO PASCAL on Jimmy Kimmel Live! | March 24, 2025
Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes Thunderbolts* (2025) dir. Jake Schreier
cas: is that what you do?
dean: thats the opposite of what i do but im not exactly a role model.
cas: thats not true
THERE IS NOTHING GAYER THAN THIS SHIT OH MY GOD
can you imagine the first time cas smiled? like with teeth and all? can you imagine it was because he finally understood a joke dean made?
because i can. picture the scene. dean saying a joke in a tense moment (as always) hoping it'll land (as always). he looks at cas, waits, and cas does that squinty look with the head tilt. dean sighs because once again cas didn't understand what he meant. he's about to say "anyway", but, then, recognition crosses cas' eyes. and after that—
he's smiling. a real, genuine, smile. the first one ever in earth.
and it's weird, and disturbing, and somewhat frightening, and so so beautiful that dean wants to cry because holyshit he just made an angel smile.
he thinks: i have to think of another joke. i have to make him smile again. i have to. i have to. think something funny. i have to.
(late valentine’s day doodle ooopppsss)
Jensen Ackles | Radio Company Live Concert | Austin, August 19, 2024 [x]
hi! can i ask what's ur opinion on giving pets away? not necessarily because u can't afford to care for em anymore but maybe incompatibility of personalities or maybe lifestyles. is it wrong to give ur pet for adoption if u know someone who's better suited for keeping a pet, like emotionally?
This is going to be controversial, but I support making that choice.
There’s a lot of rhetoric lately around how it’s evil and unethical to rehome your pet if you don’t “need to.” And what that does is prioritize human ideology over the actual animal’s well-being.
Pets that aren’t a good match for your home or pets that aren’t really wanted anymore frequently have lower welfare! When caring for an animal becomes a burden or is forced, people end up resenting them, and that means the animal often doesn’t get all of its needs fulfilled. Even if you’re still feeding it and providing appropriate vet care, how likely are you to provide affection or enrichment to an animal you’re tired of being stuck with?
Lifestyle and personality really matter to making sure a pet is a good fit for a home. A dog that alert-barks at every leaf that moves is probably a bad fit for someone who has a chronic migraine syndrome, and they might not know that until the dog has been in the home for weeks and started to open up. A really feisty kitten that requires a ton of play might not do best in the home of someone older who wanted a quiet lap cat. And while you can you do your best to plan to find a compatible animal, you won’t always know ahead of time what issues might arise.
“Forever home” rhetoric is really, really popular and I think it’s very unfair to the animals it is supposed to support. It started with the backlash of seeing animals abandoned inappropriately, and has been heavily reinforced in the public mind because it’s so frequently used to drive fundraising and support for legislation. The whole “forever home” concept communicates to people that getting an animal is an immutable commitment and that if you can’t keep an animal, it is a personal moral failing. It frames human priorities (we think people who get rid of animals are Evil and Bad and should be shunned) as more important than actual welfare needs for individual animals (are they getting the care they need where they are).
Obviously, I don’t support people dumping animals or just getting fad pets they’ll discard immediately, but there’s so many alternate situations that can arise. Even if it’s just “they got a pet and didn’t know what caring for it would take and didn’t want to care for it so they brought it back, how awful” like… okay, I’d like the person to have done more research before they got a pet, but isn’t it better that the animal now has a second chance to go to better home? Knowing what a commitment requires theoretically can be very different than having to actually follow through regularly, and I’d rather see someone maturely acknowledge that having an animal isn’t a good fit than keep it anyway!!
If animals being happy and with all their biological, veterinary, and social needs fulfilled is actually the goal, we need to prioritize their welfare over human opinion. I’d much rather see an animal rehomed responsibly to somewhere it will thrive and be welcomed than see people keep animals they can’t/don’t want to care for out of guilt or shame.
So many people have shared their stories in the notes on this post.
If you’ve ever had to rehome an animal and feel like maybe you failed them, or maybe they/their new people think badly of you - please read the notes on this post.
If you’re thinking about rehoming an animal and wondering how to know if it’s the right choice, or if they’ll be okay - please read the notes on this post.
I want you to see how much understanding and support exists. I want you to hear about animals who were happier, better off, for a change in household, even if it was hard for the people. It is okay to make that choice, and this post contains many positive examples to help you if you need to hear it.
A lot of comments have expressed surprise at the fact I prefaced my response by expecting it to be controversial. The fact that it isn’t, on this site, goes to show you how uniquely at least the community in the blog’s extended orbit thinks about animal welfare. I found a post I made in 2016 about this exact topic in response to a “forever home” infographic that was making the rounds, and the notes have such a different tone. That mentality still exists in other spaces online, in the marketing and messaging of many rescue groups, and even just as a common and highly anthropomorphic sentiment. As mentioned in the notes of this post, people to this day are shamed by shelters or people in their lives when they choose to surrender animals.
I’m really glad this ask has gotten so much visibility and so many responses. The amount of empathy in peoples’s comments, and the stories shared from both perspectives - who have rehomed animals and those who have taken in rehomed animals - they’re all so important for people to see and think about and learn from. And maybe it’ll all pay forward other pets in the future, too, by helping people making a hard decision about their beloved animal know they’re supported and understood.
You know you're supposed to catch the bullets with your metal arm, hm?