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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Show & Tell
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Item: A Stunning Frame Rarity: ⏶ Common
What game has the best art style?
Feed your dashboard by answering my question, blogger.
Okami of course
Hideo Kojima granted me the ability to piss standing up and wiggle my stream around and I've never been more delighted by a game in my life
Truly a visionary genius.
Do NOT read up on what Russian figure skaters go through, unless you want to ruin your day.
Pretty telling that the second biggest issue Russians have with Alysa Liu is the fact that she doesn't look completely fucking miserable
Or emaciated
Rotated to save your dash
Anyway normal reaction here, along with like 5 different replies of photos of your own body
Wait. The skater under the totally normal wall of text is Alysa Liu ? That's the person all of this is about ?
I highly recommend watching this testimony from Aliya Rahman, the disabled woman who was dragged out of her car and kidnapped by ICE on her way to a doctor appointment in Minneapolis a few weeks ago.
Truly my worst nightmare.
Transcript of Aliya Rahman's speech:
Thank you members, for taking the time to be here today, and thank you staff for making this happen.
My name is Aliya Rahman, and I am a resident of South Minneapolis. I am a Bangladeshi American born in Northern Wisconsin. And I’m a disabled person with autism and a traumatic brain injury.
Not all autistic brains do this, but mine fixates on sounds, numbers, and patterns. And while what the world saw happen to me exactly three weeks ago today on video was a terrible violation it is still nothing compared to the horrific practices I saw inside the Whipple center.
So I am here today with a duty to the people who have not had the privilege of coming home, and I offer this data because these practices must end now.
On January 13th on the way to my 39th appointment at Hennepin County’s traumatic brain injury center, I encountered a traffic jam caused by ICE vehicles and no signs indicating how to get around it. I had not wanted to pull in to a blocked, chaotic intersection, but verbally agreed to do so and rolled down my window after an agent yelled, “Move! I will break your f-ing window!”
His first instruction.
Agents on all sides of my vehicle yelled conflicting threats and instructions that I could not process while watching for pedestrians.
Then, the glass of the passenger side window flew across my face.
I yelled, “I’m disabled!” at the hands grabbing at me and an agent said, “Too late.”
I felt immersed in a pattern, and I thought of Jenoah Donald, an autistic black man killed by the police during a traffic stop in 2021.
I remembered mister Silverio Villegas González, who was killed by ICE in his vehicle last year.
An agent pulled a large combat knife in front of my face, which I thought was for cutting me, and later learned was used to cut off my seat belt. Shooting pain went through my head, neck, and wrists when I hit the ground face first and people leaned on my back.
I felt the pattern, and I thought of mister George Floyd, who was killed four blocks away.
I was carried face down through the street by my cuffed arms and legs while yelling that I had a brain injury and was disabled. I now cannot lift my arms normally.
I was never asked for ID.
Never told I was under arrest.
Never read my rights.
And never charged with a crime.
Approaching the Whipple center, I saw black and brown bodies shackled together, chained together, being marched by yelling agents outdoors. I continued to hear the word “bodies”, because that is how agents referred to us:
“We’re bringing in a body.”
“They’re bringing in bodies 7, 8 at a time, where do I put ‘em?”
“We can’t use that room, there’s already a body in there.”
You have no reason to believe you will make it out alive if you’re already being called a body.
Agents repeatedly had to stop and ask how to do tasks. I received no medical screening, phone call, or access to a lawyer. I was denied a communication navigator when my speech began to slur. Agents laughed as I tried to immobilize my own neck. I asked for my cane and was told no, pulled up by my arms and prodded forward in leg irons by agents laughing and saying, “Walk! You can do it, walk.”
Agents did not know if the facility had a wheelchair.
When I was finally placed in one to be taken to interrogation an agent taunted, “You were driving, right? So your legs do work.”
I pleaded for emergency medical care for over an hour after my vision had become blurry, my heart rate went through the roof, and the pain in my neck and head became unbearable.
It was denied.
When I became unable to speak my cellmate pleaded for me.
The last sounds I remember before I blacked out on the cell floor were my cellmate banging on the door, pleading for a medic, and a voice outside saying, “We don’t wanna step on ICE’s toes.”
When I opened my eyes at Hennepin County’s emergency room, I learned I was brought there to be treated for assault.
The impacts of DHS detention on my physical, mental and financial well-being and safety have been very severe, but I do not deserve more humane treatment than anyone else, US citizen or not. And I am here today with a strong spirit and a duty to the many people who haven’t had the privilege to tell their stories or see their loved ones come home. I am extremely distressed by the pattern that violence from law enforcement has been happening to black and indigenous communities for centuries, and to DHS survivors for over 20 years.
We call ourselves a civilized nation, but we lack rules and accountability around what a person claiming to be law enforcement is permitted to do to another human being.
I am not afraid, and I’m not afraid to keep working on this problem even after ICE is gone. Thank you for your time.
For the 3rd time this month, someone in Minneapolis has been shot dead by ICE. They say he posed a threat because he supposedly carried a gun in the conceal carry state, but he held his bare hands in the air. The group of agents pistol whipped him while whistles screamed like a death call. He was shot 5 times, lying on the ground, he was shot consecutively. No arrest, no trial, no actions taken in the name of securing justice for whatever the perceived crime may have been. He was murdered on a whim.
In what world should this be allowed? That man posed no threat to life. He insulted them, sure, but why should that be an offense to any code? No lives were put into danger until his was on the block. In what fucking world should the government, or anyone else, have the right to murder somebody?
This isn't anything new or unprecedented; many countries similar to the U.S. have undergone similar "reforms" in the past. Even in the history of the United States itself, the state and its enforcers have killed, kidnapped, and forcefully relocated individuals for completely arbitrary reasons. And the violence directed at those marginalized peoples has never ceased, just been plausibly denied in conversation and the minds of individuals.
But for that violence to be directed towards the very people it empowers-not natives, or communists, or immigrants, or queers, but the average white-, how can anyone deny the atrocities committed? How can any American, regardless of status, justify these atrocities-especially in the name of morality-, when your family and neighbors are now subject, when the evidence is laid out before you? The only way to justify these actions now is to explicitly support the violations of life and liberty, or to outright reject your own material reality.
"Fuck you, assholes" were the first words he said to those ICE agents, followed by "don't fucking push me" after they ran towards him and began throwing him to the ground. A man was killed today, not out of necessity, but out of cruelty, for the sake of exercising power and suppressing opposition. Masked gunmen were sent into our streets to cull us. In what fucking world could this ever be right?
And bootlickers will say it's his fault
☝️☝️
If you're gonna strawman criticism of capitalism, you at least need to word it properly.
Right in this very post it says you're dependent on a job to feed your family, and yet the implication is that this isn't oppression because you could choose not to. You could just choose not to eat. You could just choose to let your family starve.
Wage slavery or death, truly a free dichotomy.
Of course Star Wars makes the best political point ever.
Of course Star Wars makes the best political point ever.
Yes. I do that too. I also politely ask the officer for permission before performing any action beyond sitting still.
But I also know that I shouldn't have to do that. I do that because I could be killed otherwise, not because I would deserve to be killed otherwise.
"Just obey the police and they won't kill you."
In that case, everything a police officer says comes with an implied death threat. Therefore:
There's no such thing as consenting to a search or a valid confession.
Any sex a police officer has is automatic rape. Any sex a police officer proposes is automatic attempted rape.
A police officer approaching someone and starting a conversation with them is kidnapping.
A police officer asking to enter someone's home is attempted burglary.
You can't have it both ways. You don't get to require compliance with police officers under threat of death while also believing that a consensual interaction with a police officer is possible.
Aren't these people the same ones who say gun rights are vital to fight against an abusive government?