Based on my "canon" ADWM ending (I was trying to get Dark's ending)

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Based on my "canon" ADWM ending (I was trying to get Dark's ending)
uhh can't decide what topic to do for my gcse english language speaking exam (basically i ahev to present in fron tof my class/: and do a 3-4 minute speech abotu a topic) sooooo i was like ok let me list down all my ideas. there. there was a lot more than i thought. idk i need some more opinions if anybody who sees this could help me choose i woudl be so so grateful
(tagging in some of my mutuals i'm very very sorry but i need to decide on topic soon pls just let me know if you want me to not tag yuo in stuff in future or if it's annoying @luckystar1327 @world-romanticiser @xx-cupcak3cult-xx @youngatlas2010 @eflower8 @sunshine-and-anxiety) (ideas under teh cut)
[BUT THEY'RE ALL HERE FOR THE SAME REASON.]
If you liked the Good Place or Michael Schur stuff In general, I highly recommend his book "How to be Perfect: the Correct Answer to Every Moral Question."
The audiobook in particular is delightful. It's narrated by Schur, with cameos from the Good Place cast.
It's a great way to learn about complex moral philosophies in a way that is both fun and entertaining, and also relevant to everyday stuff.
He has a whole section grappling with what to do when a person or peice of media or something that you desperately love turns out to be evil. He discusses how we can deal with that while not supporting something or someone evil, but also coming to terms with the fact that this thing will always be a big part of us (his example is Woody Allen, but I found it very relevant the whole JK Rowling thing).
Anyways, if you found the glimpses into moral philosophy on TGP interesting and want to learn more, I really reccomomend this book.
there is a meme that says one of the worst things about adulthood is that no one ever asks you what your favourite dinosaur is.
that does suck.
but I realised the other day that no one asks what your favourite planet is either. wth?
The binary term normal-pathological could be used to sanction social norms and social fears deeply felt by the masses with the approval of medical science. The terminology could also be used effectively to enlighten or persuade a non-scientific public because it is conceptually isomorphic with so many other binary terms that regulate the perception of social life: moral-immoral, criminal-honest, sane-insane, violent-passive. The power to pronounce on the nature of the norm and its pathologies gave nineteenth-century medicine a social authority out of all proportion with the numbers or the status of doctors. This power gave to medicine and its ancillary sciences the right to mediate between the general public and deviance, to pronounce on its causes, and to devise its cures. Medicine gained its social power because experts shaped a medical discourse that spoke to all those problems in comprehensible language, which appeared to many contemporaries to be an accurate portrayal of the world. The widespread influence of medical discourse about deviance had, as we shall see, profound consequences not only for the “pathological” part of the population, but also, as with any binary relation, for the “normal” one as well.
Crime, Madness and Politics in Modern France: The Medical Concept of National Decline, by Robert A. Nye
yanno...for a bitch who loves horror, i sure am weak to horror games
I'm wearing a long-sleeved sweater and I'm hhhhhh fucking dying because it's Summer and it's hot but LIKE HELL I'm going to let those mosquitoes motherfuckers bite me again