I wish I had an American girlfriend💔
Love this song and love Ragatha too I'm so fucking scared for what the 9th episode will do to her.

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I wish I had an American girlfriend💔
Love this song and love Ragatha too I'm so fucking scared for what the 9th episode will do to her.
Who gives the best hugs out of RCG? Or better yet, rank RCG from best to least best (bc let's be honest, a hug from any of them could not possibly be bad) in terms of hugs.
I have never hugged any of them #touchaverse
Standing in Solidarity: HfHR Joins Actions to Confront ICE’s Cruelty
Yesterday in New York City, faith leaders, organizers, and elected officials joined forces to confront the cruelty of our immigration system. Hindus for Human Rights was proud to stand alongside immigrant neighbors in two powerful actions.
At 26 Federal Plaza, our NYC Organizer Vrinda Jagota joined the New Sanctuary Coalition’s Jericho Walk, circling the ICE building in prayer—calling for walls of injustice to come down.
Meanwhile, our Executive Director Sunita Viswanath stood with faith leaders as elected officials staged a bold sit-in on the 10th floor, demanding access to detained immigrants. Eleven officials, including NYC Comptroller Brad Lander and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, were arrested.
This is a movement of prayerful resistance and bold action—standing against a system profiting from fear, detention, and deportation.
Full story: Standing in Solidarity – HfHR
Why Pride Matters So Much To Me 🏳️🌈
June 2025 marks a monumental occasion: my first Pride as a post-op nullo, a non-binary trans person finally at home in their own skin. This isn't just a celebration; it's a defiant roar against decades of trauma and a testament to the enduring power of self-acceptance and creating chosen family.
My childhood in Southeast Wisconsin was a crucible of conservative evangelical dogma, a theocratic right-wing bubble that suffocated any sense of belonging. From my earliest memories, I felt alien, a queer kid in a world determined to erase me. The only escape I craved was literal – I started studying German at ten, dreaming of a life anywhere but there.
The collision course with my parents was inevitable. In January 2005, at 17, I came out to them as gay while a freshman at UW-Madison. Their response was catastrophic. Financially cut off, I was told my life would be "miserable, incomplete, unhappy," inevitably ending in "death by AIDS." This wasn't concern; it was a hateful prophecy, a weaponized fear designed to break me. This insidious rhetoric, designed to condemn and isolate, is etched into my memory.
The same hateful voices that attacked me as a queer kid are now orchestrating a grotesque moral panic around gender-affirming care. These fascist morons aren't concerned with anyone's well-being; they're deploying a classic strategy of distraction and division. Their failures of leadership are masked by manufacturing outrage, pitting segment against segment, all to maintain their decaying grip on power. This isn't about protecting children or upholding values; it's about control, about demonizing the vulnerable to consolidate their own crumbling authority.
Let me be unequivocally clear: there are no "gay rights" without trans rights. The fight is indivisible. To surrender on trans rights is to concede ground on all queer liberation. We witnessed this in the fight for marriage equality. When I married my first husband in 2011 in New York City, Wisconsin still treated us as second-class citizens. We paid an extra $250 for a court-ordered name change, endured extensive legal planning just to gain a shred of recognition for our union. The battle culminated in Obergefell v. Hodges, and suddenly, "gay marriage" was no longer a controversial social issue. This rapid shift illustrates precisely how easily societal acceptance can be won when we stand united.
Pride, therefore, is not a quaint parade; it's a stark reminder that the struggle for queer rights is ceaseless. It’s a call to arms against those who seek to roll back our progress, to deny us our dignity and our very existence. In this fight, we must stand in full, unwavering solidarity with every single member of our LGBT family. We are bound not by blood, but by shared struggle, by resilience, and by an unbreakable commitment to a future where all of us can thrive.
You can’t pick your parents, but you can choose your Daddy – and in the queer community, we choose to lift each other up, to protect one another, and to fight for the liberation of all. For me, Pride is a sacred space, a chance to reach back to that scared, lonely younger self and affirm, with every fiber of my being: I belong here. No matter what the bigots and their hateful pronouncements have to say, I am here, I am real, and I am unapologetically myself.
Why don't more people talk about Jesus and how great he is/was on here?
When your gay friend shuts down racism and homophobia in the most savage way possible
Trans Rights Badges 🚫 💗 💙
UHHH HII
soo hi im Boofeng and i create random stories/fanfiction! you can request anywhere tbh idc. you can see im just a small creator but i hope u read the things i made and i hope u like it.
please no hate me haha im sensitive.