When They Can’t Argue, They Tell You to Die — Tumblr’s Feminist Fragility on Full Display
I posted a blog. Someone didn’t like it. And instead of refuting me with logic, sources, or adult reasoning — they told me to kill myself.
That’s not empowerment. That’s a temper tantrum wrapped in trauma cosplay.
This is what happens when people who’ve never been challenged finally meet truth with teeth.
I’ve reported it. It’s documented. It’s blocked. But here’s what matters more than their account getting flagged:
They proved my point. That their belief system can’t survive without censorship, violence, and shame tactics.
They don’t want dialogue. They want obedience.
And I don’t do obedience.
📸 Screenshots last longer than feelings. 📢 The tribe sees all. 🦁 We don't run. We roar.
The lions are still hungry. Keep sending meat. 🦁🔥
⚖️📸 ACCOUNTABILITY CLAUSE:
📌 NOTE TO ANYONE WHO LIKED, REBLOGGED, OR AMPLIFIED THIS TOS VIOLATION: Reblogging or endorsing content that incites self-harm or suicide isn’t “solidarity.” It’s platform complicity. Tumblr’s Community Guidelines explicitly prohibit content that “encourages or glorifies acts of self-harm or violence.” If you interacted with that post, you didn’t just make a bad call — you documented your support for a bannable offense. Every reblog. Every like. Every snarky comment. Logged. Tracked. Screenshot. If Tumblr’s moderation team decides this behavior fits their abuse classification, your name goes with it. That’s not drama. That’s digital forensics. Clean it up. Or wear it. Dumb-asses.

















