Actions always prove why words mean nothing
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
almost home
noise dept.
Jules of Nature
hello vonnie

Discoholic 🪩
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Peter Solarz
Today's Document
cherry valley forever
Xuebing Du

shark vs the universe
Not today Justin
tumblr dot com

Andulka

blake kathryn

Love Begins

tannertan36

Product Placement
$LAYYYTER
seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Brunei

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Angola
seen from Belgium

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia

seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
@thankgodforsatan
Actions always prove why words mean nothing
no way am I gonna have a blog in my 20s lmao
your honour you must understand im just a silly little guy, just a fun little boy. just a harmless little fun-time boy. you wouldnt sentence a silly harmless little fun-time boy. its my birthday.
feeling a deep sense of kinship with danny here
Mood
One of us one of us
a shirt that is both very specific but could also at the same time apply to about 700K people
Great news! I found the whole text.
This is not only me, but like half my friend group.
aint this the fucken truth
[ID: Digital painting of a crying puppy captioned “I DON’T WANT AN EDIBLE NFT - I WANT FREE HEALTH CARE”. Each of the replies is a screenshot of this post on the tumblr dashboard, next to the advertisement from ‘Frank’s Redhot’ ‘for a chance to get an edible NFT.’]
OMG???? FUCKING EMERGANCY
The Army of Poland employed a brown bear as part of an artillery team in the Second World War. His name was Wojtek (pronounced "voytek") and he worked in the 22nd Artillery Company.
In spring of 1942, after the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, thousands of Polish citizens and elements of the Polish military were deported from Soviet territory. They journeyed through Iran to British Palestine.
Along the way, they encountered an Iranian boy with an orphaned bear cub. According to the boy, the cub's mother had been killed by hunters. The teenage neice of a Polish general convinced an officer to buy the bear cub, which they nursed back to health and eventually made their mascot.
The bear was trained to perform a military salute, cuddle with soldiers on cold nights, and even march with them by standing on his back legs. He copied the soldiers in every way, even attempting to smoke cigarettes (he usually just ate them).
When the Polish army finally reunited with allied forces, they were assigned to join the invasion of Italy alongside the British 8th Army. However, the transport ships banned all pets and mascot animals.
The Poles refused to leave Wojtek, and got around the rule by drafting the bear into the army as a legally recognized soldier. He had his own personal records files, his own paycheck, his own dogtag ID number, and even held the rank of Private.
It wasn't symbolic, either. Private Wojtek actually participated in combat at the Battle of Monte Casino by carrying 100-pound crates full of artillery shells. It was a job that normal required four men, but Wojtek did it alone and perfectly, never dropping a single shell. His actions kept the artillery barrage well supplied until Allied forces finally seized the fortified mountaintop from Nazi paratroopers.
In recognition of his excellent performance, Private Wojtek was promoted to Corporal Wojtek and the 22nd Artillery Company made their flag the image of a bear lifting an artillery shell. They still use that flag today.
After the war, Corporal Wojtek retired to the Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland, where he was frequently visited by fellow Polish veterans, who game him cigarettes just like old times. He enjoyed a long and happy life, weighing over 1,000 pounds as any successful brown bear should. There are several memorials in his honor, both in Poland and Scotland.
I want to meet the legendary balls-to-the-wall WW2 Veteran who first said "Lēte Prívātə Bëªr McBèąrfæçe Cárřý Tħē Fûckínğ Éxpløsivės"
nintendo online sucks because it’s not “pay us for an internet connection that you can then use to play games online” it sucks because it’s “pay us for the privilege to use the internet that you already pay someone else for and that your device is already connected to and can use for stuff like software updates. but not online play. you need to give us more of your money for that first” like damn. i miss the 3ds every day bro
for the record I hate every video game console that does this. Xbox and PlayStation are not safe from my ire
Why can’t April come sooner?
Anyways the queer community isn't just what's on the internet. You'll find transgender people who call themselves transsexuals because that's what they called themselves 40 years ago, you'll find bisexual women who have been in the lesbian community since before bisexual women were forced to make their own community, you'll find gay men who call themselves femmes, you'll find trans women who were drag queens for decades before calling themselves trans women (and still are drag queens). The queer community is big and colourful and beautiful and doesn't have set boxes, and it never should.
hey bi people
Holy fuck
How could you forget 420A55?
Marriage equality is still an ongoing fight✊
Exactly why my cousin never married the father of her kids. She's lose hers and their insurance if she had. She'd lose the supplemental income she got as well.
this is why my partner and I aren’t legally married. We can’t afford my medications without medicaid. This is a separate issue than disabled people losing their SSI benefits when they marry. They’re both important but a lot of people forget this one /:
It's interconnected. Being on disability often comes with Medicaid. You could lose both your financial benefits and your insurance.
ponayzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Childhood made everything feel like it lingered. The time it took for hot chocolate to cool down was eternal. Christmas day took weeks. The two-hour drive to my grandparents' house took us to a new world. It's all too fast now.