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@cinco-guijarros (Rain World)
@island-north-of-vaugarde (In Stars and Time)
@chatter-by-the-fountain (semi inactive writing blog)
YOU ARE THE REASON

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art blog(derogatory)
Cosmic Funnies

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we're not kids anymore.

shark vs the universe
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@tortadecuchufli
Sideblogs:
@a-snow-decahedron (Undertale/Deltarune)
@fungal-wasted (Hollow Knight)
@farolero-posting (OneShot)
@cinco-guijarros (Rain World)
@island-north-of-vaugarde (In Stars and Time)
@chatter-by-the-fountain (semi inactive writing blog)
Ryland Grace and his popularity as a character feels like such an important step in repairing the cultural tsunami left by the long running trope of every genius character needing to be an insufferable asshole to everyone in a ten mile radios about it.
Conversely, Eva Stratt is doing wonders for repairing and inspiring a appreciation for commanding women with dubious moral convictions who are fully willing to bend laws for the greater good without hesitation.
And together they are doing brilliant things by not kissing or hooking up even once.
⋆。°✩ if cosmic force is real at all, it’s come between you and i
You Know Who You Are
It can be easy to confuse the two, but you don't actually "wish you were more disabled", you wish your disability was taken seriously and was properly accommodated and that you had access to the support and resources you need - and that desire is so valid. You deserve more. But the sad truth is that no level of disability actually guarantees a sufficient level of support. So you have to work to separate your very understandable desire for more support from the incorrect assumption that other disabled people are consistently receiving what you aren't. All of us are getting fucked over in this society, and no group of disabled people actually has it easy.
"Whimsy" is truly a wretched term. What maketh thee so carefree?
thy mother
Art thou for fucking real
I think one of the funniest things that book Ryland Grace does is continue to do excessive centrifugal force stuff with the ship after it almost killed him and he's just like "It's okay Rocky I'll just pass out. If anything else happens, you got this." And Rocky is never once a fan of that plan.
(prev tags from @synthyk LMAO)
[ID: tags reading, "#rocky do heart surgery on me. rocky fly my ship if I pass out. Rocky I believe in you <3 #rocky would like it if grace beleived in rocky a little less. please." End ID]
One thing im uncomfortably woke about is bugs. And im actively trying to get more uncomfortably woke. By this i mean i DO believe the normalised fear of bugs stems from both government and business propaganda. The start of household pesticide sales coinciding with the boom in insect related horror movies. The promotion of anti intellectualism and anti enviromentalism. If you're scared of bugs, you wont care about saving them. If you dont care about saving them, you wont care about saving our home, since without bugs it cannot be saved. If you dont care about saving our home, the rich can do whatever they want with the chunks of it they continue to destroy.
I WILL calmly and kindly try to help anyone who is afraid of bugs. I will show them my finds, i will explain their importance, i will tell them just how sweet and gentle and friendly they are. And I WILL shoot down any immature loser who believes senseless killing is the only possible response to not liking something.
Get woke. Love bugs.
EDIT: this breached containment. My usual like count is like 5 😭 i want to clarify i mean people who conflate fear with hate are the ones who wont care about saving our planet, like people who threaten to kill peoples pet bugs or actively kill bugs outside for no apparent reason. Not people who run away from a bee.
Speaking as someone who loves insects, actively participates in several entomological societies in my country and is currently also doing a PhD in biology, I can't say I fully agree with you here. The fear and demonization of insects is far from a modern phenomenon and is arguably much more driven by older and deeply entrenched cultural beliefs than any intentional modern propaganda. While I don't think that entomophobia is biologically/evolutionarily innate, it IS both ancient, widespread and not entirely irrational. At the end of the day, insects ARE one of the most significant vectors of disease transmission (both for animal and human diseases) and major agricultural pests. There's a reason why one of the biblical plagues of Egypt involved locust swarms (and another one involved flies) and it's not like that problem is exclusive to the ancient world - around 2020, East Africa experienced devastating loss of crops due massive locust swarms, leading to food insecurity for several million people. And while viral, fungal and bacterial plant diseases mostly look more like an abstract blight with an unknown source, insect pests could be much more directly and obviously connected with your crops dying and thus represented a more tangible and visible "enemy" (you can't see the tomato yellow leaf curl virus - but you can see a Colorado beetle). Insects also have a long history of being associated with death, rot and decay - think of fly maggots appearing on corpses and rotten food. As a result, they are one of the oldest religious, literary and artistic symbols of corruption and mortality, especially in western/christian tradition (in paintings like Bosschaert's Dead Frog With Flies, or the depictions of Beelzebub, demonic Lord of Flies). This also ties into classist ideas of the poor as infested with lice, fleas and bedbugs (as those parasites can more rapidly spread in cramped living conditions), marking these people as "unclean" - a trope that is especially common in 19th century literature, when the industrial revolution both created stark class divisions and forced the lower-classes into overcrowded and poorly-kept urban homes. A lot of aversion to insects also originates from the perception of arthropods as the ultimate "other" - unlike mammals (but similar to reptiles) they have few traits and behaviours that humans can readily anthropomorphize and relate to. Historically, they were often treated more like semi-living things than true animals, going as far back as Aristotle - the spontaneous generation theory literally posited that insects are so "thing-like" that they can spontaneously emerge from inanimate matter.
Yes, WW2 definitely saw an uptick in propaganda campaigns with negative depictions of insects, but their actual goal wasn't to make people hate insects, it was to eliminate insect-borne diseases (especially typhus and malaria) that were negatively impacting military troops. These campaigns were effectively identical to other health campaigns of the era, like those against venereal diseases, tuberculosis and malnutrition. The need to control insect vectors of typhus and malaria however did lead to the first creation of highly effective synthetic insecticides like DDT. The reason why 1950s saw such a boom in pro-pesticide fever isn't because the powers-that-be wanted the world to suddenly turn against insects, it's because that was the first time in history that effective (and seemingly safe) pesticides were broadly available. Pesticides were and are obviously a massive contributor to ecological degradation and species loss, but they were also a crucial part of the third agricultural revolution of the mid-20th century that ensured higher and more reliable crop yields. They are, unfortunately, still a core part of modern agriculture to this day - the previously mentioned locust swarm outbreak in 2020 was in large part a result of the COVID pandemic halting the delivery of insecticides to the region. Because some insect species genuinely do present a very real threat to food production, they were obviously often a target of various agricultural campaigns - such as the (ultimately disastrous) Four Pests campaign in China or the mass campaign against locusts in 1920s/1930s Soviet Union. The latter is also interesting because it reframed the locust as a foreign invader as a political tool to unite the still fractured country against a common enemy and justify mass mobilisation of troops into contested territories. During the cold war, Warsaw pact countries similarly launched a massive and ideologically driven propaganda campaign against the Colorado beetle under the belief that the USA intentionally introduced the species in order to destabilize potato production in the region (my grandparents were actually mobilized to pick Colorado beetles in a similar campaign in Yugoslavia). Yes, insects were used as a tool of political propaganda in all of these cases, but not because the promotion of the hate against insects was a goal unto itself, it's because insects already had widely held negative connotations that could be exploited for other propaganda purposes. And these negative connotations in many cases stemmed from people's actual lived experience of crop failures and disease.
(The 1950s boom of giant bug horror movies was also arguably more driven by anxieties surrounding the rapid progress of science, especially atomic energy, in the post-war era (the same thing that drove a surge in popularity of pulp sci-fi novels and more science-based silver age comics). Arthropods were commonly used not to intentionally fuel anti-insect propaganda, but because people already had pre-existing aversion to them (and because simply magnifying an actual animal was a cheap way to have mostly realistic looking giant monsters)).
Just so no one can misunderstand or misrepresent what I'm saying here: I strongly believe that the conservation of insect species is important and that widespread negative sentiment against them hinders that goal. I am not shilling for pesticide corporations or think that we should kill all insects, nor do I think insects should be equated with pests, vermin, or carriers of disease. The hate against insects is largely not based in fact and should not be condoned. Bugs are cool. What I am saying however, is that the fear and dislike of insects is a complex and multifaceted topic and putting the blame on some sort of intentional anti-insect conspiracy is reductive and ultimately unproductive.
@smutneczwartki
Say it with me! Wheelchairs aren’t sad! Mobility aids aren’t sad! Mobility aids are instruments of freedom!
Forgive me if this is inappropriate but
So are
colostomy bags
Diapers
insulin pumps
Oxygen systems
Braces
catheters
rollators
hearing aids
compression garments
prosthetics
FREEDOM AIDS
- canes
- service animals
- noise cancelling headphones/ear defenders
- wheelchair attachments
- fidgets
IT’S DISABILITY PRIDE MONTH YALL
BE UNAPOLOGETICALLY DISABLED AND TAKE UP ALL THE SPACE AND TIME YOU NEED!!!!!
Some people very genuinely think that autism = consumerism and assume that not being consumerist means you're neurotypical, it makes me want to scream
eridian social media call that thrumblr
Someone to be brave for.
excerpt is from chapter 29 of the novel.
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It might seem weird and strange, or even vexing and annoying, but there is a tale and cause for the whole and totality of it.
curse and damn it, this is way too fun and amusing. It should be done with care and attention before it stains and ruins my whole speech and language
Girl how am I supposed to catch up on charting when my head hurts constantly.
*spends all of my time alone* perfect! but why am i crazy
the current weather that you have
yay
nay
TAKE IT AWAAAAAAYYYY
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