hey guys i jus-AAAAA đ„ AAAAAAAAđ„đ„AAA đ„ đ„ A đ„ đ„ đ„ đ„
sheepfilms
Xuebing Du
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

pixel skylines

Janaina Medeiros

Discoholic đȘ©
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JVL

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Jules of Nature
hello vonnie
Keni

â

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â
Claire Keane
will byers stan first human second

if i look back, i am lost
we're not kids anymore.
ojovivo
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@tumblaroverlord
hey guys i jus-AAAAA đ„ AAAAAAAAđ„đ„AAA đ„ đ„ A đ„ đ„ đ„ đ„
Honestly the best piece of advice I can give to younger girls trying to figure life out is to completely ignore men. Iâm not being quirky or cute when I say that, I mean it seriously. Ignore menâs judgments of you, ignore their insincere compliments, ignore their half-assed romance. Focus on developing yourself. Practice your art, play sports, do theater, volunteer, spend time with your friends, but do not put substantial effort into pleasing men. Theyâll be there for you to pursue when the time comes and if you want to. But nothing will waste your youth more than fighting for male acceptance.
Oh to be eleven years old and finding a life-changing obscure paperback in the library
Cooking at a friend or relativeâs house is very fun first you have to get out not that cabinet not that cabinet not that cabinet not that cabinet not that cabinet not that cabinet a bowl and second
You must know... surely, you must know it was all for you.
PRIDE & PREJUDICE
â 2005, dir. Joe Wright
The headline: UK Drug Dealer Feeling Bleu After Cheese Photo Leads To Arrest
The article: Police cracked encryption on a privacy-focused phone service provider and ran fingerprint analysis on photos posted by users.
Like I get that law enforcement does things like this, thatâs literally what it exists for, Iâm just really upset by the cutesy framing.
Also. Like. Donât organize shit online or over the phone. Law enforcement has been pressuring tech companies to put backdoors into encrypted services for years, this whole crackdown happened because of a device-level attack, and you never know whoâs listening.
And yeah. If youâre setting up an anonymous ID online for any reason do not, under any circumstances, post or share any identifying information under that ID or with devices associated with that account.
Just donât break the law.
The Criminalization of Private Debt.
The Human Toll of Criminalizing Drug Use in the US.
How Every Part of American Life Became a Police Matter.
No Right to Rest: Police Enforcement Patterns and Quality of Life Consequences of the Criminalization of Homelessness.
The Criminalization of Poverty.
The Criminalization of Immigration in the United States.
From âbruteâ to âthug:â the demonization and criminalization of unarmed Black male victims in America.
âForced into Breaking the LawâThe Criminalization of Homelessness in Connecticut.
American Cities and the Creeping Criminalization of Walking.
The Unfair Criminalization of Gay and Transgender Youth.
Mass criminalization is a root cause of racial inequality within the U.S.
Illegality of Unions.
âJust donât break the law.â
Jesus Christ I have JUST realized that women use FTM to mean full time mom on the app I use to find recipes. I was like WHY ARE SO MANY TRANS PEOPLE MAKING MEDIOCRE PASTA DISHES!?
Sympathising with my mother but at the same time
universal experience
@pscentral event 18: adaptations
SAM CLAFLIN PAGE TO SCREEN ADAPTATIONS
Daisy Jones and the Six (2023) dir. James Ponsoldt, Nzingha Stewart, Will Graham Journey's End (2017) dir. Saul Dibb The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013) dir. Francis Lawrence Love, Rosie (2014) dir. Christian Ditter The Riot Club (2014) dir. Lone Scherfig Me Before You (2016) dir. Thea Sharrock Enola Holmes (2020) dir. Harry Bradbeer Adrift (2018) dir. Baltasar Kormåkur My Cousin Rachel (2017) dir. Roger Michell Their Finest (2016) dir. Lone Scherfig
harry + his crush on E.T. Â đ
beyond sadness at lynch's death i'm also pretty pissed because he had been trying to get another project done in the years before his passing and netflix and others didn't want to finance it. john waters is the same age as lynch and his latest project was also canned because he couldn't find the money for it. others like scorsese have been luckier but they're also struggling to get their work made. and meanwhile there's more slop coming out every year. it just feels bleak. there won't be another lynch in part because the current system isn't allowing artists like that to exist, now less than ever
FROM THIS
I think the hardest part about addressing child abuse is getting people to acknowledge, not just intellectually but actually responding accordingly, is that the biggest threat to children, the biggest risk of abuse, is family and parents.
it is of course most often parents who are crowing about needing to protect children (often against far smaller threats than family), and pointing out that they are, statistically, the biggest threat to their kids is not gonna be received well.
tbh I feel like most of societyâs rhetoric around âprotecting childrenâ comes from the same place as deep-patriarchy rhetoric on âprotecting womenâ, where the idea is that theyâre sacred and valuable but also treated essentially as property, and the the desire to protect them is largely experienced as a desire to ensure that those property rights are sacrosanct
Wow thats it
I need this study
It looks like it's Anarchist Direct Actions: A Challenge for Law Enforcement. It was published in 2004
It's worth pointing out that cops in the US adapted to these problems through using grand juries to cast wide nets and do punitive fishing expeditions in the wake of any serious suspected left-wing actions.
Here's how it works:
Someone starts a fire at an army draft office.
The cops look through their files for anyone who might be in the political orbit of someone who'd want to do that. People picked up at protests, for drug charges, vandalism, anyone who is already on their radar. They look into their known associates, anyone they live with, anyone they drink with.
Then they start subpoenaing these people for a grand jury summons. They give you immunity (but only for the matter of the grand jury!) so that you can't exercise the fifth amendment against self incrimination. If you say nothing, they can imprison you almost indefinitely for contempt of court. If they catch you in a lie, that's criminal perjury.
They'll ask you for information on everyone you know. Obviously they'll ask about their involvement in any crimes, but they're casting a wide net. Who knows who, where do they hang out, who talked to who about what and when. They'll ask you to spill interpersonal stuff, whether anyone is cheating on someone, whether people have substance abuse problems or embarrassing personal issues, if anyone is closeted, anything they consider dirt. Anyone you name is gonna get subpoenaed and they'll be asked for all this information on everyone they know, including you, and although you have immunity from your own testimony, you don't get immunity from each others.
Assuming you didn't personally do anything they can prosecute you for in the matter of the grand jury, they'll go after you based on what they know. The cops will arrest you on any little thing they have suspicion of, even if they know they can't prosecute you, just so that they can keep you in jail for a few days while you miss two shifts at work and your friends have to scramble to raise bail. They'll leak any embarrassing info that comes out, to your boss or your family or even the local press. Whatever they can do to make your life a little harder.
They will lean fucking hard on anyone who is involved in the scene but had second thoughts or felt like they were dragged into something they never wanted to do in the first place by their friends. The cops will say 'do you want to get your life ruined by people who did something stupid over something you barely even believe in' and sometimes that's a very compelling argument! If people have dependents or kids who they think won't be looked after if they go to prison, there's a lot of pressure to cooperate.
It's important to note two things:
1) Based on the ratio of actual prison sentences to maximum possible sentences for the charges, it's better for people not to cooperate with the jury both individually and as a group. People who talk still get sentenced, with the information they helped provide.
2) These aren't surgical strikes, they're an artillery barrage designed to destroy infrastructure and send people running for cover. Cops don't want you to have friends, they don't want you to hang out and have fun, they don't want you getting or providing food or shelter through anything you can't get fired from. They don't want committed direct-action people swimming freely through a sea of friendly people. They're not scared of the flower, they're scared of the soil that grows it.
Narratives from three people who successfully stood up to grand jury indictments: one who served jail time for resisting, one who went on th
wow i wonder if that 300 year gap could be explained by any outside factorsâŠâŠ.whoa! for some reason it lines up with the timeline of britainâs invasion and subsequent colonization of ireland! wild, huh? i wonder if the two are connected in some way? i guess the world will never knowâŠ.
âwhy do the Irish hate the English so much? It couldnât have been *that* bad!!â
This was in place till 1973.
Seeing non irish people reblogging this makes me happy
The stereotype of âthe Irish are drunksâ is English propaganda used to justify paternalism and controlling the Irish. Itâs bullshit.