Some Hazbin Hotel Fake screenshot i made on 2025
Masterpiece ✨️
Peter Solarz
todays bird

★

if i look back, i am lost
tumblr dot com
EXPECTATIONS
Xuebing Du

No title available
Keni
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

shark vs the universe
Claire Keane
Not today Justin
macklin celebrini has autism

Kaledo Art
🪼
KIROKAZE

oozey mess

Origami Around
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
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@weiwei-le
Some Hazbin Hotel Fake screenshot i made on 2025
Masterpiece ✨️
have yourself a merry radioapple xmas~ 🥰🎄♥️
[please do not re-upload to other sites]
Pick-up lines. 😎
Talked about how i needed Human Al and Luci to kiss sloppy style and then just took matters into my own hands imma be so fr lol
ok I endured it. now what!!!!!!!!!
A day out on the town in Venice…
Someone else come fuck that guy for me
My holy trinity is completed now djdj
please Hazbin Hotel crew
Give my baby Luci his badass moments in S3
I'm begging you
His intro to Vox Populi is...doing things to me
Husk feels Bonita🎀✨
Sometimes we’re unsatisfied with a thing we made because when it only existed in our head, we saw all the things it could have been and when it’s done we know all the things that it isn’t, but we can’t see the way it expands into a million new things when someone else unpacks it in their head.
Sometimes I wonder how many of the 90 thousand people who have interacted with this post have been like “I think I’ll go to OP’s blog and see what other lovely nuggets of wisdom they have” and then get hit with a wall of nothing but homoerotic drawings of the men from the Yakuza franchise.
"i'm not triggered or upset by or even ideologically opposed to it, i just associate it with something so bad that i can't enjoy it anymore" is such a frustrating relationship to have with a piece of media
it’s covered in the fucking ooze!!
Me with a show I used to watch with an ex
(grabs you by the shoulders) you have to make room for new experiences in your life. you have to go through the unpleasant work of leaving your comfort zone, even if just for a few minutes at a time. because if you don't, your brain will trick you into stagnation. you will start to believe that the world can barely fit you in it. but that's not true. it's the opposite way around. you can fit the whole word inside of you. your task is only this: to welcome it with open arms
Love the tags!
ah lads not the stagnation i've been tricked again
It was cocky and overconfident to call the Titanic "unsinkable" but one thing that's overlooked is that she was genuinely really, unusually solid. She could float even with 4 compartments fully flooded, which even a lot of modern day ships can't do.
And it's not like they were wrong about her being solid! Olympic, her identical sister ship, survived being torpedoed and then running over the U-Boat that fired that torpedo. Those ships were solid.
It's very clear that absolutely no other ship in 1912 would have been able to survive that collision, and it's a testament to the quality of the ship that she didn't sink in a few minutes Empress of Ireland style. Part of what makes the Titanic such a tragic story is that it isn't a group of rich idiots locking themselves in a shoddy iron barrel to go 4km underwater. It was 2200 people, most of whom were poor immigrants, on a reliable ship on a commonly-made journey, and then something went horribly, unpredictably wrong.
#also the White Star Line never billed Titanic as unsinkable #the media kind of did though most of that was posthumous #but she was NOT officially advertised that way#and before anyone mentions the lifeboat thing: #it's a myth that lifeboats were removed for aesthetic reasons #and Titanic had WAY more lifeboats than was required or expected at the time #in a design environment where lifeboats were seen as deathtraps significantly less safe than staying with the extremely well-designed snip #titanic isn't a story of carelessness #no expense was spared on safety #and oh my god they did not lock third-class passengers in to die on purpose that is a movie it is fake (via @mylordshesacactus)
There WERE gates seperating third class from the rest of the boat, but those gates were. Literally just waist high fences. They were just there to mark 'hey you're not allowed past here' in universal language, and that was it. It was physically impossible to trap third class passengers in the ship.
What DID happen with a lot of third class passengers was just a case of really unfortunate circumstances - they had the worst steward to passenger ratio, they were the furthest down in the ship, AND they had the widest diversity of languages, giving them the least time to get out, and the worst communication barriers. And even then, y'know what many surviving third class passengers reported?
People did not evacuate third class. They knew the ship was sinking, and they stayed put, because of an overwhelming amount of learned helplessness - for the majority of these people, their lives had NEVER been their own, they were always in the hands of greater powers. So they stayed put, they waited to be ordered to leave, and when those orders never came... they died. Which is fucking awful, but... yeah, not really a design flaw; just the nature of the tragedy.
Anyways, all that aside, I also hate it when people smugly talk about how mOrE LiFeBoAtS would have saved more people, like. Dude, holy shit, the Titanic actually sank EXTREMELY fast, boats that size normally took the better part of a day to sink, she was gone in about two hours. More lifeboats wouldn't have done anything. They didn't even have enough time to launch all the lifeboats they did have - Collapsible A was launched with the sides still down, so all passengers were sitting in ankle deep water all night, meanwhile Collapsible B was never launched at all - it was swept overboard and wound up upside down in the water (with the one surviving radio operator, Harold Bride trapped underneath). The survivors on Collapsible B were mainly men, who managed to climb on top of it, and under the command of Third Officer Lightoller (highest ranked survivor), the men standing on the overturned boat kept it balanced and floating all night, while towing more survivors in the water.
This obviously had high casualty rates, but one of the survivors they towed in the water was the ships head baker Charles Joughin, the final person to leave the Titanic, as he managed to climb up to the top of the stern as it tipped, and calmly rode it down like an elevator while people were panicking and jumping; Joughin didn't even get his hair wet (the Titanic movie also lied about the ship 'sucking people down with it' btw). Joughin also spent the entire sinking drinking heavily, which probably helped him stay calm, and when he was rescued his only health concerns were mild frostbite in his feet, and a raging hangover, god bless.
Anyways as for the lifeboats not being fully loaded, that WAS a mistake, but not the crews fault - that was STANDARD PROCEDURE in the day, lifeboats were NOT meant to be fully loaded while still in the air, you were supposed to put some people in, send them down, the load the rest in the water; loading them in the air would cause their hulls to break from the weight. Now, the lifeboats on the Titanic DID have reinforced hulls, so they actually could be fully loaded in the air, which had held up in testing... but the crew and officers had NOT been informed of that fact. When they were launching full lifeboats near the end, Lightoller's admitted in his inquiry testimony that it was an extremely reckless choice being made out of desperation.
Anyways, if you are also a nerd and want to know how the Titanic sinking actually went down first hand, why not get it right from the primary sources? There was a US Senate Inquiry that began literally the day after the Carpathia arrived in New York, the British held their own inquiry later, and the full transcripts of both can be found here. Extremely interesting stuff - during Gugliemo Marconi's testinmony on the first day, you can literally see the inquiry realizing in real time that hey, why the FUCK isn't it mandatory for ships to have someone at the radio at all times in case of emergency? Really neat stuff.
part of the tragedy was that the Titanic was well and beyond the safety standards for the time, both in terms of the build quality of the ship and the amount of lifeboats.
And one of the best consolations is that it overhauled safety issues around ships. Because if this sort of accident could happen to the Titanic, then it could happen to any ship.
I think one problem is also that looking at a ship like this, today we think "ah, this is a luxury trip for pleasure and a holiday on the water" and draw conclusions about people being on it for frivolous reasons
when really if you wanted to go from Europe to the American east coast, a ship was the only way to so. The equivalent would be more like a plane having a more fancy than usual first class section. Of course you'd design a place you're stuck in for a week or more to be as pleasant as possible.
Given all this... I feel so bad for Lightoller and the rest of the surviving crew. To find out after the fact that they could've saved many more people if they'd filled those lifeboats, instead of following standard procedure... I hope someone's head rolled for that.
One minor correction, Lightoller's rank was Second Officer, not Third. Ahead of him were Chief Officer Wilde and First Officer Murdoch.
He also went on to serve as Lieutenant, First Officer, and finally Captain on several requisitioned (civilian-to-military) naval ships during WWI (two of which also suffered accidents; he was commended both times for being one of the very last sailors to evacuate). He also participated in the Dunkirk evacuation during WWII, managing to take over sextuple the number of soldiers (there are two versions of this: some accounts say it was 130 passengers total, including him, his son, and an assistant, while others say it was 130 passengers plus him, his son, and an assistant) that his boat was licensed to carry (21) in a single trip.
So, yeah, needless to say that Titanic had a lasting effect on him.
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I went to stupid bitch island and everybody knew you
well why were YOU there huh