Cry me a fucking river

oozey mess

Origami Around
trying on a metaphor
Stranger Things

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
we're not kids anymore.
$LAYYYTER
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
almost home
Cosimo Galluzzi
occasionally subtle
cherry valley forever

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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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if i look back, i am lost
h
macklin celebrini has autism

Discoholic 🪩

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@whatteachersmake
Cry me a fucking river
fireflies in timelapse, edition bleu. photos by (click pic) vincent brady, takehito miyatake, tsuneaki hiramatsu and spencer black
my mom: why are you smiling at your phone
me: *is looking at pics of dave foley in drag*
tumblr psa: dont use ouija boards!!! you never know what kind of spirits you’re inviting into your life
me: nice try but none of u can stop me from using this glow in the dark hasbro piece of garbage 2 ask oscar wilde for fashion advice
my advice: do not fuck with the spirit world, don’t take it lightly, you’re young and naive and completely unaware of how any of it works. This is one thing you don’t want to find out you were wrong about the hard way.
well thats all very nice and weirdly condescending but i just spirit-skyped jane austen & she says you’re a fucking square
the mighty boosh + textposts ½
“Defensive architecture” aimed at the homeless as a deliberate, considered kind of cruelty.
By Lisa Wade, PhD
I encourage everyone to go read this very smart and very sad essay from Alex Andreuo at The Guardian. It’s a condemnation of defensive architecture, a euphemism for strategies that make the urban landscape inhospitable to the homeless.
They include benches with dividers that make it impossible to lie down, spikes and protrusions on window ledges and in front of store windows, forests of pointed cement structures under bridges and freeways, emissions of high pitched sounds, and sprinklers that intermittently go off on sidewalks to prevent camping overnight. There is also perpetually sticky anti-climb paint and corner urination guards, plus “viewing gardens” that take up space that might be attractive to homeless people:
The examples above and below are from a collection at Dismal Garden. Here’s a picture of anti-encampment spikes featured at The Guardian:
This is to discourage urination:
This is to take up space so people can’t camp on the sidewalk:
Andreuo writes of the psychological effect of these structures. They tell homeless people quite clearly that they are not wanted and that others not only don’t care, but are actively antagonistic to their comfort and well being. He says:
Defensive architecture is revealing on a number of levels, because it is not the product of accident or thoughtlessness, but a thought process. It is a sort of unkindness that is considered, designed, approved, funded and made real with the explicit motive to exclude and harass. It reveals how corporate hygiene has overridden human considerations…
If the corporations have turned to aggressive tactics, governments seem to simply be in denial. They offer few resources to homeless people and the ones they do offer are insufficient to serve everyone. Andreuo continues:
We curse the destitute for urinating in public spaces with no thought about how far the nearest free public toilet might be. We blame them for their poor hygiene without questioning the lack of public facilities for washing… Free shelters, unless one belongs to a particularly vulnerable group, are actually extremely rare.
He then connects the dots. “Fundamental misunderstanding of destitution,” he argues, “is designed to exonerate the rest from responsibility and insulate them from perceiving risk.” If homeless people are just failing to do right by themselves or take the help available to them, then only they are to blame for their situation. And, if only they are to blame, we don’t have to worry that, given just the right turn of events, it could happen to us.
Lisa Wade is a professor of sociology at Occidental College and the co-author of Gender: Ideas, Interactions, Institutions. You can follow her on Twitter and Facebook.
Susan Blase
bow to him
[ding dong, ding dong]
Hello, sir and/or madam! Have you heard the good news?
"Trans and queer politics―which often overlap, but also branch apart―have produced a number of militants with the potential to attack capitalist social relations in a unique and powerful way. However, the queer and trans scene today is dominated by various non-profits, which seem to have forgotten the revolutionary history that created them."
Towards a Revolutionary Left in Philly: A Critique and Proposal (via ninjabikeslut)