Shared posts

24 Jan 16:40

"Only rarely in U.S. history do writers transform us to become a more caring or less caring nation...."

“Only rarely in U.S. history do writers transform us to become a more caring or less caring nation. In the 1850s, Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) was a strong force in making the United States a more humane nation, one that would abolish slavery of African Americans. A century later, Ayn Rand (1905-1982) helped make the United States into one of the most uncaring nations in the industrialized world, a neo-Dickensian society where healthcare is only for those who can afford it, and where young people are coerced into huge student-loan debt that cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
 
While Harriet Beecher Stowe shamed Americans about the United States’ dehumanization of African Americans and slavery, Ayn Rand removed Americans’ guilt for being selfish and uncaring about anyone except themselves. Not only did Rand make it “moral” for the wealthy not to pay their fair share of taxes, she “liberated” millions of other Americans from caring about the suffering of others, even the suffering of their own children.”

- How Ayn Rand Helped Turn the U.S. Into a Selfish, Greedy Nation (via wilwheaton)

I fucking despise Ayn Rand so goddamn much.

24 Jan 16:29

lordbape: nomorewaterthefirenexttime: lordbape: young black men knowing jordan and nike sb and...

lordbape:

nomorewaterthefirenexttime:

lordbape:

young black men knowing jordan and nike sb and nike history is fashion knowledge.

and i wish their interests were taken into account when planning school curriculums instead of this ridiculous need for our curriculum to be planned around the white experience and white history

if we taught hip hop as poetry and nike as fashion history black kids would be killin the Literature/Home Ec games

absolutely. their interests are entirely excluded and also entirely invalidated even by the more “artistic” fashion world. if i say i know the styles of like 3 miu miu heels and a black boy says he knows everything about jordans over the course of more than his entire lifetime, people are more impressed with the miu miu knowledge, even though nike has informed and encouraged so much in fashion.

if someone black says they know a lot about hip hop, it’s seen as unimpressive, invalid, and inherent like “of course you know, you’re Black” or “that’s easy”. no matter how often they had to learn, earn, understand, pay attention, deconstruct things, be enveloped in culture. but if someone says they know 3 classical compositions people are impressed. the world should be made more relevant to the people that are setting standards for mainstream culture to steal from while invalidating.

24 Jan 16:27

invisiblelad: That’s telling enough as it is.



invisiblelad:

That’s telling enough as it is.

24 Jan 04:24

homosexualmango: cranialgames: teapotsahoy: vassraptor coffee...



homosexualmango:

cranialgames:

teapotsahoy:

vassraptor

coffeeandcockatiels:

Always make sure to start Wandows Ngrmadly.

#ia ia windows fhtagn

I don’t think this boot looks promising.

Wandows

Safe mode wath fetwgrkifg

problems$ chgose

24 Jan 00:06

coldmorningsun: bidyke: robothugscomic: New Comic! I’ve had...





















coldmorningsun:

bidyke:

robothugscomic:

New Comic!

I’ve had this one sitting in my to-do pile for a while, and was finally galvanized to draw it up after going to a talk around intersections of sex, gender, and race this weekend. The topic of pronouns and terminology came up and the speaker just sort of smirked and said ‘yeah, we all know who wrote the dictionaries, don’t we?’ and I was like YES I HAVE A WHOLE THING ABOUT THAT.

My proudest moment of this comic is that I managed to sneak a penis joke into it.

Relevant!

Also, dictionaries take so long to collate they become obsolete before their completion, almost by definition (har har)

23 Jan 21:14

tamorapierce: Why—why, yes, Mr. President—that’s exactly what...

















tamorapierce:

Why—why, yes, Mr. President—that’s exactly what they’ve done!

23 Jan 21:12

katiegeeks: thebicker: fandomsandfeminism: beardedboggan: tot...



katiegeeks:

thebicker:

fandomsandfeminism:

beardedboggan:

totallynotagentphilcoulson:

raspberrypastry:

artiestroke:

americas-liberty:

dommypls:

Before you start ranting about the minimum wage being to low and want it to be $15.

This should be funny but it’s too true to laugh at. Raising the minimum wage will destroy low wage employment (AKA entry level jobs).

Okay no that is absolutely not true?!

By raising the minimum wage you ensure that people can actually, you know, BUY THINGS and SUPPORT THE ECONOMY?

Okay I am literally too tired of this horseshit. You know how much McDonalds would have to raise their prices in order to actually pay a REASONABLE minimum wage?

A nickle. And not even on ALL of their food items- just SOME of them.

You assholes trying to keep the poor from trying to improve their situation make me fucking sick. Do you even KNOW HOW FUCKING CAPITALISM WORKS?

YOU PAY PEOPLE PROFIT FOR THEIR WORK SO THEY CAN BUY MORE THINGS AND PAY OTHERS PROFIT FOR THEIR GOODS AND SERVICES AND ITS A GODDAMN CYCLE. YOU DONT KEEP PEOPLE BARELY PAID ENOUGH TO BE ABLE TO FEED OR CLOTHE OR HOUSE THEMSELVES BECAUSE THAT KILLS THE GODDAMN ECONOMY.

THE WORKING FORCE IS WHAT POWERS THE ECONOMY

NOT CORPORATE SHITFUCKS TRYING TO BRING US BACK TO 1800’S WORK CONDITIONS

THANK YOU AND GOOD FUCKING NIGHT.

Tumblr user artiestroke lays down the law

Also the touchscreen kiosks that McDonald’s Europe ordered back in 2011 shown in the picture were ordered to speed up taking orders so their paid employees could focus more on filling those orders, not as a method of replacing minimum wage workers

As a matter of fact, they projected back in 2011 that this would result in an INCREASE in jobs

So yeah dommypls and americas-liberty, learn economics.

And some fucking empathy for other people besides yourselves.  Fuck you for thinking that having to pay a little extra for a cheeseburger is more important than someone being able to live off their wages.

This is how toxic capitalism is. People think that cheap hamburgers are more important than human lives and well being. 

We live in a culture that commodifies FOOD, WATER, HOUSING, and HEALTH CARE, and that SCOFFS at the idea that everyone should be able to actually afford all of those things even if they are employed. 

We have a system where people think it is ABSURD to suggest that EVERYONE should be able to EAT. 

All of the above, and also, the machine only TAKES ORDERS, it does not cook the food. It does not replace the human workers. You fucksticks don’t even understand how your fast food gets made.

And actually, McDonalds wouldn’t have to raise prices at all to cover a $15 minimum wage. The company had $5.5 BILLION in profit in 2013. That’s not revenue. That’s profit. That’s the giant stacks of money they are sitting on as a corporation after all the salaries and bonuses and business expenses and taxes are paid.

The only thing McD’s would need to do is decide to operate on slightly narrower profit margins in order to improve the lives of their employees.

23 Jan 20:19

rhrealitycheck: In the GOP response to the State of the Union...



rhrealitycheck:

In the GOP response to the State of the Union address, Senator Joni Ernst barely mentioned abortion. But don’t let that fool you. Her party has already introduced five bills restricting abortion rights.

Amanda Marcotte, Don’t Be Fooled By Joni Ernst’s Minor Mention of Abortion in Her SOTU Response, in RH Reality Check

23 Jan 19:58

I Don’t Vaccinate My Child Because It’s My Right To Decide What Eliminated Diseases Come Roaring Back

I Don’t Vaccinate My Child Because It’s My Right To Decide What Eliminated Diseases Come Roaring Back:

vixyish:

The decision to cause a full-blown, multi-state pandemic of a virus that was effectively eliminated from the national population generations ago is my choice alone, and regardless of your personal convictions, that right should never be taken away from a child’s parent. Never.
By Andrea Martin
23 Jan 17:35

Photo



23 Jan 01:24

vangoghsdaughter: Stop telling kids that they’re too young to know they’re queer but also stop...

vangoghsdaughter:

Stop telling kids that they’re too young to know they’re queer but also stop spreading the idea that all queer people know they’re “different” from a very young age. Some people realize they’re queer when they’re five and some people don’t until they’re thirty-five and no one should have to justify their identity at any age.

23 Jan 01:16

parkingstrange:

23 Jan 01:15

A couple days back, I posted the portrait of a young man who...



A couple days back, I posted the portrait of a young man who described an influential principal in his life by the name of Ms. Lopez. Yesterday I was fortunate to meet Ms. Lopez at her school, Mott Hall Bridges Academy.

“This is a neighborhood that doesn’t necessarily expect much from our children, so at Mott Hall Bridges Academy we set our expectations very high. We don’t call the children ‘students,’ we call them ‘scholars.’ Our color is purple. Our scholars wear purple and so do our staff. Because purple is the color of royalty. I want my scholars to know that even if they live in a housing project, they are part of a royal lineage going back to great African kings and queens. They belong to a group of individuals who invented astronomy and math. And they belong to a group of individuals who have endured so much history and still overcome. When you tell people you’re from Brownsville, their face cringes up. But there are children here that need to know that they are expected to succeed.”

23 Jan 01:13

Frozach Submitted

23 Jan 00:05

ppaction: Today is the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, a decision...



ppaction:

Today is the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, a decision that has changed (and saved) women’s lives — and this afternoon, the House voted to turn the clock back 42 years.

Here’s a special #TBT to let them know: We will never let them take us back.

23 Jan 00:05

"Fat people have the right to exist in fat bodies regardless of how we got fat, what being fat means,..."

ThePrettiestOne

From the link:
"You must be this respectful to ride this ride."

“Fat people have the right to exist in fat bodies regardless of how we got fat, what being fat means, or if we could be thin through some means – however easy or difficult. There are no other valid opinions on this – we have the right to exist without shaming, bullying or stigmatization, period.”

-

Ragen Chastain

Study Shows You Can’t Hate Fatties for Our Own Good

(via fatoutloud)

22 Jan 17:11

Focus

Focus
22 Jan 14:10

brazilia: Speaking of western freedom of speech, meet the...



brazilia:

Speaking of western freedom of speech, meet the artist Laila Al-Attar who drew a caricature of George Bush the father that was printed on tiles and put at the entrance of Al-Rashid hotel where senior Iraqi officials stayed and held their press conferences. Obviously, her way of expression pissed the Bush Administration off, so, in 1993 her house was bombed by American warplanes turning her and her entire family into shreds.

22 Jan 13:44

facesauce: aznnotwhite: fascinasians: wordsthatididntsay: alm...



facesauce:

aznnotwhite:

fascinasians:

wordsthatididntsay:

almondskeyes:

TO EVERYONE WHO THINKS WE ARE LIVING IN A POSTRACIAL WORLD. FUCKING READ THIS. CITED FROM REAL PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH.

To everyone who says they “don’t see color.” Open your fucking eyes and READ.

MICROINVALIDATION:

Microinvalidations are characterized by communications that exclude, negate, or nullify the psychological thoughts, feelings, or experiential reality of a person of color. When Asian Americans (born and raised in the United States) are complimented for speaking good English or are repeatedly asked where they were born, the effect is to negate their U.S. American heritage and to convey that they are perpetual foreigners. When Blacks are told that “I don’t see color” or “We are all human beings,” the effect is to negate their experiences as racial/cultural beings (Helms, 1992).

(italics added)

important

22 Jan 12:21

iguanamouth: PART FIVE of all these commissioned weird lizards...





















iguanamouth:

PART FIVE of all these commissioned weird lizards - i cant believe this series has gone on so long honestly these dragons have really made a big impact on my life (and casual knowledge on types of sex toys)

heres to the next batch of em !

(part one) (part two) (part three) (part four)

22 Jan 02:37

Não dá pra contar com a vitória antes do tempo.

by Zanfa

tumblr_ndf142dOAV1qzpsuoo1_r1_250

22 Jan 02:24

"Who’s influenced you the most in your life?" “My...



"Who’s influenced you the most in your life?"
“My principal, Ms. Lopez.”
“How has she influenced you?”
“When we get in trouble, she doesn’t suspend us. She calls us to her office and explains to us how society was built down around us. And she tells us that each time somebody fails out of school, a new jail cell gets built. And one time she made every student stand up, one at a time, and she told each one of us that we matter.”

22 Jan 02:08

injektiloj: casefaceforever: willbryantplz: I’m honored to...





injektiloj:

casefaceforever:

willbryantplz:

I’m honored to congratulate you on surviving another meeting that should have been an email! You can claim your reward for a mere here.

I need a billion of these. Please and thank you.

I wonder how many of these I could pass out at work before I got caught/got in trouble for it.

22 Jan 02:07

The Tyranny of ‘the Normal’: Why the BMI has always been a hot ton of oppressive bullshit

riotsnotdiets:

A few years ago I was getting a pap smear. The doctor—whom I had just met that morning—had me in those cold metal stirrups and was rooting around in my vagina when she asked, ever so casually, “so, do you know what the BMI is?”

I laughed.

As if a woman who has been fat all of her life might have never heard of the BMI.

The thing is, we all know about the BMI. It’s a simple chart that measures our height against our weight, right? The number that comes out of that equation places us into categories—underweight, normal, overweight, obese.

The BMI is supposed to be a value-neutral way to assess bodies across populations.

Except that, did you know that the BMI has never been neutral?

Adolphe Quetelet (1796-1847), a French statistician, came up with the system we know today as the Body Mass Index. But Quetelet, influenced by early 19th century astronomers (!), charted human height and weight in an effort to establish ‘normality’—not health, or anything to do with medical risk at all. Quetelet believed that by constructing “l’homme moyen,” (the ‘average man’) through his chart, one could determine at what point bodies could be identified as deviant (by the way, Quetelet was also super interested in criminology and his work influenced the super shitty and oppressive fields of phrenology and eugenics). The chart shows that variances in body size more or less fall into a bell curve.

He noted in his work that artists have long used a similar way of looking at bodies: “deviations more or less great from the mean have constituted [for artists] ugliness in body as well as vice in morals and a state of sickness with regard to the constitution”. Quetelet noted from the get-go that the BMI is not understood in neutral terms, but is instead inscribed with cultural meaning.

So, Quetelet—this genius-level polymath with zero interest in health and 100% interest in categorizing certain bodies as ‘normal’ and the rest as ‘deviant’—created this nifty chart that even he knew was not value-neutral.

Then, in the early 20th century, life insurance companies decided to adopt Quetelet’s index as an indicator of mortality. The chart was a way for them to justify charging deviants—people at either end of the bell curve—more money for insurance.

You guys, the BMI is about capitalism.

Okay so eventually the medical community caught on, and studies were conducted in order to confirm that this NOT value-neutral categorization system could at least show us that some things were true about the different categories across incredibly large populations (but not at the level of the individual).

So again, a chart that was created to measure normalcy and deviance, which was acknowledged from the beginning as not being free of bias, was adopted by one industry as a way to make money, and then another as a “neutral” predictor of health risk??

Right. Okay.

Fat studies and disability studies academics have written about the BMI—and its construction by Quetelet—at length. Disability activist and theorist Lennard Davis calls Quetelet’s index “a symbol of the tyranny of the norm”. The norm, he argues, is even far more oppressive than the ideal: whereas the ideal is understood by most to be unattainable, the norm is something to aspire to, a “hegemonic vision of what the human body should be”.

Rosemary Garland-Thomson, another disability theorist, argues that the superiority of the ‘normal’ body (white, male, able-bodied, thin, etc.) appears “natural and undisputed”.

This is important. Because of the BMI, because of work by people like Quetelet, because of the way we value bodies culturally, what we think of as normal is actually just a social construction that seems natural because it has been hammered into our heads over and over again for the last 200 years. First by artists, then by astronomy-obsessed statisticians, then by money-hungry insurance companies, and, finally, by the medical-industrial complex.

Of course, it doesn’t take all this research to know that “normal” is a fucked up oppressive concept. But it was definitely fun to see the look on the doctor’s face when, still knuckles-deep into my vagina, I told her just how much I knew about the BMI.

(Note: information from here, here, and here.)

22 Jan 01:27

marthiiswolff: overthemistymountainsliesadragon: fayethesuccubus: petrpetrpuckeater: myresin: th...

marthiiswolff:

overthemistymountainsliesadragon:

fayethesuccubus:

petrpetrpuckeater:

myresin:

thatsnicebutimmarried:

The life of a pet owner: “What are you eating? OH GOD WHAT ARE YOU EATING???”

"Come back here with whatever you’re eating!"

"Don’t think you can fool me by stopping chewing. I know you’re still eating it!"

"Open your mouth. OPEN. YOUR. MOUTH."

The best part is that all of these can be seen as the owner’s perspective or the pet’s and it’s all still accurate.

THIS

22 Jan 01:10

-teesa-: 1.7.15 Hasan Minhaj speaks with Lloyd Pendleton,...



















-teesa-:

1.7.15

Hasan Minhaj speaks with Lloyd Pendleton, director of the Homeless Task Force.

"We have reduced our chronic homeless count by 72% since 2005."

21 Jan 23:29

themarysue: OH MY GOD WE NEED THIS SHOW IMMEDIATELY



themarysue:

OH MY GOD WE NEED THIS SHOW IMMEDIATELY

21 Jan 17:09

hazelhills: homeiswheretheheartsare: Tony: Why doesn’t anybody...

21 Jan 17:04

"Being a girl was complicated. It was swallowing rusty nails and clawing our way towards something we..."

Being a girl was complicated. It was swallowing rusty nails and clawing our way towards something we didn’t even know we really wanted.

When I was thirteen I told Stephanie that drinking orange juice could stop you from fainting because it raises your blood sugar. In sophomore year, she slammed her head, saw stars, and ended up drinking an entire carton in one sitting. She vomited on her kitchen floor, but she couldn’t tell if it was from the concussion or from a pint of orange juice sitting in her stomach. Her doctor told her mother, “All girls try throwing up at some point.”

I remember the first time one of my friends came to me with eyes so red I thought she’d inhaled a desert. She said her mother had died from breast cancer the night before. She said her home was an open grave, a holy space. She said she’d rather be in school than dealing with an absence so loud nobody could speak. I still think about her every time someone says “save the ta-tas” instead of “please god save our mothers haven’t enough of us suffered.”

On certain Saturday nights we’d all get dressed up like we were going somewhere fancy and then sit in and watch Disney movies. We filled ourselves up with popcorn and gossip. When Patty showed up with a black eye again, we all said nothing about it. We were too young to make fists out of fingers, I think.

A girl on the train was reading a book I love. We got to talking. She’s from the Peace Corps, she said, gave me a smile like a thousand volts. She was one of those people who make you feel good about yourself. When she got up to go, she gave me a little wave. I said “Go stop violence,” and she laughed. Hanging off the back of her bag was a little pink can of mace.

We learned to be secret defend-each-other types. We were going to hold the world down until it liked us. There is something bold about being defiant. There is something about having soft petal skin and still showing sharp teeth.

The box was little and teal and had a bow attached to it. Inside was a pair of brass knuckles in the shape of cat ears. “In case,” my father said, “In case.”

I remember my sister, body wrapped in a towel, saying, “It’s not as bad as it looks,” her shinbone a mess of blood where her razor slipped. She said she saw the patch of skin she removed. She wiggled her eyebrows while holding up her pointer finger. “This long,” she said, “And pretty thick.” She had to throw it out rather than let it clog the drain.

He was tall and gawky and if you asked him personal questions, his ears turned red. He asked if I wanted to go out to the pond in the woods. I blushed and told him I couldn’t swim, and he gasped as if he’d been stung. He picked me up so easily, like I weighed nothing. He put me in the trunk of his car. We were laughing.

Much later, a stranger the same size would say, “Hey mama, wanna come home with me?”

I remember I met this one girl passed out on a couch, her dress hiked up around her hips. She was lying in her own vomit. “Let’s keep walking,” someone said, “Don’t get involved.” I was too much empathy in a small body to let her go unprotected. She shivered in the shower we put her in. Her skin was so blue around her eyes, I thought maybe she’d slipped the sky in there. She looked terrified. I asked her how much she drank, she couldn’t say. I asked her how she got here, she bit her lip and shook her head. “My friends… Just left,” she said, “They just left.” Sometimes friends are like that, I guess.

In late nights, I heard Kathrine crying about the things her father had said to her. She once told me that if it was a choice between being born with her learning disabilities and being born without a tongue, she’d choose the latter one. I whispered something of an apology that fell as flat as I felt, we don’t talk about it ever again.

Skeleton hands never stop shaking me awake. Sometimes I think we’re drowning and sometimes I think we are just painted that way. There’s never an excuse not to be dainty. Someone once told me that beauty is pain.

I remember her lips and how they were bright pink, because the words out of them were sick green things. Maggie said she’d swallowed eighty-nine Tylenol two days before. She said they’d filled her with charcoal and had her spit back up the blackness that was swelling like a river inside of her. We were fourteen.

We flirted with people we didn’t know, we used other people’s hands to mess up our hair, we got home late. We towered in heels that hurt to look at. We felt fierce, on fire. We painted our lips blood red and kissed the mirror until we got a perfect mark out of it. We’d spend ages just getting ready. It was the fun part of parties, I guess.

Her spine cracked while she rested her head on my leg. She said, “Let’s never get old, okay?” and I told her that sounded great. Sometimes in the darkness, she’d sound serious about it. I wanted to ask her if she was fighting bigger demons than the ones I can raise, but before I found out, she moved away.

We belonged to a group that was all punchline. Someone says, “teen girls, am I right?” and laughter spreads like ripples through the room.

I remember the first time you find out that they hurt one of your friends, because that’s how you find out you’re not safe either. She looked so whole, and that was the problem. Her mascara wasn’t even running. I watched her tell the story five ten twenty times to officers who shuffled papers and sniffed at every other word and sighed often and looked at their watch even though they were the reason she was talking. They asked her what she was wearing, she gestured to her body: jeans, tee-shirt, hoodie. They asked her if she knew him, she said no. They asked her if she provoked him, she said no. They asked her if she told him to stop, she fell silent. After a while, she’d try to explain the fear that had crept up her throat until she had choked. They sighed. Asked for the story again. She had this look on her face that I still dream about. It looked like someone had sucked her soul out.

Kelly in the ninth grade with her shining face telling me, “One of us is the better person. Everyone always compares us.”

A waiter looking down my shirt and saying, “Just a water for you, huh?”

Ballet class with pin-thin shaking hands and bathrooms that smelt like a bad dream. A teacher who said, “Don’t eat unless you faint, darlings.” You get used to cigarettes in the hands of young girls. You get used to the backstage addictions of “only nine hundred more crunches to go.” You get used to seeing this stuff until one day someone asks you why you know all the calories in a grapenut.

The television saying, “Lose weight, feel great.”
The television saying, “Girls mean nothing.”
The television saying, “If you’re not pretty, you’re not worth discussing.”
The television saying, “If you’re pretty, your personality is awful.”
The television saying, “Spend your money.”

My father telling me: there’s nothing wrong with this system.



- Memories // r.i.d (via inkskinned)
21 Jan 15:36

Senator Bernie Sanders shares some economic realities before tonight's State of the Union