clarityofhatred:

arctic-hands:

The eco fash and eugenicist leftists (yes, whether you admit it or not, you exist) aren’t going to like this but I rank the invention of plastic as one of the top 5 best inventions to ever happen to medicine, along with soap, insulin, vaccines, and rehydration salt fluids

Absolutely! People who want to eliminate plastic production in its entirety ignore how it is used in *countless* ways medically. You know how surgical instruments stay sterile? Plastic packaging to keep them that way. How subdermal implants can be lightweight and comfortable as the body moves (to the point of being unnoticeable) and still disperse the medication for even years before needing to be changed out? Plastic bodies! Do you know what many modern stitches are? Plastic! Bc it has the ability to be fully sterilized and stretchable enough to move without snapping or tearing the skin while keeping the wound closed and in a position to heal.

If you wanna go after plastic: go after the consumer culture that puts ridiculous amounts of kids toys in dumps and clothes made by fast fashion. But this is a strong case of the ironic “all generalizations are bad” truism. I am all for reducing plastic waste and it’s damage on the environment, but don’t even *look* at the medical industry, let alone blame it until youve “solved” about ten other industries, cos this one improves and saves lives.

(via iamdeltas)

darealsaltysam:

i think what gets me about manousos being so fun and silly this episode is like. we’ve only seen him be alone and interact with the hivemind thus far and he’s been so cold and calculated and just a man on a MISSION. running on pure spite but also anguish over this horrible thing that has happened. then we saw him determinated to get to carol and fighting with everything he has and telling the hivemind to get fucked at every turn. he’s been set up to be this enduring badass in the narrative because that’s kind of what he’s had to be to survive and press on towards his goal BUT nonetheless there were hints of the full person beneath in the notes and money he left for people, in how he went out of his way to learn english for carol and idk if it was just me but like. he sounded so delighted every time he corrected himself or repeated something new. yknow???

and then we FINALLY see him interact with another honest to god person and instantly he’s got an attitude but he’s also joking around and smiling and he’s clearly so excited to be around someone who is in some way negative because that’s such a HUMAN experience. people love to talk about these two’s haterism but in a world of forced smiles & contentment and constant pressure for assimilation into it being moody and telling each other to fuck off and fighting is such a great way of connecting with humanity again y'know…… there’s such a stark contrast between manousos paranoid and stressed as hell in his little bunker vs manousos fixing up his hair before talking to carol. there’s a contrast between manousos in the gap and manousos lamenting “nine thousand kilometers for this shit” over a minor setback in communication when we know he’d do this all over again if need be. but he’s human and to be human is to be bitchy about the small things sometimes……

like. maybe it’s just me but he very much felt like a different character this episode but not in a BAD way. it’s just he was having a very specific response to the hivemind and his isolation but now that he’s around carol it’s finally MANOUSOS manousos in full and quite frankly i love him dearly

(via iamdeltas)

nationwidedornermoment:

BOSS MAKES A DOLLAR, I MAKE A DIME, THATS WHY I IMPAILED HIM ON COMPANY TIME

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(via iamdeltas)

vaspider:

therapatical:

that-grassbro:

you can talk about trans women struggling as women who can’t give birth without framing capacity for pregnancy as a privilege for A MAN.

You can talk about it without calling trans men ‘fertile’, or 'breeders’ or abled to your disabled.

Within cishet patriarchy women are supposed to be able to give birth, yes. We should talk about how not being able to do this makes trans women’s lives harder WITHOUT acting like MEN are supposed to be able to give birth.

Trans men are not fertile by the definition of fertility for a MAN in cishet patriarchy which is the ability to GET A WOMAN PREGNANT WITH YOUR EJACULATION.

For a man in cishet patriarchy it is seen as an immense shame to have any kind of 'problem’ with the sacred most beloved penis, which the world thinks is apparently god’s gift to us all. And that makes trans men’s lives harder in a similar way to trans women and capacity for pregnancy.

Trans men’s capacity for pregnancy is a separate and additional problem ON TOP of both groups of trans people not fitting the definitions of fertility for their chosen genders. You can’t compare it to fertility in cis women because TRANS MEN AREN’T WOMEN.

there’s also just. I think people underestimate just how much pregnancy + birth + after does to your body. people compare these two struggles (the suffering one group faces for not being able to carry a pregnancy vs the suffering another group faces for being able to carry a pregnancy when their gender is not “supposed” to) as if they’re equal and i’m sorry but one of them includes not having your entire body basically go through another puberty over the course of 9 months, complete with permanent irreversible side effects that can sometimes result in brand new disabilities you never had before but will continue to have for the rest of your life. the amount of bodily damage it does, too, often in heavily dysphoria-inducing ways. it just is a whole extra layer of awful & every time people try to erase this from the discussion i want to scream (not that you’re doing that, OP).

every time somebody has brought up “you’re just rubbing my womb dysphoria in my face” when I mention abortion rights, I just……..trans people who can get pregnant are usually dysphoric about that, too. we often get monthly reminders of this, too. and then pile on the fact that actually getting pregnant will mean permanent changes that are themselves often very dysphoria-inducing, assuming you don’t literally die. I just often feel frustrated with the way the conversation is framed because. ugh. trans women and trans men are both murdered for this exact same problem and yet people want to ignore the whole other aspect of this where one of the major causes of death in pregnant people is homicide, alongside the general risk of death with pregnancy and childbirth (especially as a marginalized person; I don’t think we even have stats on how awful mortality rates must be for trans men giving birth, but the medical field is notoriously bigoted and willing to let you die).

idk. i might delete this later because i am notoriously not at all levelheaded about pregnancy-related topics, and I tend to get very sucked into my own horrors about it, but it just strikes me as so so so so selfish the way some people talk about this subject in particular. it feels like somebody is arguing about their feelings while i’m arguing about potentially enduring one of the most physically painful experiences of the human experience, having my genitals literally ripped open (95% of births have at least a 1st degree tear), having massive stretching and loose skin afterwards, having my hips permanently widened, having my breasts grow often multiple sizes, and then all of the actual physical complications common and uncommon (gestational diabetes sometimes just….doesn’t go away. you can lose your teeth. you can have osteoporosis! oh and here’s a link to The List aka my personal nightmare fuel). it’s just. it is one instance where it’s not fucking comparable it’s not fucking equal and i’m so tired of people acting like it is, because it isn’t. there are many situations where transfems deal with horrifying bullshit that we do not deal with, but the opposite is also true, and this is one case where yes there is more harrowing horrifying bullshit on one side than the other and that’s okay. that does not take away from anyone’s gender at all. that does not change that there are other areas where other people suffer worse. it doesn’t mean even within that category that there’s nothing going on on the other end; of course there is. there’s dysphoria. there’s homicide. there’s all sorts of shit. but. ugh. i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this i hate this

I’m not going to put the list of permanent things that happened to my body during childbearing which have assured that i could never pass (if I wanted to) on this post, specifically bc I don’t want to trigger the fuck out of the other transmasculine people on it.

But like. It’s a fucking lot. Just to pick one, my tits went from barely a B to a G, and then back down to DD. I could have gotten keyhole surgery, I’m pretty sure, but… that would never be an option now.

(via iamdeltas)

royalarmyofoz:

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Rhea Seehorn as Carol Sturka
PLURIBUS Season 1

(via iamdeltas)

busket:

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sometimes I think we need to drop “privilege” as the end all be all metric to discussions of queer social dynamics because clearly people do not know what it means. wtf are you talking about, closeted queers have privilege?? living a fake life, being misgendered every day, not being able to pursue romantic relationships that you desire or having to wear clothing you hate all for your own safety is not privilege. that is a survival tactic.

it comes down to the misconception that people think “privilege” means “how likely you are to get physically assaulted or be the target of a hate crime” with absolutely no nuance for personal freedom, bodily autonomy or even happiness and emotional fulfillment

ask these people whos more privileged, a prisoner in solitary confinement or someone living in a city with a normal crime rate? and by this logic they’d answer “the prisoner” because the prisoner is less likely to get mugged on the street lmfao

(via iamdeltas)

fiddleabout:

riftclaw:

stonefemmesiren:

a lot of you really need to internalize that acting avoidant isn’t cute at all and that it will cost you experiences and life outcomes if you don’t change course

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#YOU’RE A REGULAR GUY. YOU CAN HANDLE A CONVERSATION.#YOU’RE A REGULAR GUY. YOU CAN CONFRONT YOUR DISCOMFORT.#YOU’RE A REGULAR GUY. YOU’RE ALLOWED TO LIVE AND HAVE A DUTY TO DO SO.

(via youngbloodbuzz)

twinkhole-destroyer:

twinkhole-destroyer:

my diva moment will have casualties

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(via carefullydisheveled)

nonasuch:

nat-20s:

I can’t speak for other social media webbed sites but I really enjoy how tumblr seems to just completely spin a wheel on whatever media is hot right now. Like yeah sometimes it’s a new show that’s big and actively coming out but also sometimes there will be a solid month where half my dash is Columbo memes. Defy authority. Get really into an book from the 1800s. Watch shows that haven’t aired in 40 years. Celebrate the anniversary of the Boston Molasses Flood. Become unmarketable

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oh shit i almost missed it!

(via nerdyemsy)

splybox asked:

ICE is preparing to assault Boston/Massachusetts next

https://www.axios.com/local/boston/2026/01/13/boston-prepares-ice-surge-wu-plans

There's a virtual training on Thursday 1/15 with the Massachusetts Immigrant & Refugee Advicacy Coalition

https://miracoalition.org/know-your-rights-trainings/

kuttithevangu:

massachusetts-official:

Damn

Make sure you have the LUCE hotline number saved and keep your eye out, if you speak Vietnamese, Cantonese, Nepali, Bengali, Khmer, or Cape Verdean Kriolu they are actively looking for hotline operators with those languages

warningsine:

tapacamino:

warningsine:

Trending posts with thousands of notes on here:

  1. defending Khamenei and the Islamic Republic. Tell that to the 12.000 people that were killed, to all the people screaming they want freedom.
  2. calling hijab-free women who were protesting “US propagandists.”

Like, I know their whole shtick is authoritarianism and misogyny with a gay hat, but wow. The lack of empathy never ceases to amaze.

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(via iamdeltas)

dailymanners:

lanthir:

penrosesun:

lastoneout:

raincitygirl76:

dailymanners:

I am about going to gripe about something that’s been really annoying me lately.

First let me start with a disclaimer that I am speaking generally here. Of course both the U.S. and Europe are both massive and diverse places containing hundreds of millions of people, and a lot of regional differences. Neither the U.S. or Europe are a monolith (although a lot of people on the internet speak of both places as a monolith, which I wish people would stop doing, since neither are).

I could be wrong about this, since I don’t live in the U.S., and haven’t visited everywhere in Europe. But between where I have visited in the U.S., and where I have visited / lived in Europe, and from what I know from my friends in the U.S. and friends in other European countries, I get the feeling that overall the U.S. has stricter disability access laws than a lot of places in Europe do, especially in regard to building codes.

Of course there are exceptions, I know New York city is abhorrently hostile in its design towards anyone elderly and/or disabled. Although when I visited New York city it really just felt on par with a lot of major European cities with how abhorrently inaccessible it was.

One example of this is that recently I saw a Reddit discussion where a USAmerican vacationing in France was surprised at how many staircases didn’t have handrails, because according to this man handrails are required by law in the U.S.

The comments were all Europeans having an absolute field day with this. Pretty much all of the comments were some variation of “I can’t believe Americans are too stupid and lazy to use the stairs without a handrail 🤣🤣🤣 what’s wrong with you fat lazy stupid Americans that you can’t even use stairs without a handrail 🤣🤣🤣 thank GOD I was born in Europe where I was just taught how to walk up and down the stairs on my own and don’t need a handrail like a lazy fat stupid American 🤣🤣🤣”

A few people tried to gently point out that this was about accessibility for elderly and disabled people, and it’s not cool to laugh at building codes that are about accessibility, but those commenters were usually shut down with some variation of “yeah well in MY European country if someone is disabled or becomes elderly we either move to a more accessible building or we modify our home to be more accessible, we don’t sit around whining like a bunch of Americans that our building isn’t already accessible 🙄”

Which is, such a cruel way to talk about accessibility. Why wouldn’t disabled and elderly people deserve the same access to a building as anyone else? Are elderly and disabled people not allowed to visit friends and family? Anyone could get hit by a car today, and after that struggle with going up and down stairs without the use of a handrail for the next several months, years, possibly the rest of your life. It’s so easy to feel smug when you can easily trot up and down the stairs without a handrail, but so cruel to be unwilling to consider anyone who struggles with stairs should maybe be allowed access to the same places as you.

Honestly when I go on vacation abroad with my elderly + disabled mother, it’s often easier to go to the U.S. with her than other places in Europe, because the U.S. does tend to be more accessible (in my experience, and except for New York city ofc) making going around to different public places with my mom generally a lot easier than somewhere like France or the Netherlands.

Out of all the things you could clown on the U.S. about, why you gotta go for accessibility of all things? It’s disgustingly ableist and ageist, and I have to wonder if these people actually just hate disabled people / accessible design, and are using the U.S. as an excuse to hate on disabled people and accessible design.

I’m a Canadian. Our disability access is probably better than much of Europe (although I haven’t visited a lot of different European countries). But it’s definitely worse than the USA.

The USA has something called the Americans With Disabilites Act (ADA), and apparently it works fairly well. An American in my WhatsApp group went to a figure skating championship in Toronto a while back and was stunned that the arena didn’t have wheelchair access for spectators. Because an American arena would have.

Not everything about the USA is awful. Not everything about Canada and Europe is great.

Also, I live in Vancouver. We didn’t have a subway system until 1986, that’s when the Skytrain was finally built. Several of the Skytrain stations were originally built with no elevators. People with wheelchairs were expected to enter or exit the system at a different station that did have wheelchair access. In 1986.

The system wasn’t built in 1896 or 1926, when wheelchairs were a newfangled idea. It was built in 1986. British Columbian Rick Hansen’s Man In Motion world wheelchair tour started in 1985 (in Vancouver).

Or well, the Skytrain was opened in 1986. Let’s say the plans for it were finalized by 1983, since it would’ve taken a few years to build. In 1983, there was already a substantial disability rights movement in Canada, but several Skytrain stations didn’t have elevators anyway, presumably because it was cheaper.

Naturally, it eventually became politically unacceptable to make wheelchair users (and people with strollers, and people with canes or walkers, and people with suitcases) skip a station because they hadn’t bothered to put an elevator in that station.

So those stations had to be retrofitted at vast expense to make them wheelchair-accessible. It probably would’ve been cheaper to just build them accessible from the start, in retrospect. But we didn’t have a Made In Canada version of the ADA, so it didn’t happen.

Also, wheelchair accessibility does not only help wheelchair users. It also helps people with babies or toddlers in strollers, people using walkers, crutches, or canes, travellers with heavy suitcases, elderly people, etc, etc. I take the Skytrain several days a week, and I see all those people taking the elevator instead of the stairs or escalators.

You know I’m really not used to being grateful to live in the US especially now but uh. Huh. Jesus fucking christ.

Also, bluntly, clowning on the USA for having comparatively good disability rights is spitting in the face of all of the disabled activists who made that happen. The USA didn’t just wake up with the ADA one day, and we sure as fuck didn’t just up and decide to enact it become so many of our non-disabled citizens were lazy and fat.

The fight for the ADA was long, and bitter, and every single line of it is thanks to decades tireless activism work. Evangelical religious groups widely opposed the ADA because they believed that disability (and especially particularly disabling conditions, such as being HIV+) was God’s will, and wanted disabled people to be reliant on (religious) charity. Most large corporations and business interest groups opposed the ADA, because complying with accessibility requirements might hurt their bottom line. The US Chamber of Commerce came out swinging against it. The National Federation of Independent Business called it “a disaster for small business” and fear-mongered about it shutting down mom & pop shops and throwing hard-working American out of work. Greyhound Bus Lines literally testified before Congress that they were ~so concerned~ about the costs of requiring disability accommodations that they believed that passing the ADA would be tantamount to denying all rural people access to any buses, because apparently having to install a few fold-out ramps and fold-up seats would instantly bankrupt every extant bus company.

The bill was trapped in limbo for months. It looked hopeless. A lot of people thought it couldn’t happen – that the lobbies against disability rights and the disabled were simply too strong.

And in response, hundreds of disabled protesters showed up in Washington, DC and crawled up the steps of the Capitol.

How dare anyone call the USA “lazy” for our disability rights laws. We had second graders with cerebral palsy drag themselves up 100 stone steps in order to win those rights. Get the word out “lazy” out of your fucking mouthes.

Most of the pictures I have seen of the Capitol Crawl Protest are in black and white, which is bizarre because it happened in 1990. Here’s a couple pics in full colour.

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#really good info but also There’s a HUGE hole here- shit in Europe is way older#some buildings are genuinely impossible to retrofit- a lot of people just dont wanna bother (NOT SAYING THIS IS OK)#i really noticed the abhorrent accessibility in Stratford-upon-Avon#but there was a distinct difference between the newly built areas and old stuff

That’s not really a hole because I don’t think the age difference is relevant to what I was talking about in the original post. Since this post has taken off and gained a lot of traction I get multiple notes a day pointing out the age difference between the buildings in Europe vs the U.S., but the age difference in the buildings was never really the point (at least in my original post, I can’t control what others add on) the rancidly ableist / fatphobic / ageist attitudes of many Europeans was the point.

The point was that a U.S.American can’t politely say “wow it sure is different not seeing so many staircases with handrails, guess you guys just have to be more careful over here haha 😊” without dozens of Europeans gleefully jumping at the opportunity to say “FAT!!! LAZY!!! STUPID!!!” and then when it’s gently pointed out that handrails are for accessibility, not a fat/lazy/stupid thing, the very same Europeans will just dig their heels in and say “well Europeans don’t need accessibility because we’re not a bunch of whiny fat stupid Americans, we’re too smart and fit to need accessibility over here! 😤” without bothering to stop and think how horrifically ableist they sound while asserting that.

I can’t control what people add on, but that pervasive attitude of Europeans pointing and laughing at accessibility in the U.S. as a fat/lazy/stupid thing that Europeans are too smart and fit to need was all I was trying to talk about in my original post, and age difference between the buildings doesn’t excuse that attitude.

Besides, Europe isn’t a monolith, so the generalization that buildings in Europe are older doesn’t apply to all of Europe. In Iceland most of our buildings are the same age or younger than most buildings in the U.S., before WWII our population was less than a third of what it is today, and most of that population was poor sheep farmers living in flimsy wooden farmhouses out in the countryside that often aren’t still standing today. So like the U.S., most of our buildings are quite new, and despite this, our accessibility is often quite bad, because it’s never really been a priority.

(via iamdeltas)

shinhati:

you can’t even say “get a job” to people anymore because the market is so bad they’ll be like ive applied to 400 jobs over the past 6 months

(via youngbloodbuzz)

the-last-teabender:

twofingerswhiskey:

wind-on-the-panes-deactivated20:

notahorseindisguise:

ichigo-kuriimu:

ichigo-kuriimu:

ichigo-kuriimu:

the japanese “-ne?” particle and the british slang term “innit” serve the same function

Standard English: It’s cold, isn’t it?

Japanese: Samui desu ne?

British: It’s fuckin’ freezin’, innit?

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i have to do everything around here

i hate this cause i did japanese for like a year and this explains the use of the -ne particle WAYYYY better than my teachers ever did. it took me ages to comprehend what this post makes abundantly clear.

my teachers: its like a, a little rise at the end of a sentence, to show that you are seeking a response, while not warranting the -ka particle which would make it a proper question.

me: ok. i guess i get that??

this post: its like saying “innit?” 

me: oh. oh no.

fun fact: afaik, “-ne” was inherited from the Portuguese settlers/priests that stayed in Japan in the 16th century. It comes from “né?”, which the contraction of “não é?”, “isn’t it?”.

It’s LITERALLY “innit”.

oh so like “eh” in canadian

*un-Babels your Tower*

(via iamdeltas)

hope-for-the-planet:

From the article:

“If you look only at the trend of species declines, it would be easy to think that we’re failing to protect biodiversity, but you would not be looking at the full picture,” said Penny Langhammer, lead author of the study and Executive Vice President of Re:wild. What we show with this paper is that conservation is, in fact, working to halt and reverse biodiversity loss. It is clear that conservation must be prioritized and receive significant additional resources and political support globally, while we simultaneously address the systemic drivers of biodiversity loss, such as unsustainable consumption and production.”

This massive meta analysis (for those not familiar, a study analyzing the results of many studies on similar topics) found that the vast majority of conservation efforts show much much better results than doing nothing. In many cases, biodiversity loss was not only stopped but reversed.

This shows that conservation efforts really work and money invested is put to very good use. Legally protecting endangered species really works, restoring habitat really works, removing invasive species really works, returning land to Indigenous communities works. All of the blood, sweat, and tears being poured into protecting the natural world has been making a real, big, tangible, difference on a global scale.

(via chaumas-deactivated20240115)