Avatar

honest โ˜˜๏ธŽ hearts

@wtf-is-a-person

Liam - 26 - nb androgynous - Bi-gay - (he/they) - โ™Š๐Ÿ‡ - ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ช - anarcho-socialist - femboy - environmentalist - vegetarian/vegan - pacifist - land back - pro-blm - pro-choice - pro-palestine - inclusive-feminist - pro-sex work - pro-queer+ (link to all of my side blogs) https://www.tumblr.com/wtf-is-a-person/747197038277672960/cry-baby?source=share

URGENT - YOU COULD SAVE A LIFE

the Cumberland County Animal Shelter in Fayetteville, NC (USA) is AT CAPACITY as of 10/02/2025. They will need to begin euthanizing perfectly adoptable pets soon due to a lack of available space. That means there is NO ADOPTION FEE for any pets there - they just urgently need homes. I am not affiliated with the shelter, but I want to see these pets saved - if you canโ€™t make it to the shelter, but you want to help, contact me. I am willing to transport pets (dogs or cats) this weekend to get them out of the shelter.

Whenever I think shit is bad here in America I see some headline from the UK like "Want To Shave Some Money Off Your ยฃ43,025 Heating Bill This Winter? Piss On Your Hands If They Get Cold" by some guy named Lord Sir Arthur Albert Pomphrey who holds 5 government positions and lives in a house worth $37,000,000,000,000,000

I think the purest form of love is just wanting someone to notice life with you. "taste this. look at that. hear this song." again and again. until you can't imagine noticing life without them.

If you have a crunchyroll subscription and you support Palestine, please cancel your subscription on the upcoming October 7th to boycott this decision. A massive Israeli boycott on the anniversary of that day would send a very strong message. Not just crunchyroll either, if you have subscriptions for any other company that enables and supports Israel, October 7th is the day to cancel all of those. Please participate and spread the word.

500-year-old Serpent Figure from the Incan Empire, c.1450-1532 CE: this fiber-art snake measures 86.4cm long (about 34 inches) and it was made from cotton and camelid hair

The figure was crafted by shaping a cotton core into the basic form of a snake, wrapping it in structural cords, and then using colorful thread to create patterns and details along the surface. A zig-zag design covers most of the snake's body, and its facial features are decorated with embroidery.

A double-braided rope extends from the distal end of the snake's body, near the tip of its tail, and another rope is attached along the ventral side, forming a small loop just behind the snake's lower jaw. Similar features have also been found on several other fiber-craft snakes from the same time period/region, suggesting that the figures may have been designed for a common purpose. Very little is known about the original function and significance of these artifacts, however.

The figures may have been created as toys, ceremonial props, costume elements, decorative pieces, gifts, grave goods, or simply as pieces of artwork.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art argues that they were likely used as props during an Andean tradition known as ayllar:

In a ritual combat known asย ayllar, snakes made of wool were used as projectiles. This effigy snake may have been worn around the neckโ€”a powerful personal adornment of the paramount Inca and his alliesโ€”until it was needed as a weapon. The wearer would then grab the cord, swing the snake, and hurl it in the direction of the opponent. The heavy head would propel the figure forward. The simultaneous release of many would produce a scenario of โ€œflying snakesโ€ thrown at enemies.

The same tradition is described in an account from a Spanish chronicler named Cristรณbal de Albornoz, who referred to it as "El juego de los ayllus y el Amaru," meaning "the game of the ayllus and the Amaru."

The image below shows another fiber-art snake that was made in the Incan Empire during the 1300-1550s CE. This figure has several remarkably similar features, leading some experts to argue that it may have been used as part of the same tradition.

Sources & More Info:

DAY 15

GIVE IT UP FOR DAY 15

Avatar
fnaf-thechoco

You can only reblog this 12 times a year

Make the most of that

Every month I reblog this and every month Iโ€™m baffled that itโ€™s already the 15th.

Avatar
pumpkindobby

Iโ€™m scheduling this for every month

Avatar
sassy-in-glasses

IT ONLY APPEARS ON THE FIFTEENTH OF EVRY MONTH

Avatar
splatoon-jim

THIS ONLY APPEARS ON 15THS WTF

Avatar
sanders-sides-sins

*slams reblog button*

Avatar
yoshiyoshikage-tira-munchakoopas

Welp itโ€™s that day again

Do people just have this queued or something`??

I donโ€™t have it queued but todayโ€™s the 15th of February 2024, so Iโ€™m gonna do my noble duty and SMASH THAT REBLOG BUTTON~

It pains me to see any human being to be living this way, to struggle to survive, to not know if you shall eat or live or die the next day, to be living in constant fear and waiting for some kind of relief. If it hurts you to see someone suffer like this as well, as I'm sure it does, imagine how much worse it must feel to those living through it! It hurts my heart, and I want to help, but I can't do it alone! My Palestinian friends needs your help! And you can help! Together, we are not powerless!

The Al-anqar family (who is vetted & #4 on this spreadsheet by gazavetters) needs our help to get to safety with their family. Thanks to the generosity of kind people, such as those on tumblr, they have made it to โ‚ฌ30,608 of their โ‚ฌ50,000 goal! However, they still have โ‚ฌ19,392 more to raise in order to reach their dream of safety and security, and you can help them do it, even if it's simply through a reblog and/or a small donation. Every little bit counts!

"In an open-air courtroom set up in a nature reserve in Western NSW, a four-nation clan has secured one of the largest native title claims in the region's history.ย 

Far from the four walls and formalities of a federal courtroom, Justice Melissa Perry delivered her determination at Newey Reserve in Cobar on Wednesday, recognising the native title rights of the Ngemba, Ngiyampaa, Wangaaypuwan and Wayilwan peoples.

The decision marks the successful end of a 12-year legal battle that began in 2012.

The claim covers more than 95,000 square kilometres of land and water from the Barwon River in the north, to the Lachlan River in the south, the Castlereagh River in the east and Ivanhoe to the west.ย 

It recognises native title rights including the right to hunt, fish and gather resources, the right to access and camp on land and right to protect places of cultural and spiritual importance.

A legacy for future custodiansย 

Aunty Elaine Ohlsen, a Ngiyampaa Elder from Cobar and one of the original applicants, said the decision brought her "mixed emotions".

"I just persevered," she said.

"We've been through a lot of trials and tribulations to get here, but I'm someone who won't give up fighting for our people."

"These sorts of things need to happen all the time, because we need to know who we are and where we come from and where we are in this country."

Aunty Elaine hopes the determination will inspire future generations to continue their ancestors' legacy.

"Hopefully, this will encourage them to stay connected to their country, heritage, and culture, and to carry on the hard work we've done," she said.

Vision for the future

Wangaaypuwan man and claim applicant John Shipp recently camped on country with four generations of his family.

He said the recognition of native title meant they could continue to do so without fear of being moved on.

"It's just those little things that give us our connection back to our land, our heritage, our culture," he said.

The native title holders have now formed the Ngemba, Ngiyampaa, Wangaaypuwan Wayilwan Aboriginal Corporation (NNWW Corporation) to manage their rights.

As a director of the NNWW Corporation, Mr Shipp sees the determination as the beginning of a new chapter...

As for Mr Shipp's message to other Indigenous groups fighting for recognition?

"Keep going โ€” it's getting better, it's getting shorter, it's happening, just keep going," he said."

-via ABC News Australia, August 14, 2024

just a friendly reminder that, just because slavery was formally "abolished" in the so-called united states* in 1865, enslavement itself is still ongoing in the form of incarceration, which disproportionately affects Black and Indigenous people

(*i say "so-called" because the US is a settler-colonial construction founded on greed, extraction, and white supremacy) recommended readings/resources:

I donโ€™t know how to embed a video on here, but this quote so poetically explained a concept I couldnโ€™t put into words.

Sponsored

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.