Hit me up
Submit a post
Archive

I'm lost right now and I'm taking my time finding my way

Alex they/them ; adult ; nonbinaried and transed my gender 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈 |

~ 💉3/17/18 (#my trans stuff)~

feel free to message me if you'd like ✨~

face tag is #its me and #my face

Posted 1 month ago with 7272 notes
stxrddst asked:

palestine flag themed dragon!!! from the river to the sea!!!!!!!

daily-dragon-drawing:

A green dragon with a red mane, red tail fins, and black claws. Its horns look like thick branches of olive trees. It is holding onto a large Palestinian flag and floating in front of several plants overlooking the ocean: two olive trees, some cactus, a thyme bush, and an orange tree . There is a shining star in the dragon's eye and it is smiling. In the border around the illustration are the words, 自由 "Freedom", 和平 "Peace", to the right, and, 巴勒斯坦 "Palestine", to the left.ALT

#24 - 自由 和平 巴勒斯坦 (freedom, peace, Palestine) - Within our lifetime, Palestine will be free. 🇵🇸

If you see this post, please take one or more of these actions right now:

DONATE-

Contact your reps for an immediate ceasefire (USA, UK, Canada, Australia)

Educate yourself and follow contemporary Palestinian voices

Follow BDS’s list of companies to boycott and tell your friends and family why you are boycotting.

Plan to join a protest in your area (worldwide)

Posted 1 month ago with 2355 notes

bloglikeanegyptian:

bloglikeanegyptian:

one of the things i can’t really get over is talking to someone who works at the new york times (in a very local capacity and has never dealt with their overseas reporting) and realizing they genuinely, earnestly don’t think there is a systemic bias in their reporting. they actually couldn’t see it. this is someone who is very sharp and religiously fair in their own reporting. but it simply never occurred to them, even through the war in iraq, through the caliphate mess, through the thomas friedman op-eds, and through 75 years of reporting on palestine, that there may be a systemic problem in the new york times and that it is deliberate. at worst, they would say, it is an error on the part of these individual reporters. they were careless. they were sloppy. but they can’t possibly mean it.

but you know, if you can’t see the bias, you don’t see the mistake until it’s a scandal. and you think it’s made once. but in fact the scandal is that this mistake was made a thousand times. when you make a mistake a thousand times, it’s not a mistake, it’s policy. it’s an editorial decision. i think i was just really sad to see someone defend it not on the basis of malice, but rather on the basis of an earnest and thoroughly casual dehumanization. what’s the problem if a headline is incorrect? what’s the problem if a humanitarian organization is inferred to be a terrorist organization? what’s the problem if an entire people are characterized as rapists? what’s the problem if a cause and effect are incoherent? what’s the problem with a few missing historical facts? these were all just earnest mistakes. people might be terrorists and rapists and things are complicated and history is disputed. i can repeat that endlessly even over the corpses of 13000 children. what’s the problem with that? i don’t see a connection between our reporting and the dead children. we report on the dead children too. i think our reporting is very fair. we talk about the dead children maybe a third as often as we talk about why they should be killed. that seems fine to me. yes the president of this nation quoted us, and the president of that nation quoted us, but this is surely correlation and not causation.

it’s the kind of casual racism that makes you walk and talk like a fool. the editorial board knows what it’s doing. but the casual racists, the ones who don’t even want to be racist but have simply never lived a life that confronted their racism—they’re being taken along for the ride. footsoldiers in a march for genocide who think they’re on a scenic hike.

thinking about this especially in light of this pew center poll:

Most Americans report having strong emotional reactions to the Israel-Hamas war. Yet, for the most part, Americans are not paying very close attention to news about the conflict. One sign of this limited attention is that only about half of U.S. adults can correctly answer a question that tests their factual knowledge by asking whether the number of deaths in the war, so far, is higher among Palestinians or among Israelis. (The correct answer is that the death toll is higher among Palestinians.)ALT
Posted 1 month ago with 7324 notes

imhereformysciencefriends:

Dungeon Meshi gets it so right because the two most powerful forces in the world are 1. Lesbianism 2. Autism and at every step of the way Dungeon Meshi GETS THAT. Also the humanity and connection of sharing a meal and the desire to live and thrive or whatever

Posted 3 months ago with 102151 notes

thebigbiwolf:

thebigbiwolf:

thebigbiwolf:

Decided to say fuck it to my congestion. Closed myself in the guest bathroom, blocked out all ventilation, turned my massive humidifier on full blast and ran myself the hottest bath i can stand.

This is my enclosure. I live here now. I have recreated the water cycle in a matter of minutes and can finally breathe.

Would love to show y'all but yeah

image
image
Posted 3 months ago with 243 notes

navajja:

image
image
image
image
hOW COME NO ONE GAVE FERN SOME PLANT VITAMINSALT
image
image

Some adventure time stuff before the year ends!⭐🌱

Posted 3 months ago with 169690 notes

icecreamsoup:

hoaxghost:

hoaxghost:

image

small guide to my emoticon usage

image

Did a lil addition for various other emoticons people have asked me about

I wanted to add my takes on these two

image
image
Posted 3 months ago with 64396 notes
evilscientist3:
“disheveledcatgirl:
“slunch:
“god I wish that were me
”
who is the person in the corner
”
Nancy Pelosi
”
View high resolution

evilscientist3:

disheveledcatgirl:

slunch:

image
image

god I wish that were me

who is the person in the corner

Nancy Pelosi

Start
00:00 AM