Just those Lil' SJW Things

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  • termanal-velocity:

    Literally nothing theroguefeminist has to say is worth wasting my time on reading.

    Well she is a homophobic yaoi fangirl tucute who believes in self diagnosis, what more do you expect?  I remember ages ago someone said she was beginning to move past all that bullshit and might actually grow out of it and I was actually rather hopeful that was the case: some of the nicest people i know used to be tumblrinas after all.   We can always hope right?  

    Just wanted to say hi quickly to you all.  I hope you are all well, and are taking care of yourselves.  

    (via frogmunist-deactivated20190724)

    • 7 years ago
    • 97 notes
  • (via stanleydoes-deactivated20200811)

    Source: nicolevega.com
    • 8 years ago
    • 15290 notes
  • critical-feminist-black-lady:

    Don’t become so anti-sjw that you become anti-sj.

    Don’t become so anti-feminist that you become anti-woman.

    Don’t become so anti-fat acceptance that you become anti-fat people in general.

    Don’t become so anti-BlackLivesMatter that you become anti-black people.

    You know what they say about people who fight monsters; they’re very much capable of becoming one themselves.

    And tumblr? Tumblr is infested with zombies. Don’t get bit.

    (via effervescent-sweetheart)

    • 8 years ago
    • 4544 notes
  • victorfrankensteinuk:

    Daniel Radcliffe and James McAvoy star in #VictorFrankenstein. In cinemas THURSDAY. Check showtimes and book tickets now: www.victorfrankensteintickets.co.uk

    I have to admit, there’s adaptational attractiveness then there’s this version of Igor 

    • 8 years ago
    • 186 notes
  • i always thought seymour's hair was cool
    Anonymous

    this message is unacceptable 

    • 8 years ago
    • 7 notes
  • Are you circumcised??
    Anonymous

    No and thank god for that 

    • 8 years ago
    • 18 notes
  • WHY THE FUCK ARE YOU AWAKE AT 3 IN THE MORNING?
    Anonymous

    insomnia 

    • 8 years ago
    • 13 notes
  • beaute-masculine:
“ “(beauté-masculine)” ”

    beaute-masculine:

    (beauté-masculine)

    (via stanleydoes-deactivated20200811)

    • 8 years ago
    • 461 notes
  • ivaan-ffxiv:

    knightofleo:

    Peter Mohrbacher | Angelarium
    uriel, angel of flame
    rahab, angel of the deep
    sahaqiel, angel of the sky  
    hasmed, angel of annihilation
    suphlatus, angel of dust
    israfel, angel of song
    matariel, angel of rain
    zachriel, angel of memory
    eistibus, angel of divination
    simikiel, angel of vengeance

    Eldritch horror angels are my favorite kind.

    Especially since they don’t differ from the actual canon too much

    such as the Thrones (interlocking wheels studded with eyes, a bit like something out of NGE) 

    (via abendlichter-deactivated2020060)

    • 8 years ago
    • 127694 notes
  • thekidsfrom2005:

    sansaspark:

    People who don’t know anything about the french revolution aside from “the peasants wanted bread so they started a war and the king and queen got their heads cut off” should just not share their ignorant opinions about Marie Antoinette and the monarchy and the role they played in the revolution

    Marie Antoinette wasn’t the materialistic empty-headed blonde bimbo that a lot of people think she was. She was, first and foremost, a young girl. She (along with Louis) was still a teenager when she was crowned queen, and anyway she knew she was too young to rule (“Oh God protect us, we are too young to reign” —when Louis XV died). On top of everything, she was lonely at French Court. In Austria, she had tons of siblings she could play with but in Versailles all she had were three aunts that were much older than her (and gave her pretty bad advice at one point). Plus in her first few years, she and Louis were still strangers so they didn’t talk much (that changed later on but that’s besides the point). SO, she was a) a 14 year old girl, b) a complete stranger to france and its culture, and c) alone and virtually friendless for some time. Not to mention, her so-called “friends” (her three aunts) gave her really sucky advice about ignoring Louis XV’s current mistress and upsetting both her father-in-law and a lot of the French Court—all because her aunts had some personal issues with Madame du Barry. And on top of everything, France was already in a tricky spot and she was pressured by her mother to have an heir and also make sure the French were not angered by Catherine the Great of Russia partitioning Poland and handing it out to Austria and Prussia. Imagine dealing with all that shit as a teenager. 

    Pretty sure most people know that the “let them eat cake” myth is already debunked, but that leads me to my next point—she had, and has, the image of being an apathetic, money-guzzling queen when in reality she was extremely compassionate and generous. This is from Marie Antoinette and the Decline of the French Monarchy:

    “The first occurred when her carriage passed the scene of an accident. She insisted her driver stop, then tended to the wounded man herself while her attendants went for help. She refused to leave until he was safely on his way to a doctor.”

    and also…

    “A peasant was accidentally fatally wounded during one of Louis Auguste’s hunts and Marie Antoinette had him taken to his home in her own carriage, and when he died, she made her his wife and children were compensated.”

    That “let them eat cake” phrase being attributed to her and making her seem cruel and indifferent to the starving poor is complete crap but it’s just part of the revolutionary propaganda that blamed her for the country’s inability to govern their subjects properly and justly. Which brings me to my next point…

    The peasant’s weren’t actually the direct cause of the revolution. Revolts by the starving peasants were actually considered harmless just right before the official breakout of the French Revolution. And even during the revolution, it wasn’t the peasants that led that bloody and poorly planned revolution. It was middle class white men from the third estate who basically wanted to pay less taxes so they could have more money for themselves. As if they gave a shit about the starving peasants. The bourgeoisie were made of lawyers, bankers, merchants… in other words, they had enough money. They were educated, so they were the ones who led the French Revolution. Not the peasants. That’s why the Revolution shouldn’t be romanticized as some noble attempt to give the peasants food again—the leaders of the revolution had their own ambitions in mind. Once the educated and persuasive bourgeoisie rallied the support of the peasants, that’s when the peasants actually posed a threat to the monarchy (see: the women’s march on Versailles). 

    Revolutionaries were REALLY fond of pointing fingers, and Marie got the brunt of it. They called her Madame Deficit and blamed her for France’s financial crisis, but Marie’s role in the financial crisis wasn’t… actually …that big?? She did spend a lot of money, but the main cause of the crisis was the aid they sent to the American Revolution, taxes that the CLERGY set on the third estate, the ancien regime in general, the previous king’s lavish spending, along the king before that (Louis XIV) digging France into debt with war costs. So in perspective, Marie buying lots of dresses and perfumes isn’t that big of a deal, coupled with the fact that she didn’t have an idea what the hell was going on with the economy anyway!! Is it really fair to blame an woman who was kept in the dark about the country’s financial troubles over continuous, conscious mistakes made over the reigns of the past two French kings??

    tl;dr Marie deserves all the sympathy in the world and the historians who condemn her probably only researched the French Revolution as a whole and not Marie specifically. Marie was an ordinary teenager girl despite her position and she wasn’t ready for the pressures put on her both when she was a princess and as a queen, and she was in no way deserving of death, nor was her husband. The people who are at fault, morally and/or otherwise, are the clergy, the selfish bourgeoisie, and also the incompetency of the people behind the king (financial advisors & etc). Not Marie.

    Just also think its important to note that the same woman everyone portrays as self centred accidentally step on he foot of her executioner moments before her death and gave her sincerest apologies to the man who was about to chop off her head

    I really love Marie Antoinette.

    She wasn’t a villain or a saint.  She was a very complex woman who had the misfortune of being… well in the middle of the French Revolution.  She had a great deal of positive qualities and possessed a great deal of courage, but could also be vain, frivolous and sometimes suffer from a great lack of common sense (you can imagine what the starving French peasants thought about her mock peasant village so the aristocrats could pretend to be poor, like 18th century trustifarians).  She’s one of my favourite characters from history.  

    (via abendlichter-deactivated2020060)

    • 8 years ago
    • 36080 notes
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