零 (ling)/30s (THEY/THEM/佢)
art tag: #a pile of bread
twitterart bloginsp blogao3

tarajenkins:
“ kasunshine:
“ Are you kidding me. Do I need to watermark everything now?
The Xibalba picture above is a piece of work I made shortly after seeing the original trailer for the Book of Life. If you dig deep enough in my blog, I posted...
kasunshine

Are you kidding me.  Do I need to watermark everything now?

The Xibalba picture above is a piece of work I made shortly after seeing the original trailer for the Book of Life. If you dig deep enough in my blog, I posted WIP shots and everything.

If you see a phone case or whatever featuring this art PLEASE DO NOT SUPPORT IT. It was BLATANTLY STOLEN from me, signature cropped out and everything.

And if the comment section is any indication of how many of these were sold, its in the thousands.  I’ve had my work stolen for monetary gain before, but usually not to this degree.

I wish I could just laugh this off, report it and be done with it, but the damage has been done already. I can’t express how sickened I feel.  

I’ve contacted the company about a DMCA notice, so now I can only wait.

tarajenkins

Sunshine busts her ass off to produce gorgeous art, she has incredible talent, yet while these shitlords are making THOUSANDS off her efforts she’s had to take a fucking STOCK JOB because the Discorderly Patreon was not paying HER BILLS. Spread this shit like wildfire, there are other original artists being ripped off on that website, make sure this shit ends here and now for “Uni-Armor” at “CaseCoro”.

I’m so sorry again, Sunshine. It feels like being a fucking cash cow getting milked dry when it happens, and I am so god damn furious it’s happening again.

garconniere:
“ What is happening right now in Ottawa, paired with what happened Monday in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu means people are scared, and people are jumping to conclusions. Good time for a reminder of this resource courtesy of On the Media. More...
garconniere

What is happening right now in Ottawa, paired with what happened Monday in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu means people are scared, and people are jumping to conclusions. Good time for a reminder of this resource courtesy of On the Media. More details here.

EMERGENCY! Monica Roberts needs our help!
la-lobalita

Please signal boost the hell out of this!

Monica Roberts the fierce and fearless activist behind Trans Griot is being unfairly evicted.

We need to come together as a community to help one of our brightest and strongest voices!

If you have any leads on housing in the Houston TX area and/or can help in any way, please contact her immediately at transgriot@yahoo.com!

There is also a donation link on the Trans Griot site.

ghostmarius

a ya dystopian novel where 16 year olds are split into groups according to which meme they are most like, but one day a girl finds out she is both tfw no gf and the sad frog

miraghoulmodus

been reading yotsuba& and i’ve got some gintama thoughts that are bugging me

  • kagura getting jealous of whenever sakamoto is around because he hogs so much attention so she just slams the door on his face when he shows up
  • kagura and shinpachi making up weird baffling games while gin is asleep (“how far can we throw the water balloon without it exploding” “how far can we make the water balloon shrapnel go when we throw the water balloon hard” “who can stay conscious longer while only inhaling and exhaling into a balloon”) (they found a pack of balloons on the street)
  • gintoki taking them aside and gently telling them “never listen to zura when he explains something. zura doesn’t know. only ever listen to me.” and so they only listen to zura
  • zura gives kagura a famicom for her birthday. where did it come from. how does it still exist.
  • sakamoto gives kagura three different prototype consoles that haven’t been released and are incredible and expensive and shiny and weird-shaped.
  • gintoki gives kagura a deck of cards but like, it’s missing the ace of spades, the four of diamonds, and the jack of clubs. it’s useless. all the cards are marked.
  • shinpachi gives kagura a book. 
  • everyone gives shinpachi eyeglasses cases. 
  • basically sakamoto is leslie knope, he always says “ahhahah no don’t get me gifts” and then buys incredibly thoughtful gifts and everyone is miserable. he celebrates “sorry i left you all to die in the war” day and it’s so uncomfortable. he has like six different anniversaries with mutsu. “first day we met” “day we became co-workers” “first time i puked on you” “first day you kicked me in the balls” “first day i crashed the ship” “first day you laughed at one of my jokes” (the last one he celebrates secretly by himself with a cake)
  • hijikata gets kagura an etch-a-sketch
  • okita gets kagura a box full of hornets. "lemme pop a quick H on this box, this way we all know its filled with hornets.”
arquius:
“ thepeoplesrecord:
“ The Malala you won’t hear about
October 16, 2014
Malala Yousafzai, the 17-year-old Pakistani activist, has won a well-deserved Nobel Peace Prize, putting her and her amazing, tragic story back in the spotlight. Per...
thepeoplesrecord

The Malala you won’t hear about
October 16, 2014

Malala Yousafzai, the 17-year-old Pakistani activist, has won a well-deserved Nobel Peace Prize, putting her and her amazing, tragic story back in the spotlight. Per usual, nevertheless, the corporate media has taken this positive development and exploited it in the service of U.S. imperialism.

The corporate media loves talking about Malala’s remarkable bravery and strength in standing up for girls’ rights to education, and the brutality of the Taliban forces that tried to assassinate her on her school bus. Such coverage fuels its orientalist, neocolonialist narrative about “backward,” misogynist Muslims and their need for “white saviors,” thereby legitimizing Western imperialist interests in South and West Asia.

Malala’s Nobel victory can be appropriated by the U.S. political establishment to “prove” that its invasion, occupation and destruction of Afghanistan has “helped” its people. (As for the hundreds of thousands killed and injured in the process, well, those inconvenient exceptions aren’t part of this narrative.)

As Michael Parenti points out, while most people who win the Nobel “Peace” Prize do so for war-mongering and crimes against humanity (Henry Kissinger boasts one, for example, along with Barack Obomba himself), Malala actually deserves hers. This makes the exploitation even more grotesque.

Malala has devoted her life to fighting for education for children—a most noble and important cause. When she implored at the United Nations, “Let us pick up our books and our pens, they are the most powerful weapons. One child, one teacher, one book and one pen, can change the world. Education is the only solution,” the Western intelligentsia ate it up like a voracious canine gobbling up its kibbles (on second thought, perhaps a vulture would have been a more apt choice for this simile).

Everyone can agree that education for children is a positive goal. By emphasizing that education is the only solution, the West can draw attention away from the very realmaterial concerns facing the vast majority of the world.

This oversight is by no means the fault of Malala. In that same speech, just before the above excerpt, she spoke of “a glorious struggle against illiteracy, poverty and terrorism.” Two of these three things are endlessly emphasized throughout the corporate press. You can guess which one is excluded.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Malala Who Opposes Global Poverty

Roughly half of the world still lives on less than $2.50 per day. Around one-quarter of people live in extreme poverty, less than $1.25 a day. UNICEF estimates that 24,000 children under the age of five die each and every day because of poverty, meaning that “every 3.6 seconds one person dies of starvation. Usually, it is a child under the age of 5.” And, in many countries, poverty is getting worse.

Education certainly has a role in the fight against poverty, and it’s important that one learns, say, basic chemistry. (Malala was sitting in chemistry class when she was informed she had won the Nobel Prize.) But learning basic chemistry does not provide billions of impoverished people with food, clean water, and health care. That takes material, collective action.

Malala understands how poverty creates and perpetuates the very social and political ills against which she is fighting. She continuously stresses the importance of not just spreading education, but of directly combating poverty. Yet these calls fall on the selectively deaf ears of the Western media.

The press picks and chooses which of Malala’s messages are amplified—and which are silenced. It can hardly get enough of her insistence on the importance of “the philosophy of nonviolence I have learned from Gandhi, Bacha Khan and Mother Teresa.” The Western intelligentsia positively salivates upon hearing such messages, despite the fact (or because of it?) that Gandhi was a virulent racist and Mother Teresa had ties to Central and South American dictators.

Interestingly, many of the same people lauding the Nobel Peace Prize laureate for her advocacy of nonviolence also happily cheered on the violence of the U.S. invasion and occupation of Afghanistan. The utter hypocrisy does not strike them. After all, it has always been much more useful to advocate a philosophy of nonviolence for individuals and oppressed groups than hegemons and states.

As much as it highlights Malala’s words on education and nonviolence, the U.S. corporate media never mentions the side of Malala that it doesn’t like, the side of Malala that doesn’t serve but rather challenges Western imperialist interests, the side of Malala that overtly opposes not just U.S. drone strikes but capitalism itself.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Malala Who Opposes Drones

On October 11, 2013, Malala met with Barack Obama in the Oval Office. The press could hardly have lauded the president more for taking the time out of his busy schedule to meet the 16-year-old activist, and for bringing his family with him.

What went much less reported was that at this meeting, Malala warned that U.S. “drone attacks are fueling terrorism. Innocent victims are killed in these acts, and they lead to resentment among the Pakistani people.”

The White House, which, given its supposed investment in fighting terrorism, would presumably not be interested in spreading it further, left these comments out of its official statement.

Just a few weeks after this meeting, another Pakistani girl visited Washington to testify before Congress, and received much less media attention. Nabila Rehman was 8 years old when she was out in a field picking okra and her grandmother was eviscerated before her eyes by a U.S. drone strike. Seven children were also wounded, including family members.

Nabila’s brother Zubair, a 13-year-old who was injured in the US drone attack, told the five congress-people decent enough to show up, “I no longer love blue skies. In fact, I now prefer grey skies. Drones don’t fly when sky is grey.” The Rehman family’s story was so dreadful that the translator burst into tears while telling it to Congress.

Given such a horrific report, you’d think the U.S. government would express interest in learning from it to make sure random civilians are not again slaughtered by bombs falling from microscopic dots in the sky. Yet only five (out of 435) House members attended the hearing.

Al Jazeera writer Murtaza Hussein noted that, in a symbol of the “utter contempt in which the government holds the people it claims to be liberating, while the Rehmans recounted their plight, Barack Obama was spending the same time meeting with the CEO of weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin.”

Clearly, stoking the military-industrial complex that creates the Predator drones that havemurdered and injured thousands of innocent civilians is a higher priority for the president of the United States than meeting the actual victims of what can only correctly be referred to as state terrorism.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Malala Who Opposes Capitalism

Last year, I wrote a brief article titled Malala Yousafzai, Spivak, Abu-Lughod and the White Savior Complex. I noted that Gayatri Spivak, in her classic article "Can The Subaltern Speak?" explained that colonialist powers justify their draconian, parasitic rule with the belief that they are “white men are saving brown women from brown men.”

In her well-known essay, "Do Muslim Women Really Need Saving?" Lila Abu-Lughod situated Spivak’s thesis in a contemporary setting, explaining how the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan was justified with the exact same argument—the Bush administration was a group of overwhelmingly white leaders who consistently workedagainst women’s rights in their own country but now acted desperate to “save” Afghan women from Afghan men.

In his article Malala Yousafzai and the White Saviour Complex, journalist Assed Baig explored how this racist “white man’s burden” phenomenon is still alive and well, detailing the repugnant ways in which the West has exploited Malala Yousafzai’s amazing strength and bravery to support its interests.

Absent from many of these discussions, however, is that Malala herself is well aware of this manipulation. In a statement released on October 13, 2013, she defiantly declared that she is "not a Western puppet."

When discussing the way in which the neocolonialist West exploits and manipulates those working against oppression, one should be careful to establish that this is not done to them unwittingly. We are dealing with agents, individuals who understand the implications of their actions and change them accordingly. To forget this fact is, in a less overt way, to uphold the very paternalist, neocolonialist strictures we seek to destroy.

As Spivak reminds us, the subaltern indeed speaks—and not only speaks but resists oppressors. Articulated a bit differently, Arundhati Roy insisted, “There’s really no such thing as ‘the voiceless.’ There are only the deliberately silenced or the preferably unheard.”

The attempt to deliberately silence Malala is not only evident in the way the U.S. corporate media ignores her criticism of U.S. drones; even more insidious is its complete disregard for the Nobel Peace Prize laureate’s politics. In March 2013, Malala sent this message to the congress of Pakistani Marxists:

First of all, I’d like to thank The Struggle and the IMT [International Marxist Tendency] for giving me a chance to speak last year at their Summer Marxist School in Swat and also for introducing me to Marxism and Socialism. I just want to say that in terms of education, as well as other problems in Pakistan, it is high time that we did something to tackle them ourselves. It’s important to take the initiative. We cannot wait around for any one else to come and do it. Why are we waiting for someone else to come and fix things? Why aren’t we doing it ourselves?

I would like to send my heartfelt greetings to the congress. I am convinced Socialism is the only answer and I urge all comrades to take this struggle to a victorious conclusion. Only this will free us from the chains of bigotry and exploitation.

This is the Malala the Western corporate media doesn’t like to quote. This is the Malala whose politics do not fit neatly into the neocolonialist, cookie-cutter frame of presentation. This is the Malala who recognizes that true liberation will take more than just education, that it will take the establishment of not just bourgeois political “democracy,” but ofeconomic democracy, of socialism.

When the courageous activist speaks of the importance of education and nonviolence, the West shouts her words loudly from the media mountaintops. When that same activist criticizes predator drones and, that most sacrosanct entity of all, capitalism, the silence is deafening.

Only the distinctive buzzing of U.S. killer drones can be heard, watching and bombing overhead, protecting empire and “freedom.”

Source

arquius

"I am convinced Socialism is the only answer"

neyyen sent
Hello, Grim! I saw your post about genderfluid Gintoki and your posts about aro and ace earlier today. These two topics kind of mushed together, and now I have a question that I'm curious about! How do you feel about fandom as a medium for representation? (For example: A few years ago, I read a Homestuck fic wherein one of the characters identifies as demisexual. I had no knowledge of the ace spectrum prior to that, and the information ended up being very relevant to me personally.)

i think fandoms can be very good for representation for reasons like your example, i also think, if certain identities become popular, it can help with normalizing marginalized identities in making them not so foreign for people who are new to the concept or changing points of view. like sometimes it can get problematic but i think thats more of a call for discussion within fandoms/communities than a definite “well that didnt work”

starlingsongs:
“ fuckyeahsexeducation:
“ izzy-springbolt:
“ actuallyintersex:
“ misohead:
“ aaron-in-transit:
“ purpleferretspirit:
“ murasaki-pengi:
“ blackenedbutterfly:
“ emphasize:
“ fuzzyhorns:
“ fuzzyhorns:
“ L0031936 Credit: Wellcome Library,...
fuzzyhorns

L0031936 Credit: Wellcome Library, London 
Intersex Society of North America
www.isna.org PO Box 3070 MI 48106-3070
‘Phall-O-meter’ (Showing in actual scale current
medical standards employed to determine nature of
genital plastic surgery for children born with
mixed sex anatomy)
In copyright ?
 
Collection: Wellcome Images

emphasize

What in the actual fuck.

blackenedbutterfly

WHAT THE FUCK

murasaki-pengi

… what the— is this legit!?

purpleferretspirit

Yeah it is. The phrase “three standard deviations below the mean” is the common reason for removing a male fallus and assigning the baby a female gender.

If you think about it, this actually sums up, pretty well, our society.

aaron-in-transit

It physically hurt my stomach to see this.

misohead

Same >_< I’ve reblogged this before but it needs more publicity so I’m doing it again.

actuallyintersex

Unfortunately, this is nothing new and is still used today. ~Mod A

izzy-springbolt

can someone explain this to me in Lehman’s terms pleSe? im confused and don’t know why everyone’s losing their shit because i don’t really understand the diagram

fuckyeahsexeducation

Okay, so there’s a wide variety of genitals out there. Here is a very simplistic chart of a spectrum genitals can fall on: 

Basically the clitoris and the penis are the exact same thing, very similar anatomy. Doctors will define it as a clitoris or penis depending on 1. if it has a urethra going through it and 2. it’s size. The diagram is the one they use to decide if they want to call the baby a girl or boy or intersex. Many babies are put through genital surgeries (sometimes without the parent’s knowledge or permission) to make them look more like a penis or more like a vulva which can cause many health problems as it is a surgery, or other problems related to being assigned a gender. Any kind of surgery that isn’t necessary for health should not be performed on babies because they cannot consent.

starlingsongs

AND THIS IS WHAT WE MEAN WHEN WE SAY SEX IS A SOCIAL CONSTRUCT!

avialum

anime trope episodes: the beach episode, the festival episode, the episode where someone doesn’t know how to cook
western cartoon trope episodes: the episode where someone has several copies of themselves made, the episode where inanimate objects come to life, the episode that is a homage to a movie from the 1950s, the episode where someone is shrunk down to microscopic levels and placed inside the body of another person
Tears are tears, but I don’t want to draw tears that aren’t proactive. The feeling “Ahh, it’s so sad” when people die and it’s all over, it doesn’t feel quite right. Even though a lot of people died in Gintama. Even if people die, it’s not the end. I don’t want to draw tears that fall and stay at the same place, but droplets that sprinkle along the road to one’s future.
— Hideaki Sorachi (x)
earth-dad

Hideaki Sorachi (x)

#