Day 7 in London, in Hyde Park
(via porcelania)
Watch the ending to Homeward Bound if u need a good cry:
(Source: yaoikuza, via frickyeah1990s)
If owning a gun and knowing how to use it worked, the military would be the safest place for a woman. It’s not.
If women covering up their bodies worked, Afghanistan would have a lower rate of sexual assault than Polynesia. It doesn’t.
If not drinking alcohol worked, children would not be raped. They are.
If your advice to a woman to avoid rape is to be the most modestly dressed, soberest and first to go home, you may as well add “so the rapist will choose someone else”.
If your response to hearing a woman has been raped is “she didn’t have to go to that bar/nightclub/party” you are saying that you want bars, nightclubs and parties to have no women in them. Unless you want the women to show up, but wear kaftans and drink orange juice. Good luck selling either of those options to your friends.
Or you could just be honest and say that you don’t want less rape, you want (even) less prosecution of rapists.
When people scoff at the message that we need to teach people not to rape they make the assumption that the lesson goes: “Rape is bad. Don’t do it.” That is not what the lesson looks like. The lesson, once it is adopted, will be that every single person out there, regardless of any defining personal characteristics, is a human being of value, and with a right to make their own decisions about what bodily contact to have with others. There is nothing a person can do that makes them less deserving of that right. Violating any person’s right to control the when, what and who with of their sexual interactions is wrong. Do it and you will be punished, and you will deserve it.
N.B. While not all those who are raped are women, and not all rapists are men, much less rape apologists; rape prevention myths are always targeted at women, and this post reflects this. My language in the final paragraph is very consciously gender-neutral.
(via longdivisionnnn)
Suit ca. 1780
From LACMA
Everything ever should be embroidered.
Here is the truth: lolitas are strong. Lolitas are brave. Every day, they decide to wear things that are not popular or accepted. They have been mocked, alienated and harassed for their choices, in every location from big cities to rural towns. Why? Because as a lolita, the fundamental belief is that making yourself happy is the most important thing. Even if you feel awkward, standing alone in a pink-and-blue ruffled dress, knowing that the rest of the world is staring… you are standing up for your right to make choices about your happiness, not others’. If this dress makes you feel happy when you look at it and put it on, then it should be your choice to embrace that.
(Source: lolita-charm.blogspot.com, via cadney)
(Source: yubolove, via fuckyeahtoonami)
It is unfair to ask a woman to leave aside her personal experience and discuss feminist issues in the abstract. You are discussing the stuff of her life. Asking her to “not make it personal” is to ask her to wrench her womanhood from her personhood. Don’t play Devil’s advocate. Seriously. Just don’t.
(via feministquotes)
(via fuckyeahtoonami)
thetimetravelersguidetothegalaxy:
I’ve been waiting for this joke for ages
(Oh my gosh , this story gave me the chills, to see a joke made on it is kinda sick, although, funny.)
I THOUGHT THIS WAS GONNA BE A POST ABOUT HOW GAMERS NEED TO CALM THE FUCK DOWN ABOUT “TRUE GAMERS” BUT OH MY FUCKING GOD
ITS A REFERENCE TO THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME
I SERIOUSLY GOT SO EXCITED WHEN I SAW THE END OF IT NO LIE
(via milkchandelier)