pandavalkyrie:

pandavalkyrie:

pandavalkyrie:

I like how fanfiction culture decided to drop all pretense about self-insert oc characters hooking up with canon characters and just leaned into “character x reader” stories. These were just non-existent in my early FF days, we’re talking 15+ years ago, and they’re everywhere now. I appreciate it, chase your bliss dears

GOD I WISH I HAD THAT SPINE OF STEEL

WHY DID YOU LEAVE OUT THE BEST PART, THIS IS A LEGEND

bibaporu:

asapotentialrolemodel:

as a disabled person who is dependent on marijuana to live my fullest life I’m incredibly happy to see a change in how people are starting to view responsible marijuana use but we can’t forget that disabled people should always come first in your activism

voting to legalize medical marijuana, even if you’re not disabled yourself and wouldn’t be able to “take advantage of it,” is one way to help force a change in status quo. it’s a process. and you shouldn’t feel like it’s not important just because you don’t get to ‘have fun’ just yet when there are people who are dependent on marijuana use to live a functional life

as a disabled person of color, id like to point out that its not as simple/black n white as “disabled people should always come first.”

yes, disabled people should be a priority. but the safety of black and latine people should also be prioritized when voting to legalize and decriminalize marijuana.

keep in mind that while the criminalization of marijuana majorly affects people with disabilities, it is not criminalized because of ableism. it is criminalized because of racism, and it is important to keep that in mind while addressing the legalization of marijuana.

like, don’t worry op, i get what you’re trying to say. but acknowledging the ableist side effects does nothing to abolish the racist roots of the problem.

white people (and yes that includes white disabled people) are encouraged to reblog.

silverhawk:

silverhawk:

silverhawk:

silent lunches were so….weird. like the entire cafeteria was expected to be quiet and it usually was a punishment for something super dumb tbh like i remember a bunch of kids popped plastic bags one day so we got silent lunch for a week and everyone was just….sitting there all quiet. it was duuuumb

the only funny part tho was sitting around ur friends and all of u trying VERY VERY HARD not to laugh when someone makes a face or something like that, or trying to sneak into the bathroom so u can talk…even then tho fuck silent lunches

ppl keep going “what the FUCK is a silent lunch why would schools have that” and im like. genuinely so forgetful abt the fact that silent lunches are one of those american public school things that literally dont make any sense

jumpingjacktrash:

mlgspacememe:

ironlocked:

venom.

  • 31% on Rotten Tomatoes
  • 35% on Metacritic
  • 2/5 on Empire
  • 1/5 stars on the Rolling Stone
  • “a massively overqualified cast”
  • “What went wrong? Everything, actually.”
  • “No one has to fake a bad review of this”
  • “The ending suggests that there’s a…sequel…Audiences have suffered enough.”

Also:

  • 95% of Google users liked it
  • 89% of Rotten Tomato audiences liked it
  • The average audience rating was 4.4/5 (18,619 reviews)
  • My mother, who doesn’t usually like superhero movies, says that this movie deserves at least 80% and that’s really something

Conclusion:The critics can and will be wrong.

critics don’t seem to rate movies on “will you have fun watching it” even though that’s the #1 criterion for audiences

mmhmmhim:

hufflepuffkat:

the-modern-typewriter:

“Shh, it’s alright,” the villain said. “You’re doing beautifully and I’m so proud of you. But that’s enough now. It was cruel of them to make you fight me – you could never have won. It’s not your fault.”

The ancient and powerful villain may have had a calm and gentle face as he spoke, but he was furious, not at the hero, but the gods for continually sending kids and teenagers to fight their battles.