Yeah twitter accusations don't bother her, that's why she fled to Tumblr.
Anyway, I noticed something weird.
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How many characters does an anonymous ask get on Tumblr? Like how many things can they type?
Is it usually this many? And why is the spacing so weird at the top of the ask?
I assume it's just a format glitch or something but it still weirds me out.
As much as I hate the whole "cancel culture" bullshit that permitted Twitter, it is, if nothing else, entertaining when it happens to someone who legitimately deserves to get called out on their bullshit.
Lily's going to find that, while generally having the same politic's as Tumblr, Twitter is still a very different animal. Twitter may not be as merciless as Tumblr was in its hayday, but it's certainly more so then Tumblr is now. Twitter's guidelines are also far more ridged then Tumblrs, even after the great "purge", some people are expecting Lily to quite Twitter in a few months, but I think it's far more likely that we'll get a repeat of what happened last time. Which is Lily will lose her temper with someone, as she's been known to do, and either go way to far in her "snarky" insults or just straight up threaten them with physical violence, which is against Twitter's guidelines (it's technically against Tumblr's too, but they won't give a shit unless you start borderline stalking them), and get booted off the sight before she can build up a significant following on there .
After that she'll probably run back to Tumblr, spend a few days ranting about how "Toxic" of an environment Twitter is (which is technically correct, but Lily will think so for all the wrong reasons) and remain in her Tumblr safe space for another few years. I mentioned in a Moviebob thread about there being this thing I call a "creator purgatory" where a content creator never really leave's an area of being just barely above total irrelevancy. Spending year after year making content for the came audience that never really grows or shrinks because the creator never bother's to improve their craft or attitude, sure they make enough to stay just in the middle class life-style, but they don't do much to move beyond that.
I'm not sure where this life style ends up, the Internet is still a bit too new for anyone to have lived long enough to see many a content creator retire from old age, but I think Lily will be part of the first generation to provide us with such an answer.