Social Justice Warriors - Now With Less Feminism Sperging

Yeah
You know what I love about the Kimono thing?

As the kimono has another name, gofuku (呉服?, literally "clothes of Wu (吳)"), the earliest kimonos were heavily influenced by traditional Han Chinese clothing, known today as hanfu (漢服?, kanfuku in Japanese), through Japanese embassies to China which resulted in extensive Chinese culture adoptions by Japan, as early as the 5th century AD.[5] It was during the 8th century, however, that Chinese fashions came into style among the Japanese, and the overlapping collar became particularly women's fashion.[5] During Japan's Heian period (794–1192 AD), the kimono became increasingly stylized, though one still wore a half-apron, called a mo, over it.[5] During the Muromachi age (1392–1573 AD), the Kosode, a single kimono formerly considered underwear, began to be worn without the hakama (trousers, divided skirt) over it, and thus began to be held closed by an obi "belt".[5] During the Edo period (1603–1867 AD), the sleeves began to grow in length, especially among unmarried women, and the Obi became wider, with various styles of tying coming into fashion.[5] Since then, the basic shape of both the men’s and women’s kimono has remained essentially unchanged. Kimonos made with exceptional skill from fine materials have been regarded as great works of art.[5]

The formal kimono was replaced by the more convenient Western clothes and yukata as everyday wear. After an edict by Emperor Meiji,[7] police, railroad men and teachers moved to Western clothes. The Western clothes became the army and school uniform for boys. After the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, kimono wearers often became victims of robbery because they could not run very fast due to the restricting nature of the kimono on the body and geta clogs. The Tokyo Women's & Children's Wear Manufacturers' Association (東京婦人子供服組合) promoted Western clothes. Between 1920 and 1930 the sailor outfit replaced the undivided hakama in school uniforms for girls. The 1932 fire at Shirokiya's Nihonbashi store is said to have been the catalyst for the decline in kimonos as everyday wear. Kimono-clad Japanese women did not wear panties and several women refused to jump into safety nets because they were ashamed of being seen from below. (It is, however, suggested, that this is an urban myth.)[8][9] The national uniform, Kokumin-fuku (国民服), a type of Western clothes, was mandated for males in 1940.[10][11][12] Today most people wear Western clothes and wear the breezier and more comfortable yukata for special occasions.

Not only did the Kimono only come into existence because Japan liked clothes from China, but they also fell out of use because they decided that they liked wearing clothes borrowed from the west better. The Kimono literally begins and ends with Japan deciding to wear clothes from other cultures. Trying to claim that someone from a different culture wearing them is somehow offensive to the history of the garment is hilarious.
"deciding to wear clothes from other cultures"???? CULTURAL APPROPRIATION !!!!!!!-Said the white knight
 
At MUN there are Thursdays where the student space has the chaplain giving out popcorn, hot chocolate and coffee. Also, there are coloring books and a few games. And during heavy exam times they turn it into an "exam oasis" where they have
all of the above and add trained therapy dogs from the "St. John's Ambulance" so people can chill out and pet a nice little pup.
To be fair there are plenty of majors that almost inevitably lead to massive amounts of stress. The first time I took general chemistry I was a gibbering wreck and at least two people were visably quivering when the final for that was passed out. I still have no idea how I passed the second time.
 
To be fair there are plenty of majors that almost inevitably lead to massive amounts of stress. The first time I took general chemistry I was a gibberin wreck and at least two people were visably quiverig when the final for that was passed out. I still have no idea how I passed the second time.
I remember my first chemistry final in college, 7 out ~50 left crying.
 
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Wow Ricky do you have something against people with mutated genes? That's racist! #HEALTHYnoMATTERwhat
 
To be fair there are plenty of majors that almost inevitably lead to massive amounts of stress. The first time I took general chemistry I was a gibbering wreck and at least two people were visably quivering when the final for that was passed out. I still have no idea how I passed the second time.
I'm astonished I passed Chem 1011 first time around. I was flanking the tests...
 
:story:

[E]
This guy in the comments section...

No, but seriously: adult pre-school? When I was a young buck, we didn't have adult pre-school--we had LSD. Those were the days.... Now people fingerpaint. Sheesh!

When aging hippies are cooler than your generation, your generation needs to kill itself.
 
I'm astonished I passed Chem 1011 first time around. I was flanking the tests...
101? I'm a bio major. I had to start in the 200s...
Not meaning to discount the fact that it seems like that subject burns almost everyone.
 
101? I'm a bio major. I had to start in the 200s...
Not meaning to discount the fact that it seems like that subject burns almost everyone.
I'm a biochem major, and I'm still starting out. Everyone has to take 1000 level courses. It's a slightly different system here I guess. Math 1001 is calculus and 1090 is precalc.
 
You know what I love about the Kimono thing?

As the kimono has another name, gofuku (呉服?, literally "clothes of Wu (吳)"), the earliest kimonos were heavily influenced by traditional Han Chinese clothing, known today as hanfu (漢服?, kanfuku in Japanese), through Japanese embassies to China which resulted in extensive Chinese culture adoptions by Japan, as early as the 5th century AD.[5] It was during the 8th century, however, that Chinese fashions came into style among the Japanese, and the overlapping collar became particularly women's fashion.[5] During Japan's Heian period (794–1192 AD), the kimono became increasingly stylized, though one still wore a half-apron, called a mo, over it.[5] During the Muromachi age (1392–1573 AD), the Kosode, a single kimono formerly considered underwear, began to be worn without the hakama (trousers, divided skirt) over it, and thus began to be held closed by an obi "belt".[5] During the Edo period (1603–1867 AD), the sleeves began to grow in length, especially among unmarried women, and the Obi became wider, with various styles of tying coming into fashion.[5] Since then, the basic shape of both the men’s and women’s kimono has remained essentially unchanged. Kimonos made with exceptional skill from fine materials have been regarded as great works of art.[5]

The formal kimono was replaced by the more convenient Western clothes and yukata as everyday wear. After an edict by Emperor Meiji,[7] police, railroad men and teachers moved to Western clothes. The Western clothes became the army and school uniform for boys. After the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, kimono wearers often became victims of robbery because they could not run very fast due to the restricting nature of the kimono on the body and geta clogs. The Tokyo Women's & Children's Wear Manufacturers' Association (東京婦人子供服組合) promoted Western clothes. Between 1920 and 1930 the sailor outfit replaced the undivided hakama in school uniforms for girls. The 1932 fire at Shirokiya's Nihonbashi store is said to have been the catalyst for the decline in kimonos as everyday wear. Kimono-clad Japanese women did not wear panties and several women refused to jump into safety nets because they were ashamed of being seen from below. (It is, however, suggested, that this is an urban myth.)[8][9] The national uniform, Kokumin-fuku (国民服), a type of Western clothes, was mandated for males in 1940.[10][11][12] Today most people wear Western clothes and wear the breezier and more comfortable yukata for special occasions.

Not only did the Kimono only come into existence because Japan liked clothes from China, but they also fell out of use because they decided that they liked wearing clothes borrowed from the west better. The Kimono literally begins and ends with Japan deciding to wear clothes from other cultures. Trying to claim that someone from a different culture wearing them is somehow offensive to the history of the garment is hilarious.
Speaking of Japan.
Didn't Japan adopt virtually everything from its neighbours?
Early Japanese borrowed Chinese characters, tea drinking came from China too, and even the architecture originated from Korea.

It's kinda hard trying to defend a culture from "cultural appropriation" when that's pretty much what said culture was founded upon.
 
Speaking of Japan.
Didn't Japan adopt virtually everything from its neighbours?
Early Japanese borrowed Chinese characters, tea drinking came from China too, and even the architecture originated from Korea.

It's kinda hard trying to defend a culture from "cultural appropriation" when that's pretty much what said culture was founded upon.

Hell, even freaking anime was inspired by Walt Disney.
 
White people shouldn't exist and soon won't thanks to evolution

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Evolution also comes for people like the tumblrite that thinks it only comes for white people. The only way one wouldn't survive is if 1) they weren't able to adapt to their environment and 2) they were unsuccessful in passing down their genes and having offspring. And the "be in the sun without withering away", the hell is that suppose to mean? If this person thinks being in the sun is bad for white people, it's bad for everyone since one can get cancer from the UV rays of the sun if they been out too long.
 
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Replace "white people" with "Jews" in those posts and adopt a German accent, and tell me you DON'T get a bit of a chill down your spine, wow.

Why? It were those dang dirty jews who started it all in the first place!
Source: /pol/, why would they lie?





El oh el, I studied at TAU (Tel Aviv University) for a short period and nobody tried to kill me.
In case you don't know, /pol/ is reverse tumblr
 
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White people are weak creatures who literally do not possess the qualities necessary to be out in natural conditions of this planet longer for ten minutes.
"WHITE PEEPOLE R EVIL CUZ THEY TAKE OVR THE WORLD AND OWN EVRYTHING!!!"
"WHITE EEPOLE R WEAK"
hmmm
if these white people are weak, and yet own the world with their white PRIVLEG, what does that say about all the other races?
 
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