Random Tumblr posts

That's what I am, according to Tumblr.
Just like non-feminist women, non-BLM supporting black people, non-LGBT supporting gay people...
FUN STUFF.

On the subject of names, I love it when American pee-oh-seas whine about their names being mispronounced being a symbol of white supremacy.
I want them to meet a Polish person one day. Or a Swede. Or a Greek. Hell, even a French person cause :powerlevel:God damn do those fuckers butcher my name.

Also, unrelated but still funny: they claim that the name Tyrone is an ancient African name, but you wanna know what it really comes from?
MI-Tyrone-Ireland-counties.jpg

A county in goddamn Ireland.
 
I actually sort of understand the Vietnamese person wanting to just go by the "anglicized" pronunciation and getting aggravated at those who refuse to oblige.

I agree completely with whoever made that post. If I'm Indian and my name is Srivastavaramashivaaharajuvaripeta or whatever and I introduce myself as "Sam," fuck you if that's not good enough for you.

Oh, I get that. Guess I should've elaborated on the aspects that made me roll my eyes on that one. So let's try again:

The whole of 3). This is Tumblr, and the 2 posters before are clearly trying to rank up as many Good Whitie points as they can. It's kinda hilarious they don't know how that shit always ends over there, though. But sure, let's use the white entitlement card here since we can. They're trying to be considerate because they're so entitled.

From 4) "please think about why you think that poc are doing those things for your benefit. please think about why you potentially consider poc to be so subservient... etc" Uhh. Because, like it was implied, a lot of people are douchebags and give you shit for having a name too 'difficult' or foreign to them? These things keep popping up all the time. Or, whatever, let's just go with racism. They're racist whites. That's the reason.

It's the angle the 3rds poster keeps pushing that grinds my gears. They were trying to be considerate and find ways to incorporate that into the way they treat people of color. But clearly the underlying problem here is that they're still racist white supremacists who think it's poc nature to be subservient and whatever-the-fuck 3rd implies.
 
The whole of 3). This is Tumblr, and the 2 posters before are clearly trying to rank up as many Good Whitie points as they can. It's kinda hilarious they don't know how that shit always ends over there, though. But sure, let's use the white entitlement card here since we can. They're trying to be considerate because they're so entitled.

Put yourself in the place of someone having to deal with that kind of insufferable groveling and imagine how annoying it would be and how difficult it would be not to kick whoever was doing it in the face.
 
We've reached peak tumblr--sending someone death and rape threats and finding their girlfriend's house because of false pedophilia allegations made by an unfunny blogger.
http://archive.is/dTboo
Gonna wait until I have more proof of this, but if this is real then Tumblr's even more of a flaming dumpster fire than I already thought.
 
We've reached peak tumblr--sending someone death and rape threats and finding their girlfriend's house because of false pedophilia allegations made by an unfunny blogger.
http://archive.is/dTboo
While there's some room for doubt on whether this story is true, it is, nevertheless, a culmination of drama that's been brewing for some months now. The guy who made the allegations, papatulus, is some moderately Tumblr-famous guy who's been grudgewanking at another group of bigger bloggers for using his "the Nintendo Switch is gay, straight people aren't allowed to play it" post as an example of lazy, unfunny Tumblr humor. He's been flying off the handle about how people who don't like him are pedophiles and already publicly doxed at least one guy before this. Kind of a Vordrak-lite, except actually liked by people for some unfathomable reason.
mvbHDYf.png

yi1bP7I.png

P8ugQa7.png

3wvsRSL.png

KYMSC92.png
 
Apparently straight people never get bullied anymore.

Yeah, because no one is ever or has ever been bullied for:

Being short, being tall, being fat, being skinny/scrawny, having zits, having freckles, having red hair, having curly hair, having thick hair, having NO hair (allopecia--however it's spelled), having a learning disability, being hyperactive, being poor, how they dress, liking something unpopular, stuttering, poor grades, being shy, not being athletic, race, creed, gender, etc.
 
Just like non-feminist women, non-BLM supporting black people, non-LGBT supporting gay people...
FUN STUFF.

On the subject of names, I love it when American pee-oh-seas whine about their names being mispronounced being a symbol of white supremacy.
I want them to meet a Polish person one day. Or a Swede. Or a Greek. Hell, even a French person cause :powerlevel:God damn do those fuckers butcher my name.

Also, unrelated but still funny: they claim that the name Tyrone is an ancient African name, but you wanna know what it really comes from?
MI-Tyrone-Ireland-counties.jpg

A county in goddamn Ireland.

Honestly, I have never seen anybody arguing that "Tyrone" is African in origin. What I have seen is a lot of jokes about "ghetto" names coming from people that don't realize that a lot of the names they make fun of are often European in origin, and French in particular.

Now, while it's fair to say that some of that might have to do with the Francophones in Louisiana, I suspect that it might have more to do with the history of African-American soldiers in WWI and how they were received in France as opposed to how they were treated back home.

The two black combat divisions, the 92nd and 93rd, made up of approximately 40,000 troops, did see battle. Unsure how to use black national guardsmen, the American army "loaned" the 93rd Division to the French army. It was the only American division to serve exclusively under French command. Despite having to acclimate to French methods of combat, the division's four regiments performed exceptionally well and received numerous commendations.

The 93rd Division's 369th Infantry Regiment from New York became the most famous fighting unit of African-American troops. Nicknamed the "Harlem Hellfighters," the regiment first garnered notoriety for its world-class band, led by the acclaimed James Reese Europe and made up of top musicians from the United States and Puerto Rico. Europe's band, along with other black regimental ensembles, popularized jazz to a war-torn French nation fascinated with black culture. The 369th received equal acclaim for its combat performance. Two soldiers of the 369th, Henry Johnson and Needham Roberts, were the first American soldiers to receive the French Croix de Guerre (War Cross). The regiment served for 191 days and ceded no ground to German forces. They were the first American regiment to reach the Rhine River in Germany following the armistice and returned to the United States national heroes.

The 92nd Division, in comparison to the 93rd, had a much more harrowing experience. White army officials characterized black soldiers of the division as rapists and spread vicious lies among French civilians. African-American officers were particularly singled out for racist treatment because of their status. Viewed as a threat to white authority, many were unjustly transferred out of the division and others were court-martialed on bogus charges. Despite inadequate training and racial discrimination, the division as a whole fought well. However, one regiment, the 368th Infantry Regiment, performed poorly during the Allied Meuse-Argonne offensive in September 1918 and was used by the military to characterize all black soldiers and officers as complete failures. African-American soldiers would contest these slanderous charges well into the postwar period.

The rigors of combat and labor challenged black soldiers' physical and emotional stamina. Nevertheless, service in France constituted a remarkable experience. African-American troops often interacted with North and West African soldiers serving in the French military, expanding their sense of diasporic belonging. Black soldiers received a warm welcome from French civilians, who, unlike white troops of the American army, exhibited little overt racism. "They treated us with respect," one soldier recalled, "not like the white American soldiers." These interactions further contributed to the image of France as a nation free of racial discrimination and uniquely committed to universal democratic rights. Travel and service in France expanded the boundaries of how black soldiers viewed the world and their place in it. Lemuel Moody, a soldier who served overseas, reflected that his experience was "altogether improving and broadening.…[It] changed my out look on life. I see things now with different eyes."

Bolding for emphasis. It's fascinating history.

But unfortunately, you'll often see people bungling history online, leading to "we wuz kings" jokes, particularly with regards to Ancient Egyptians being black instead of looking pretty much like modern Egyptians look. And then conveniently forgetting that Timbuktu exists and was inhabited by black people.

More of a failure of the education system, really.

No, you're just a human being acting objectively. If they know that you're willing to criticize their actions as much as anyone else's, you're automatically the enemy.

Eh, I try.

We've reached peak tumblr--sending someone death and rape threats and finding their girlfriend's house because of false pedophilia allegations made by an unfunny blogger.
http://archive.is/dTboo

Jesus jumpin' shit, how am I only now hearing about this?
 
But unfortunately, you'll often see people bungling history online, leading to "we wuz kings" jokes, particularly with regards to Ancient Egyptians being black instead of looking pretty much like modern Egyptians look. And then conveniently forgetting that Timbuktu exists and was inhabited by black people.

And they always leave out Ethiopia, one of the great empires of Africa and the second nation in history to adopt Christianity as its state religion (Armenia was first; Rome was much later). Its history is fascinating, but it disrupts too many official narratives, so the average person pretty much only knows about its occasional famines.
 
the 2nd one is much easier to pass as typical 2deep4u tattoo, countrary to the first one
ponies are always the worst
 
  • Agree
Reactions: toothpick
make fun of are often European in origin, and French in particular.

Now, while it's fair to say that some of that might have to do with the Francophones in Louisiana

It might?

I don't think so, though. Your second explanation seems more likely. Louisiana never really experienced a mass exodus of people leaving even during the Great Migration, not like other parts around it, and francophone culture was heavily suppressed by the American authorities after the Union victory (1862), and in a lot of places, remains so, albeit it quietly. Libraries got burned, newspapers shut down, etc. I wasn't allowed to speak French in school for instance, and I'm only 21. Some of my uncles/aunts etc were jailed for the crime of speaking French in public. The reason I bring this up is that as weird as this all sounds, the effect of black culture and American culture on Louisiana can actually be quite distant in a lot of cases and was usually forced on Louisiana. Most black people and many Acadians adopted anglo-names to escape persecution, police and military brutality, and so on. To top it off New Orleans is one of the only metropolitan areas in the U.S. where almost all of the population was native-born (born in Orleans parish or those surrounding it), and most universities, etc. are 95% locals. Literally 85-95%. Some of my friends can remember meeting their first "foreigner" (a dude from Arkansas.) The north and south of the state may as well be different countries. Of course, these effects lessen every year but history were quite notable trends.

So, its black population's effect on the rest of black culture was actually very situational and often minimal as compared to Mississippi. A lot of music to be sure. But, it wasn't until the 1920s-1940's that most of the black population was even speaking the same language (at least, in the majority) as black people in the rest of the South. The relation can be so strained at times I have older relatives who literally just call the U.S. "the Empire." I can be guilty of this, even, calling Bayou Rum "an import" while in North Carolina and the like. There is a whole scholarly tradition dedicated to studying the weird, isolated, cultural anomaly that is South Louisiana/Acadiana because of shit like this.
 
It might?

I don't think so, though. Your second explanation seems more likely. Louisiana never really experienced a mass exodus of people leaving even during the Great Migration, not like other parts around it, and francophone culture was heavily suppressed by the American authorities after the Union victory (1862), and in a lot of places, remains so, albeit it quietly. Libraries got burned, newspapers shut down, etc. I wasn't allowed to speak French in school for instance, and I'm only 21. Some of my uncles/aunts etc were jailed for the crime of speaking French in public. The reason I bring this up is that as weird as this all sounds, the effect of black culture and American culture on Louisiana can actually be quite distant in a lot of cases and was usually forced on Louisiana. Most black people and many Acadians adopted anglo-names to escape persecution, police and military brutality, and so on. To top it off New Orleans is one of the only metropolitan areas in the U.S. where almost all of the population was native-born (born in Orleans parish or those surrounding it), and most universities, etc. are 95% locals. Literally 85-95%. Some of my friends can remember meeting their first "foreigner" (a dude from Arkansas.) The north and south of the state may as well be different countries. Of course, these effects lessen every year but history were quite notable trends.

So, its black population's effect on the rest of black culture was actually very situational and often minimal as compared to Mississippi. A lot of music to be sure. But, it wasn't until the 1920s-1940's that most of the black population was even speaking the same language (at least, in the majority) as black people in the rest of the South. The relation can be so strained at times I have older relatives who literally just call the U.S. "the Empire." I can be guilty of this, even, calling Bayou Rum "an import" while in North Carolina and the like. There is a whole scholarly tradition dedicated to studying the weird, isolated, cultural anomaly that is South Louisiana/Acadiana because of shit like this.

Ah, see, I wasn't sure. It was pretty much a stab in the dark.

Thank you for the correction!
 
"allistics don't go anywhere near this post'
lol too late, most already have
Don't you love when they think they can tell people not to comment on posts they've chosen to make public, as if they have the authority to control it?

Been finding some ridiculous tattoos on tumblr dot com lately. The ones I love to hate the most are these two however:


To be fair, those lyrics apply perfectly to that character. I think it's a cute tattoo (but then, I'm a woman, and I grew up with ponies, so...more justifiable?). Still wouldn't get a cartoon fandom tattoo, though.
 
To be fair, those lyrics apply perfectly to that character. I think it's a cute tattoo (but then, I'm a woman, and I grew up with ponies, so...more justifiable?). Still wouldn't get a cartoon fandom tattoo, though.

I guess it's fitting though I don't really know about the character, but generally I see her depicted as very kind. And yeah, it is a well done tattoo.

:powerlevel: I guess it just rubs me the wrong way for combining something I like and something I loathe haha. :powerlevel:

Carry on.
 
I guess it's fitting though I don't really know about the character, but generally I see her depicted as very kind. And yeah, it is a well done tattoo.

:powerlevel: I guess it just rubs me the wrong way for combining something I like and something I loathe haha. :powerlevel:

Carry on.

Fluttershy also has a problem with her spine, as in, she often can't find it. She's afraid of everything, whispers half her lines, and lets everyone walk all over her. All of her "character growth" moments have to do with her stepping up, raising her voice, and/or saying "no". That's not what the quote describes.
 
Anonymous: Okay so someone just called me out as a shit artist on a bad art blog just when I thought I was getting better and im kind of loosing confidence in my art, like I really donwant to post anymore
hey, listen to me.


those blogs are disgusting. they’re run by people who have nothing better to do than to hurt others.

there is no such thing as bad art.

i’ll say it as many times as i have to.

art is art! art is expression and creation and POWER!

it’s amazing that you can create these images nobody’s seen before.

please, please don’t stop. your art is perfect because your art is yours.

own it.

Do I have to say anything? Then again, this girl in general is pretty cringe worthy.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Vorhtbame
Back