Avatar

Sell your soul for a ________?

@7heboy

I'm mainly here to keep track of people I know and enjoy the thoughts of. I have random bouts of impressive levels of intelligence, followed by large amounts of stupid things and naked women. I also have periodic bouts of posting music videos. I don't expect questions, if you decide to follow me, I might not follow you back if I don't like most of what you post, or if you don't have an ask... or reply it it. Just a warning. If that's what you're into, great. If not, then there are better places for you to waste your time.
Avatar

You can hate abortion and still want it to be legal. Legal abortion doesn't mean it's mandated. It means the option exists. You personally can vehemently never use it.

Criminalizing abortion doesn't mean less abortion, it means unsafe abortion. It means more women doing it to themselves. Bleeding and maimed. It means infection and torture. Death.

If you think you can comfortably live with less autonomy, that doesn't mean you have the right to mandate that for other women. Unconditional abortion being a right means the option to invoke it.

If you think "Oh I don't like abortion, but it should be allowed for incest or rape or young girls", what you're acknowledging is that each woman's situation is different and requires a case by case judgement. For this to be respected, the Option of abortion needs to precede that.

If you think abortion is horrible because you love your baby and you both are happy and healthy and in a stable environment... then you're not the woman that needed that option. It's not about you. You still need that right though.

If you are in love with a man and he waits till he impregnates you to show his true colors and starts abusing you, you may find yourself suddenly in need of these services. Or else you'll be legally mandated to be in contact with him indefinitely.

You may feel fine giving up your own rights. Are you fine giving up your daughter's rights? What about your friends? Your sister's? Your mom's?

Criminalizing abortion leads to female slavery.

Avatar
reblogged

Here’s the whole video. It’s called “Don’t Be A Sucker” and it’s 17 minutes long.

don’t just scroll past this actually watch it, it’s only 2 minutes long. If you re-recorded this today word for word with modern actors and places, it wouldn’t even look out of place as a PSA

300,000 notes and i can’t find a transcript

Avatar
sky-squido

Transcript: (sorry for the language!)

Speaker: “I see negroes holding jobs that belong to me! And you! I’ll ask you, if we allow this thing to go on, what’s gonna become of us real Americans!”

Hungarian man with clear foreign accent: “I’ve heard this kind of talk before, but I never expected to hear it in America.”

Young man: “This man seems to know what he’s talking about.“

Speaker: “What are us real Americans gonna do about it? You’ll find it right here in this little pamphlet—the truth about negroes and foreigners! The truth about the Catholic Church! You’ll find…” [audio grows quieter as camera shifts to the onlookers]

Hungarian man: “You believe in that kind of talk?“

Young man: “I dunno, it makes pretty good sense to me.“

Speaker: “And I tell you, friends, we’ll never be able to call this country our own until it’s a country without… without what?“

Other man: “Yeah? Without what?“

Speaker: “Without negroes, without alien foreigners,”—the young man is nodding, following along—“without Catholics, without Freemasons! You know these…“

Young man: “What’s wrong with the Masons, I’m a Mason.” Looks to European man worriedly, “hey, that fellow’s talking about me!“

Huungarian man: “And that makes a difference, doesn’t it.“

Speaker: “These are your enemies! These are the people who are trying to take over our country! Now you know them, you know what they stand for. And it’s up to you and me to fight them!” A bunch of the onlookers in the vicinity wave him off like he’s crazy and turn away, “fight them and destroy them before they destroy us!”

Speaker: “Thank you.“

One man in the now somewhat awkward crowd: “claps“

Young man: *is visibly uncomfortable*

Hungarian man: “Before he said Mason, you were ready to agree with him.”

Young man: “Well yes but, he was talking about… what about those other people?“ *the pair sit down on a park bench*

Hungarian man: “In this country, we have no ‘other people.’ We are American people, of course.“

Young man: “What about you? You aren’t American, are you?“

Hungarian man: “I was born in Hungary. But now, I am an American citizen. And I have seen what this kind of talk can do. I saw it in Berlin.”

Young man: “What were you doing there?“

Hungarian man: “I was a professor at the university. I heard the same words we have heard today. But I was a fool, then. I thought Nazis were crazy people, stupid fanatics. But unfortunately it was not so. You see, they knew that they were not strong enough to conquer a unified country, so they split Germany into small groups. They used prejudice as a practical weapon to cripple the nation.”

Avatar
reblogged

"If people obeyed the police, then the police wouldn't kill them."

In other words, you're not even denying that the police are murderous monsters. You're insisting that they're murderous monsters but supporting them for it.

"Obey me or I'll kill you" is what dangerous criminals say to hostages. You're literally demanding that people think of the police the same way while also complaining when people don't like the police.

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
callese

[ID: A tweet from @MLLanzillotta1 that says: If public drug use offends you, advocate for Overdose Prevention Sites. If unhoused people offend you, advocate for affordable housing. If public urination/defecation offends you, advocate for public restrooms. Fix the underlying problem instead of blaming the victims. /ID]

Avatar
reblogged

I have switched to using DuckDuckGo for my search engine, but I can’t talk about because makes a really crappy verb. “I ducked the information” is what the company wants us to say, but it doesn’t work for my language sense.  It would be taking over a preexisting term and I don’t want to teach my autotypo that I meant to say “duck” any more often than I can possibly help. Besides, it’s not the full name of the company. “I duckduckwent the information” is too damn long. “I duckduckgo'ed the information.” No, I bloody didn’t, because English doesn’t do that, and it’s too long. “I duckwent the information” is my favorite postulate.

Sticking to a three letter acronym is goofy because it’s still three syllables. You can’t pronounce DDG productively in English.

“Doozh” (rhymes with zhoozh) already exists in my dialect as an onomatopoeia for punching someone. Anything is better than duckduckwent or, god help us, duckduckgo'ed.

Other theories?

Avatar
curlicuecal

“I quacked it down”

Avatar
frankenmouse

Most companies HATE when their brand names become interchangeable with a category of product or action (e.g., kleenex, bandaid, photoshop, google) because it weakens their trademark and might actually cause them to lose it. It’s called a proprietary eponym. Laundromat, cellophane, aspirin, and escalator were all trademarks that lost their trademark status. (Here’s an interesting story about it).

In other words: Go ahead and say that you googled something. If only because google probably really doesn’t want you to.

Avatar
anaisonfire

Also you can say you asked the duck. Not a verb but it’s funny.

You duckled it?

Avatar
7heboy

I ducked it what good!

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
neil-gaiman

Genuine question. why did you, a British man, write american Gods? Why not write British Gods or European Gods? I don't mean any disrespect with this question, I'm just genuinely curious about the thought process.

Avatar

I wrote an essay about that very thing, in 2001. Let me see if it's up on the web.

I'll cut and paste it for you. Here you go:

Nobody's asked the question I've been dreading, so far, the question I have been hoping that no-one would ask. So I'm going to ask it myself, and try to answer it myself. And the question is this: How dare you? Or, in its expanded form, How dare you, an Englishman, try and write a book about America, about American myths and the American soul? How dare you try and write about what makes America special, as a country, as a nation, as an idea? And, being English, my immediate impulse is to shrug my shoulders and promise it won't happen again. But then, I did dare, in my novel American Gods, and it took an odd sort of hubris to write it. As a young man, I wrote a comic-book about dreams and stories called Sandman (collected, and still in print, in ten graphic novels, and you should read it if you haven't). I got a similar question all the time, back then: "You live in England. How can you set so much of this story in America?" And I would point out that, in media terms, the UK was practically the 51st state. We get American films, watch American TV. "I might not write a Seattle that would satisfy an inhabitant," I used to say, "But I'll write one as good as a New Yorker who's never been to Seattle." I was, of course, wrong. I didn't do that at all. What I did instead was, in retrospect, much more interesting: I created an America that was entirely imaginary, in which Sandman could take place. A delirious, unlikely place out beyond the edge of the real. And that satisfied me until I came to live in America about eight years ago. Slowly I realised both that the America I'd been writing was wholly fictional, and that the real America, the one underneath the what-you-see-is-what-you-get surface, was much more interesting than the fictions. The immigrant experience is, I suspect, a universal one (even if you're the kind of immigrant, like me, who holds on tightly, almost superstitiously, to his UK citizenship). On the one hand, there's you, and on the other hand, there's America. It's bigger than you are. So you try and make sense of it. You try to figure it out - something which it resists. It's big enough, and contains enough contradictions, that it is perfectly happy not to be figured out. As a writer, all I could do was to describe a small part of the whole. And it was too big to see. I didn't really know what kind of book I wanted to write until, in the summer of 1998, I found myself in Reykjavik, in Iceland. And it was then that fragments of plot, an unwieldy assortment of characters, and something faintly resembling a structure, came together in my head. Either way, the book came into focus. It would be a thriller, and a murder mystery, and a romance, and a road trip. It would be about the immigrant experience, about what people believed in when they came to America. And about what happened to the things that they believed. I wanted to write about America as a mythic place. And I decided that, although there were many things in the novel I knew already, there were more I could find by going on the road and seeing what I found. So I drove, until I found a place to write, and then, in one place after another, sometimes at home, sometimes not, for nearly two years, I put one word after another, until I had a book. The story of a man called Shadow and the job he is offered when he gets out of prison. It tells the story of a small Midwestern town and the disappearances that occur there every winter. I discovered, as I wrote it, why roadside attractions are the most sacred places in America. I discovered many other strange by-ways and moments, scary and delightful and just plain weird. When it was almost done, when all that remained was to pull together all the diverse strands, I left the country again, holed up in a huge, cold, old house in Ireland, and typed all that was left to type, shivering, beside a peat fire. And then the book was done, and I stopped. Looking back on it, it wasn't really that I'd dared, rather that I had had no choice.

Avatar
Avatar

Every writing advice thing ever: Don’t get bogged down in details on your first draft. Just write! ☺️

Me: How I begin this scene hinges on whether cheese sandwiches were served with mayo in the 50’s.

have not seen anything more relatable today >.<

some excerpts:

there’s nothing to stop you from using the <get there> method for research details. in fact, i know many many writers who use it for just that.

[Image description:] A twitter thread dated October 14th, year unknown, by David Dalglish:

But now? My big trick? My permission to you, even, if you feel you need it? <get there> That’s it. That’s the magic trick.
Jack: “All right, everyone clear on the plan? Awesome. Let’s go raid that prison.”
<get there>
Jack and Bob lurked in the shadows, watching the prison guards loop the grounds.
Once I finish a novel, I’ll then do a search function for any < in the documents, which is how I put notes in for myself. If I can’t remember someone’s eye color, I just type “their <color> eyes” and figure it out later. And inevitably I’ll have like 10 or so <get there> to fix.
By the way, you can do more with notes like this beyond just <get there> even if <get there> is the most common one I use. Not feeling up to writing the fight scene you know goes in a chapter? <fight scene>
Know that characters need to argue about a plot detail but not sure how exactly to do it, and you’re getting frustrated? <the two argue about X, then leave>
I think a lot of writers hear constant advice about how “rough drafts are rough”, and that “you can fix it in editing”, but don’t quite realize how freeing that can truly be. When I tell you your rough drafts can be rough, I mean rough.
Avatar

The stages of reading a Terry Pratchett novel:

  1. Huh, this is weird and kinda funny.
  2. Wow, this is weird and very funny.
  3. OH MY GOD I WOULD DIE FOR THESE CHARACTERS.
Avatar
Avatar
totallyfubar

most of us need to be shown how to be considerate

not as a criticism or anything, I just mean that

A. being able to care for other people is a skill that’s practiced and honed

B. being considerate for each person is so wildly different, 90% of the time you will have no way of knowing how to be considerate for someone until they show you

C. you can try to get better at figuring out what people need implicitly, but all that skill really is is listening so just get better at listening

D. being good at listening and adapting on the fly is maybe the most precise definition of being considerate I can think of, so strive for that and just know you’re never gonna be a telepath

Avatar

How to like yourself

1. Cultivate self-acceptance. That means you accept yourself for who you are right now. It means you don’t say things like “I would accept myself if … or … I’ll accept myself when.”

2. Stop going over all things you’ve done wrong, the mistakes you’ve made, and your (perceived) inadequacies.

3. Where there’s something in your past that you feel bad about say: “This is what I learned from that situation … And that was THEN and this is NOW.”

4. Don’t compare yourself to others. Instead notice the areas where you’ve grown and changed, and chooses to focus on those changes. 5. Don’t fall into the trap of judging other people – as that often lead to being self-critical.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.