We’ve gone through some rough times, but we’re still here.
Here’s my piece for the Critical Role Holiday Gallery!
Happy Holidays to you all and take care. You can watch the HD version with music here
@shameimaru / shameimaru.tumblr.com
We’ve gone through some rough times, but we’re still here.
Here’s my piece for the Critical Role Holiday Gallery!
Happy Holidays to you all and take care. You can watch the HD version with music here
same dick!
‘the future is bright if we ebb with the flow’
me driving 2k miles to see my sister in a week
*Medieval celestial scenes* - 30.05.2020 3:22PM GMT-4
instagram | blossomanddill
the problem with catboy culture is that it tries to erase dogboy culture and detract from it whereas dogboys have no choice but to be aware of and surrounded by catboy culture. it’s very unfortunate and exhausting to live in a catboy-geared society as a dogboy when no one will acknowledge that dogboys are the ones holding all the pieces together.
bernie sanders mindless self indulgence bitches edit
#in that moment he knew, he was fjucked
+ bonus:
Sam Riegel appreciation post
no alcohol in this flask girl this is miso soup
i think that when god made stealing a mortal sin he didn’t know that walmart would ever exist
I’m absolutely not a rabbi, but I’ve been thinking a lot about this, actually, and what stealing might mean to gd. and I know this post is probably a joke but like I said. been thinking about it a lot.
So what a lot of people may not know is that the Torah is mostly like. a farming manual. A day-to-day life guide for 6,000 years ago. And so it has instructions for harvesting, of course. But it says specifically that you shouldn’t reap all the way to the edge of your field, and that you should leave that for the poor. It also says that you shouldn’t take the fallen grapes from your vineyard, and to leave that also for the poor. And a lot more little things like that.
So why is it encouraged? Why doesn’t it count as stealing for the poor to take the food you grew?
I think that gd’s definition of stealing would, in this case, punish you if you did take the fallen food from your fields, because you’d be taking it from the mouths and bellies of people who clearly desperately need it. It’s not the poor who are stealing, because they are simply trying to survive. I think gd wants us to remember, in our harvests, in our successes, that we have a duty to give what we can to those who need it, and if we don’t, that’s stealing from our fellow human.
A cowgirl puts a nickel in an El Paso parking meter to hitch her pony, October 1939. Photograph by Luis Marden, National Geographic
if you live in california please vote no on prop 22 to waste the 186 million dollars uber lyft and doordash spent to keep exploiting their workers