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JoCarthage

@jocarthage / jocarthage.tumblr.com

Fandom, a bit of world changing, lots of feminism and shipping. This is one of the sillier places I exist online, so expect very little serious-business. She/her & queer | 34, PST.
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These people are still alive.

If you are looking for a small, specific way to help individual, living women still in Gaza, below are the GoFundMe pages of three of my friends, desperately trying to pay their way out of Gaza.

These are women I have taken camping to Yosemite, who I have coached for pitch competitions.

They are real.

They are as real as the victims of Hamas's horrific October 7th assault and as real as the hundreds of people injured by the IDF attacks in Jenin in summer 2023.

There are more who I do not know, like this one shared by a close friend in Gaza who was thankfully outside of the area when the war started. If you have personal relationships with others who need direct aid, please include them in your reblogs so others can find them.

I've included a brief FAQ below the cut, as well as another way to give directly.

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times-chu

I want you guys to understand that this pretty blue rock was, at one point, maybe the most valuable material on earth. It wasn't just more valuable than gold, it was more valuable than some kingdoms. After the recipe for Egyptian Blue was lost, this was *the only* way to get stable blue paint. The only one. For 1400 years. If you wanted your painting to still be blue a year after you painted it, this was what you needed.

And for nearly 10,000 years, it came from one mine in Sar-i Sang, Afghanistan that had just. one. shaft.

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reblogged

There are parts of queer history we will never touch. People who lived quiet lives and were forgotten within a generation. Stories that were tucked under the bed and hidden from the world. Diaries that were burned with nothing to recover. Beyond the hiding, there is queerness that never had the chance to be discovered, people who felt different but never gave themselves a moment or sliver of grace to explore, much less vocalize it. This is worth mourning. It is worth cradling to your chest and feeling to the fullest devastation. More than anything else, it is worth remembering.

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I love British mystery shows set in beautiful peaceful quaint idyllic towns full of simple happy folk who are constantly murdering the shit out of each other.

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Tiffany couldn't quite work out how Miss Level got paid. Certainly the basket she carried filled up more than it emptied. They'd walk past a cottage and a woman would come scurrying out with a fresh-baked loaf or a jar of pickles, even though Miss Level hadn't stopped there. But they'd spend an hour somewhere else, stitching up the leg of a farmer who'd been careless with an axe, and get a cup of tea and a stale biscuit. 

It didn't seem fair.

“Oh, it evens out,” said Miss Level, as they walked on through the woods. 

“You do what you can. People give what they can, when they can. Old Slapwick there, with the leg, he's as mean as a cat, but there'll be a big cut of beef on my doorstep before the week's end, you can bet on it. His wife will see to it. And pretty soon people will be killing their pigs for the winter, and I'll get more brawn, ham, bacon and sausages turning up than a family could eat in a year.”

“You do? What do you do with all that food?”

“Store it,” said Miss Level. 

“But you-”

“I store it in other people. It's amazing what you can store in other people.” Miss Level laughed at Tiffany's expression. “I mean, I take what I don't need round to those who don't have a pig, or who're going through a bad patch, or who don't have anyone to remember them.”

“But that means they'll owe you a favour!”

“Right! And so it just keeps on going round. It all works out.”

“I bet some people are too mean to pay-”

“Not pay,” said Miss Level, severely. “A witch never expects payment and never asks for it and just hopes she never needs to. But, sadly, you are right.”

“And then what happens?"

“What do you mean?”

“You stop helping them, do you?”

“Oh, no,” said Miss Level, genuinely shocked. “You can't not help people just because they're stupid or forgetful or unpleasant. Everyone's poor round here. If I don't help them, who will?”

"A Hat full of Sky" - Terry Pratchett
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twobabkas

michael guerin but it’s the ‘I just wanna annoy one man for the rest of my life’ text post

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Just learned about the existence of this poem written by Vincent Starrett in 1942. I'm always so happy when I can learn more about the Sherlockian fandom and discover more of Sherlockiana.

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dduane

A verse very much on my mind today as I settle in to finish work on a first-time paid visit to 221B.*

*Adding the fairly belated realization that this is the third time now that I've pulled off this stunt of getting paid for writing in an IP I was already a fan of. (In this case, my very first major fandom.) Damn, but what a privilege. :)

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neil-gaiman

As a Baker Street Irregular, I need to reblog the poem. And Diane, obviously.

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Not "It's a product of it's time" as a way to excuse its problematic undertones but rather "it's a product of it's time" to say that the issues it tackles were relevant then and its stances that now seem milquetoast were radical then, and that heavy handed, cheesy driving home of those viewpoints was sometimes necessary, and our acceptance and normalization of those viewpoints is in large part because of media like it normalizing those viewpoints and imagery, and watching it in the modern day turns into a loving study of history of the masses and public opinion

Yes this is about the original star trek

broke: it's a product of its time

Bespoke: Our Time Is A Product Of It

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jocarthage

Updates to Dear M--!

I posted 4 new chapters for Dear M--, covering all of 2017!

Sent: January 1st, 2017 From: [Redacted] Dear M–, It’s weird to write that, but it’s also weird to be writing a letter to my Mom after all this time. I hope this is the right address. Greg said it was. I emailed him. The card probably looks weird too, but I’m not at the Brandenburg Gate, I just picked up a big pack of cheap cards the last time I was in Germany.  I got recommended for the Air Medal and my commander said he would send a letter notifying my family about it, but I couldn’t think of anyone to send it to. My next of-kin contact form is blank now. If you get this, let me know, and I’ll have him send it to you, if that’s ok? I didn’t just pick up writing postcards randomly. I had someone I was writing to for, God, for years now. Every little thing that happened in my day, I would think ‘should I put this in the letter’? And every letter I’d get back, I liked to think the writer was thinking that too, multiple times a day, just, thinking of me. That’s where the postcards were from. Why I bought them. I’d use those if I didn’t have a lot to say, to save on postage, I guess. I used to write letters too. Pages and pages and pages, all in a shoebox back in my storage locker in Idaho. I always started them “Dear M–” and so when I sat down to write this to you, that’s what came out. Sorry if that’s weird. It’s just, I have all of this love left over and nowhere for it to go. I can’t write who I was writing. Not anymore. But I don’t have anyone else to tell about my day. My life. My guys live through it with me every day, they don’t need to hear me bitch about it at night too. That’s where I’d write, am writing. Before dinner, I’d take a walk, in whatever place I was. Around the barracks, around the base in Kunsan or Warner-Robins or Mountain Home or wherever. Here I just wander around the trailers we all live in. It’s not much to look at, but it’s what I’ve got.  Honestly, this base kind of reminds me of home. Then I come here, sit down on my cot, and start writing. Just a little update, or a question, or some kind of bit we were committed to tossing back and forth. It just seemed so normal. Then it didn’t. I should ask how you are, because I do want to know. I want to know how you’ve spent the last decade and a half, what your favorite flowers on the rez are, how many people you can fit into your house (Greg said you had a house?).  Anything you want to tell me about your life and how you’re living, I want to know. Your son, Alex PS: Sorry there’s so many cards in this one envelope, once I started I couldn’t seem to stop and I didn’t want to use up 15 postcard stamps.

Reblogging for the morning crowd!

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