
Free Palestine, DRC, Sudan, Uyghurs || any pronouns WAHOO
892 posts
Guilt
guilt



-
dollardactyl liked this · 11 months ago
-
piiinch reblogged this · 11 months ago
-
sirghostheart liked this · 11 months ago
-
thecoatladythings reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
thecoatladythings liked this · 1 year ago
-
ninjagirl9797 reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
ninjagirl9797 liked this · 1 year ago
-
firekate-3 reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
swingfromthegallery reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
bejeweled-witch reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
extrabitterbrain liked this · 1 year ago
-
literallyjustvibin23 liked this · 1 year ago
-
mary-the-opossum liked this · 1 year ago
-
sarchehe liked this · 1 year ago
-
teamoon7 liked this · 1 year ago
-
bace22 liked this · 1 year ago
-
itzmattew liked this · 1 year ago
-
creativityismything liked this · 1 year ago
-
homefortheheartlessones liked this · 1 year ago
-
yok1kumo liked this · 1 year ago
-
trans-trashcan liked this · 1 year ago
-
silaasje liked this · 1 year ago
-
mikasslime reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
atherissqar liked this · 1 year ago
-
downinpink reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
downinpink liked this · 1 year ago
-
madmud2730 reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
moon-mote liked this · 1 year ago
-
whimzyyog liked this · 1 year ago
-
ramestice liked this · 1 year ago
-
tealchorus reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
tealchorus liked this · 1 year ago
-
dha-haree liked this · 1 year ago
-
grennz-da-gay liked this · 1 year ago
-
cheekyaxel liked this · 1 year ago
-
pauluffel liked this · 1 year ago
-
quarterchills reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
quartergremlin liked this · 1 year ago
-
shrugbugs reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
ayselart liked this · 1 year ago
-
severelyinstantenemy liked this · 1 year ago
-
redwingedangel002 liked this · 1 year ago
-
nannadoll11 liked this · 1 year ago
-
supersaltgod liked this · 1 year ago
-
the-lemon-toast liked this · 1 year ago
-
hkeny101 liked this · 1 year ago
-
tiazzara liked this · 1 year ago
-
stuffgoeswrong liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Goldfish-supremacy


đłď¸âđ MY STREAMER đłď¸âđ
(rbs appreciated!)
Random things. What happens when you protest in Russia? You are immediately arrested. Itâs not a game of chance, itâs a guarantee. All protests are forbidden. We are not allowed to call the war â the war, youâll be fined at best, arrested at worst if you do. In fact, as of today, if youâre caught at an anti-war protest, youâre considered a member of a radical extremist group and are facing 6 years in jail. People âdetainedâ for protesting are invariably beaten. Concussions, contusions, broken bones. Men more so than women, though women canât rely on it. You can be asked to strip since they âneedâ to check your underwear. Youâll be verbally abused and threatened the entire time. And yes, of course, it doesnât stop there, since they now know you and your family and where you all work and live. In this country, there is nothing truly independent, there never was. If the words â1937â mean nothing to you, you are very, very fortunate. For us, itâs this again, only a thousand times worse because now itâs empowered by technology.
The other day they arrested a bunch of kids. Literally kids, four of them, aged seven to eleven. They, along with their mothers were carrying flowers to the Ukrainian embassy and a small simple poster âNo to Warâ. They were all detained and immediately separated, kept locked up for the night. We donât know how the kids were treated. Mothers had their possessions confiscated, not allowed to call anyone, stripped, yelled at, threatened. The harshest threat was to be stripped of parental rights on the spot, never see their kids again. The kids were released closer to morning when a lawyer from a group that helps people in these situations arrived. I have no idea how these lawyers are still allowed to function. Small mercies. (Support them here: https://donate.ovdinfo.org/)
But itâs not just the pain of punishment or jail sentence. Itâs the utter uselessness of it all. He wonât care if half the population comes out to say âNo to Warâ. He wonât care if itâs all of us.
A few days ago, every school in the country received instructions to hold special classes to explain to kids why âthe liberating military operationâ was necessary and what happens now. The teachers have been given manuals on what to say and how to answer the kidsâ questions. Some of the answers include: âDonât worry if you hear that some countries donât want to be friends with us anymore. There are other countries who do, and besides, Russia is a very big country, so we have everything you can possibly need right here.â By âother countriesâ, my guess is, they mean North Korea. After the class, the kids are supposed to take a test. Itâs electronic, entered through a QR code, and the answers are automatically logged in. Questions include: âExplain why the liberating military operation was necessaryâ and âExpand on what the Russian government is doing to help people of Lugansk and Donetsk.â The results of the test are tallied, and if some kid doesnât give the right ones, their parents are called in for âa talkâ.
We will either end up with a bunch of really smart kids or another generation of completely deluded people. The last time something like this had happened was in 1991, when the Soviet Union was falling, and my classmates and I were asked to make a choice of do we want to pledge allegiance to the communist party or not. I was ten. My class, as I remember, was split roughly in two. The kids who voted âyesâ looked at the rest of us with teary eyes and whispered âour parents told us to do it, they are too afraid.â And we got it. We all got it. Nobody hated anybody for the choice, because we all knew that fear and we all knew what it was like, to be hostage of the regime. We who voted ânoâ knew what we were risking. At ten years old, we were more politically savvy than a lot of full-grown adults across the ocean. Itâs not a good thing.
For roughly twenty-something years, we lived in the illusion that we were out of that prison. Sure, our democracy was not perfect, but whose is? It was maybe incredibly naĂŻve of us, but can you blame us that we wanted to believe it? That we still desperately want to, which is why there are a lot of really confused people in the country right now who still canât grasp that their leadership has betrayed them?They will, in fact, believe anything but this. They will sooner believe him and ignore the facts, because a) theyâre not getting the facts, and b) the truth is terrifying.
Nothing has changed. Weâre still in the USSR. Yesterday, in Nalchik, students of the local university were ordered to go out and express their support for the president. They had no warning. At some point the university staff members entered their classrooms, handed out banners and t-shirts, and ordered them to go outside âto stand in solidarityâ with the president. Refusal was not an option on pain of expulsion. Among other statements, they were made to hold up banners saying #wearenotashamed which should tell you everything you need to know about how the Russian people really feel.
Iâm not going to talk about the independent media, because the last survivors of this extremely rare breed are being shut down as we speak. Meduza is still holding up by some miracle, but their turn can be any hour. They have been declared âa foreign agentâ some years back, which means that they can no longer be properly financed and have to preface every single post and article with a huge all-caps statement that this information was created by a foreign agent, presumably to turn âloyal citizensâ away. They have been subsiding on crowd-funding this whole time, canât imagine how, since all transactions are now traceable and giving them money is not without consequences. (Support them here: https://support.meduza.io/)
The world has turned away from us, and I get it, but they donât understand what theyâre doing. Or maybe they do but donât care. I donât mean this on an emotional level, but purely practical. The more they punish the Russian people, the more, unfortunately but sadly naturally, the Russian people will unite in their support of He Who Must Not Be Named. He will feel even more legitimate in his actions and he wonât stop. Not that I can imagine anything that could make him stop now but⌠Itâs not helping. It might make a lot of people out there feel better about themselves, but itâs not helping.
Worst of all, we canât help Ukraine. So much as saying that weâre fighting a war or that we are losing that war can earn you up to 15 years in prison for âspreading misinformation.â Itâs impossible to send over money, and as for supplies we can only gather those for the refugees that are fleeing to Russia. Our economy is on the brink of collapse, and the people that are running from the war and come here will have to share it with us. Weâre doing what we can for them. Itâs not enough.
And personally⌠My mornings these days start like this. I wake up. I donât want to get up. I do eventually. Splash water on my face etc. Take my heart medication. Wait for it to take effect. Then I open Telegram and see if Meduza is still broadcasting. Read the overnight update. Learn that the horror continues in a multitude of fresh new horrifying ways. Remind myself that I have no right to sympathy or feeling sorry for myself or any of that. I was not the one who spent the night in a bomb shelter. I was not the one whose house was destroyed. I wish I was but Iâm not. Iâm just a useless spectator whoâs too chickenshit to even go get beaten up and who rationalizes her cowardice any way she knows how. I want you to know this about me before you decide to continue knowing me. I am unaccountably grateful having known all of you.
I donât know what else to say except maybe this. Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace.
just realised Tommy has always been the imperfect right hand man - follows orders until he knows it's better not to. Wilbur only lets him come to the revolutionary surrender on the promise he won't start anything, and then he secures the duel that eventually wins them L'Manberg by disobeying direct orders. when he's with Techno (which isn't stated to be a right hand man relationship but they certainly aren't equals) and he charges into the community house conflict and loses the disc and Techno's trust, it ends up being the better choice in that situation than staying with Techno and betraying his ideals. and when Tubbo tells him to keep the disc and let Dream kill him, he hears the order, hesitates, and runs the other way, keeping Tubbo alive long enough that they both make it out alive. even in the case of Wilbur blowing up L'Manberg, he stays with him but refuses to back that plan - even when he says yes, he's standing beside Wilbur, not reaching for the button himself. Tommy's disobedience is often cited as one of his traits that irritates other characters, but it's actually one of his biggest strengths: knowing when to trust his own judgement.




Let the games begin