spinningthehamsterwheel:

aropride:

bananonbinary:

here’s your fucking feedback @staff

list of problems the removal of icons causes:

  • i cant see my friends
  • ruins the sense of community
  • can’t tell at a glance who’s online right now and what they’re interested in
  • literally cannot tell without scrolling back up who put a post on my dash if it has a single addition attached to it. or like. 2 paragraphs in the op.
  • i cant click my own icon at the top of the dash to quickly view my own blog
  • can’t tell who someone used to be if they change their username
  • squashes the margins between the menu and posts, making the whole dash feel more cramped
  • ruins the quick visual cue of how long each post is and where it ends when you’re trying to scroll past ones youve seen before
  • people put a lot of creativity and individuality into icons, and now i never see them
  • makes people who primarily reblog instead of make their own posts all but completely disappear

list of problems solved by removing icons:

  • ?????
  • who the fuck was asking for this
  • ive never in my life seen a website or app that has profile pics forcibly HIDE them, so i guess you did it you made the dash unique again in the worst way


here’s some more feedback: maybe when you run an a/b test you should, idk, actually have a feedback form people can fill out about it somewhere

@photomatt @wip

There actually is a feedback form! Go here and select “Feedback” for category and you can type in just what you did here.

tanadrin:

mutant-distraction:

image

William Alberto Huaman Vilcatoma

Guilin Mountains China

#this is one of the wildest landscapes to me#but i will not be seeing it live. just look at that steamy fog#i am not compatible with that kind of humidity 

these landscapes are great bc you see these chinese paintings showing what you think are very stylized landforms, but then you see photographs of the actual mountains in south china and it’s like, no, that’s actually just what they look like

iirc these kinds of insanely dramatic peaks are characteristic of karst topography, since soft limestone is easily eroded and can create some pretty wild shapes in the process. some of the really insane ones include the stone forest (also in southern china) and tsingy de bemaraha in madagascar.

needless to say you often also get incredible caves in karst regions, even ones which don’t have nearly as dramatic surface features as these

glowcowboy:

glowcowboy:

we’re gonna be ok btw

it’s ok if you’re scared. or tired. or unsure. or one million billion other complicated emotions at once. but i’ve decided things are going to be ok anyway. and i will hold that belief close to my heart no matter how scared or tired or lonely or depressed or one million billion other things i am. i will hold onto that. and if you’re scared, you can hold onto me. we can carry each other through

You can’t drown someone determined to float

essaressellwye:

ignoremymanymistakes:

silentwalrus1:

veritasrose:

Lost followers after reblogging that whole thing about JKR being radicalized over the years, and that disturbs me.

Like if you think saying that people can be radicalized and manipulated into hate is somehow justifying it, yikes. And if you think that people are somehow just good or evil and that you are not at risk of buying into propaganda, have I got some very red flag news about that!

Idk if its because I am an older Millennial maybe (most who unfollowed were younger) but I watched a ton of that generation slide from one of the most progressive to the far right before my every eyes. Hell, my dad fought alongside his black friends in the Detroit race riots and now he watches Fox News 24/7 and talks about the border wall. Yet still claims he could never be racist because of how he used to be. He doesn’t even realize what he has become.

JKR isn’t a deluded old woman or innately evil, but in fact THE prime example of how well-meaning ignorance and privilege can be weaponized and encouraged down a pipeline, until it turns into a force of hate, and should be a cautionary tale about why educating and being open about these issues are necessary. Because there are those out there who will use those divisions and ignorance to their own ends. And just digging in our heels and saying “that could never be me!” is the very thing that puts you more at risk. I’ve lost so many loved ones down that pipeline and it is more slippery than most realize.

Stay alert, stay compassionate, stay humble, and make sure you move through life guided by reason rather than reaction. I love y’all and don’t want to see your passion twisted to get used against the world.

image

tags from @galwednesday​

2 things

1) This is why it is vitally important not to make monsters of even the worst people. Because when we turn Hitler into a monster, we are saying that we could never become Hitler. And that is unfortunately and terrifyingly not true. Assuming you could never be Hitler is the first step to becoming Hitler.

2) Haven’t seen the original post mentioned, so maybe this is covered there, but I think there is a very simple and easy to draw line around Joanne’s radicalization. She used to not be a billionaire. Moreover, she used to be someone who was intentionally not a billionaire. She famously had a hard line over which all earned money went directly to charities. It was once a moral issue for her to not be a billionaire. Then at some point, that changed, and her morals shifted to allow herself to become a billionaire.

I’m sure it’s completely coincidental that this shift was followed by Cursed Child and Crimes of Grindelwald and a slide into hateful rhetoric.

People often point out the hypocrisy of the themes of the series juxtaposed against the words and actions of the author. There’s a reason why the first trans people I met were all through Harry Potter fandom. But the author of a series about diversity and questioning labels and fighting against erasure and genocide coming out strong for labels and erasure is only the latest betrayal of her themes. She didn’t start out sounding like a Malfoy. But then she became rich, not just rich but a billionaire, and then it was only a few short years until she was straight up just saying Malfoy lines unironically.

There is a belief that’s disturbingly common on the left that no one can ever change their mind about anything. This, of course, relieves you of any need to sell your ideas to people, and it creates a group of people it can be open season on. And it makes “they weren’t always like that” sound like a defense

crysonna:

mostlysignssomeportents:

Paying consumer debts is basically optional in the United States

A blasted wasteland. Three young men who have been terribly beaten cluster in the center of the frame. Looming out of the left is a thug brandishing a club, holding out his hand.ALT

The vast majority of America’s debt collection targets $500-2,000 credit card debts. It is a filthy business, operated by lawless firms who hire unskilled workers drawn from the same economic background as their targets, who routinely and grotesquely flout the law, but only when it comes to the people with the least ability to pay.

America has fairly robust laws to protect debtors from sleazy debt-collection practices, notably the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), which has been on the books since 1978. The FDCPA puts strict limits on the conduct of debt collectors, and offers real remedies to debtors when they are abused.

But for FDPCA provisions to be honored, they must be understood. The people who collect these debts are almost entirely untrained. The people they collected the debts from are likewise in the dark. The only specialized expertise debt-collection firms concern themselves with are a series of gotcha tricks and semi-automated legal shenanigans that let them take money they don’t deserve from people who can’t afford to pay it.

There’s no better person to explain this dynamic than Patrick McKenzie, a finance and technology expert whose Bits About Money newsletter is absolutely essential reading. No one breaks down the internal operations of the finance sector like McKenzie. His latest edition, “Credit card debt collection,” is a fantastic read:

https://www.bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/the-waste-stream-of-consumer-finance/

Keep reading

Never consolidate student loans

Never admit to a debt over the phone or give any allusion to doing so, it will get recorded.. and then it will become your debt

Demand written itemized details of all debt

Reject anything weird on your credit report…every single year. All three. They have a limited amount of time to prove it’s valid or they have to remove it… FOREVER.

dduane:

lierdumoa:

Cringe started as a verb describing a physical reaction, i.e.: “I cringe when I see [x].”

Modern slang has turned cringe into an adjective describing anything to which a person might have such a reaction.

.

This shift in language is illustrative of a shift in culture.

.

For a while there, in the early 2000s, there was this big sex positivity movement and we talked openly about kink and queer sexuality and creating a culture of consent that broke away from traditional conservative ideas of moral respectability.

And now we are in the midst of this giant purity culture backlash, this giant push for rigid conformity all over the internet. Anything that deviates from the norm even remotely is ridiculed.

And this cultural shift is perfectly encapsulated in this singular linguistic shift, this verb becoming a noun.

The Revenge of the Pearl Clutchers

That’s what “cringing” is. It’s pearl clutching.

When the pearl clutchers turned cringe into an adjective, they turned a reaction into an accusation. The pearl clutchers don’t want to take responsibility for their own kneejerk emotions. They want to blame YOU.

They are saying, “My disgust isn’t the fault of my own backwards prejudices. It is YOU who are inherently disgusting. My inability to cope with even the slightest deviation from norm is not the problem here. YOUR refusal to rigidly conform is the problem. I am not the one who is cringing. YOU are the one who is cringe.”

Fuck ‘em.

.

Take the word back.

Cringe is not something people are.

It’s something judgmental assholes do.

This. THANK YOU.

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