do women that comment “but it’s itchy🥺i don’t like the feeling of prickly hair😔” under anti-shaving posts and videos realise that the itchiness and prickliness is a result of shaving? if you don’t shave the hair is soft, you don’t feel it at all. have they forgotten what it feels like to be unshaven? have they ever experienced it?
Young girls are reading dark romance and eroticizing their own oppression, and violence done against them.
Young boys are watching pornography and eroticizing women’s oppression and violence done against women.
There is nothing subversive about kink or pornography. The status quo remains intact, men act, women submit. Now only, women are taught even younger than before, to romanticize the violence that will be done to them.
Wow tell us something we don't know genius
This man is a pedophile.
OKAY I’M OUT. this is the last straw
all sides of the political spectrum (for some reason):
Only a deeply misogynist society would enshrine the ideals that womanhood can solely be defined by a feeling in a man’s head, but cannot be solely defined by women’s biology, our lived realities (and oppressions) faced by being female sexed.
ethel cain did not get enough flak for using a real murdered child's missing person's poster and abduction details for the ethel cain story and official art like seriously what the fuck.
A woman on tiktok makes a video about how b*tch is a slur:
the comments:
crazy how some women think they’re hated for being …feminine and not because they’re ummm women….
I rly hate the Satanic Panic & the moral panic surrounding violence in video games in the 90s, coz it's now impossible to talk about the social implications of violent video games in a realistic sense.
No, violence in video games does not create serial killers in the way most people imagine it would.
However, it's very important to notice how after 9/11, a lot of violent video games pivoted their content from silly gratuitous cartoon gore to more realistic military shooters set in the Levant from a US American lens. It's also important to notice the connection of these games & their toxic online multi-player voice chats to Gamer Gate in 2014.
It's obviously not as black & white as it was presented in the 80s & 90s, I dont think everyone who played early Call of Duty games is a white supremacist who wants to join the military to kill people in the middle east, but I think it's dangerous to pretend like video games or any media can't have an impact on the way people think about violence.
I think what makes all the difference here is how that violence is portrayed, what the message behind it is, what the motives are behind the people who crafted that message, who the victims of that violence are, how they are portrayed & the greater cultural context that surrounds it.