no i know i agree with you completely. HOW DO I MAKE EVERYONE UNDERSTAND THAT GAMZEE IS TRANS FOREVER. I CAN’T. and then i cry
cry with me
mfw im suddenly alarmed that ppl may not pick up that both of the makara siblings are trans
Source: shavingryansprivates
gamzee ur chain is bigger than u go away
In today’s episode of “Is Richard Dawkins a revered intellect or a guy I went to high school with?”
Funny. I thought new atheists were all about not blindly believing something from a book.
There’s a big difference between a bible and the dictionary.
Both are subject to ideology and should not be viewed as objective sources of information.
How the fuck is the dictionary not an objective source of information. It lists the definition of words. How is that not an objective source of information.
yep. you’re totes right. no one would ever construct a dictionary in such as a way as to validate their personal neo-colonial world view. nope.
word definitions were handed down to us by
godthe dictionary and they shall stay static forever moreOh how cute! “The dictionary is objective.” Bless.
culture is objective, anglosaxon liberal democratic capitalism is eternal, the selfish gene is great, dawkins akhbar
why are so many people so loudly slurping white academia asshole
because you know damn well a old white man made the dictionary
(via cryingjessepinkman)
Source: billdegrassenyeson
The Ashkenazi/White Jewish Privilege Checklist was developed by Corinne Lightweaver, Sasha King, and members of the Jewish Multiracial Network online discussion group, 2006–2009, to teach about the white privilege conferred upon Ashkenazi Jews by the Jewish community. Please distribute the Ashkenazi/White Jewish Privilege Checklist, use it in workshops, and add to it.
The following statements are examples of ways in which white Ashkenazi Jews have privilege because they are white. The privileges listed below are ones that many white Ashkenazi Jews may take for granted today, but which are not available to most Jews of color in the United States.Please check all the statements that apply to you. At the end, try to list at least two more ways you have privilege in the Jewish community based on your race or ethnicity.
___ I can walk into my temple and feel that others do not see me as outsider.
___ I can walk into my temple and feel that others do not see me as exotic.
___ I can walk into my temple and feel that my children are seen as Jews.
___ I can walk into temple with my family and not worry that they will be treated unkindly because of the color of their skin.
___ I can enjoy music at my temple that reflects the tunes, prayers, and cultural roots of my specific Jewish heritage.
___ No one at my synagogue will attempt to assign me to a ethnicity to which I do not belong (e.g., assuming all Jews of African descent are Igbo or Ethiopian).
___ I can easily find greeting cards and books with images of Jews who look like me.
___ I can easily find Jewish books and toys for my children with images of Jews that look like them.
___ I am not singled out to speak about and as a representative of an “exotic” Jewish subgroup.
___ When I go to Jewish bookstores or restaurants, I am not seen as an outsider.
___ I find my experiences and images like mine in Jewish newspapers and magazines.
___ I do not worry about access to housing or apartments in predominately Jewish neighborhoods.
___ My rabbi never questions that I am Jewish.
___ When I tell other members of my synagogue that I feel marginalized, they are immediately and appropriately responsive.
___ There are other children at the religious school who look like my child.
___ My child’s authenticity as a Jew is never questioned by adults or children based on his/her skin color.
___ People never say to me, “But you don’t look Jewish,” either seriously or as though it was funny.
___ I do not worry about being seen or treated as a member of the janitorial staff at a synagogue or when attending a Jewish event.
___ I am never asked “how” I am Jewish at dating events or on Jewish dating websites.
___ I can arrange to be in the company of Jews of my heritage most of the time.
___ When attempting to join a synagogue or Jewish organization, I am confident that my ethnic background will not be held against me.
___ I can ask synagogues and Jewish organizations to include images and cultural traditions from my background without being seen as a nuisance.
___ I can enroll in a Jewish day school, yeshiva, and historically Jewish college and find Jewish students and professors with my racial or ethnic background.
___ People of color do not question why I am Jewish.
___ I know my racial or ethnic background will not be held against me if I attempt to join a minyan in prayer.
___ I know my ethnic background will not be held against me in being called to read the Torah.
___ I am not discriminated against in the aliyah process as a Jew of my particular ethnicity.____ I have never had the police called on me or have been escorted out of a service by a policeman for doing nothing other than praying while being a person of color.
_____ I have not been asked to leave a shul or a class or have been barred from entering a shul or a class due to my skin color.
Text not copyrighted. Developed for educational purposes by the Jewish Multiracial Network, 2006–2009. Please distribute and add to the checklist. For more information about the Jewish Multiracial Network, visit www.jewishmultiracialnetwork.org.