ecstaticoblivion:

FULL POST OF DESIGNS DEDICATED TO UNDERAPPRECIATED JOBS!

These were all made with the idea to bring some more attention to the underdogs of the working world. More designs may be added as time goes along.

Show your support by sporting these designs on a shirt, sticker, notebook, etc. from my Redbubble!

Individual Links:

Call Center Workers
Teachers
Retail Workers
Unpaid Interns
Cleaning Workers
Factory Workers
Food Workers

ALL THE ARTWORK CONTAINED IN THIS POST IS MINE. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO COPY, CLAIM OR REPOST THIS WORK. © Hayleigh West Nover

x-cetra:

vaspider:

wetwareproblem:

vergess:

wetwareproblem:

barbidreamdumpster:

bifoxstiles:

adayinthelesbianlife:

The first Pride was a riot.

Wall sticker in Marlborough lesbian pub, Brighton.

i’m actually realizing this now

but the original poster said “queer power” and someone erased that and replaced it with “gay power”

real classy

#is this real

Well. I’m not exactly an expert at image analysis, but the bottom text in the first one looks much cleaner than the top text while the second one matches better. Also, the creases in the second one on the Q and U seem like the sort of detail that wouldn’t be faked. Finally, this actually matches up significantly better to “queer” politics than “gay” politics; it was always queers who advocated and took the front lines in direct action.

If you put the image in an editor or just view the full size of the first image, it becomes very obvious that the text on the bottom was added later: all of the vertical lines in every letter are pixel perfect straight lines. That is basically impossible with a photo of a poster that is both visibly at an angle, and has paper weathering and other distortion. Look at the verticals of the white text to compare. The only distortion of the text is the jpg artifacts we would expect in that level of contrast. There is no lighting on the pink text either, another highly suspicious trait.

Additionally, if you crop out the pink text in op and run an image search you get the second photo, as well as four or five other photos of the poster, all reading “queer power.”

With the pink text left in, however, the only version of the poster is this exact image, sourcing to op.

I want every single person who ever argued with me on That Queer Post to take a long, hard look at this. I have been told at least dozens of times that “nobody is saying you can’t identify as queer,” that I’m “ignoring history,” that they’re not trying to shift back to gay, etc.

Now, here’s this post, in which queer people are having their art defaced in order to rewrite their identity. Where they’re being forcibly rewritten as gay. Where history is being literally goddamn erased. It’s got three times the notes of That Queer Post, and as far as I can tell, @bifoxstiles is the first one to challenge this narrative. And I’m not gonna hold my breath on y’all to call out OP.

They’re literally stealing our history, rewriting it into a new version that excludes more than half of the community. And nobody’s challenging this. You’re too busy trying to shut down inclusive, egalitarian language.

Shame on every last one of you.

Uhhhh. That’s like a really famous poster, at least if you are over a certain age. I recognized it immediately. 

Yeah. It… it never said ‘Gay Power’ originally. It said ‘Queer Power.’

What the actual fuck.

OKAY KIDS. HISTORY LESSON TIME.

Ironically, just before this crossed my dash, Oxford University Press shared a link to a new archive of queer oral history. If not for Tumblr’s recent push to wipe “queer” from our collective memory, I wouldn’t have thought twice about OUP using the term. After all, it was chanted in pride and defiance when over a million of us participated in the 1993 March on Washington to demand an end to discrimination…

image

Video clip from that day: “We’ve come to Washington to show everyone that we’re here, we’re queer, and we’re not going anywhere!”

Queer theory, queer studiesnew queer cinemaqueer liberation: it was and remains the umbrella term in academia, since “gay” leaves out the bulk of people discriminated against for their gender and/or sexuality.

In the past year, I’ve seen some Tumblr members trying to suppress the word “queer,” just as people back then tried to suppress us. The excuse is that it’s sometimes used as a slur. But so is “gay.” In my 45 years, I have heard/seen “gay” used as an slur far more often.

At first, I tried to respect the fact that “queer” bothered some Tumblr users, even though it was painful for me to see queer-positive posts tagged “q slur.” But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that caving in to those asking us to drop the term “queer” would permit homophobic and/or transphobic sensibilities to define our identities. Do we have to drop “gay” now as well, or tag it “g slur”? Since when did we stop reclaiming these words as a matter of pride? 

Isn’t this just the latest ploy of internalized homophobia/transphobia sneaking up on us? 

Unfortunately, erasing “queer” from our vocabulary has hurtful real-world consequences.

Silencing “queer” silences many of those who fought, marched, rioted and died for your rights. It erases those of us who are queer but not gay: trans, intersex, nonbinary, lesbian, bisexual, aromantic, asexual people, and more (see why the term is so necessary?) Erasure/minimization of queer people is how we end up with disrespectful historical revisionism like that Stonewall movie. Or the Photoshopped poster above, rewriting our history with a lie. 

And that’s the real kicker.

Erase “queer” from our vocabulary, and we erase future generations’ ability to learn about their past. How will they be able to find LBGTA+ history, if you teach them not to use one of the main keywords they need to search for to find it? 

How much of our past and present community will be rendered invisible and their needs ignored (this article is really, REALLY worth a read), if those now lobbying against the term “queer” are successful?

Decades ago, when being out was taking a huge risk, we chanted, “We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it!” It would be a bitter irony if, even as mainstream society becomes “used to it,” as demonstrated from the Supreme Court to the bridge of the U.S.S. Enterprise, our own community becomes less “used to it.”

Think about the forces of prejudice who were trying to silence us when that “queer power” sign was made. Please don’t let them win.

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

chuplayswithfire:

Doing harassment prevention training for work and saw this. Since I often see people demanding a citation for “intent doesn’t matter” here’s one straight from the Eastern Michigan University harassment training manual.

I wish more people would realise how this applied to this and more situations as well

“But I didn’t mean to hurt you!”

“But I didn’t mean to say something offensive!”

“But I didn’t mean to write something problematic!”

“But I didn’t mean to upset anyone”

YOU DID

Apologise for it, learn from it, don’t do it again

Don’t act like just because you didn’t INTEND to hurt anyone that means the people you hurt should just accept it

Stuff kids on tumblr better relearn

jhaernyl:

abessinier:

1. You are responsible for your own media experience. 

2. There is such a thing as a healthy level of avoidance towards topics that make you feel unwell or even (in a real-life clinical definition of the term) trigger you – but you are the one to actively take care of what you view.

3. Avoiding does not mean policing others.

4. You have no right to tell artists to censor themselves – you may criticize what others do, you may dislike it, that’s fine – but actively asking for censorship when you could easily unfollow or block a person just makes you look incompetent in your use of the internet.

5. Do not give people on tumblr or /any/ website the responsibility for your emotional well-being. Because these people do not even know you so no, you have no right to ask them to take care of you.

Amen

abscidium:

please remember that in a healthy, adult relationship (romantic or not), you should be able to talk about things that are bothering you. if you are bottling up your emotions and holding it against someone when you haven’t told them what is wrong, you’re not engaging in healthy behaviour. but also, if your friend/significant other makes you feel as though you can’t talk about what bothers you- i.e. has made you feel guilty/gotten extraordinarily angry when things were brought up in the past- they are not engaging in healthy behaviour.

Little fact about French because I just learned that

kat2107:

hayley-studies:

culmaer:

limbile:

The accent circonflexe (^) exists in French words to replace the “s” that no longer exists but used to be there in older French.

For example: fenêtre used to be fenestre

It is still possible to see the “s” at times in family words like “défenestrer”.

knowing this, « être » becomes much more regular :

  • être  → estre (es, est, sommes, ê[s]tes, sont ; ser-)

some French derivations become clearer :

  • fenêtre   → défenestrer → L. fenestra
  • fête   → festival
  • hôpital → hospitaliser (E. hospital, ise)
  • intérêt  → intéressant (E. interest, -ing)
  • ancêtre  → ancestral (E. ancestor, -ral)
  • arrêt    → arrestation
  • épître  → épistolaire (E. epistle)

some English cognates become more obvious :

  • hôtel  → hostel (E. ‘hotel’ borrowed from French)
  • forêt  → forest (tipp to remember ^ goes on the ‹e›)
  • bête  → beast
  • côte  → coast
  • honnête → honest
  • pâte, pâté → pasta, paste
  • quête   → quest
  • enquête  → inquest
  • tempête  → tempest
  • vêtements → vestments (ie. clothes)
  • baptême → baptism

sometimes, the acute replaces the circumfex for phonetic reasons :

  • ḗcole   → escole → L. schola (E. school)
  • ḗtranger   → estrangier (E. stranger)
  • ḗtudier   → estudier (E. study)
  • dḗgoûtant → desgoustant (E. disgusting)
  • dḗbarquer → desembarquer (E. disembark)
  • rḗpondre  → respondre (E. respond)
  • rḗpublique → L. res publica

Also, where « c → ch » (eg. cantare→ chanter) :

  • château → castel (E. castle)
  • pêcher → L. piscare

and « w → gu » (eg. war→ guerre ; warden→ guardian) :

  • guêpe → E. wasp ! (this is my n° 1 favourite cognate)

bonus etymologies :

  • tête   → L. testa
  • fantôme  → L. phantasma (E. ‘phantom’ borrowed from French)
  • Pâques  → Gk. pásxa → Am. pésaḫ (E. Paschal)

Also just be aware that the circumflex has some other uses too, like distinguishing « sur — sûr » or « dû » and the vowel quality in « âge »

Where was this post when I was doing A-Level French! This is actually a really interesting language change called “syncope” (the loss of a medial segment within a word) and what makes it even more interesting to me is that not only was the -s- dropped post vocalically and largely before voiceless stops, but that the circumflex was (unnecessarily but coolly) adopted as an orthographic marker of the lost -s-. Even more interesting is that syncope usually occurs in vowels. I love this.

oh! this is amazing! this makes so much sense

How do you keep going when someone says something mean about your art, like if it’s worthless or stupid? Or even if they just criticize it? I’m so afraid of criticism because most of the time it just seems like people don’t really want to help you. They just want to put you down.

:

I always think something like, “It’s none of my business.”

This is… kind of hard for me to pull apart because it’s something I’m pretty well bombarded with on a daily basis, and sometimes I’m not as good at dealing with it as I wish I was.

I mean obviously that kind of apathy is tough. Because you do care. You can’t help it. You don’t want to separate yourself from your art. It’s YOUR art. Everyone—especially artists, who put themselves out there in a way that’s immediately subject to the most casual, callous judgement from people who are not experts and not sympathetic to you—everyone cares about what other people think. And it hurts if someone says something cruel or needlessly critical about you or about what you’re doing.

But the fact that people can be so casually judgmental is exactly what makes their reactions none of your business. Because you are not their investment. It’s literally not their work, time, skill, or happiness. They don’t know you from Adam. Everything that you used to make that art—your feelings, your experiences—belongs to you and only you. The only thing haters can do is use themselves as the tool with which they judge.

I care more about my art than anyone ever will. You know? That’s a fact. Haters and critics will never hate what I do as much as I love what I do. They just won’t. They will never be me. They will never know what it’s like to be me. They cannot hate more than I love.

So whatever someone says or does is really, truly none of my business. 

Haters will hate, and people will always use art as something onto which they project themselves—they will always do this. That’s part of the definition of art.

But it’s none of your business. You’re in the business of being yourself for yourself. No one else can touch that.

Practice saying it. “It’s none of my business.”

sebhawkes:

heyitsharding:

sebhawkes:

“but being abused made you so kind!” being abused made me terrified of being anything less than perfectly accommodating and pleasing in an effort to protect myself from the violence my abuser reacted with but okay whatever

Also see “You’re so mean now. I liked you better before.”

You liked me when I was completely accommodating out of residual fear and now I have basic boundaries and a shred of self confidence it inconveniences you.

Cool story.

Also true. Once you stop being a doormat you’re not a survivor, you’re an inconvenience. It’s disgusting.

jaclcfrost:

tbh you can’t live your life never giving yourself recognition for your accomplishments like you can’t continuously discredit yourself and downplay every single thing that you do just b/c someone else out there did more, did it quicker, better, had an easier time doing it, etc. they aren’t you? you’re you. you are going to have an easier time doing certain things, too! you’ll do more. quicker. better. always comparing yourself to others is only ever going to make you miserable, honestly. you did something and you’re in an even slightly better place than you were yesterday? a month ago? a year? good, then. it’s not small. if you want to still call it small, ok, but no matter what it’s still an ACCOMPLISHMENT. acknowledge that. if you don’t start sometime then you never will and you won’t have the motivation to do anything else b/c you’ll be stuck feeling like you’ll never be enough/doing enough which is.. incredibly disheartening and.. you are? you’re working towards something. you’re taking the steps. nothing happens instantly and, again, you have to start somewhere! you’re good. know that.