title says it all. newer tech is just not as appealing to me sadly. Everything is designed to be thin and quiet and nontactile and those are like my 3 big computer "turn-ons." i like it when they're LOUD and BULKY and HAVE BUTTONS why are modern laptops so </3 and the repairability is awfull.. you open it up and it doesnt even feel intimate it feels Scary like taking someones skin off. </3 anyways if you know of newer tech thats also sexy lmk
> . . .
> WHY IS NOBODY TALKING ABOUT EDGARS NEW LIL TV GIRLFRIEND AT THE END OF THE LOVE IS LOVE MUSIC VIDEO. . .
> SHE IS SUCH A CUTIE!GUYS we need to name her who is she .
> Edgar techkin selfshipers r gonna go crazy w this one
I could finally set up my crt monitor AND I just watched Electric Dreams LOOK ITS EDGAR
a vampire stroking ur hair as they're fangs deep in ur neck. u agree
the thing about disability is it really does sometimes boil down to "wow i wish i could do that" and then you can't. and it sucks.
Guys having an mp3 is the best thing i own on this day an age alongside my vinyl + cd radio combo i feel like this pic rn
I NEED MORE CDS AND VINYLS OMG
tumblr leftists being surprised to see middle aged white women with signs or hats saying "deny defend depose" really reinforces for me that tumblr leftists don't actually talk to people lmao. like I did a lot of canvassing as a teenager and you know who the best most reliable political organizers are? middle aged women. you know who's bloodthirsty after watching rachel maddow every night and sharing HuffPo articles on facebook? middle aged women. maybe sheryl from iowa who's been voting religiously for democrats for the past thirty years IS more hardcore than you, tumblr user who did a write-in "protest vote." what are you going to do about that.
Wake up on a Tuesday in a gooey sweat, eyes burning from not enough sleep.
Doomscroll for 35 minutes instead of getting out of bed. Let the dogs whine beside you.
Post to Facebook: “I can’t take it anymore. “The American public is asleep.” Check back obsessively to see who’s liked it.
Coffee in hand, walk the dogs through the neighborhood park. Scold yourself for not doing enough. Ask if doing anything even matters. Then ask what you should be doing.
Read a news alert about the gutting of yet another federal agency. Swear loudly into the void. Wonder how we got here, and how much worse it can get.
Decide, then and there, to do something. Even if it’s small.
Sign up for a Zoom call with a local advocacy group. Listen as speaker after speaker denounces the administration in increasingly blunt terms. Feel the first tingle of hope. Let it linger.
Join more calls. Listen, but don’t speak. Feel slightly less alone.
Start researching. Dig into the history of broken systems and the context they were built in. Read the news—but only from sources you trust. Don’t look away when it gets overwhelming.
Talk to friends, family, coworkers, and acquaintances, even when the conversations turn infuriating. Tell them they should be talking about this too.
Meet former colleagues for drinks—ones who’ve been laid off or ground down. Let the anger rise as they describe their new realities. Tell them you’re doing something—and that they can, too.
Before your first protest, scrounge up a piece of sturdy cardboard. Rummage through junk drawers for the Sharpie you lost months ago. Write a mediocre slogan.
Show up. Meet fellow protesters. Hear their stories. Realize your own reasons go back to your ancestors—some of whom were killed in Nazi Germany. Remember your grandmother’s mantra: “Never again.”
Spend your free time denouncing the administration to anyone who’ll listen. Smoke weed some nights because it’s the only thing that takes the edge off. Wonder if you’re smoking too much.
Keep going. Attend more protests. Notice the crowds are growing. That helps. Expand your network: friends of friends of friends.
Eat chips and salsa for dinner. Stress-eat ice cream that makes your stomach hurt.
Watch as more federal workers are fired. Watch as the president calls journalists and judges “radical lunatics” on social media. Watch funding for food stamps, scientific research, cancer research, and green energy disappear. Watch humanitarian and development aid dry up. Watch universities threatened and DEIA erased, along with Black history. Watch the Department of Education dissolve. Watch public figures bullied into silence. Watch a body of water renamed in the president’s image.
Silently suffer as wildfires rage, tornadoes demolish communities, and human rights erode in real time. Agonize over the fact that democracy is faltering—not just here, but everywhere.
Ask yourself why it’s so damn quiet.
Decide you must do more. Realize the most powerful thing you can offer is your voice.
Start a blog.
Write a post.
Wonder if you’re actually making a difference. Or just screaming into the algorithm. Do it anyway.
Call it an act of resistance.
Repeat, until they can’t ignore you.
Source: How to Become a Political Activist