Oh my GREAT GOOGLY MOOGLY
I'm your new God. A better one. So you will bow down and profess your love unto me, your Lord. Or I shall destroy you.
“I’m going to be the one to watch you murder the world” is an insane line
the way cas says he’s still gonna be there with dean even when he becomes a monster and everyone else is long gone is absolutely wild.
Especially since dean has insane abandonment issues and was convinced that everyone’s gonna leave him eventually
And it’s the way he didn’t say he’d have to kill him, he just said he’d watch
can someone please change the fucking prophecy
Taking away dean winchester’s jewellery was homophobia
AUYUIGIHJKLL:"{OIPJOHGIYUFTDYR^SETYDHFCjg
I can definitely see Dean mocking Sam for learning sign language, "Finally learning how to move your fingers to please your girl, Sammy?" etc etc
But he actually thinks it's really cute and is excited about them. And maybe one day watching Sam practicing his skills, he gets an idea.
So he loses himself in the library to the point that everyone in the bunker is worried, "Did he make a deal?"
And then one morning he makes coffee, hands one to Castiel with a "Morning Sunshine" in butchered enochian, and it's all worth it to see the angel turn red and speechless.
Literally me about Destiel, Wenclair, and Percabeth
thinking about them isn't enough, I need to inject them into my veins.
ponyboy’s first christmas (when he’s 5 months) soda sends santa a letter asking if he can give pony back in exchange for a real pony
(santa writes back that he doesn’t do exchanges and soda bawls so hard he throws up twice)
every day I see people say that we can’t generalize by saying “men do *insert violent thing here*” but the issue is, you literally can. Most of it boils down to a lack of statistical literacy. You can certainly say that “men are more likely to commit homicide,” but that doesn’t mean you’re saying “every man is a murderer.” This is called an ecological fallacy, which is when you apply statistical conclusions that are generalizable to a population to a single individual. We know this because homicide is the most reported crime.
Likewise, I could say "higher testosterone is correlated with increased aggression." However, I could not conclude that "testosterone causes men to be violent," even though cis men on average produce more testosterone, because everyone produces testosterone, regardless of their sex. Additionally, we know there are other contributing factors when committing acts of violence like age, intellectual ability, and socioeconomic status. This is called a reductionist fallacy, which is when you attribute a multifactorial issue to a singular cause. (could also be a causal fallacy)
Finally, I could say that "I was abused by a woman," but that does not mean I could then say that "all women are abusers" because that is not backed by statistical evidence. This is a hasty generalization, which is when you apply individual experiences or a small sample to a broader population.
Men are more likely to be perpetrators and victims of every violent crime, except for SA (though there is a “dark figure” as it’s called in the field for SA statistics due to underreporting). Women are more likely to be SAd generally, and trans individuals are the most disproportionately likely to be s*xually ab*sed. I would cite more sources (linked below), but this is a consistent fact of crime in every single criminology class I've ever taken as a current forensic psychology graduate student. Most resources you look at will mention this in some way.
I truly hate when men say “we experience this too!” but like, yes, y’all do actually, and y’all do it to each other. When you break down the statistics, men are consistently more likely to harm other men than a woman is to harm them. No matter how you twist it, patriarchy is the root of the problem. There is evidence that this gender gap is decreasing in some countries, however.
you might need to look some of these articles up by name if you don't have access:
Sex, Race, Age, and Violent Offending - Criminology Collection - ProQuest
Understanding the persistence of the victimization -offending relationship: Modeling causal mechanisms across place and time - Criminology Collection - ProQuest
Victimization as a predictor of offending behavior in youth - Criminology Collection - ProQuest
National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) | Bureau of Justice Statistics
Crime/Law Enforcement Stats (UCR Program) — FBI
Transgender people over four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crime - Williams Institute
I have been diagnosed with a severe disease called "Destiel." This disease impacts the brain, causing the ship Dean x Castiel to be the only thing you are able to think about.
/siily
-Choir kid-Theatre kidSupernatural fanatic#1 Percabeth, Destiel, and Wenclair shipperI like music, writing and reading fanfiction, and torturing myself with angst.
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