I’m So Livid About This Entire PewDiePie Situation.

 I’m so livid about this entire PewDiePie situation.

He’s been given so many chances, and yet he is still making loads of money with people protecting him and not once has he genuinely apologized or seemed sorry about the things he said. It’s always followed up with dubstep music, jumpcuts, and other sarcastic remarks and jokes.

The Firewatch creator also wants to take down Felix playthrough of the game, as well as ban him from buying/playing any other game by them and people are mad about that? Like, any sane god damn person would disassociate themselves with someone throwing the N-word around, as well as spreading anti-semitic bs

And some people will defend him with “Words are just words”, and I’m losing my shit over that. I’ve heard that excuse when using the n-word, the f-word and generally when saying other problematic shit. Words are NOT just fucking words. Words are what got humanity here, words are how we communicate, words are what keeps this fucking shit society moving. If you stand by the mentality of “Words just being words”, then you NEVER get to be emotionally affected by words every again. Because words are just words and hold no meaning or value to them right?

No, they fucking do, and the people who say this shit knows that, but it’s different when its racial slurs and general assholery, because they don’t want to look bad.

Words are not just words. Words hold meaning. Words hold history. 

Words define you. And if you throw them around without thinking twice and you don’t respect history and the people it affected and will affect, then you fucking don’t deserve an audience like the one Felix has.

“But PewDiePie doesn’t mean it! It’s just something he says”, cool, doesn’t make it better. Now he isn’t an ACTUAL™ racist, he is just, you know, normalizing racism

I know many of you are nostalgic about him, because he used to be a somewhat decent person who could apologize and all but y’all gotta realize that it gets to a point, where you can’t defend him anymore, and if the anti-semitic shit didn’t make it for you, then please let this be, because there’s nothing redeemable about this.

More Posts from Thatleftistqueer and Others

7 years ago
Yeah No
Yeah No
Yeah No
Yeah No
Yeah No

yeah No

7 years ago

if ur sad do not fear friend i am sending puppies to help u

image
7 years ago
Centrists Be Like

centrists be like

7 years ago

i feed stray cats in my backyard because the cats in those warrior books died for my rights

7 years ago
SEVENTEEN 2ND ALBUM ‘TEEN, AGE’ CONCEPT PHOTO 01 2017.11.06 Release #SEVENTEEN #세븐틴 #TEEN_AGE
SEVENTEEN 2ND ALBUM ‘TEEN, AGE’ CONCEPT PHOTO 01 2017.11.06 Release #SEVENTEEN #세븐틴 #TEEN_AGE
SEVENTEEN 2ND ALBUM ‘TEEN, AGE’ CONCEPT PHOTO 01 2017.11.06 Release #SEVENTEEN #세븐틴 #TEEN_AGE
SEVENTEEN 2ND ALBUM ‘TEEN, AGE’ CONCEPT PHOTO 01 2017.11.06 Release #SEVENTEEN #세븐틴 #TEEN_AGE

SEVENTEEN 2ND ALBUM ‘TEEN, AGE’ CONCEPT PHOTO 01 2017.11.06 Release #SEVENTEEN #세븐틴 #TEEN_AGE #20171106_6PM

10 years ago
Haunting Illustration Of Lady Stoneheart By Weremoon

Haunting Illustration of Lady Stoneheart by weremoon


Tags
7 years ago
Computer Scientist Karen Liu Creates Tech To Help People Get Up The Stairs More Easily

Computer scientist Karen Liu creates tech to help people get up the stairs more easily

Karen Liu, a computer scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology, worries stairs could become a real issue for her 70-year-old mother.

So when Liu heard about an exoskeleton that stores energy to make walking easier, she wondered if there was a way to do it for stairs.

She wanted to design something inside the steps themselves, rather than a device someone would have to put on their body.

Liu enlisted two engineering colleagues and set to work creating a prototype, which they describe in a paper published Wednesday in PLoS ONE. They designed a system of springs and magnetic locks that holds a movable stair tread. Read more (7/12/17)

follow @the-future-now

7 years ago
Extreme poverty in America: read the UN special monitor's report
Philp Alston, the UN’s special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, has spent 10 days touring America. This is the introduction to his report

I have spent the past two weeks visiting the United States, at the invitation of the federal government, to look at whether the persistence of extreme poverty in America undermines the enjoyment of human rights by its citizens. In my travels through California, Alabama, Georgia, Puerto Rico, West Virginia, and Washington DC I have spoken with dozens of experts and civil society groups, met with senior state and federal government officials and talked with many people who are homeless or living in deep poverty. I am grateful to the Trump administration for facilitating my visit and for its continuing cooperation with the UN Human Rights Council’s accountability mechanisms that apply to all states.

My visit coincides with a dramatic change of direction in US policies relating to inequality and extreme poverty. The proposed tax reform package stakes out America’s bid to become the most unequal society in the world, and will greatly increase the already high levels of wealth and income inequality between the richest 1% and the poorest 50% of Americans. The dramatic cuts in welfare, foreshadowed by Donald Trump and speaker Ryan, and already beginning to be implemented by the administration, will essentially shred crucial dimensions of a safety net that is already full of holes. It is against this background that my report is presented.

The United States is one of the world’s richest and most powerful and technologically innovative countries; but neither its wealth nor its power nor its technology is being harnessed to address the situation in which 40 million people continue to live in poverty.

I have seen and heard a lot over the past two weeks. I met with many people barely surviving on Skid Row in Los Angeles, I witnessed a San Francisco police officer telling a group of homeless people to move on but having no answer when asked where they could move to, I heard how thousands of poor people get minor infraction notices which seem to be intentionally designed to quickly explode into unpayable debt, incarceration, and the replenishment of municipal coffers, I saw sewage-filled yards in states where governments don’t consider sanitation facilities to be their responsibility, I saw people who had lost all of their teeth because adult dental care is not covered by the vast majority of programs available to the very poor, I heard about soaring death rates and family and community destruction wrought by opioids, and I met with people in Puerto Rico living next to a mountain of completely unprotected coal ash which rains down upon them, bringing illness, disability and death.

Of course, that is not the whole story. I also saw much that is positive. I met with state and especially municipal officials who are determined to improve social protection for the poorest 20% of their communities, I saw an energized civil society in many places, I visited a Catholic Church in San Francisco (St Boniface – the Gubbio Project) that opens its pews to the homeless every day between services, I saw extraordinary resilience and community solidarity in Puerto Rico, I toured an amazing community health initiative in Charleston, West Virginia that serves 21,000 patients with free medical, dental, pharmaceutical and other services, overseen by local volunteer physicians, dentists and others (Health Right), and indigenous communities presenting at a US-Human Rights Network conference in Atlanta lauded Alaska’s advanced health care system for indigenous peoples, designed with direct participation of the target group.

American exceptionalism was a constant theme in my conversations. But instead of realizing its founders’ admirable commitments, today’s United States has proved itself to be exceptional in far more problematic ways that are shockingly at odds with its immense wealth and its founding commitment to human rights. As a result, contrasts between private wealth and public squalor abound.

(Continue Reading)

7 years ago

Hoe Tips: School and Studying

I’m currently in PA school with close to a 4.0 GPA, and with college and back to school starting up, I’m dropping some tips for y'all. A hoe gotta get bomb ass grades if ya want a bomb ass career and to be successful af. So let’s get it✨

1. Write out your notes. Have two notebooks: one for when you’re in class (this one can be messy) and one for at home (this one is the neater one, for color coding, formatting, and all that organizational jazz). Writing things out is proven to enhance memorization 7X more than just reading is.

2. Have a go-to format for your notes. Numbering, bullet points, whatever floats your boat.

3. Type out your notes. I use Google Drive, because it automatically saves all your shit, and you can access your notes via your Google account literally anywhere. Typing out your notes does the same thing writing them out does, as far as helping you review the material.

4. Use Quizlet. Quizlet is a free flashcard website/app that allows you to type in all of your flashcards and definitions, and gives you review options like matching, testing, flashcard mode, and more. This shit made me my high schools valedictorian, no lie.

5. Keep your old quizzes and tests. Often times, teachers will ask similar questions on finals.

6. For math-based subjects, always always always show your work in your notes. I try to explain each step for a math problem in the margins of my notes, and generalize how to do each problem at the end.

7. Do practice problems consistently.

8. For my college hoes: never take an 8 am class. You think you can do it because you did it for high school, but I promise you will regret it. If there’s no avoiding the 8 am lecture, bring coffee and skip any makeup/hair that day. Sleep is too important.

9. Make flashcards. The night before my exams, I like to try and fit everything I need to know for a specific chapter/topic onto one flashcard, in order to weed out main ideas.

10. For essays, easybib.com is amazing with free citations to avoid any plaigiarism or incorrect bibliographies.

11. Rent👏your👏textbooks👏. Unless your teacher specifically requires you BUY it, you likely won’t need the actual textbook. Buying access codes for the book online is hundreds of dollars cheaper.

12. If you do get your textbooks, a lot of them have chapter summaries at the end of each chapter. Be sure to write out/type out/review those summaries.

13. For science labs, if you are allowed, take pictures of any models or slides you need to know for your exams. Pretty much all labs won’t let you take pictures of cadavers or animal dissections, but plastic models and microscope slides should be fine.

14. If you have a question, ASK YOUR TEACHER. It is better to look stupid in class and get your clarification, than to look stupid when you get your exam back and actually have it count against your grade.

15. Do study groups. I have two nursing friends in some of the same classes as me, and we’d always meet up before exams to go over the material. We would bring dry erase markers and map out shit in empty classrooms, taking turns explaining shit to each other until we nailed it.

16. Try to teach the material. Like I said in #15, study groups are great for this. By teaching the material out loud, you are subconsciously reviewing it yourself. This is a HUGE help.

17. Take breaks. You cannot exhaust yourself and expect to still recall anything you learned.

18. I know everyone does this and there’s no avoiding it sometimes, but DO NOT CRAM. Gradual learning is most effective.

19. Have one day every week where you don’t do any schoolwork. You need time to reboot.

20. Use your phone’s calendar/task checklist app for all major assignments, due dates, exam dates, study plans, appointments, etc. Set reminders as needed.

21. Charge your phone in another room while studying. No distractions.

22. Rainymood.com is a free website that plays a 30 minute loop of rain sounds. It helps me focus like nothing else, especially in my loud ass household, and every time the loop stops and replays, I know to take a break between 30 minute study sessions.

23. Feel distracted at home when studying? Try studying in a library, cafe, or even at school. I find that going somewhere else to study actually forces me to pay attention to what I’m doing, for some reason.

24. Reward yourself for good grades. Buy yourself a slice of pizza or a new highlight, have a netflix marathon, go to a party, or take a nap. Whatever conveys a job well done, do it. It’ll make all that studying feel that much greater when it’s over, and you’ll have a goal to work towards.

25. Sit in the front of the classroom as often as possible. You’ll be forced to pay attention, be able to actually see the board, hear the instructor better, and you’re more likely to have your questions answered quickly because your teacher will actually see your hand go up.

26. Caffeinate. I prefer tea because it’s healthier, but coffee works too. Ya girl is NOT a morning person, but my morning tea at least helps me pay attention during earlier classes.

27. Keep all of your school shit organized, together, and labelled.

28. Do NOT skip a class just because you’re lazy or don’t feel like going. The temptation is real sometimes, but a hoes gonna be pissed when ya see your participation average decline.

29. This may just be a psychological thing, but I love to use the same colored/brand of pen for all of my notes/assignments/tests. It just makes everything seem more uniform, and I’m able to recall information better.

30. Trouble taking tests? For any multiple choice question, read the question and try to answer it first without reading any of the options. If your answer doesn’t match the options, then use process of elimination to find the best answer. For true/false questions, write out justifications for each answer (you can also do this for multiple choice). You’ll be acing your exams in no time.

31. Chewing gum during class/studying, and chewing that same flavor gum during the exam, has been scientifically proven to boost your memory recall.

32. Literally any time you have the opportunity to do extra credit, DO IT. Cherish that shit.

33. If you aren’t doing so hot in a particular class (literally any math class for me lol), schedule a private meeting with your professor and go over test questions you missed, or topics you didn’t get. If you know your professor is a flop, or can’t get an appointment, meet with a tutor or another professor of that same subject. Sometimes another voice can shed new light on a difficult topic.

34. For essays, readable.io critiques your writing for free based on readability, grade level, formality, tone, grammatical errors, etc. Seriously a life saver.

35. Also thesaurus.com is ya bff for fancier words/phrases to make your writing more eloquent

36. Always make an outline for every essay or project to organize what you want to say. This will keep you on track, and help you work around any quotes or sources in you writing to make sure your writing is hella organized.

That’s all I can think of for now, please please please feel free to add and share. Enjoy those 4.0’s, hoes💞

  • pastelgothfieri
    pastelgothfieri liked this · 4 years ago
  • peeppeermintcreemeer
    peeppeermintcreemeer liked this · 4 years ago
  • angelwith-abookclub
    angelwith-abookclub reblogged this · 4 years ago
  • ambitiousanarchist
    ambitiousanarchist liked this · 5 years ago
  • temporarycrowbirb
    temporarycrowbirb reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • pinkhopelessromantic
    pinkhopelessromantic liked this · 5 years ago
  • flashy-snow
    flashy-snow liked this · 5 years ago
  • sarcasticsleeping
    sarcasticsleeping liked this · 5 years ago
  • mehwhyno
    mehwhyno reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • casuallyfancydonut
    casuallyfancydonut liked this · 5 years ago
  • mehwhyno
    mehwhyno liked this · 5 years ago
  • highkinglizardeliot
    highkinglizardeliot liked this · 5 years ago
  • grvning
    grvning liked this · 5 years ago
  • faerlysimple
    faerlysimple liked this · 5 years ago
  • books-n-cleverness
    books-n-cleverness reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • books-n-cleverness
    books-n-cleverness liked this · 5 years ago
  • politicalgayshit
    politicalgayshit reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • triptoclosure
    triptoclosure liked this · 5 years ago
  • angeljokic
    angeljokic liked this · 6 years ago
  • kinblrdrama-archived
    kinblrdrama-archived reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • kinblrdrama-archived
    kinblrdrama-archived liked this · 6 years ago
  • victoryfroststarlight
    victoryfroststarlight liked this · 6 years ago
  • ratibussy
    ratibussy liked this · 6 years ago
  • gwencere
    gwencere liked this · 6 years ago
  • 5lilducks
    5lilducks liked this · 6 years ago
  • sablenitez
    sablenitez liked this · 6 years ago
  • meowls02
    meowls02 liked this · 6 years ago
  • serving-count
    serving-count liked this · 6 years ago
  • electronicdelusionstarlight
    electronicdelusionstarlight liked this · 6 years ago
  • akiphobic
    akiphobic liked this · 6 years ago
  • aphrodeiti
    aphrodeiti liked this · 6 years ago
  • stringsbean
    stringsbean reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • toastwcheese
    toastwcheese liked this · 6 years ago
  • katie1101
    katie1101 liked this · 6 years ago
  • tarudawn
    tarudawn liked this · 6 years ago
  • internetghost
    internetghost reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • internetghost
    internetghost liked this · 6 years ago
  • queenoftheskittleholics
    queenoftheskittleholics reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • sugared-violets
    sugared-violets reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • sugared-violets
    sugared-violets liked this · 6 years ago
  • irhen07
    irhen07 liked this · 6 years ago
  • anxiousnerd300
    anxiousnerd300 liked this · 6 years ago
  • assflute
    assflute liked this · 6 years ago
  • gaelicspectre
    gaelicspectre liked this · 6 years ago

190 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags