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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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@beignets

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Reach WITH IN To your LOCAL dirt and you may find A Friend And Boyā¦

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A dragon temple in Thailand.Ā
Wow
Sip sip sip #hognose #snake #snek #reptiblr
Oh my sweet god
OH GOD GUYS BE CAREFUL THERES A SNAKE Thatās really thirsty and way too fucking cute for it to be right, can I please have 87485768029375892758720756187590816598175896238547235469823758.
Since joining Tumblr, Iāve met a lot of young queer people. Look, Iām a bisexual man in a gay relationship, and Iām approaching 30. I was still a kid when Matthew Shepardās story was being covered on the news. I remember thinking, āI better keep my mouth shut about these feelings Iām having.ā
And then I met Dominic when I was 12, and people could see how in love we were. And we got the shit beat out of us. The year I met him, some kids in the grade above me held me down against the bleachers in our gym and stomped on my hand until my fingers broke. Instead of sending me to the nurse, the teacher sent me to the assistant principal to explain the situation. She asked why the kids had beat me up. I said, āThey were calling me gay.ā
Her response was, āWell, are you?ā
My, āI donāt know,ā earned a call to my parents, and I was outed. Efforts were made to keep me from seeing Dom. Throughout high school, Domās stepmother intensified these efforts. He slept in the basement of the house. Although he was an incredibly talented student, he was prohibited from participating in any extracurriculars. He suffered a lot of physical abuse during those years.
The day he turned 18, he packed up everything he had and walked to my house, and weāve lived together ever since. Things are better, but theyāre not perfect. Iāve had trucks pull up next to me at stoplights and, seeing the pride sticker on my car, through old drinks and garbage into my window. I no longer speak to my dadās side of the family. I havenāt been to see them for Christmas or Thanksgiving in years. One of my uncles had cornered me at Thanksgiving when I was 17 and said, āIām not going to judge you, but Iād be happy to break your neck so God can do the judging a little sooner.ā
I joined a support group for trans and intersex people. When I joined, 40 people attended regularly. Within the year, the group was half the size it had been. Some couldnāt make it anymore, because they were staying at the shelter, where their stay hinged on them agreeing to instead to attend homophobic sermons. Some were put in correctional therapy. Five of them died. Three of those, I didnāt know, but I knew Alex, the 19 year old who was fag-dragged in Kentucky and died a day later in the hospital, and I knew Stephanie, who went home to Alabama to care for her mom in hospice and was beaten to death with a baseball bat by her momās boyfriend.
Tumblr is not reality. The dynamic here does not reflect the dynamic out there. Hereās the part where I finally make a point, and it might be extremely unpopular - but guys, value your allies. Value each other. We are met with enough hate in our daily lives to enter an online safe-space and meet more hate from our own, over petty things. Donāt go after one another over every little thing you find problematic.
Learn to see nuance. Maybe the word āqueerā bothers you, and you see a gay man using it as an umbrella term. Maybe someone called a trans man a trans woman because theyāre confused about terminology, but the post where they did it was voicing support for the trans community. Maybe someone is just asking a question, wanting to learn more. Stop. Attacking. These. People.
Allies are being driven away. Members of our own community are being ostracized. Others are feeling nervous and estranged, and itās largely because of places like Tumblr, where the social justice movement is quickly becoming violent and radical. I am begging you, stop nitpicking āproblematicā things and start directing your efforts to create real change. When it comes to comes to your allies, forget the āsocial justice warriorā mentality and put down your torch. Educate calmly. Be respectful. Be understanding. Be forgiving. And Iām certainly not saying that your anger doesnāt have a good place - when you are met with bigots on the street, congress members who want to pass hateful laws, violent protesters, abusive parents, prejudiced teachers, thatĀ is when you need to be a warrior. Thatās when it counts. In the real world. When you have the opportunity to protect people from real harm. Attacking your would-be allies via anonymous asks is just going to lose us ground in the long run. And we donāt have time for that, not when trans women of color are being murdered every day, not when states are still fighting against marriage equality, not when there are politicians in office who believe that trans people are possessed by demons, not when weāve just lost 50 brothers and sisters to one gunman, not when the media wonāt even admit that the attack was homophobic.
Please step back. Look at the big picture. Look at where we are, globally. Donāt just log on to your safe space and attack your allies over small missteps. Thatās like washing the dishes in a house thatās on fire, kids. Letās fight on the battlefield, and when we come home to each other, letās just focus on bandaging up our wounds so we can go out and win the war.
Signal boost to this unbelievably important message.
How America Used Highways To Destroy Black Neighborhoods
(by Alan Pyke)
Itās time for America to reckon with the role that highway projects too often play in ripping apart underprivileged communities around the country, Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said Wednesday at the Center for American Progress.
In the first 20 years of the federal interstate system alone, Foxx said, highway construction displaced 475,000 families and over a million Americans. Most of them were low-income people of color in urban cores. It was Foxxās second speech in as many days about how federal infrastructure projects contribute to inequality and poverty, and how the agency wants to make up for it now.
What the Secretary is doing āappears unprecedented,ā the Washington Post notes. Foxx, only the third African-American to ever hold the top federal transportation policy job, is explicitly acknowledging and condemning a history of destroying black communities and stealing wealth from their residents through intentional decisions.
Goodbye, Brooklyn
Foxx grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina, in a neighborhood that had been hewn apart by expressway projects before he was born. āI grew up living with those barriers, even though I had no idea how they came to be or what they really meant,ā he said. Eventually, he became mayor of his hometown, and developed a much clearer understanding of what white leaders in the city had done to his community.
Foxx cited the case of a now-vanished Charlotte neighborhood called Brooklyn, where black families of both blue collar and professional means thrived in the early and middle 20th century. It was the favored overnight stop for jazz greats like Duke Ellington when they played the city, and home to both Charlotteās first black high school and the first free black library in the whole South.
āBy 1912, the local paper captured the prevailing views that Brooklyn was far too valuable to be left to African-Americans,ā Foxx said. āThey wrote in fact that āFar-sighted men believe that eventually this section, because of its proximity to the center of the city, must sooner or later be utilized by the white population.āā
Redlining and āurban renewalā followed, making the community untenable for residents and newcomers alike. In a single decade, white city leaders ripped out almost 1,500 buildings in Brooklyn, displacing over a thousand black families and 200 mostly black-owned businesses.
And when Charlotte eviscerated Brooklyn, road projects served as the scalpels.
āFirst came Independence Boulevard, which cut a gash through the community,ā the Secretary said. āLater, an inner beltway, I-277, which remains to this day,ā stabbed fork-like into the neighborhoodās heart.
As the interstate system routed into and around Charlotteās downtown over the coming decades, the cityās old identity of interlocked rich and poor neighborhoods devolved. Today, poverty clings to the freeways like a shadow.
Brooklynās invisible today, but itās far from alone.
The Airport Plan That Built A Ghetto
The tool wasnāt always roads, and the decisions themselves werenāt all made way back in the mists of pre-Civil Rights Era social order.
In the early 1980s, for example, the city of St. Louis started buying out middle-class black residents of Kinloch, Missouri so that nearby Lambert International Airport could expand its runway network.
For the airlines and other businesses at Lambert, the project promised hundreds of millions of dollars in new profits by speeding up the flow of traffic through the airport. With planes spending less time idling on the tarmac, studied predicted that nearby residents would also benefit in the form of better air quality.
But for the stateās longest-standing black city, its bakeries and and drugstores and public schools, the project spelled doom. After a series of buyouts that locals say felt more like arm-twisting than a genuine personal choice to stay or sell, Kinlochās population plunged from over 4,000 to below 300.
āI think the interesting thing about that is where they went,ā Foxx said. āMany of them, most of them, ended up moving to a town called Ferguson.ā
(continue reading)
Not only did they destroy these neighborhoods, but they did it in the cheapest way possible.
The government canāt technically legally just take peopleās homes, Ā but they can buy them under the law of Eminent Domain, which states just that- that the government can purchase any property for civil or judicial purposes, and the property owners have almost no alternatives whatsoever.
So the government would (and still will) purchase ~3 feet of the property line and turn it into construction lot, which would absolutely shatter the property value (usually diminishing it to less than 20% of the original value), and only THENĀ would the government buy the rest of the property.
These people were cheated out of their homes, and out of the last bit of equity they could get.Ā
And this is not simply some past practice from that long ago either. Itās still going on today.
We are all dependent on others to varying degrees. A language that denies this fact fuels a system that obscures the ways in which other people care for us. Words such asĀ independence, self-reliance and self-made help create, and are created by, a dynamic within which people are ignored and devalued. Joan Tronto reminds us that by ānot noticing how pervasive and central care is to human life, those who are in positions of power and privilege can continue to ignore and degrade the activities of care and those who give care.ā
Independence is perhaps the most fundamental of our cultural myths; it supports the organisation of our society and justifies the distribution of goods, real and ideal. The labelsĀ independent andĀ dependent,Ā rather than reflecting empirical reality, are myths used to justify inequality.
Lynn May Rivas, Ā 'Invisible Labors: Caring for the Independent Personā inĀ Global Woman: Nannies, Maids and Sex Workers in the New Economy ed. Barbara Ehrenreich & Arlie Russell Hochschild p.83

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No parent should have an āif I get deportedā conversation with their child.
off to work
If anybody has any advice on how to do cool shit in NYC for like not a whole ton of money or any suggestions at all of good places to hang and eat and stay and stuff thatād be cool. Iām going to be there in like 2 months so.
hi this is happening in like a week and a half!!! suggestions for excellent food and cheap attractions and great shopping (ideally cheap thrift stores or top notch lingerie) especially are welcome
-Ā mamounās near washington square park is hella cheap and sooo good, you can just get a sandwich to go and chill in the park
- iām obsessed with ICE CREAM MARIOĀ which u can get at kuluĀ desserts near wsp ..... soo goood.....
- dollar slices of pizza r everywhere and plenty, i love prince st pizzaās pepperoni squares tho theyāre like $4 but theyāre soooo filling. itās family run n cute n they have a hugeass wall of celebrities to look at lol
- buffalo exchange in the east village is hella popular, they also have brooklyn outposts
- ive gotten the raddest shit at beaconās closet, thereās a bushwick one and one in lower manhattan. everythingās organized by color and i v much recommend. manhattan one had weirder stuff if i remember correctly?
- journelle has really amazing lingerie and itās got a bunch of locations everywhere?Ā
- galleries are always free to check out, artcards gives you a list of art related events & openings ... usually free drinks too
- all the museums have free days or pay what you want days, the met is *always* pay what you want which is nice
-the piers by hudson river park trust are really nice just to sit and hang out at for a lil bit. itās just a little grassy park right by the water
- the highline in chelsea is another park, it has a nice view of the hudson river and itās pretty well maintained. it sits above the street level so you have to go up a bunch of stairs to see stuff
(^ā 0 ā)^ Tamagotchi!! ^(ā w ā^) Ā
Mythical PokƩmon Events will be distributed this year as part of the 20th anniversary of PokƩmon.
Reblog to save a life
UGH I can not wait tho

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this is the scene of the crime
@perigarnet
a real angel