100 years later.
Gary, Indiana

if i look back, i am lost
The Bowery Presents
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

Origami Around
noise dept.
macklin celebrini has autism
ojovivo
cherry valley forever
we're not kids anymore.
taylor price

romaâ
Today's Document
Claire Keane

gracie abrams
Fai_Ryy
The Stonewall Inn
wallacepolsom
occasionally subtle

Product Placement

@theartofmadeline

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@melimilkinson
100 years later.
Gary, Indiana

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Unmute !
Nimbasa subway is a wild ride
Another day in the Office

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PC Magazine - December 2001
I Have No Reply Button and I Must Scream
sons crying thanks
there is simply nothing funnier than habsburg history
âAustrian blunderâ yeah Iâd say so
Just made a little oopsie in front of my 100,000 men and 500 cannons, haha so embarrassing x
Garden of Hope - James Gurney (detail)
oh my god, but what is this painting without the dinosaur?
why would you crop the dinosaur
Somebodyâs not a fan of Dinotopia. James Gurneyâs art is amazing.Â
He modeled for that last one himself, which is just great.
Long live Dinotopia and James Gurney!

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Things I remember reading online that I wish I had screenshotted: Story of a trans guy, estranged from family, who got an invitation to his sister's wedding, but their parents had specified that he'd better come in a dress or not come at all. But they hadn't seen him in almost 7 years and didn't know that not only was he on T and had surgeries, he's a passionate weightlifter.
So if I remember right he sent the sister a heads-up beforehand and the sister was like "holy shit do it", and he showed up in a pink, frilly dress, and sneakers. No makeup, jewellery or anything, just this bulky, hairy dude in a dress for no particular reason.
Their parents, naturally, still got mad despite of him following their exact, specific instructions in order to "not embarrass the family", and after the wedding the sister made sure to pick as many photos of the wedding as possible with the brother visible in them, because it was now a funny family story of bringing the family together by pissing the shit out of their parents.
All hail the king and queen siblings.
it is perhaps more helpful to move the conversation away from âitâs okay not to be productiveâ to âwe need to have a long hard think about what counts as productivityâ.
if youâre ill (chronic or otherwise), it is productive to spend a day sleeping and resting up. your body needs you to rest so that it can heal.
but something that is true for everyone is that things like healing from trauma, learning new things, practicing hobbies, building relationships⌠are all productive ways to spend your time. just because youâre not making money doesnât mean youâre not being productive.
looking after yourself is productive. looking after others is productive. hell, playing with your pet is productive.
productive means being in a state of producing something. thatâs all it means. and when youâre doing the things your body needs you to do⌠youâre producing your own well-being. youâre producing neural pathways. youâre producing happiness.
if you can feel a sense of productivity from non-traditional productive actions⌠I think thatâs a lot more helpful for your mental health than just claiming that productivity isnât important. of course itâs okay to not be productive. but I know I feel better when I think of happiness as something I can produce.
minneapolis is an insane city. a man on the street asking for change assumed i was a lesbian completely unprompted
and what the hell kind of a strip club advertisement is this
imagine you get a job there and you come out the next day to see someone painting a 4 on the sign
I think he broke a record for the amount of NSFW jokes in this one. đ

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You ever invite your coworker to watch you give birth just to spite a racist
Okay howmst the fuck has a ship doctor in the far future never handled a birth without the father present? Are sperm donors and gay couples and trans women no longer a thing in the bajillionth century CE?? :/
I while understand the frustration with erasure sometimes it helps to look at things through the cultural context of when something was made. Star Trek the Next Generation was made in 1987, this particular episode I believe aired in 1988 a time when a future where the husband was always present for the birth would have been amazing to many of the people watching the show as men had only been allowed to be present for the birth of their children for 10/15ish years at that point in the US.
Women (and many men) fought for decades with hospitals to even have men allowed in the delivery room during the early stages of labor, which can last for several hours, and hospitals only began to give in to their requests in the 1960s but even then they would be kicked out of the room by hospital staff before the actual birth took place. So many of the couples watching the show would have had to go through labor without having/being allowed to support their spouse regardless of their wishes. Having the childâs father present for the birth only began to happen in the 1970s and 1980s. Which means most people watching this show either went through birth without the support of their spouse, were not allowed to support their spouse during the birth of their child, or their own motherâs went through that during their birth.
A future where the husbands were always present for the birth was still a little crazy to consider in the late 1980s. A good kind of crazy for the people living in that time, it showed a future where the wishes of the couple were finally consistently listened to by medical professionals as a result of the actions of people during their or their parentâs lifetimes. And it does that by also subverting it in allowing Data to step into the role of the father when the father was unknown and/or unwilling/unable to fill that role (Iâll be honest my knowledge of Next Gen is a bit spotty and I have not seen this whole episode, just a piece of it at family Thanksgiving). The womanâs desires as to how she would give birth are listened to and respected, something that still doesnât happen in many hospitals now and would have been seen as even more revolutionary then. So while it isnât perfect I think this scene was actually fairly impressive for its time and cultural context and shows a future that many people of that time would have seen as ideal.
I think this kind of contextual understanding and analysis is really important because things that look antiquated now were revolutionary then. I remember reading that the mini skirts in Star Trek TOS were legot just in fashion (about 64â ish), one of the actresses (the one that played Rand) requested they be in the show and both her and Nichelle Nichols said they didnât see them as demeaning but liberating in that time and context. Where as NOW it looks like âsexy male gazeâ but then it wasnât.
Miniskirts are comfortable and easy to move in - unlike longer bulkier skirts, which had previously been required for âmodesty.â And unlike the approach of âweâll just put them in pants,â miniskirts made a statement that women crew-members werenât being treated like men. Miniskirts were a way to say âI can be an attractive woman, wear comfortable clothes, and still look professional and do a serious job.âÂ
The clothing for that message today would be different.Â
This is also why the bridge crew of TOS may seem âtokenisticâ today. When it came out, the Cold War was in full swing and âSovietsâ were maligned and hated, Black people could not count on their right to vote being honored, and mixed-race people (like Spock) were called horrible things like âhalf-breedâ and âzebra.â A white man was in charge of the ship, but Gene Roddenberry was fully aware that a chunk of the viewership read him as queer, and did ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DISCOURAGE THAT READING, at a time when âhomosexual activityâ was illegal in the United States!
By todayâs standards, âone of everything? How tokenistic.â In 1966? âA Black woman, a Russian, a man from multiple cultures, and a man who loves differently, all top of their fields, all working together and finding common ground to learn, grow, and help where they can? What a wonderful future!â
Also Iâm sorry but like. A show also featuring a Japanese man who isnât a stereotype but part of the crew, having a Scottish character be a part of the central cast (idk if I need to get into why this is important, but considering how England has continuously tried to erase Scottish culture and identity, and the stereotype of Scots as bumbling bumpkins, etc, its kind of nice to see a Scotsman whoâs the best of the best at his job).
Moreover, a lot of kids watched this show. MLK himself contacted Nichelle Nichols and asked her to stay on the show when she was considering leaving, because âyou donât have a Black role, you have an equal role,â and there wasnt many Black role models on tv. I can only imagine how Black kids, Asian kids, and mixed race or mixed culture kids felt seeing people like them on tv. Hell, seeing Uhura on screen is what inspired Whoopi Goldberg as a little girl.
Also, yeah, its easy to look back and say âdamn, fathers werenât there in the delivery room? What assholesâ but no like they legitimately were not allowed in there.
Tiny correction: while George Takei is Japanese, and while Sulu thus looks like what we in the 20th-21st century consider to be an ethnically Japanese man, Hikaru Sulu was Pan-Asian by design. His last name is not Japanese. And Roddenberry designed him like that intentionally, because while there was a lot of anti-Japanese sentiment in the US at the time (I mean, hell⌠George Takei himself spent years in Japanese internment camps during WW2), there was also a lot of other anti-Asian sentiments, and Roddenberry intentionally put ALL of it on the character of Sulu.
Like, all the years of anti-Chinese racism in the US? Sulu. Anti-Japanese sentiments left over after WW2? Sulu. Korean War in 1950-52? Sulu. The Vietnam War, with Johnson in 1965 (a year before TOS started airing) choosing to start sending American troops into the conflict? Sulu.
Sulu was Roddenberryâs desperate attempt to show all Asian people as inherently worthy, inherently human, and yeah, he probably put kind of too much on Suluâs shoulders, but it was the 1960s and Roddenberry fucking cared about representation, so he did what he could.
Just, you know⌠a little bit more historical Star Trek context
Also to hammer this home?
Scotty was third in line for the captainâs chair. The only non-Kirk who had the con more then him was Spock.
He was smart, he was a *ranked* crewmen, he was a gentleman, he wasnât a skirt chaser, and he was capitol L loyal. The only time he got into a fight was when someone both went after his Captain, AND his Ship.
And he was Scottish.Â
Thatâs so above and beyond the typical Scottish stereotype even TO THIS DAY.
Dr Polaski was coded as something of an arse just so they could make their valid points about equality and bigotry using her as a foil. Yes it was kind of clumsy from a modern perspective, but it was also kind of groundbreaking (not least because you didnât usually get arses being played by women)
I am hard-coded to put this on any post that mentions MLK and Nichelle Nichols.
Also, itâs very worth noting that the âtoken minority characterâ label doesnât apply in any way to these characters.
Tokens are there to present the appearance of diversity. Whereas Roddenberry created a diverse cast in an era where there wasnât even a need for the appearance of diversity. Roddenberry didnât put these characters in because he wanted to look diverseâ he put them in to BE DIVERSE.
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