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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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These two quotes are from an article published today by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) titled "Palestinians are still suffering six months into Gaza ceasefire."
The suffering and death of elders is a profound loss. Families are unraveled by grief, and important knowledge is lost. The 69 year old Palestinian patient quoted above was born in 1957. The settler project of Israel is only 9 years older than he is. The zionist project always seeks to rewrite history for its own interests, and when Palestinian elders are dying, in a very literal sense it is Israel killing the witnesses.
if requests are open could you do mousefur? :3
The pile of elders ;333 I also drew mousekit and runningkit because I love kitsss

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
A letter to the teen who can't transition yet
"An article can’t change the world, and the world feels pretty bleak at the moment. Besides, you know what’s going on: you’re taking in the news (or as much of it as you can handle at a time), and you know that it sucks and it’s sucked for a while now and it probably will suck for a while still. You don’t need someone you don’t even know to tell you that. So instead, I offer this letter against the current moment, in hope of providing some words that help, or at least make you feel less alone.
I’m writing to you as a trans person who’s seen a lot in my relatively short time on this earth. I came out to everyone in my life in 2010, a little bit after my 18th birthday, and before many people had heard of the transgender “issue.” In secret and in private, I had been trans and online for a long time before that, haunting forums and poky little bespoke websites, sharing with a few very trusted friends, and knew absolutely no other trans people IRL."
Since coming out in 2010, Liz Duck-Chong has helped build trans health services, supported LGBTQIA+ youth orgs, written resources, and connected with trans folks around the world. Today she’s sharing ways to make meaning in dark times, so we can hold onto the threads and together keep knitting the future we know is possible.