Important to know

blake kathryn
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Jules of Nature
Peter Solarz

if i look back, i am lost
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Product Placement
Cosmic Funnies
d e v o n

titsay
One Nice Bug Per Day
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Acquired Stardust

Kaledo Art
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Keni
occasionally subtle
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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@thirdtempil
Important to know

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The hardest part of life is pretending to be okay while your soul quietly feels tired and broken inside.
“You can hide memories, but you can’t erase the history that produced them.”
— Haruki Murakami, Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage

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Shabbat Shalom
Blessings for peace, safety and good health.
Stay safe.
Parshat Behaalotecha - (Numbers 8:1–12:16)
“The years between eighteen and twenty-eight are the hardest, psychologically. It’s then you realize this is make or break, you no longer have the excuse of youth, and it is time to become an adult.”
— Helen Mirren
Me: *watches the multitude of footage showing the Flotilla members attacking Spanish police officers after being asked to clear the way for others and the officers responding with force* Me: Huh, that one guy who attacked the officer in charge has a very creepy dead eyed stare that I only see in cases where the suspect is accused of multiple homicides and post mortem mutilation... *Later* Friends (cause a bunch of you have sent this to me): Guess fuckin' what? Me: ??? Friends: Dead eyed stare guy was part of a Spanish terrorist group and was sentenced to 8 years for his role in an assassination. Me *looks up group*: Oh they have 850+ confirmed kills from bombings, assassinations, and other activities...knew I recognized the look. I've seen it so many times.
For context: José Javier Oses (aka "Jotas") was a member of ETA. He was sentenced to 8 years in France due to his role in planning the assassination of a politician. He was well known for being violent and engaging in "street violence". If you watch some of the videos showing the altercation between Flotilla members and Spanish police he is the one that peels off from the group and grabs the OIC (the unhelmeted officer) from behind and attempts to grapple him.
Convicted terrorist found in Hamasnik flotilla? What's next, a fork found in the kitchen!? What's the world coming to? Next you'll tell me that we'll find fish in the sea! -_-
Jokes on you, "fish" aren't real. (like, from a scientific standpoint. "Fish" is a nonsense term that doesn't actually have meaning in modern taxonomy)
Apologies. Allow me to be more specific:
You're saying that an individual convicted of terroristic activities, including conspiracy to commit murder, was found aboard the group of individuals who had been previously sailing towards the Levantine coastline with an intent to breach the legal blockade there? What is next, a pronged eating utensil found in a food preparation area? What will occur next in this benighted world? Next, you will tell me that members of the class Actinopterygii will be found in large bodies of temperate saltwater!
*laughs in pedantic scientist*
Thank you for meeting me at that level.
Tumblr: Haha Moon Moon so funny
Frum people: These are my children, Tzipporah Feige, Yitzchak Isaac, Zahava Golda, and Tzvi Hirsch. If we're Chabad, all the boys are Menachem Mendel.
You forgot Aryeh Leib, Ze’ev Wolf and Dov Bear.
My great grandfather was called Barich Bendet (benedict), but that's not as common.
Shabbat Shalom ✨ May it be full of peace and relaxation.
What are your plans? Will you be taking some time to rest? Enjoying with loved ones? Eating delicious food? Being outside in nature?
By the way, let me know if you have any suggestions on what to draw next 🥰
Copyright © 2026 Ketubah Ring. No reproduction, printing, resale, or use without permission.

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Here is a Dry Bones Cartoon from 2006. I was looking for some humor. It seems like every 5 minutes the political situation in Israel changes these days. It is like the weather in some places. If you don't like it, just wait a bit and it will change. It is hard for me to decide how I feel about it.
I remember a cartoon that Yaakov did, but I cannot find it. It says about our ceasefires, "We cease, and they fire". Unfortunately too true.
Hezbollah is still attacking in the north, and Israel has promised not to go after them in Beirut... so far.
Source: drybonesblog.blogspot.com
A man asked his gardener: why his plants grew so beautifully. The gardener said: I don't force them to grow. I remove what stops them.
when i was a kid i decided that killing people was bad therefore war was bad therefore the military was evil. and adults would tell me it's more nuanced than that and i would understand when i grew up. well i'm a grown up now and idk i still think that killing people is bad and war is bad and the military is evil
so, sometimee, other militaries start a war with you
(sincerely, a Ukrainian)
It always goes like:
"There is an evil empire next door to you, and they keep trying to invade"
"Well, just let them? Borders aren't real, silly!"
"When they invade they want to stop you from passing down your culture, ban your language, stop you from celebrating your holidays, kidnap your kids and scatter them to the four winds."
"Well, I would just stop them, I would say no! I'd hashtag RESIST!"
"Then, they will kill you, and everyone who tries to resist."
"Well then I would fight back, I'd form a resistance movement against them, we'd train with weapons and learn to make bombs and..."
"Wouldn't it be easier if you had already trained that resistance before people were dying? Maybe, get them to learn how to hold a rifle or pilot a drone before they have to do it in secret?"
"Yeah, probably."
"Congratulations, that's an army."
You see, one could argue that the OP probably meant to say the mere existence of an institution whose purpose is to hone the skill of killing/destruction to maximum efficiency is a horrifying thing (hard to disagree), and it doesn't necessarily interfere with a people's right to defend themselves against an agressor in reality.
But the thing is, it absolutely does. People from the countries that haven't known war for decades or have always been the aggressor are equating any military with evil. Even if they say they discern between the perpetrator and the victim fighting back, there's still this underlying feeling of contempt and mistrust. And it is very much interfering with Ukraine's ability to defend itself.
At the beginning of the full-scale invasion, plenty of the so-called 'progressive' westerners were opposing arming Ukraine because 'weapon bad', berating queer Ukrainians posting about taking up arms to fight russia, asking others to disregard charities related to the military needs. People were willing to donate to foodbanks etc, but not to charities collecting money for the frontline needs. Which is fine as a personal preference, and we are grateful for any help, but when it turns into a stance where supporting the military is considered bad, it's equals holding a person's hands back while they're being attacked with a knife so that they can't defend themselves, and then nobly tending to their wounds.
And what's worse, it leads to complete disregard of the victims in the military. While the civilian deaths can draw at least some attention, the deaths in the army are met with indifference. And no, not in all instances it's by design of the military as a system made to kill, so the argument 'if it wasn't for the military, they'd be alive' doesn't work in Ukraine's case. In Ukraine's case, if it wasn't for the military, they'd be just as dead, and many more people would be dead as well.
And still, I remember a post of a female Ukrainian war medic interacting with the foreigners, and realizing that her fellow figters and veterans do not even make it to the list of those deserving sympathy in their eyes despite defending the others (with the adult Ukrainian civilians being far at the bottom of the list way below animals and 'great russian culture', but that's a different conversation). And the military are one of the most vulnerable groups in the Ukrainian society at the moment due to constant danger, exhausting 24/7 work and life-changing injuries. The only way they could become even more vulnerable would be if none of us were given weapons and trained in defense at all, an entire society becoming a target with zero chance of fighting back. So, you know, if there was no military.
So yeah, maybe sometimes it's a good thing to get your head out of your own ass and understand that the countries likely to become a victim of aggression have to train their military, because surprisingly, being able to defend yourself from being genocided is a good thing, and not, in fact, evil.

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“Always defend your right to heal at your own pace. You are taking your time. You are allowed to take your time.”
— Unknown
The thing about radical kindness (or any kindness, for that matter) is that there are going to be times when someone or something makes you regret it. There are going to be times when you show someone empathy and grace that they don't "deserve". There are going to be times when someone takes that kindness and uses it against you. The world doesn't magically transform into a perfect place when you decide to choose kindness and people will take advantage of it. People will continue to be shitty.
But the thing is...that's not a flaw of kindness. That's not a you problem. That's a them problem. People who are happy with themselves and their lives don't go out of their way to misuse someone's kindness or grace. The "normal" response to kindness or empathy is not to find a way to exploit it. People who are happy with themselves don't look for ways to hurt people for no reason. Kindness will never be the problem. No matter what some shitty person decides to do with it. It should go without saying not to be a doormat, yes. Don't allow people to treat you badly just for the sake of being kind. But also don't let shitty people make you bitter because of how they treated you when you were kind.
People will make you regret being unkind too and that one usually hurts a lot more