imagine being this rich and petty 😂😂
noooo, don’t be mortified by the ordeal of being known…you’re so loveable lol
That’s it. That’s literally all you need to know about band.
“You are the universe, expressing itself as a human for a little while”
Bible version: a king lusts after another man's wife
Veggie Tales version: a king wants another man's rubber duck
Bible version: threat of genocide
Veggie Tales version: threat of banishment to the island of perpetual tickling
Bible version: since they won't bow down before an idol, the king has them burned alive
Veggie Tales version: since they won't bow down before a chocolate bunny, the manager has them burned alive
my cat figured out how to open the cabinets so he made a nest in his favorite one. he’ll only come out if he hears the fridge open.
in an attempt to appeal to the pathos of my potential employers, i wrote my resume using the same format a no-kill shelter would use to describe a geriatric dog
Studies show that approaching youth with a bystander-intervention model is actually a lot more effective for reducing sexual assault, and it is also more enthusiastically received than programs that bill themselves as anti-rape.
We can tell youth that they are basically “rapists waiting to happen” (anti-rape initiative), or we can tell them that we know they would intervene if they saw harm happening to someone and we want to help empower them to do that (bystander intervention). The kids jump in with both feet for the latter! It was amazing to see children (and young boys in particular) excited to do this work and engage their creativity with it. Also, studies show that not only do they go on to intervene, but they also do not go on to sexually assault people themselves. Bystander intervention also takes the onus off the person being targeted to deter rape and empowers the collective to do something about it. It answers the question in the room when giggling boys are carrying an unconscious young woman up the stairs at a house party, and people are not sure how to respond and are waiting for “someone” to say or do something.
Richard M. Wright, “Rehearsing Consent Culture: Revolutionary Playtime” in the anthology Ask: Building Consent Culture edited by Kitty Stryker
Stuff I like that I reblog, and stuff that I post .... Luke
5K posts