they definitely would be besties
I love this!
Added my version of Kenny n Butter's child + Style's daughter (I'll add her brother some day `~`) ++ Wendy's daughter!!! (Ik a lot of daughters, I can't help it that I like drawing girls whoops)
GET TO KNOW THE GIRLS!!!
Christina (Chris) Tucker:
**long black hair, usually braided in the back, has a mole above her lip**
>Peruvian/White
>is her Papa's (Craig) mini me // from the way they act to the way they speak in their nasally monotone voice
>looks more like her papa but gots her dad's (Tweek) nose
>is close to Kam McCormick // Kam calls her "her sister from another mister"
>speaks spanglish often // much to the point where Tweek also picked up some Spanish as well
>her in game persona is always a guy because she finds it endearing (hints to her might being genderfluid or Trans)
>Ace!
Kameron (Kam) McCormick:
**dirty blonde hair, shaggy like hair cut with her ends dyed pink, has freckles**
>Hella white
>makes sure you know she ain't white trash
>loves scene culture hence her hair style
>is a self proclaimed "weeb"
>follows the internet culture religiously
>is always seen with some type of orange on her // bcuz of her dad (Kenny)
>is also his mini me // Butters claims that they can be twins
>looks identical to Butters tho
>Pan!
Stacey-lynn (Stace/Stacey) Marsh-Broflovski:
**black hair (w/ red undertones), is usually seen with a blue headband and gold earrings**
>Also white
>plays volleyball for the school's team // and is the captain and right wing hitter
>learnt how to read and write in Hebrew to please her Baba (Sheila)
>is her Baba's favorite
>her and her brother lived in New Jersey for most of their middle school years
>yes that means they have a jersey accent // though they can mask it pretty well
>has her Papa's (Kyle) attitude but her dad's (Stan) looks
>is a people's pleaser (oof)
>is dating Irene
>Lesbian
Irene Testaburger:
**short black hair, is seen with a pink hair clip in her hair, drawn on hearts underneath her eyes, dimples**
>is from Australia // yes accent!
>not Wendy's bio daughter as she is the daughter of her diseased coworkers
>was adopted by Wendy when she was 13
>moved to South Park when she was around 16 // junior year bby!
>is Korean/Australian
>though new to South Park High, she is already the VP of her class council // last VP dipped
>is a huge nerd
>loves dancing // was in a dance group back in Australia
>is dating Stacey!
>Lesbian!
//I want to personally add the fact that I named her Irene after Red Velvet's Irene! I also made her Korean name Yerim Yoo (shares names with Yeri) and her birthday Feb 10 (shares bday with Seulgi). It pairs perfectly with the fact that she's Wendy's kid too đ. Testaburger family = Red Velvet?? *insert vine boom* (sorry Joy, I'll add you somehow my love)
According to the Book Disney Descendants: Up Close! Mal was born in 1999.
She was 6 years old when she wasnât invited to Evieâs 6th Birthday Party, which took place 10 years after all the villains were banished to the Island. Which places it in 2005. (Isle of The Lost Novel)
That means that That Auradon was created in 1995.
It also means that Rise of Red takes place in 2025.
"During an archaeological dig in a desert area north of Jerusalem 40 years ago, a seed was discovered which was determined to be in pristine condition but had obviously seen many a year.
Now, despite falling from its parent 1,000 years ago, it has grown into a mature tree, and botanists examining it believe it may be an extinct species that was used for medicinal purposes for thousands of yearsâeven receiving a nod in the Bible.
Neither Israeli botanists, nor Dr. Sarah Sallon, a physician who founded the Louis L. Borick Natural Medicine Research Center at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem, could determine what species it was from simply from the seed covering. So they did what nature intendedâthey planted it.
Using a well-documented technique that saw 2,000-year-old date palm fruit pits germinate, Dr. Sallon soaked the seed in hormones, liquid fertilizer, and water, and then planted it in a pot of sterile seed; then waited.
Despite its genetic code being exposed to environmental stressors for over 1,000 years, the seed sprouted after 5 weeks. The shoot was protected by a caplike feature called an operculum. As the shoot grew, the operculum was shedâleaving something for the team to radiocarbon date. It narrowed down the age of the almost 10-centuries-old seed to between the years 993 an 1202.
Fast forward 14 years and the plant has become a 10-foot-tall tree. Dr. Sallon shared images of the tree, its bark, and its leaves with botanists around the world. One expert suggested it belonged to the genus Commiphora, found across the Arabian Peninsula and parts of Africa. A genetic analysis subsequently revealed this was the case, but a perfect match was lacking.
Pictured: The tree, now 14 years old.
Dr. Sallon and her team thought it was an extinct species known from history as Judean Balsam, but the best way to confirm that suspicion would be to have some aromatic traces similar to the resins of the myrrh tree to which it is related. However, no such fragrant compounds were detected.
Instead, the chemical analysis of the leaves identified a group of phytochemicals known as guggulterols which have been observed in a related species called Commiphora wightii thatâs known to possess certain cancer-fighting properties in its resin.
A medicinal balm, the origin of which is not known, is mentioned in multiple historical texts including the Bible as âtsori,â and rather than the fragrant Judean Balsam, itâs this tsori that Dr. Sallon and her team believe they have found.
They must wait until the tree, now 14 years old, produces flower or fruit to know for sure if itâs an extinct species, and if so, how to perhaps keep it alive.
Dr. Louise Colville, senior research leader in seed and stress biology at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in London who wasnât involved in the research, told CNN that it was a major accomplishment to grow a seed that old and possibly lead to a resurrection of this Biblical botanical.
âWhatâs surprising in this story is it was just a single seed and to be able to have one chance for that to germinate is extremely lucky,â she said.
âWorking in a seed bank, seeing the potential for that extreme longevity gives us hope that banking and storing seeds that some at least will survive for very long periods of time.â"
-via Good News Network, October 8, 2024
--
Note: This is such a good demonstration of why seed banks are so important!! They give us such real and massive hope for deextinction and the revival of endangered species.
I do not.
I really think people have forgotten just how bad things were under the Trump Administration. Literally every day there was news about some service being cut or someone terrible appointed somewhere they shouldn't be or what have you. He constantly flirted with WW3 and military dictatorship. It was such a blur of badness that there aren't big standouts for people to point to to make him "the XYZ president." it was everything. all the time. Why do we not remember this.
The handwriting/fonts I use for each of the Madrigals
Good evening! My name is Sammy. I am a pink and purple moth.
I mostly make content about gardening, but I sometimes make fan content for Disney(Descendants and Disney Princess Movies), Marvel(Black Widow), and South Park.
Lastly, I keep my socials very clean, so I do not do smut, pwp, or even swearing. Speaking of my socials, my Instagram and Tiktok ae both under the handle @sammyam1234.
Thank you for reading my intro! Happy writing.
Good morning, afternoon, or evening to anyone reading my post!
In relation to my last post about my Black Widow movie fanfic, I wanted to ask a question: What is your opinion of the upcoming ThunderBolts movie?
Personally, I am 50/50 on it. I am excited for the return of some characters, but not others.
What are your thoughts?
Thank you for taking the time out of your day to read my post, and have a good day or night.
This post is very relevant today!
If youâve spent any time discussing or reading about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I guarantee youâve heard some variation of this statement:
OMG, Jews think any criticism of Israel is anti-Semitic!Â
In the interests of this post, Iâm going to assume that the people who express such sentiments are acting in good faith and really donât mean to cause pain to or problems for Diaspora Jewry. For those good-faith people, I present some guidelines for staying on the good side of that admittedly murky line, along with the reasoning why the actions I list are problematic. (And bad-faith people, you can no longer plead ignorance if you engage in any of these no-nos. Consider yourselves warned.) In no particular order:
Donât use the terms âbloodthirsty,â âlust for Palestinian blood,â or similar. Historically, Jews have been massacred in the belief that we use the blood of non-Jews (particularly of children) in our religious rituals. This belief still persists in large portions of the Arab world (largely because white Europeans deliberately spread the belief among Arabs) and even in parts of the Western world. Murderous, inhumane, cruel, viciousâfine. But bloodâŚjust donât go there. Depicting Israel/Israelis/Israeli leaders eating children is also a no-no, for the same reason.
Donât use crucifixion imagery. Another huge, driving motivation behind anti-Semitism historically has been the belief that the Jews, rather than the Romans, crucified Jesus. As in #1, this belief still persists. There are plenty of other ways to depict suffering that donât call back to ancient libels.
Donât demand that Jews publicly repudiate the actions of settlers and extremists. People who make this demand are assuming that Jews are terrible people or undeserving of being heard out unless they âproveâ themselves acceptable by non-Jewsâ standards. (Itâs not okay to demand Palestinians publicly repudiate the actions of Hamas in order to be accepted/trusted, either.)
Donât say âthe Jewsâ when you mean Israel. I think this should be pretty clear. The people in power in Israel are Jews, but not all Jews are Israelis (let alone Israeli leaders).
Donât say âZionistsâ when you mean Israel. Zionism is no more a dirty word than feminism. It is simply the belief that the Jews should have a country in part of their ancestral homeland where they can take refuge from the anti-Semitism and persecution they face everywhere else. It does not mean a belief that Jews have a right to grab land from others, a belief that Jews are superior to non-Jews, or any other such tripe, any more than feminism means hating men. Unless you believe that Israel should entirely cease to exist, you are yourself Zionist. Furthermore, using âZionistsâ in place of âIsraelisâ is inaccurate and harmful. The word âZionistsâ includes Diasporan Jews as well (most of whom support a two-state solution and pretty much none of whom have any influence on Israelâs policies) and is used to justify anti-Semitic attacks outside Israel (i.e., they brought it on themselves by being Zionists). And many of the Jews IN Israel who are most violent against Palestinians are actually anti-Zionistâthey believe that the modern state of Israel is an offense against God because it isnât governed by halakha (traditional Jewish religious law). Be careful with the labels you use.
Donât call Jews you agree with âthe good Jews.â Imposing your values on another group is not okay. Tokenizing is not okay. Appointing yourself the judge of what other groups can or should believe is not okay.
Donât use your Jewish friends or Jews who agree with you as shields. (AKA, âI canât be anti-Semitic, I have Jewish friends!â or âWell, Jew X agrees with me, so youâre wrong.â) Again, this behavior is tokenizing and essentially amounts to you as a non-Jew appointing yourself arbiter over what Jews can/should feel or believe. You donât get to do that.
Donât claim that Jews are ethnically European. Jews come in many colorsâwhite is only one. Besides, the fact that many of us have some genetic mixing with the peoples who tried to force us to assimilate (be they German, Indian, Ethiopian, ItalianâŚ) doesnât change the fact that all our common ancestral roots go back to Israel.
Donât claim that Jews âarenât the TRUE/REAL Jews.â Enough said.
Donât claim that Jews have no real historical connection to Israel/the Temple Mount. Archaeology and the historical record both establish that this is false.
Donât accuse Diasporan Jews of dual loyalties or treason. This is another charge that historically has been used to justify persecution and murder of Jews. Having a connection to our ancestral homeland is natural. Having a connection to our co-religionists who live there is natural. It is no more treasonous for a Jew to consider the well-being of Israel when casting a vote than for a Muslim to consider the well-being of Islamic countries when voting. (Tangent: fuck drone strikes. End tangent.)
Donât claim that the Jews control the media/banks/country that isnât Israel.  Yet another historical anti-Semitic claim is that Jews as a group intend to control the world and try to achieve this aim through shadowy, sinister channels. There are many prominent Jews in the media and in the banking industry, yes, but they arenât engaged in any kind of organized conspiracy to take over those industries, they simply work in those industries. The phrase âthe Jews controlâ should never be heard in a debate/discussion of Israel.
Donât depict the Magen David (Star of David) as an equivalent to the Nazi swastika. The Magen David represents all Jewsânot just Israelis, not just people who are violent against Palestinians, ALL JEWS. When you do this, you are painting all Jews as violent, genocidal racists. DONâT.
Donât use the Holocaust/Nazism/Hitler as a rhetorical prop. The Jews who were murdered didnât set foot in what was then Palestine, let alone take part in Israeli politics or policies. It is wrong and appropriative to try to use their deaths to score political points. Genocide, racism, occupation, murder, exterminationâgo ahead and use those terms, but leave the Holocaust out of it.
In visual depictions (i.e., political cartoons and such), donât depict Israel/Israelis as Jewish stereotypes. Donât show them in Chassidic, black-hat garb. Donât show them with exaggerated noses or frizzled red hair or payus (earlocks). Donât show them with horns or depict them as the Devil. Donât show them cackling over/hoarding money. Donât show them drinking blood or eating children (see #1). Donât show them raping non-Jewish women. The Nazis didnât invent the tropes they used in their propagandaâall of these have been anti-Semitic tropes going back centuries. (The red hair trope, for instance, goes back to early depictions of Judas Iscariot as a redhead, and the horns trope stems from the belief that Jews are the Devilâs children, sent to destroy the world as best we can for our âfather.â)
Donât use the phrase âthe chosen peopleâ to deride or as proof of Jewish racism. When Jews say we are the chosen people, we donât mean that we are biologically superior to others or that God loves us more than other groups. Judaism in fact teaches that everyone is capable of being a righteous, Godly person, that Jews have obligations to be ethical and decent to âthe stranger in our midst,â and that non-Jews donât get sent to some kind of damnation for believing in another faith. When we say weâre the chosen people, we mean that, according to our faith, God gave us extra responsibilities and codes of behavior that other groups arenât burdened with, in the form of the Torah. Thatâs all it means.
Donât claim that anti-Semitism is eradicated or negligible. It isnât. In fact, according to international watchdog groups, itâs sharply on the rise. (Which sadly isnât surprisingâanti-Semitism historically surges during economic downturns, thanks to the belief that Jews control the banks.) This sort of statement is extremely dismissive and accuses us of lying about our own experiences.
Donât say that since Palestinians are Semites, Jews/Israelis are anti-Semitic, too. You do not get to redefine the oppressions of others, nor do you get to police how they refer to that oppression. This also often ties into #8. Donât do it. Anti-Semitism has exclusively meant anti-Jewish bigotry for a good century plus now. Coin your own word for anti-Palestinian oppression, or just call it what it is: racism mixed with Islamophobia.
Donât blow off Jews telling you that what youâre saying is anti-Semitic with some variant of the statement at the top of this post. Not all anti-Israel speech is anti-Semitic (a lot of it is valid, much-deserved criticism), but some certainly is. Actually give the accusation your consideration and hear the accuser out. If they fail to convince you, thatâs fine. But at least hear them out (without talking over them) before you decide that.
Iâm sure this isnât a comprehensive list, but it covers all the hard-and-fast rules I can think of. (I welcome input for improving it.)
But wait! Why should I care about any of this? Iâm standing up for people who are suffering!
You should care because nonsense like the above makes Jews sympathetic to the Palestinian plight wary and afraid of joining your cause. You should care because, unfortunately, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has correlated to an uptick in anti-Semitic attacks around the world, attacks on Jews who have no say in Israeli politics, and this kind of behavior merely aggravates that, whether you intend it to or not.Â
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a real minefield in that itâs a clash between oppressed people of color and an ethnoreligious group that is dominant in Israel but marginalized and brutalized elsewhere (often nowadays on the exact grounds that they share ethnoreligious ties with the people of Israel), so itâs damned hard to toe the line of being socially aware and sensitive to both groups. I get that. But I think it is possible to toe that line, and I hope this post helps with that. (And if a Palestinian makes a similar list of problematic arguments they hear targeted at them, Iâd be happy to reblog it, too.)
So, TL;DR version:
Do go ahead and criticize Israel.
Donât use anti-Semitic stereotypes or tropes.
Donât use overly expansive language that covers Jews as a whole and not just Israel.
Donât use lies to boost your claims.
Do engage Jews in conversation on the issues of Israel and of anti-Semitism, rather than simply shutting them down for disagreeing.
Do try to be sensitive to the fact that, fair or not, many people take verbal or violent revenge for the actions of Israelis on Diasporan Jews, and Diasporan Jews are understandably frightened and upset by this.
May there be peace in our days.
20 she/her/hers. Interested in Disney, Taylor Swift, County Music, TLC Shows, Politics, Sustainability, Gardening, Floral Arrangements, Baking, Piano, and Figure Skating.
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