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The Cypric Intellectual

@guiltyidealist / guiltyidealist.tumblr.com

Elliott, 20s, they/them
Read my "About" if you decide to follow me? :>c
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Follow rule: 18+ only please

Self-explanatory: I no longer consent to minors following this blog.

Nothing about my blog is changing--

  • it is not an "18+ blog"
  • I do not post kink/horny/porn
  • I reblog sex ed posts here n' there
  • nsfw themes, imagery, & jokes appear (amount may increase from now on)

Only my boundaries are changing.

It's just that I wanna feel less restricted with what I post. It's my main

⛔️ As such, I do not permit minors to follow anymore-- too close.

⚠️ Minors simply interacting is fine!

This rule is new-- if you're a follower who's a minor, go ahead and unfollow for now (come back when you're 18!)

Please and thank you ^^

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girlballs

they should invent uhh. like. vaping but for cock. its so dark in here

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slygirlboy

two guards with halberds walk in and give you a single piece of jerky as a reward for the joke. my experiment to create the perfect jester will continue

water. please

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who’s left- Mariame/Prison Abolition

by Flynn Nicholls

[image description: a comic titled “Who’s Left: Prison Abolition.” It opens with a black woman wearing glasses, beaded earrings and a headscarf. She says, “I’m Mariame Kaba, director of Project NIA and prison abolitionist.” Someone off screen asks, “is prison abolition a hard thing to explain to people?” Mariame says, “I get the same questions. ‘What about bad people? What about rapists?’ I don’t answer those questions anymore.”

Next panel is of an ominous city skyline, split diagonally into a street scene where a white businessman is looking terrified among people of color moving about their lives. Text reads: “These are posed as questions about safety but are mostly based in fear of the other. Safety for whom? And from what?” Next panel says, “It doesn’t make sense to answer because there are bad people who have not been incarcerated.” There’s a closeup of a corner of a newspaper, showing a smiling man with the text: “dog murderer net worth $1.5 million, cleared on all charges.”

Next panel shows blue silhouettes of police and cameras and Mariame’s text says, “I’d rather talk about having justice without police or surveillance.” Next panel shows Mariame being asked, “Why abolition? Why not reform?” and she replies, “The prison system is harmful!” Her words appear over stylized prison bars: “there is rampant violence, rape and deaths in custody.” On a panel of a whip with an arrow pointing to a prison, she says, “the prison itself was a reform of corporal punishment.” Next panel shows a couple Quakers looking anxious outside a prison and says, “When prisons first came into use in the late 1700s, Quakers pushed for reform. Why continue centuries of rounds of unsuccessful reforms?”

Next panel says: “So we have to create the conditions that decrease the demand for police and surveillance. You need jobs, healthcare, housing, people need to be able to live their lives.” Beneath that, three cranes with heavy chains are lowering a hospital and a home, and lifting away a prison with cracked walls as someone watches. “You need to create structures to address harm and hold people accountable. People think abolitionists minimize harm but we take it very seriously.” Beneath that, eight people are drawn, four sitting atop the others’s shoulders and holding hands above their heads to form a bridge. Underneath that it says, “Safety is a collective action.”

Next panel says: “A lot of people think abolitionists want to close prisons tomorrow when we didn’t get there yesterday. Ruthie Gilmore says, ‘Abolition is about presence, not absence. It’s about building life-affirming institutions.’” On the left side of this panel, there’s a person trying to flip a switch on the side of a prison. The switch is labeled “Prison industrial complex” and is flipped to “on.” On the other side is a drawing of Ruth Gilmore. Next panel is a white spiderweb on a black background with a pink prison in the center, and text around the web reads: “The prison system sits at the intersection of multiple forms of oppression and facets of society, and when you map it out, we’re all in that web.”

Next panel shows Mariame smiling and holding a clipboard, saying, “I am the director of Project NIA, an organization focused on ending youth incarceration. I also work with Survived + Punished, a project dedicated to the release of survivors of domestic + gendered violence imprisoned for survival actions. Survived and Punished’s Free Bresha campaign successfully managed to keep Bresha Meadows in the juvenile system rather than being tried and sentenced as an adult, and transferred to a mental health facility before finally being released, avoiding a 25 to life sentence.” Beside that is Bresha Meadows, a teenager with a somber expression. A caption in front of her reads: “Bresha Meadows was arrested at 14 for fatally shooting her abusive father in self-defense.”

Next panel shows a complex web of prison walls, topped with barbed wire, separating individuals from each other. The text reads: “Some people ask how feasible abolition is. Security is about putting up gates and walls and weapons between you and other people. How feasible is it to continue a violent system? For people to live in fear?” Next panel zooms in on one of the people within the web, and reads: “The prison system is a recent development and not as permanent as people think.” The wall in front of the person is knocked down by a person behind it, revealed to be a cardboard cut-out. 

The next panel shows similar cranes as before lifting all the cardboard prison walls, and reads: “I don’t know what a world without prisons will look like.” The last panel shows a line of people of different body types, abilities and ethnicities, most looking upward at text that reads: “But it will fundamentally transform our relationship with other people.”]

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toastyglow

'kids these days are weirdly scrupulous for no reason'. WRONG not for no reason. grew up on increasingly de-anonymized internet, being available to everyone all the time, data tracked, google sees all, digital panopticon, etc. less and less space to explore and form own opinions without judgment from broad public audience. lack of privacy can be deeply traumatic and cause intense paranoia, obsession with thought crimes, morality, etc. not good.

Yeah, and they're entering a job market where employers will do thorough checks of your online presence and, like, when I finished school/undergrad, 5-10 years ago, the advice from hiring managers was, like, "don't have photos of yourself passed out in a gutter on a night out on your public instagram*", but now I'm hearing things like "don't have pictures of yourself in bloody make-up on Halloween" like you're expected to run every ounce of your online presence (which is increasingly a major part of your social presence) like it's your LinkedIn profile

*To stress, I also don't think employers should be holding anything on social media against you, but, like, not posting photos from after a night out got out of hand is a much smaller ask than never posting a photo of myself with a drink in hand or out of professional attire

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What makes us human is the Nintendo 3DS

bat-demon

DONT FORGET TO DOWNLOAD ANY GAMES ON THEIR THEY WILL SHUT DOWN THE ESHOP MARCH 27TH AND YOU CAN NO LONGER ACCESS THEM AFTER THAT

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warmcoals

dont actually panic u can do a super easy no prerequisites hack to any 3ds at any time and then use free software to get any 3ds game or otherwise download-only content ever! so you dont need to worry abt losing out, actually the future is more open than ever before!! 3ds make us human!!!!!

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nitw

DON'T LET YOUR MEMES BE DREAMS!! MAGIC IS REAL HAPPINESS IS ATTAINABLE

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Look. At. What. You. Guys. Did.

With the help of the funds you guys raised through the last post, Mona and some volunteers were able to cook and distribute so many chicken and rice meals that fed entire families!!!!! This is amazing!!! Please remember to donate, you are changing and helping maintain so many lives. EVERY DOLLAR COUNTS. P*ypal.

Don't forget! None of this is possible without Mona's hard work! If you'd like to send her a kind message please respond in the replies or the tags or reblogs! She was very happy to recieve kind messages from you guys under the last post as well!