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Bad art arena

@justacringeartist

gayify the straights
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Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Undertale (Video Game), SCP Foundation Rating: General Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Characters: Sans (Undertale), Sans Ensemble (Undertale) Additional Tags: Error Sans (Undertale) - Freeform, Error Underswap Sans | Blueberror (Undertale), Alternate Universe - SCP Foundation, Underswap Sans (Undertale) Summary:

Inspired by emeraldonion’s undertale scp au ——————– Description: Scp-1109 is an anomalous marionette puppet comprised of a material similar to wood and measures at 1.524m (5ft). It is a black skeleton with four stars, it’s eyes and nose are royal blue with yellow and purple irises, and the mouth is a light blue color. All of its facial features are poorly painted on. It wears a red bandana with a black shirt with teal sleeves and black shoulder pads. The pants are black with two yellow stripes with red boots with two thin black lines on each boot. The arms are cyan fading into purple with black gloves. There is five red strings on the marionette, one on each of it’s wrists and ankles and one on its neck.

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bitzy-bop

how I be staring at my mutuals/followers after developing brainrot for a sentient chess piece within the past 12 hours

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If I had a nickel for every time the autistic community decided that a piece of silly colorful media was now ours, and no one could pry it from our cold dead hands.. I have like what, 4 nickels at this point.. Which is not a lot but really weird it's happened FOUR TIMES!!

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Filming people without their consent is a massive issue of not only privacy but ableism that's been going on for many years.

It started out with filming more visibly disabled people, like high support needs autistic people having meltdowns in public and (especially fat) disabled people literally just using mobility aids, but once that was deemed less acceptable it moved to other things. Filming people acting "weird" in public. Eating weird foods. Falling asleep in weird places. Wearing weird things. Stimming. You get the idea. It's no longer safe to be visibly weird in public and that's an issue for a lot of disabled people. I recently had to lay down on the floor of a department store because I had an ME crash while out shopping. Not only did I have to worry about the normal things like people coming up to ask me if I'm ok, I also had to worry about some video of me at my lowest point, when I'm suffering immensely, being shared around as "haha look at this weird bitch on the floor". It's upsetting. It's scary.

And then there's fakeclaiming. A fun trend where people will film us in public to "prove" there's some kind of huge epidemic of people faking disability. Spoiler alert: there is not. Most of the time the people they film are real disabled people who don't fit into the expected mold for disability, usually service dog teams or people who use mobility aids who don't "look sick". And you would think this trend would be some kind of abled nonsense, but it's not. It's often other disabled people doing the fakeclaiming. Yes, there are some times when it's obvious a service dog isn't trained properly, but other than that, it's damn near impossible to tell if someone is faking a disability, and you're much more likely to target a disabled person than a faker. I'd love to say this trend was new, but it's been going on since the days of "the people of walmart" where many of the people posted were fat mobility aid users, always with the assumption that they used it because they were too fat or lazy to move on their own. In fact, the image of a fat person in a mobility cart has become almost synonymous with "lazy". It's one of the things that drove me to get my own expensive power wheelchair, to avoid the judgmental stares in the grocery store when I was just trying to exist, to avoid the fear of public shame. Even now when I stand up from my chair to walk to the bathroom stall or reach something on a high shelf, I watch the corners of my vision for that telltale phone in the air. I feel like I'm never safe from the judgemental eye of the internet, even when I'm logged off, and I'm sure I'm not the only person who feels that way.

Tik Tok, YouTube, Instagram, these places are all great for disabled people, especially those of us without access to the outside world. But it's also become a source of great anxiety for anyone who's uncontrollably "weird", mostly disabled people. Leave us alone, I'm begging you, we just want to go to the fucking grocery store in peace and safety.

Tl;dr

Stop filming people for "acting weird" or "faking a disability" in public. It's ableist, it's invasive, it's creepy, and it's humiliating. People don't exist in public for your amusement and especially not disabled people. You don't know who is disabled and who isn't no matter how many disabled people you've known or how sure you are that the person is faking.

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when I say “autism won today” I’m not saying it like a self absorbed autism speaks mom moaning about how autism has stolen her normal child, I’m saying it like a warrior leader in a hall full of his compatriots the evening after coming out on top of a most fierce enemy, lifting his cup to the heavens and bellowing, with the power of all those who have fallen and the joy of all who have not, that “autism won today.”