Hi! It;s me, with sme arts! I know it’s been a while, but here I am! I was inspired to draw someone in a dress, so here’s this random character I drew!
Continually filling your mutual's dash with your blorbo like some sort of missionary trying to convert them
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Drawing my girl all dressed up for her birthday :)
Trust me, I'm a genius.
-Artemis Fowl, The Eternity Code
I’ve been rereading the eternity code for my fic too and... HE SAID THE THING!
Iconic.
#realatable
not me starting another fic for a completely different fandom and gaining insane useless paranoia that I'll forget about my main fic even though I know I won't but I'm still scared that I'll abandon it.
wake up new animatic just dropped :3
link to the fic
(for the wonderful, amazing, brilliant @hakureiryuu! surprise!!)
I am here to thank @the-fives-advocate for giving me more art from the one and only!
I'm workin on a thing for @the-fives-advocate owo
After watching 15 seconds of police body camera footage last week, viewers of various races and political affiliations had made a decision: 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant was “the aggressor” — the “fat,” “huge,” “knife-wielding attacker” and “maniac” who deserved to be fatally shot by the police on April 20 in Columbus, Ohio.
According to these viewers, Nicholas Reardon, the police officer who immediately shot and killed Bryant, who was holding a knife, was justified. That she was a teenager in the middle of an altercation, in which she was presumed to be defending herself, did not matter.
Treva Lindsey, a professor of African American women’s history at Ohio State University, told Vox that there are those who won’t see Bryant as a victim but as someone who brought this on herself. And even for those who do see her as a victim, they’ll still victim-blame, erasing the systemic oppression — including that Black children are far more likely to be in foster care than their white counterparts, and kids in foster care are often exposed to high levels of violence — that brought her to being killed at the hands of the police.
“People will say ‘I’m really sad this whole scenario happened, but had she not had that knife …’ That becomes the ‘but,’ the qualifier, the caveat. And too often we have a caveat when it comes to defending, protecting, and caring for Black girls,” Lindsey said.
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Here have a Holly while I’m at it.
My pronouns are she/her and this blog is for whatever I feel like :) Currently Trials of Apollo lives rent free in my head.
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