#but don’t fuck TERFs
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questionablequeeries · 2 years ago
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Always happy to reblog anti-TERF posts
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questionablequeeries · 1 year ago
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you were SOO right your attempts at writing ARE poor. you're also a horrible person have an awful day!
I had a pretty good day, and all of the kudos and sweet comments on my ao3 as well as the reblogs and hearts on tumblr say otherwise. Stay mad, TERF. :)
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yourlocalbadgerscales · 8 days ago
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Trans rights you fuckers. Y’all know who you are.
Just clogging your tags before you can clog the toilets with all your shit. No need to thank me, terfs <3
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questionablequeeries · 2 years ago
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:)
rb to explode a terf ^_^ nonrefundable ^_^
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 1 year ago
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Terfs really pull the “you’re not a real scientist if you don’t agree with me exactly” card at the drop of a hat huh
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walnutsupreme · 1 year ago
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btw since there’s like triple the amt of u there was before i’m gonna do a little housekeeping and say this very loudly: u have to be as transgender as possible and you have to do it as incorrectly as possible all the time.
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cormancatacombs · 2 months ago
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questionablequeeries · 1 year ago
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thebestusernamepossible · 5 months ago
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Aw fuck, guys I get that it sucks Neil Gailman is accused of SA. But it’s not about him, it’s about the SA survivors. If you are withholding judgment or waiting for more evidence, or for more to come out, then ok fine. But it is NOT ok what so ever to ethier act like the SA survivors are ‘ruining your fandom’ or ‘probably liars for terfs’ (actual thing I’ve seen). Can you fucking imagine how horrible it would be to bravely come out like this against your abuser (who has adoring fans, and if more powerful than you), only to be met with people etheir theorising you may be a transphobic plant or making it about them and how your trauma inconveniences them. This is about THEM, stop making about how much this hurts you. These are real people. If the allegations turn out to be false, ok, THEN you can say whatever you want. But until then let’s treat this with grace and NOT fucking victim blame them. Our hearts need to be with the survivors of SA at the moment, remember that, these are real people.
Also, again, stop making it more about fandom than the SA survivors. Please.
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clowningcrows · 2 months ago
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lol just saw a lesbian nsft blog that has “men dni” on every single post and yet their pinned post says, “this doesnt include trans men, since that isn’t clear for some reason” like hello????
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no-song-so-sweet · 6 months ago
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I want to talk about Harry Potter.
Well. Sort of. I want to talk about Harry Potter in a roundabout way, in that, I want to talk about the reaction my friend group had when shit started really going down with That Bitch Rowling.
Because Rowling is a horrible person. She’s a TERF, a denier of Nazi Crimes, homophobic, anti-Semitic, the list goes on and on (and most recently, has been attacking a trans soccer manager, if my dash is to be believed? Somehow, she just seems more cartoonishly evil with each passing day). But this isn’t about That Bitch Rowling, not really. Or if it is, she’s merely a footnote in the story.
Harry Potter was, and I think this is true for many of us, a large part of my childhood. While the writing may be mediocre at best, it was wildly influential. I didn’t know a single kid that wasn’t hoping for a letter to Hogwarts. It was a Big Deal for a lot of people, and that included my friend group. My friend group, which is made up of members of the LGBTQ+ community. My friend group, which includes a young lady who we didn’t always know was a lady. I’m sure you can see where this might be going.
The day I got a tear filled phone call about That Bitch Rowling was, frankly, heartbreaking. She was mad because a woman she had respected up until now didn’t respect her. She wanted to get rid of her copies of the books, but didn’t want to donate them. I never want to hear her cry like that again. So I made a decision.
I told her to hold onto her books for just a little while longer. I phoned the group. I figured out when everyone could get together for a weekend, and when I had hammered out dates, I packed up my car, and drove the six hundred miles back to my childhood home.
In the passenger’s seat, was my set of Harry Potter books.
Excluding my trans friend, there were seven of us. I had made a plan, and my father had the space to enact it - I grew up on acres of land; complete with 200 year old oak tree, creek in the woods in the backyard, and a massive fire pit.
Nostalgia and youth, I find, paint everything with a rose tinted hue; if Rowling had just kept her mouth shut, I’m sure many of us would have looked back on the Harry Potter series with some amount of shame. But I don’t think it would have suffered the sort of fall from grace that led us to this point.
The fire pit is important for several reasons. For example, it had been the popular gathering place for my friend group of literal decades at this point. Small towns mean that you know everyone from a very early age. We lived right beside the woods, so we used the fire pit to burn the leaves, and the branches storms took down, of which there were many. And when the first six of my friends rolled down the half mile driveway that day, I had already collect enough wood to get a decent fire going.
Six of my friends. We told the seventh a later time. We wanted to be prepared, and anyway, we all had the same cargo (six sets of seven books joined mine on a rickety folding table). I put them to work collecting more firewood (is it really a good bonfire if you’re not risking setting the barn on fire?).
By the time our last member rolled up, I had a fire going.
She had her set of those damn books too.
(There is a visceral grief that comes from being let down by your childhood heroes, and I fully believe that That Bitch Rowling embodies the phrase “never meet your heroes,” because folks, as a general rule, I am not a fan of burning books. But I was prepared to make an exception.)
We burned our copies of the Harry Potter books that day, all eight of us. They were well read, beaten to hell and back, with cracked spines, and dents in corners, and pieces of the pages missing where we had bent down the corners one too many times. And I won’t lie to anyone. We cried. Tears of sorrow and rage, for the piece of our childhood that we were choosing to give up, because to keep it would be to disrespect the woman we had known and loved for longer than we’d ever had those books.
Letting go sucked. But it was the right thing to do.
When they were gone, we put out the fire, went inside, and built the pillow fort of our dreams. We marathoned Star Wars, and ordered too many pizzas, and had way too much soda. We fell asleep playing Risk, because that’s what our friend choose, and in the morning, I made waffles with chocolate chips and too much maple syrup.
I wanted to talk about this, not just because this is a fond memory for me (even though it is), but because one of my coworkers confessed to me that they hated Rowling, and everything she stood for, and they refused to have anything else to do with the Harry Potter franchise, but they just couldn’t bring themselves to get rid of the books.
I said I was happy to host another book burning.
But I wanted to write this down because I know that sometimes it’s hard to take that final step, to leave behind that last thing. So for anyone who needs to hear it, it’s okay to grieve the things we loose when we grow up. Letting go can be hard, but I promise you’ll end up better off. It’s been awhile since things really went downhill, but I maintain that, in this case, death of the author is nonexistent, and it is better to have loved and then lost, than to hold on too tight.
Don’t hurt yourself on the shattered remains of your childhood magic.
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questionablequeeries · 2 years ago
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You will never be a woman.
I’m literally a cis woman, so that’s a plot twist.
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what-shitfuckery-is-this-ew · 7 months ago
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I actually can't with misogynistic bullshit anymore
A YEAR 1 KID? A FUCKING 6/7 YEAR OLD
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image id: One primary school teacher described how several students in her Year 1 class have been making "sex sounds" to herself, a co-teacher and other students
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questionablequeeries · 1 year ago
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This is why TERFs should never be allowed to feel secure.
This site has been going around Twitter trans accounts quite a bit lately, so just pointing out here too that it'll do fuck all, they're exploiting trans people at a time when hrt is particularly hard to access and please don't give them your money
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shego1142 · 4 months ago
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At this point and up until the elections are over and the results are announced
I think that we should just call a spade a spade.
Anyone and everyone who is neigh-saying Kamala?
They're a Trump supporter.
Anyone and everyone who is a centrist, a "let's see both sides of things right now" type of person?
Trump supporter.
Anyone calling for people to "vote third party" right now?
Trump supporters.
Anyone calling for people to "just not vote" ?
Those are Trump supporters.
Because there are two really hard to swallow facts you need to hear:
#1.) This is, without a doubt, going to be the most important and instrumental election in American history.
#2.) Like it or not, the American Political System is a two party race. It wasn't supposed to be, sure.
But for right now it is. There's no ifs and or buts about it. The system is set up so that a third party candidate cannot win.
Every single vote that isn't counted for Kamala is a vote for Trump.
I don't care how leftist, or how progressive you think you are, if you're not willing to vote for Kamala then you're a Trump supporter.
If you are not loudly rallying behind and supporting Kamala, who is very likely our one and only chance of hope and progress, then you should either be quiet about it or else you are a Trump supporter.
If you're not willing to be an active participant in our society with how it works right now, then sit down and shut up and don't complain about anything.
If you think that they’re both equally bad then you must be privileged enough to feel safe in Trump’s America.
It’s a privilege for you to even consider voting third party or to consider throwing your vote away and not using it. It’s entitlement.
You feel safe saying that they’re the same.
But for us poor people, us queer and trans people, us disabled people, and for people of colour, for Palestinians and Ukrainians, and so so many more people, Trump’s America would not be safe.
Kamala could be our only chance at preserving our democracy and if you're not supporting her just for the sake of your own selfish performative white knighting about your "morals" trying to make yourself look good?
Then the only person you're benefiting is Trump.
So you're a Trump supporter.
If being called that doesn't feel good to you then maybe analyse why that is.
If being called a Trump supporter makes you upset, stop doing things that support him.
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essskel · 1 year ago
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fandom sexism is real cause if the lodge of sorceresses were men we��d be swimming in content of them in the way that the various witcher schools are. we NEED to be freaks about these despicable and overpowered women who cannot even do one thing right. hold my hand ….
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