#lindsay sawyer
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dudiinx · 1 year ago
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Heathers AU
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zuureleena · 2 years ago
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total drama x heathers au 💙💛❤💚
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jasvvy · 10 months ago
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magicmadnessx · 2 years ago
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A woman can never compete with a gun and a shield, it was something she'd heard her mother say often. Lindsay's father had been a dedicated cop, but he'd sacrificed being a dedicated husband and father to do it. To him the uniform mattered more, and her brother had taken that to heart when he'd gone through the academy. She knew the life, sometimes she even understood it, and she certainly kept any law enforcement she worked with at arms length because of it. Even the ones she seemed to be working with almost infuriatingly often.
"You shouldn't be here." She'd glanced up from her phone as she exited the courthouse, and immediately noticed him standing outside. Regarding him for a few seconds, she went back to scanning through the notifications she'd missed while she'd been at trial. It seemed several happened to be calls from Sawyer. "If this is about a case, I'll give you the courtesy since you came all the way down here. But you're going to have to walk and talk, I'm running late for something. Next time try calling my assistant."
Closed for @blndsided
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troperjovialjam · 10 months ago
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In light of recent events, let’s not forget that H. Bomberguy is responsible for driving a formerly-beloved transphobic TV writer into a downward spiral that cost him his career and his family… all by playing Donkey Kong.
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pupsmailbox · 7 months ago
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NEUTRAL LEANING MASC NAMES ⌇ abner.  abram.  adam.  adrian.  alex.  alistair.  andreas.  ariel.  arlen.  arley.  arlo.  ash.  atlas.  auden.  august.  austin.  avery.  bailey.  baron.  barrett.  baylor.  beauden.  bee.  bellamy.  bennett.  blair.  blaise.  bowen.  brayden.  brendan.  bronson.  bryce.  byron.  caius.  caleb.  callahan.  callan.  calloway.  callum.  camden.  cameron.  carlin.  carson.  casey.  cassian.  chandler.  chase.  cody.  cole.  connolly.  corban.  corwin.  cyrus.  dallas.  damion.  damon.  daniel.  darius.  davis.  dawson.  daylon.  denver.  desmond.  devin.  doran.  dorian.  drew.  elian.  elias.  ellery.  ellison.  emery.  ethan.  evan.  ezra.  fallen.  farren.  finley.  ford.  foster.  gabriel.  gannon.  garner.  gavin.  gentry.  graham.  greer.  griffin.  guthrie.  harley.  harlow.  hartley.  hayden.  henley.  henry.  heron.  hollis.  hunter.  ian.  irving.  isaiah.  jace.  james.  jameson.  jared.  jeremiah.  joel.  jonah.  joran.  jordan.  jory.  josiah.  jovian.  jude.  julian.  juno.  justus.  kalen.  kamden.  kay.  kayden.  keaton.  kellan.  keller.  kelly.  kendon.  kieran.  kit.  kylan.  landry.  lane.  lennon.  leslie.  levi.  leyton.  liam.  linden.  lowell.  luca.  madden.  marley.  marlow.  marshall.  martin.  mason.  mathias.  mercer.  merritt.  micah.  miles.  miller.  milo.  morgan.  morrie.  morrison.  nate.  nevin.  nick.  nicky.  nico.  nicolas.  noah.  noel.  nolan.  oren.  orion.  owen.  parker.  percy.  perrin.  peyton.  pierce.  porter.  preston.  quincy.  quinn.  reece.  reid.  reign.  rein.  remi.  remington.  renley.  riley.  river.  robin.  rollins.  ronan.  rory.  rowan.  russell.  ryan.  rylan.  sam.  samuel.  sawyer.  saylor.  seth.  shiloh.  soren.  spencer.  stellan.  sterling.  talon.  taylor.  thaddeus.  thane.  theo.  toni.  tracy.  tristan.  tyrus.  valor.  warner.  wells.  wesley.  whitten.  william.  willis.  wylie. 
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NEUTRAL LEANING FEM NAMES ⌇ abigaël.  abilene.  addison.  adrian.  ainsley.  alexis.  and.  andrea.  arden.  aria.  ashley.  aspen.  aubrey.  autumn.  avery.  avian.  ayla.  bailey.  beryl.  blair.  blaire.  blake.  briar.  brooklyn.  brooks.  bryce.  cameron.  camille.  casey.  celeste.  channing.  charlie.  chase.  collins.  cordelia.  courtney.  daisy.  dakota.  dana.  darby.  darcy.  delaney.  delilah.  devin.  dylan.  eden.  eisley.  elia.  ellerie.  ellery.  ellie.  elliot.  elliott.  ellis.  ellory.  ember.  emelin.  emerson.  emery.  evelyn.  ezra.  fallon.  finley.  fiore.  florence.  floris.  frances.  greer.  gwenaël.  hadley.  harley.  harper.  haven.  hayden.  heike.  hollis.  hunter.  ivy.  jade.  jamie.  jocelyn.  jordan.  jude.  juno.  kelly.  kelsey.  kendall.  kennedy.  koda.  kyrie.  lacey.  lane.  leighton.  lennon.  lennox.  lesley.  leslie.  lilian.  lindsay.  loden.  logan.  lou.  lyric.  madison.  mallory.  marinell.  marley.  mckenzie.  melody.  mercede.  meredith.  mio.  misha.  monroe.  montana.  morgan.  nico.  nova.  oakley.  olympia.  owen.  page.  palmer.  parker.  pat.  paulie.  perri.  petyon.  peyton.  phoenix.  piper.  priscilla.  quinn.  raven.  ray.  reagan.  reece.  reese.  remi.  remy.  riley.  rio.  river.  robin.  rory.  rosario.  rowan.  ryan.  rylie.  sacha.  sage.  sam.  sammy.  santana.  sasha.  sawyer.  saylor.  severin.  shannon.  shelby.  shiloh.  skye.  skylar.  sloane.  sol.  soleil.  sterling.  stevie.  sutton.  swan.  swann.  sydney.  tatum.  taylo.  taylor.  tracey.  valentine.  vanya.  vivendel.  vivian.  vivien.  wren.  wynn.  yael.
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starfallpod · 2 months ago
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“I take it things didn’t go quite according to plan at Miss Leona’s first cast party?”
Starfall: Act 1, Scene xiii is now live! Go find it on your favorite podcatcher 😁
Cheers to the absolutely fantastic Trace Callahan for their quintet of compositions in this episode, including our shiny new intro and outro songs!
And shoutout to our absolute powerhouse of a cast who came together to make this episode possible!
That full cast can be found right here (under the cut, because, hoo boy is it a long list!)
Ishani Kanetkar as Leona
Sam B. Nguyen as Fel
Cole Burkhardt as Dalyn
Malcolm Jay as Aksol
Maxime Hendrikse Liu as Elsibel
Lindsay Zana as Rhea
D.J. Sylvis as Glenn
Juniper White as Mint
Rook Mogavero as Thyme
A.C. Letim as Ravey
Shade Oyemakinwa as Koua
Cass McPhee as Basil
Grayson Teals as Aster
Swann Grey as Ginger
Liz Morey as Dots
Toby Harvey as Colden
Algie Todd as Lumen
Sean Siegler as Macalus
Cam Clark as Velette
Tal Minear as Kio
Elissa Park as Jyrsa
Sawyer Greene as Vair
Ally Amador as Centhy
Brandon Nguyen as Hosse
Emma Laslett as Raybar
Ashley Margaret as the Narrator
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livelovecaliforniadreams · 1 year ago
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Alright, cliffhanger. Who's Lucas gonna pick? Lindsay making the phone call. Here's my analysis. Lindsay called him when she knew that he had a game. She's admitting that she lied to him, that she was seeing someone, she is admitting that she does have feelings for him and has just put him in this purgatory for no good reason. And so I think that he definitely should not pick her because she's been kind of toxic. That's my take. Yeah. -Hilarie
Does that have anything to do with how, how you might feel for Peyton Sawyer? -Sophia
All I'm saying is Peyton has made it very clear, that of the three girls, she's the only one who actually wants him. -Hilarie
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mushroom-weeb · 1 year ago
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Awwww
𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐢𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐡𝐨𝐫𝐫𝐨𝐫 𝐬𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐟𝐚𝐧𝐝𝐨𝐦 😂☠️🗡️
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lunarw0rks · 1 year ago
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which one of the boys do you think would be the type to listen in on their daughters phone calls—but by accident (and definitely shares what he overheard to you while getting ready for bed)?
swinging by her room to drop off her laundry and now he suddenly knows who lindsay from science class is crushing on, how the breakfast sandwich your daughter had from starbucks was still cold in the middle, whos cheating on who, and how much amanda sawyer’s (mean girl) diamond necklace really costs—and it’s not 3k like she said, her grandma got for it from macy’s.
price tbh,,,
he's down for the girl gossip !! completely butchers the slang and what the hell is going on though.
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v4vandana · 3 months ago
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GOOD GIRL GONE BAD ZODIAC SIGN=Cancer, Scorpio & Pisces ♋️♏️♓️🦀🦂🐟🌊
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Evan Rachel Wood, Pisces Moon as Tracy Freeland
Side Note:Tracy got involved in social misbehaviour due to the influence of Evie(Nikki Reed, Gemini Moon)
Have you ever wonder what zodiac sign causes an innocent girl go from playing with barbie dolls and being righteous to causing chaos and using substance? Well it’s the air signs influence who turn the innocent water signs to do chaotic stuff or water signs naturally just become absorbed in the sensorial pleasure they forget about everything and aren’t self aware.
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Lindsay Lohan, Cancer ASC as Cady Heron
Side Note:Regina George was played by Rachel McAdams(Gemini Moon)
As you may know water is governs the sacral chakra, the chakra of sensorial pleasure. Those who overly dwell in the sacral chakra can become overly stimulated in their senses and be completely unaware of how their actions affect others. In addition, overly emotional, and you might become too attached to people and depend on them for your happiness + no sense of boundary which can get you prone to addictions. Water is a easily polluted element and can be very sensitive and fixated on purity.
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Kaya Scodelario, Pisces Sun & Cancer Moon as Effy Stonem
If you want to think of someone with an overactive sacral chakra, you can think of Effy Stonem
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Sydney Sweeney, Scorpio ASC as Cassie Howards
Side Note: Maddy Perez was played by Libra Moon Alexa Demie
Tangent back to the good girl going bad trope. I think one perfect example would be Cassie from Euphoria. In season 2 she sleeps with her friends ex boyfriend behind her back due to her overactive sacral chakra.
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Brittany Murphy, Scorpio Sun&Moon as Tai
Side note: Although Cher(Alicia Silverstone, Libra Sun) isn’t a bad influence its interesting to note that Water Signs are always friends with Air signs
Also another thing, i see that sometimes a love interest also disrupts them and turns them bad. You saw that with Cassie, Cady and now Tai and many more examples to come
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Winona Ryder, Scorpio Sun&Pisces Moon as Veronica Sawyer
Lol again !! Christian Slater has Libra Moon. Air Signs and Water Signs find each other everywhere
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Olivia Newton John, Cancer Moon as Sandy Olsson
Btw the mean girl in the movie Betty, the actress had Aquarius Sun and Libra Moon AND the love interest has Aquarius Sun. Water sign changing because of an Air sign
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Lili Reinhart, Scorpio ASC as Betty Cooper
I have so much more i want to add but 10 is the limit so i am typing down 2 more
1.Lola Tung, Scorpio Sun and Cancer Moon as Belly in The Summer I Turned Pretty
Both her love interest had Air sign moons(Gemini&Aquarius)
2.Lana Condor, Cancer Moon as Lara Jean in To All The Boys I’ve Loved
her love interest was a Aquarius Moon
Sidenote: love triangle tropes is seen in Fire Signs
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Brittany Murphy, Scorpio Sun&Moon
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Eminem, Libra Sun & Aquarius Moon
Eminem must have a thing for water+fire sign woman (Rihanna,Pisces Sun & Mariah Carey,Cancer Moon too)
AIR AND WATER SIGNS FIND EACH OTHER EVERYWHERE
Anyways thank you for taking the time and reading. I tried my best to explain. I am good at patterns but have a difficult time writing. Thank you for reading💞💗.
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jasvvy · 10 months ago
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magicmadnessx · 2 years ago
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@blndsided
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requested by @sunshine-seb
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By: Neil Shenvi and Pat Sawyer
Published: Feb 13, 2024
On October 7th, 2023, most Americans watched in horror as Israel experienced the deadliest terrorist attacks in its history. In the days and weeks that followed, some of that horror mingled with confusion.
For example, on Oct. 8th—before an Israeli counteroffensive was launched—BLM Grassroots issued a “Statement in Solidarity with the Palestinian People,” writing that they “stand unwaveringly on the side of the oppressed” and “see clear parallels between Black and Palestinian people.” Two days later, BLM Chicago posted a graphic featuring a paraglider with a Palestinian flag and the text “I stand with Palestine” (terrorists had used paraglides to attack a Music festival on Oct. 7th, killing over three hundred civilians). Even more bizarre posts began turning up on social media. The Slow Factory, a progressive group with over 600k followers on Instagram, posted a graphic stating “Free Palestine is a Feminist issue. It’s a reproductive rights issue. It’s an Indigenous Rights issue. It’s a Climate Justice issue, it’s a Queer Rights issue, it’s an Abolitionist Issue.” The group “Queers for Palestine” began showing up with signs at various demonstrations. A banner hanging from a building at the University of British Columbia announced, “Trans liberation cannot happen without Palestinian Liberation.”
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What explains these signs and sentiments, which seem to be springing up organically around the country and other parts of the world? How is the Hamas-Israel war connected to climate change? Why is it a feminist issue? Why are “queers” standing in solidarity with Palestine when Israel’s government is far more permissive than Palestine’s (for example, same-sex activity is criminalized in Gaza)? What has inspired an outpouring of egregious and unconscionable antisemitic rhetoric and behavior in various cities and on a number of college campuses?
The answer is, in a word, intersectionality. In this article, we’ll explain the intersectional framework that undergirds these phenomena and will then offer a brief reflection on how it can be resisted.
* * *
Intersectionality was a term coined by critical race theorist Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989. She used it to describe the discrimination faced by Black women, whose social location (that is, their relationship to power within U.S. society) was predicated on both their race and their sex simultaneously. In other words, a Black woman’s experience cannot be reduced to merely the sum of her race and sex experiences. Instead, she occupies a unique (and uniquely marginalized) category that is shaped by both her Blackness and femininity.
Although Crenshaw’s first examples focused on race and gender, intersectionality was rapidly applied to other categories like sexuality, class, and disability, just as Crenshaw intended. Indeed, precursors to Crenshaw’s conception of intersectionality can be found in other Black feminist writings. For example, the Combahee River Collective Statement insisted in 1977 that it is “difficult to separate race from class from sex oppression because... they are most often experienced simultaneously” and feminist Beverly Lindsay argued in 1979 that sexism, racism, and classism exposed poor Black women to “triple jeopardy” (see Collins and Bilge, Intersectionality, p. 76).
So in what ways does intersectionality shape progressive views on the Israel-Hamas War?
First, through its embrace of the social binary; second, through its implicit adoption of the category of “whiteness,” and finally through its commitment to solidarity in liberation.
The Social Binary
While the concept of intersectionality can be understood narrowly to refer to the trivial claim that our identities are complex and multifaceted, Crenshaw intended a far more robust understanding rooted in a prominent feature of critical social theory, what we call the “social binary.” The social binary refers to the belief that society is divided into oppressed groups and oppressor groups along lines of race, class, gender, sexuality, physical ability, religion, and a host of other identity markers. Crenshaw did not merely believe that Black women (and White men, and Hispanic lesbians) all had different social locations, but that they had differently-valued social locations.
In a 1989 paper, Crenshaw asked the reader to “[imagine] a basement which contains all people who are disadvantaged on the basis of race, sex, class, sexual preference, age and/or physical ability” and who were then literally stacked “feet standing on shoulders with the multiply-disadvantaged at the bottom and the fully privilege at the very top.” This understanding of intersectionality necessarily assumes a hierarchy of oppression and privilege such that people can be ranked in order from most to least oppressed.
Although Crenshaw didn’t discuss “colonial status” in the body of her paper, she did state in a footnote that Third World feminism is inevitably subordinated to the fight against “international domination” and “imperialism.” It is at precisely this point that intersectionality affects progressive understanding of Israel-Palestinian relationships.
Later critical social theorists, and especially postcolonial scholars, believe that colonialism—like white supremacy, the patriarchy, and heterosexism—divides society into oppressed and oppressor groups. Because the Israeli government is positioned as a “colonizing foreign power,” it is therefore necessarily oppressive. Conversely, Palestinians are then necessarily positioned as a colonized, oppressed group. Never mind the spurious assessment of both. Note here that critical theorists make these judgments not on the basis of the actual history of the region (which is complex) or a careful analysis of particular Israeli policies (which are certainly open to debate). Rather, the mere identification of Israel as a “colonial power” is all that is needed to set up a social binary between the Israelis and Palestinians.
The social binary then explains why some progressives make such a quick, simplistic analysis: intersectionality deceptively primes them to see the world in these black-and-white terms.
Whiteness
A second factor that contributes to a reflexive pro-Palestinian perspective by some in the U.S. is the ascendance of critical race theory and an attendant understanding of “whiteness.”
CRT, which was birthed concurrently with intersectionality in the late 1980s, conceptualizes whiteness not as a skin color or even as an ethnicity, but as a social construct that provides tangible and intangible benefits to those raced as “White.” (Notwithstanding that white skin and whiteness are often conflated when it serves the interests of progressives). Whiteness as a social construct signals that “whiteness” is fluid and malleable and need not only include people traditionally understood as White. For example, in his important 2003 book Racism Without Racists, sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva hypothesized that America could develop a “triracial order” consisting of “Whites,” “Honorary Whites,” and “Collective Black.” On Bonilla-Silva’s reading, Whites would include not just Anglo-Saxons, but also “Assimilated white Latinos,” “Some multiracials,” “Assimilated (urban) Native Americans,” and “A few Asian-origin people.” On the other hand, the “Collective Black” category would include “Vietnamese Americans,” “Dark-skinned Latinos,” and “Reservation-bound Native Americans” (see Bonilla-Silva, Racism Without Racists, 228).
Critical race theorists have long wrestled with the place of Jewish people within their racial hierarchy. On the one hand, Americans did not traditionally consider Jews “White” and the U.S. has explicitly discriminated against Jews in the recent past (Jewish admission quotas at Ivy League Schools being one glaring example). On the other hand, many critical race theorists today believe that most Jews have assimilated to whiteness and benefit from “White privilege” and therefore should be classified as White. In her chapter “Whiteness, Intersectionality, and the Contradictions of White Jewish Identity,” Jewish psychologist Jodie Kliman writes that,
As European Jews have slowly ‘become’ white over the last three generations (Brodkin, 1998), we have internalized White supremacy in general and anti-Black prejudice in particular...Immigrant Jews and their descendants assimilated into US society, becoming white, or sort of white...
Unfortunately, to the extent that American Jews are viewed as “White adjacent” while Palestinians are viewed as “Brown,” the former are members of an oppressor group and the latter of an oppressed group. This categorization adds another layer to knee-jerk progressive support for Palestinians.
Liberation
Finally, the glue that binds together pro-Palestinian, pro-LGBTQ, and feminist activists is a shared commitment to mutual liberation. Again, this commitment is not new; it is found in the earliest texts of critical race theory, including those authored by Crenshaw herself. For instance, in the 1993 anthology Words that Wound, she and other co-founders of CRT wrote that a “defining element” of CRT is the commitment to ending all forms of oppression: They write: 
Critical race theory works toward the end of eliminating racial oppression as part of the broader goal of ending all forms of oppression. Racial oppression is experienced by many in tandem with oppressions on grounds of gender, class, or sexual orientation. Critical race theory measures progress by a yardstick that looks to fundamental social transformation. The interests of all people of color necessarily require not just adjustments within the established hierarchies, but a challenge to hierarchy itself (Matusda et al., Words that Wound, 6-7).
This last point is crucial to understanding the automatic solidarity between, say, LGBTQ activists and decolonial activists. One could, in principle, accept that both LGBTQ people and Palestinians are oppressed groups and still conclude that their goals are mutually exclusive. For example, most Palestinians are Muslim and traditional Islam rejects the sexual autonomy demanded by LGBTQ activists. Yet an intersectional framework insists that homophobia, transphobia, Islamophobia, and colonialism are all “interlocking systems of oppression” that can and must be overturned simultaneously—never mind the details.
Lest anyone worry that we’re misinterpreting or overstating the degree to which popular progressive sentiments surrounding this issue are shaped by a fundamental commitment to intersectionality, consider the article “Palestine is a Feminist Issue” from the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. It begins with a quotation from Mariam Barghouti “Fundamentally speaking, feminism cannot support racism, supremacy and oppressive domination in any form” and immediately explains intersectionality in its opening paragraph: 
Intersectional feminism is a framework that holds that women’s overlapping, or intersecting, identities impact the way they experience oppression and discrimination. Intersectionality rejects the idea that a woman’s experience can be reduced to only her gender, and insists that we look at the multiple factors shaping her life: race, class, ethnicity, disability, citizenship status, sexual orientation, and others, as well as how systems of oppression are connected... When we look at the world through an intersectional feminist lens, it becomes clear that Palestine is a feminist issue.
Conclusions
While the reaction of some progressives to the Hamas-Israel war took many people, especially Jewish people, by surprise, it was largely predictable given the powerful influence that intersectionality exerts on our culture. Intersectionality can lead to a grotesque moral calculus that justifies Hamas’ rape of Israeli girls as an understandable response of the oppressed lashing out at their oppressor. It has caused university presidents at our elite institutions to shamefully equivocate and prevaricate when given opportunity to unapologetically condemn antisemitism. Unfortunately, these examples are natural outworkings of the intersectional worldview.
For those who are alarmed by what seems to be growing acceptance of anti-Semitism within some segments of the left, we offer the following action items.
First, we should resist critical theory’s simplistic moral categories of Oppressor vs. Oppressed. To the extent that we see every conflict as a battle between innocent victims and cruel victimizers, we will gloss over the moral complexities of reality.
Second, we need to see people primarily as individuals rather than as avatars of their demographic groups. It’s much easier to dehumanize abstract categories than the nervous old woman across the street or the energetic cashier at the grocery store. Personal connection is an antidote to demonization.
Finally, we need to be realistic about the perniciousness of “woke” ideology, which has been infiltrating our institutions, universities, businesses, and places of worship for decades. Many social movements have waved the banner of progress and justice while slaughtering tens of millions. If we don’t learn from history, we very well may repeat it.
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totalswap-official · 1 year ago
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Creator: @deimosbreakfrost
_______________________________________________
"they're here because they don't wanna be just like YOU!"
-Hey, Hey!!!
Thank You for Chiming in and opening the GODDAMN door!!/unnecessary ref
Anyways, I'm Deimo (sometimes Jimmy might be here too:P) and Welcome to the OFFICIAL TSI BLOG!!!
_______________________________________________
-Quick explanation of what total swap island is:
-Total Swap Island is a Total Drama based fan project. As far I could think, it will be a YouTube series.
-In total Swap island, there will be 24 participants that will get into dangerous perfectly safe Challenges for 1 million dollars!
-In every challenge a team will obviously win and a team will obviously lose. And when a team loses, they ALL will have a encounter in The execution cerimony where they will Eliminate one of their team Mates! (The name is just for exaggeration, they'll just vote off a team mate. Not kill them.)
-After A LOT of eliminations and challenges, all the remaining participants will be merged in just ONE team where it will be One against one.
-There will be 1 or 2 months for one of the participants win.
-It might happen everything in this reality show. People starting dating, exes finding eachother, weird ships, odd friendships, dark truths being discovered, insanity, unnecessary acts of violence, erm, a-and more!
Just right here, right now, on TOTAL SWAP ISLAND!
(The show happens in the 2000's, but in this season it happens 2003)
-If you want to know more about my project, please click in read More.
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-They'll eventually be linked with the post where their bios are on it
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-Hosts.. and pseudo-hosts:
1. Britney Lindermann McGillis (Swap of: Chris and Brainely) 
2. Jason Hodder Myers - (Swap of: Chef and Chris)
3. Saint Jimmy/ Scott Von Benjamin - (original character)
4. Deimo/ Dan Vázquez - (original character)
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Participants and teams;
 -Be Gay Do Crimes:
1. Nipper Mccorp Silva - (Swap of: Ripper and Owen)
2. Alfonso Novacain Weakarm (Swap of: Raj and Lorenzo)
3. Michael Novacain Weakarm - (Swap of: Wayne and Chet)
4. Ashly Lee - (Swap of: Axel and Eva)
5. Zeck/Zacarias Spencer Kennedy - (Swap of: Harold and Sam)
6. Fubuki Shinrai - (Swap of: Duncan and Trent)
7. William Domenic Ross - (Swap of: Dave and Cody)
8. Ronnie Von Benjamin - (Swap of: Trent and Duncan)
9. Ayesha Letícia Lima - (Swap of: Izzy and Scary Girl)
10. Jane Stephen Way - (Swap of: Gwen and Millie)
11. Sarah Doe Miller - (Swap of: Topher and Sierra)
12. James "J.K" Kurt - (Swap of: MK and Ezekiel)
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 •Virtual Disastorlogy:
13. Marilyn Der Versage - (Swap of: Heather and Julia)
14. Gerald Der Versage - (Swap of: Noah and Chase)
15. Bobby Vick Janisse - (Swap of: B and Geoff)
16. Alex Mark Chapmen - (Swap of: Tyler and Bowie)
17. Christian Marquéz Lopez  - (Swap of: Alejandro and Zee)
18. Nathalie Beverly Williams - (Swap of: Emma and Beth)
19. Duke Brobeck Smith - (Swap of: Damien and DJ)
20. Nicky Angellis Torchio - (Swap of: Leshawna and Anne Maria)
21. Damiano Joseph Spears - (Swap of: Justin and Caleb)
22. Helena Gordon Ahlberg - (Swap of: Bridgett and Scarlett)
23. Mia Weaving Ortega - (Swap of: Nichelle and Lindsay)
24. Clarissa Jon Sawyer - (Swap of: Courtney and Priya)
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-Things that'll have in this blog !!
1. Asks to the characters: want to send an ask to your favorite character or a character that called your attention? Send them a ask!! If you want to; just get into the inbox, type "undear *character name*", type what you want to tell them and after a while (unterminable time, actually) they'll answer (even if they're forced to do so.)
2. Posting/Rebloguing art: I mean.. it'll be hard to even gain the 5 minutes of fame that TSI had in the start of this year but whatever happens, we'll try to have a fanbase and Carry it on with it. So, if you want to us to (stalk and hunt you down.) find your art, don't forget to use the #TSI fanart tag so we can reblog it here !! Talking about art, we'll have our own art that will be posted in here! Of course, not all of them will be something to be seem as canon.. just sketching and drawing for fun, y'know? So mostly of them will have the #not canon tag
3. Yes. We do support fandom activities: I mean, we'll not go completely unnoticed during all this time, right? So of course we'll support our fandom (unless they're being problematic, fucked up, retarded or disgusting.) so we'll not mind you giving headcannons, other designs, ships and more cool stuff to them! (Again. UNLESS the headcannons are problematic and the ships are Proships.)
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-Some things that I (creator) want to say:
-TSI is NOT. FOR. KIDS. it'll probably be for people on 14+ or 16+. (Kids will still find it and consume it? Yeah, sure and whatever. It's better them to like TSI than cough cough, be a theri- cough cough)
-Why that? It'll have acid/dark humor (basically the humor that the internet had in the 2000's), mentions of suggestive topics, cursing and mention/use of drugs
-The Series will have A LOT of references to internet culture, horror media and overall rererences to musics/albums/band/artists (especially the 2000's ones)
That's it for now, welcome to the Shitshow
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All of this boys and all of this girls, losing their souls to the material World..
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palmviewfm · 3 months ago
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mw female counterparts?
i'd  love  to  see  the  following  being  used  for  counterparts  !  if  you'd  like  anymore  suggestions,  then  feel  free  to  send  in  another  message  !  counterparts: marissa  cooper,  aria  montgomery,  spencer  hastings,  emily  fields,  alison dilaurentis, maya st germain, mona vanderwaal, prue  halliwell,  paige  matthews,  phoebe  halliwell,  claire  standish,  allison  reynolds,  sloane  peterson,  mia  thermopolis,  sam  montgomery,  lindsay  weir,  paris  geller,  lane  kim,  allie  hamilton,  sabrina  spellman,  angela  chase,  betty  cooper,  cheryl  blossom,  toni  topaz,  josie  mccoy,  torrance  shipman,  missy  pantone,  andie  walsh,  kat  stratford,  joey potter, jen lindley, carrie bradshaw, miranda hobbs, jade  west,  addison  montgomery,  lexie  grey,  arizona  robbins,  mary  jane  watson,  elena  gilbert,  katherine  pierce,  anna stern, cat valentine, brenda walsh, kelly taylor, belly conklin, sarah cameron, kiara carerra, cleo anderson, donna martin, caroline  forbes,  jenna rink, bonnie  bennett,  hayley  marshall,  buffy  summers,  willow rosenberg, faith  lehane,  cordelia  chase,  daphne  bridgerton,  lorelai  gilmore,  heather  chandler,  veronica  sawyer,  regina  george,  blair  waldorf,  cora hale, allison argent, malia tate, siobhan roy, fiona gallagher, veronica fisher, serena  van  der  woodsen,  georgina  sparks,  brooke  davis,  peyton  sawyer,  haley  james  scott,  tashi duncan, quinn  james,  alex  dupre,  rachel  gatina,  rosalie  hale,  alice  cullen,  esme  cullen,  jane  volturi,  daphne  blake,  dionne  davenport,  aimee gibbs, amber  mariens,  samantha  baker,  sandy olson, olivia baker, layla keating, betty rizzo, marcia  brady,  lyla garrity, jackie burkhart, donna pinciotti, and  monica  geller  !
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