#rachel bobbit
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Beyond Beyond Beyond by The Crane Wives redraw!
I saw them live recently with a friend, and my god it was INCREDIBLE. Everyone looked so cool, why did all of their songs go so hard live, I was shocked when they played RIBS FIRST!? and then THE GARDEN!? It's been years since they played it, and it sounded incredible. (Me and said friend were vibing and blew out our vocal cords lmao)
I couldn't give them this piece in person, but a stage crew member managed to give it to them so I just scribbled a little note on the back, so if anyone from the Crane Wives is reading this, hello :D I was the one near the left balcony corner from the stage with the tan crochet bandana on and a shirt from the 2023 fall tour, yall were amazing!
Also please go give Rachel Bobbit some love, she opened up for the set and her music is incredibly comforting and amazing ^^
#the crane wives#the crane wives live#concert rant#also there was this guy who was absolutely rocking this skirt#like he looked incredible#to the people wearing the corsets that looked like TFIHW's. i love you yall are awsome#traditional art#north arts sometimes#beyond beyond beyond#rachel bobbit#watercolor#colored pencil#n a bit of acrylic. cause colored pencils wouldn't work for the lettering unfortunately#also to the lady who gave Emilee the cursed star plushie. youre also awsome that was amazing /pos :>#crane posting
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
And the opener from last night Rachel Bobbitt! She had a great sound too
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
More - Rachel Bobbit
I’m a vacant shell of what you’d allow
If you wanted me once well you don't want me now
I’ll call you back when you’re settled with kids
You can lean back, relax, tell me all about it
…
Wasted potential feels a lot like protection
From yellow walls, missed birthday calls and passed down self rejection
No more please
0 notes
Text
MY LIFE IS COMPLETE
The crane wives were amazing. I'm so glad I got to experience this. Rachel Bobbit was also an awesome opener. Wishing them all luck on the rest of their tour!!!!
Gonna see The Crane Wives live in 2 hours.
Yippeeeeeeeeeeee
4 notes
·
View notes
Note
🎶✨️when u get this, list 5 songs u like to listen and publish. then, send this ask to 10 of your favourite followers (positivity is cool)✨️🎶
Jejejejej an oppurtunity to share my music taste!?!??! 😱😱
My dearest darling by Etta James
Whatcha gonna do by The Valdons
For keeps by Rachel bobbits
Gardenia by Malice Mizer
Huwag kang matakot by Eraserheads
JEJEJEJEJEJEJEJE
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
FinalIy getting to this one! I was tagged by @theoldmixer and @notgrungybitchin to share five songs I've been listening to lately. Thank you ilysm!!
It's been spooky crunchy leaves vibes up in here along with sad indie that gives me mclennon feels, and of course t h e m
Again - Rachel Bobbit
I'm Looking Through You - The Beatles
False Knight on the Road - Fleet Foxes
Too Sad - Ex:Re
Helter Skelter - The Beatles
I think most of you lovelies have already gotten a tag but feel free to do this and tag me if the spirit moves you ^-^
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
saw rachel bobbit last night at lees palace and truly lived out scott pilgrim and the seven evil exes... love live music and the community xoxo
on a serious note what a great night -- rachel has the most insane voice in the world. I can't wait when she has the ability to have a fully decorated set behind her
0 notes
Audio
7 notes
·
View notes
Link
This girl is amazing. Sort of Jazzy and Upbeat with a pop flare. It’s sick. Positive Vibes x. <3
#music#jazz#instagram#improv#pop#acoustic#solo#composition#new#art#arrangement#original#jam#jam session#jamming out#rachel bobbit#rachel#bobbitt#rachel bobbitt#2016#new music#jazzy#drums#guitar#singing#singer#vocal#vocals#pretty voice#pretty song
0 notes
Text
HIIII IT WAS AMAZING MY THROAT HURT FROM SINGING AND CHEERING (AND HOWLING WITH EVERYONE BEFORE THEY PLAYED THE MOON WILL SING) BUT IT WAS A SMALL PRICE TO PAY
They did interact with the crowd some during the show! People were giving them gifts and stuff; it was really sweet (someone gave them half of a dinosaur friendship necklace and they joked that all of us were their best friends now 😭). Nothing after the show, but it was still super fun!
Rachel Bobbit as their opener was really good too!! Also it’s her first time performing!!
There was a merch table! I got a shirt and a pin, and they had tote bags and physical CDs/records too!
My life has been forever changed (positive)
SCREAMS
CRANE WIVES CONCERT IN UNDER AN HOUR WE’RE SO FUCKING EXCITED
ITS A SMALL VENUE (CAPACITY IS 500) AND WE BROUGHT A CD SO MAYBE WE CAN GET IT SIGNED?? NO IDEA IF THEY INTERACT WITH THE CROWD OR NOT BUT-
#IT WAS SO FUCKING GOOD AAAAAAAAA#THE CROWD WAS SO ENERGETIC AND EVERYONE WAS SINGING ALONG#AND THEY MADE SOME AWESOME ANNOUNCEMENTS TOO#not gonna say them though cause I don’t wanna spoil you hehehehe#they played some brand new songs though!!! they were awesome!!#hope you have fun!!! know you will though lol#reblog.#the crane wives#crane wives#music#concert
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
Singles I Listened To 5/16 (Morning)
Good = Track to Listen to Again Okay = Won't Skip Not Bad = Didn't Skip, Wouldn't Seek Out Skipped = Not For Me
Findings: most songs are not bad, but the really good are rare (at least this week). Many songs have an interesting sonic idea, but are often too afraid to explore them. Even Frank Zappa chickened out of some solos.
Good:
Welcome to Hell - black midi
Thin Thing - The Smile
Please Send of J.F. - Jose Melendes, Marisa Anderson
Michael - Remi Wolf
Okay:
Sugar - Amethyst Kiah
More - Rachel Bobbits
Hardcore - Allison Ponthier
This is Mongol - The HU
Tell Me Secrets - VIZE, Da Hool, Joker Bra
Butterfly Globe - Aleksi Kinnunen, Aki Himanen
Patria - Daniel Villareal
Dreamt I Talked to Horses - Katie Alice Greer
Not Bad:
Nowhere At All - Young Guv
Coming of Age - mxmtoon
Tired of Taking it Out on You - Wilco
Circus - Hellacopters
Fate - Triptides
Neon Lights - Loreen
Meet the Moonlight - Jack Johnson
Colm's Conquest - Secondhand Sound
Body Music (Edit) - Jennifer Vanilla
Midnight Delivery - Suray Sertin
Stand Over You - TG Kommas
Bring Some More - Lil Eazzy, NLE Choppa
Hold the Line - Bartees Strange
Vertigo - DREAMDVNR
Dying to Miss Out - Kim Tee, Ashlynn Malia
Free and Weightless - Billy Howerdel
Skipped:
Why did some of these even show up on my feed?
Breath - Todd Hall
I Ain't Worried - One Republic
IOU - Five Fingered Death Punch
Slaughterhouse - Motionless in White, Bryan Garris, Knocked Loose
Kong 2.0 - Steve Aoki, Natanael Cano
Triblend! - Dowser
Another Day - Lucinda Chua
Better By Myself - Lara D
Naked Intentions - Model Home
Tracksuits - KILJ
0 notes
Video
youtube
11/09/19.
Forest Gump (Guitar Loop) || Frank Ocean ft. Rachel Bobbit
i love being underestimated. why? it provides fuel for motivation and it alleviates the pressure of being watched too closely. i prefer being unpretentious and worldly.
i practice walking softly but carry a big stick on the daily.
0 notes
Text
Woman Bishop sets out to Castrate God in the name of Equality
Take a red pill, Bishop Rachel, before you set female prisoners free.
Rachel Treweek, Bishop of Gloucester, is an über-feminist. On Sunday, she called for the God of the Bible to undergo Gender Reassignment Surgery. “I don’t want young girls or young boys to hear us constantly refer to God as he,” she told The Telegraph.
Jesus, the Son of God, called God his Father. Treweek grew up praying the Lord’s Prayer and calling God “Our Father”. But now, as the most senior female bishop in the Church of England and a member of the House of Lords, our Rachel has inside information that God wishes to transition to a non-gendered being.
(function(w,d,s,i){w.ldAdInit=w.ldAdInit||[];w.ldAdInit.push({slot:10817585113717094,size:[0, 0],id:"ld-7788-6480"});if(!d.getElementById(i)){var j=d.createElement(s),p=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];j.async=true;j.src="//cdn2.lockerdomecdn.com/_js/ajs.js";j.id=i;p.parentNode.insertBefore(j,p);}})(window,document,"script","ld-ajs");
The “mind your language” bishop, oddly enough, hasn’t yet objected to the masculine nomenclature of the House of “Lords” or to the masculine form of “bishop” – she threw her miter at me after I called her a “bishopess”. Of course, she believes bubble-gum popping tweens and teens will come flooding into the Church of England if we stopped calling God by his preferred choice of pronoun.
Once Treweek gets rids of God the Father’s toxic masculinity, her next project will be to persuade God the Son to put his name on the NHS waiting list for Hormone Therapy. Jesus can have a second incarnation as a woman and Treweek can re-brand Jesus Christ as Jessie Christa.
“I am very hot about saying can we always look at what we are communicating,” she says. Treweek is also very hot on setting prisoners free – she intends to implement the Nazareth manifesto from Luke’s gospel, where Jesus, reading from the prophet Isaiah, announces that God has called him “to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound”.
Now that Treweek is Bishop for Women’s Prisons she’s flagged off her campaign for prison reform in the House of Lords last week. Surely that’s not a bad thing? But before you raise a toast and sing She’s a jolly good fellow (sexist, eh?) to this reincarnation of Elizabeth Fry, take a deep breath and listen to the whole story.
Treweek doesn’t want all prisoners to go free. There are around 4,000 female prisoners in Her Majesty’s Prisons and her heart bleeds for these victims of the patriarchal society, which is, no doubt, to blame for women committing crimes. Treweek wants only the guilty women to be let loose. The male prisoners can rot in Wormwood Scrubs for all she cares (unless they self-identify as women).
After all, she’s a feminist. But isn’t feminism all about equal rights for women? My dictionary defines “feminism” as “the advocacy of women’s rights on the ground of the equality of the sexes.” So Rachel, by your own standards, women, and men are equal. Men and women are equal before God – in creation and salvation (which is why Treweek was one of the pioneering campaigners for women’s ordination). If Treweek wants us to treat women as equal to men, why is she launching a campaign that is predicated entirely on special pleading for women?
Is she taking us back to the dreadful days of patriarchal hegemony where women were considered the weaker sex? If women can fight in commando units like the SAS in the Her Majesty’s Army, surely they aren’t complaining just because they have to do “equal time for equal crime” as the men in Her Majesty’s Prisons?
So why is Bishop Rachel calling for a change to the way women are sentenced? Why is she calling for a review of short prison sentences and asking for consideration of community-based orders and rehabilitation for women with less serious offenses? Why is she calling for women offenders to be given more lenient sentences?
Her first reason is that “these women present a distinct set of needs and their imprisonment has a significant impact on communities and society as a whole”. Well, don’t men have an equally distinct set of needs? Doesn’t throwing them behind bars also have a significant impact particularly on the family? What if the man of the family is the only breadwinner? What if he is an activist who is not around to protect them from Muslim rape squad threats as reportedly happened in the case of Tommy Robinson’s wife and two small children?
We know that a pregnant woman presents a distinct set of needs. But what if this is used as a get-out card as in the case of Natalie Williams from Darlington, County Durham, who after she was arrested, deliberately got pregnant with a new boyfriend – to stay out of prison?
Treweek talks about “the vulnerabilities and challenges of women in prison” but does not name them. Yes, some women, like some men, would certainly be more vulnerable and face more challenges than others. But, surely, to label an entire group on the basis of their gender as “vulnerable” is the most offensive kind of gender stereotyping, isn’t it, Rachel?
At the recent Fourth International Conference for Men’s Rights, where I was invited as a speaker, I heard the testimony of boxer and physical trainer Ramon Sosa, a Puerto Rican who became an American citizen. Using photographs and FBI reports, Sosa narrated how a stunningly beautiful Mexican illegal immigrant lured him into marriage and used him to legalize her immigration status. When the couple were on the verge of divorce, she got his best friend to hire a hit man to kill him for $12,000 so she could inherit his business. The FBI staged his death and arrested his wife. She escaped a life sentence and is doing 20 years in jail.
Bishop Rachel, I do wish you would send Mrs. Sosa a bottle of Chanel, a bouquet of flowers and a “Get Out Soon” card.
What is Treweek’s justification for privileging women offenders over their men counterparts? ABUSE! Yes! “Unfortunately, the majority of women offenders have experienced some sort of abuse, whether from a partner or a family member,” she laments in her speech to the House of Lords.
Treweek cites Women in Prison, who typically blame “abuse, marginalization and poverty” as “the root of so much of women’s offending”. She parrots their statistics:
“53% of women in jail report having experienced physical, emotional or sexual abuse during childhood; 46% report having suffered domestic violence; and over 30% spent time in local authority care as a child.”
But does “abuse” justify criminal behavior? Also, would Bishop Rachel support lighter sentences for male offenders if they were abused or orphaned?
Alan Dershowitz, leading criminal lawyer, Harvard Law School professor, and a staunch liberal, lambasts what he calls “the abuse excuse”. In his book The Abuse Excuse and other Cop-Outs, Sob Stories and Evasions of Responsibility, Dershowitz argues that excuses that are gender-specific, send a “dangerous double message of irresponsibility, especially about women. After all, if women who have been abused are not responsible for their violence, then does it not follow that such women are irresponsible and thus untrustworthy?”
Unlike Treweek, Dershowitz really believes in women’s equality. He contends that the kind of “generalization” perpetuated by Treweek and Women in Prison, “if accepted – would contribute a major setback for abused women, and for women in general. It would confirm the sexist stereotype of the woman out of control. Such a generalization would also be an insult to the thousands of abused women who obey the law – who have not engaged in violence,” because “the truth is that the vast majority of women (and men) who have been abused are entirely capable of controlling their behavior and complying with the law”.
Perhaps the next time Treweek calls for women to be admitted to so-called Women’s centers rather than prison for their crimes, she could buttress her case by throwing in the premenstrual syndrome defense. Orthopedic surgeon Geraldine Richter got away with drunken driving and assaultive behavior after arguing it was premenstrual syndrome, not drunkenness, which caused her crime. This stigmatizes all women with PMS who do not drive drunk or engage in physical violence during the pre-menstrual part of their cycle.
What would Treweek do with 24-year-old Lorena Bobbit who took a knife and cut of her husband John’s penis when he was fast asleep, took the penis and fled in her car, tossing it out on the highway? “He always have orgasm, and he doesn't wait for me to have orgasm,” the Ecuadorian-born Lorena complained. “He's selfish.” Lorena also claimed that John raped her. A jury of nine women and three men acquitted John. Searching for his penis, though, was like looking for a needle in a haystack. It was finally found and reattached to John.
Treweek needs to take a red pill before she puts her feminist Nazareth manifesto into operation. The red pill, a popular cultural meme, derived from The Matrix, represents the brutal truths of reality. In 2016, journalist Cassie Jaye produced a documentary called The Red Pill. Jaye, a feminist, set out to debunk men’s rights movements. Jaye was red pilled by her investigations: men, not women, are the real victims of discrimination in the West, she concluded.
Gender equality activist Elizabeth Hobson contacted me with political dynamite about Treweek’s claims. Men are the real victims of the UK criminal justice system. Flogging as a punishment for female criminals was banned in 1820 but continued for men until 1967. Currently, men account for around 95% of the total prison population despite only committing 3.4 times more crimes than women. For the same crimes, men are given longer sentences than women and women are paroled earlier than men (despite being more likely to be disciplined for bad behavior whilst incarcerated), Hobson informed me.
Philip Davies, MP for Shipley, who has sat on the Justice Select Committee and the Women and Equalities Committee, slams the rampant sexist “bias towards women” when it comes to sentencing in British courts. Sexism in the justice system is evidenced by the fact men are more likely to be sent to prison than women, despite committing the same crimes. 61 percent of men found guilty of robbery are sent into custody, while only 32 percent of women suffer the same fate,” says Davies, courageously battling the tide of political correctness.
“Men have to wear uniforms in prison but women do not ‘because it’s bad for their self-esteem’. The inequality in the justice system is breathtaking. I’m arguing for equality – the justice system should be gender-blind,” argues Davies.
(function(w,d,s,i){w.ldAdInit=w.ldAdInit||[];w.ldAdInit.push({slot:10817587730962790,size:[0, 0],id:"ld-5979-7226"});if(!d.getElementById(i)){var j=d.createElement(s),p=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];j.async=true;j.src="//cdn2.lockerdomecdn.com/_js/ajs.js";j.id=i;p.parentNode.insertBefore(j,p);}})(window,document,"script","ld-ajs");
Davies is bang on target. Consider the case of aspiring heart surgeon Lavinia Woodward, a student at Christ Church, Oxford University. Woodward dosed on drugs, punched her boyfriend in the face, stabbed him with a bread knife, hurled a laptop at him, then followed up with a glass and a jam jar. The judge let her off the hook because she was an “extraordinarily able young lady”.
Contrast this with the case of Samuel Bunyan, who sexually assaulted a fellow undergrad as she slept. His victim admitted she was “seven out of ten drunk” when she invited him back to her flat “to watch movies”. The judge ordered the young man instantly to prison, and put him “indefinitely” on a sex offender register rendering him unemployable in a normal graduate job.
The next time Bishop Rachel trots out the psychobabble of the “abuse excuse” and blames amorphous structures like poverty or sexism or patriarchy, rather than sinful individuals for their actions, she should turn to the first pages of the Bible where the first recorded excuses appear.
Adam blames Eve and Eve blames the serpent. She tells God, “Don’t blame me, blame the serpent, he deceived me.” God, who happens to be a “he” in the book of Genesis, rejects Eve’s defense. Is this why Bishop Rachel is mad at God and so determined to emasculate Him?
from Republic Standard | Conservative Thought & Culture Magazine https://ift.tt/2xsQsEp via IFTTT
0 notes