23| RO/UK| raging introvert| nonbinary| they/them| skinny boi bitch nsfw blog: whatever-nsfwmind 'What is rare, is not that someone should be in despair; no, what is rare, the great rarity, is that one should truly not be in despair.'
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How about we kill 8th floor. That would be my suggestion immediately
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1st floor says that he’s glad he has the first floor because it would be hard to get up anyway due to his leg, but considering the floors as a social food chain it’s really that his bad leg is keeping him from moving up floors, how in society those with a disability (physical or other) tend not to even get a chance to move up.
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everyone talking about how 8F didn’t face consequences but i think it’s a nice little metaphore of how those on the top of society are beyond the laws; the lower, middle, working classes will get their asses beaten, but the people above them, the one who makes them fight will always remain untouched, because they’re the ones who can afford this
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the way nobody wrapped they fist in #8s hair and drag her down them stairs
like beat her face in one good time bruh
#1… you coward
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Se-mi outhandsomed all men around the world🤷🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️
my shayla💔💔💔
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Happy Birthday, Alex Turner! (6 January, 1986)
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I love sleep so much
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Lesbian Avengers eating fire, 1990s
The Lesbian Avengers adopted fire-eating in response to the 1992 fire-bombing of the apartment of Hattie Mae Cohens and Brian Mocks. This tragic murder prompted Avengers at a West Village encampment to march, carrying torches and burning pictures of prominent anti-LGBTQ figures in protest against LGBTQ violence. Choreographer Jennifer Monson introduced the action of eating the fire, marking it as a symbol of reclamation for the Lesbian Avengers. The act itself is meant to both draw attention but also serve as symbolism for lesbian visibility—"the fire will not consume us. We take it and make it our own."
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