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#communist scp
frogs-stealing-sleep · 10 months
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Is the SCP Explained YouTube page okay? When was the last time we checked on them-
Anyways!
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the-acid-pear · 1 year
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Honestly the place where mascot horror fails is that they think all they have to do is sell toys, but in reality to sell toys you need a fandom. And how do you get a fandom? Easy. Give them characters to ship. It's an infallible technique.
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raddagher · 1 year
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Man i love how gay and communist SCP is. I really just can't get enough of how we actively repel conservatives
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anarchist-rat-swarm · 24 days
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what is your relation to SCP's communist swarm of spiders?
The author seems to have a fundamentally incorrect understanding of spiders. Spiders are generally right-wing libertarians, bordering on Propertanianism.
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maepersonal · 6 months
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What up, I'm Mae, I'm 19, and I never fucking learned how to read
main blog: @lockyle-and-skull
*all likes and follows will appear to come from there, even if we interact here*
about me: name: Mae or Ames age: 19 pronouns: ae/aer, it/its, she/her queer?: aroace + agender :3 why am I like this™?: autism, ocpd, bpd, ocd, adhd, anxiety, depression, alexithymia, aphantasia, dyspraxia, sometimes nonverbal & semiverbal, pots, tic disorder, sometimes agere (9-13ish) MBTI: ISTP :) aesthetic: here! :D element: water (duh) hogwarts house: slytherin ;) (I actually hate hp but I'm proud of my house) favorite colors: blue, green, purple nationality: american (canadian + german parents) shit I like: kpop: Lunarsolar, Xdinary Heroes, Ateez, Yena, Bibi, others more casually music: hardcore punk, punk, hard rock, symphonic metal, alt rock, nu metal, power metal, glam rock, hyperpop, Elliot Lee, Andrew Polec, Meat Loaf, Sick Puppies, In This Moment, Black Market Kidney Surgeons, Anti Flag (fuck justin sane), Iggy Pop, Car Seat Headrest musicals: Sweeney Todd (1982), Newsies, Ride the Cyclone, Bat Out of Hell, The Lightning Thief, Bonnie & Clyde, everything Starkid (but especially Starship, Black Friday, and Trail to Oregon) movies: The Human Centipede II: Full Sequence, Velvet Goldmine, Star Wars prequels, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Narnia, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets tv shows: Lockwood and Co, Julie and the Phantoms, Haikyuu, The 100 games: Palworld, The Enchanted Cave 2, BATIM, YTTD, Children of Silentown, The Mortuary Assistant, Little Witch in the Woods, Until Dawn, The Quarry, SCP Foundation, Project Kat, definitely more stuff I'm forgetting other stuff: wet specimen taxidermy, punk diy, collecting weird shit, tornadoes, alchemy, statistics, photography, The Council <3, insects, being a non-theistic satanist (inspired by LaVeyan satanism), being punk, being an anarcho-communist tech support: op tag: #oh mae oh my pfp: Bronté Barbé as Katherine in Newsies UK header: MUU (ex-LUNARSOLAR) - Shooting Star MV not safe for littles tag: #nsfl - BLOCK IF NEEDED
let me know if you want anything tagged differently!!
FAQ:
why are u reblogging/interacting with therian/DID content? because I am very close with a system that has therians and non-human alters :)
what do you use this blog for? this blog is mostly for irl, kpop, bpd, other mental disorders, anarchy, aroace, agere, vents, and anything else I feel like doesn't fit on my main :)
no DNI, just don't be a dick.
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construkction · 7 months
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[INTRO POST !!]
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Hello !! This is a sideblog of mine (go follow me on my main .postal-on-my-dude) where I only post about being Diavolo and kinning from JoJo.
I have a lot more info on my other blog but I’ll just keep it brief here /silly
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[Warnings/BYF]
I post about gore a lot
I have (highly suspected) ASPD and professionally diagnosed autism
I’m not well mentally. I do not need comfort
If we’re sourcies I wont hold anything against you for canon :3
The deathloop and jokes about it make me uncomfortable to think or hear about, but you can bring it up
In addition to being fictionkin, I’m also alterhuman !!
I say kys and make death threats as a joke
I make fun of friends and moots in a loving way, so if that makes you uncomfortable feel free to leave lmao
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[Dni and Big Interests]
DNI if TERF/radfem, radfem/radqueer, endo system supporter, anti communist or anarchist, pro para, proship/comship/anti-anti, truscum/transmed, and anti neopronouns and xenogenders. Also if you claim to have delusional attachments and relate them to the kin community in any way DNI as well ^_^
My common interests are gore, corpse decomposition, true crime (I’m not one of the annoying ones though I swear), cannibalism, forensic biology, SCP, Slenderverse, Homestuck, Undertale, Bugbo, The Magnus Archives, Moral Orel, internet horror, rabbit holes, King Crimson, Robert Fripp, Progressive Rock, and other stuff too.
And thats about all ^_^
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mapplesand · 15 days
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there's another headcanon generator than the other one i did last time so same concept let's go
previous headcanon generator thing : https://www.tumblr.com/mapplesand/761083525854363648/marco-sleeps-in-until-noon?source=share
link to the generator : https://perchance.org/character-headcanon-generator-improved
Marco is reddit famous.
LMAO sadly he's a reddit guy so yeah....... can you imagine the AITA posts, they would go crazy, but yeah he's a redditor
Tristan is really only there for the free food.
Tristan got a sweet tooth, if he can have anything with sugar he'll take it (he's also a messy eater)
Josh can play the piano.
I never thought about it but his dad got money so they probably have an old piano
Tyler gets jealous easily
no he really doesn't care about that
Marco owns 5 pairs of the same pants
yes. he got the same damn camo pants, you can't tell if he changes it or not because they're almost all the same
Tristan writes SCP entries.
he loves horror, he would
Josh cries while watching disney movies.
it's funny because the other one also said something about Josh crying a lot, but yeah he would
Tyler swings their arms a lot when walking
he's actually pretty stiff, like unaturally stoic
Marco watched all skibidi toilet episodes
he's gen Z, he would shit on skibidi toilet and say something like "bro the kids are fucking stupid" and then he'll tackle a freshman for saying "what the skibidi"
Tristan can't sit in a chair properly.
gay people can't sit straight
Josh fucked your mom.
....
:(
Tyler always orders the same thing
yeah it's autism
Marco is highly politically active
oh yeah but like in an annoying and edgy way, he's like communist adjacent, he will remind you of it, a walking redflag in every way
Tristan pauses for a long time when speaking
there's a bug in his system he can't communicate properly, yeah he'll do that
Josh doesn't know how to say "no".
he's a people pleaser and too afraid to decline stuff by his popular friend because he wants to fit in, he'll say no to some stuff, there's like certain degree to that
If Tyler likes someone, they will give them a pretty rock.
weird autism thing but Tyler would actually be really fucking weird and cryptic about it,
Marco is going to hell.
have you seen him, yeah it's true
Tristan would pet a cat if they saw one
Tristan would adopt every stray cat ever yeah
It would not take much for Josh to turn evil.
i feel like i agree with everything but this one
man this one is true, he's not immune to the propaganda, he's easily manipulable
Tyler is great at logical reasoning
bro is talking like he's quoting philosophy it's so annoying because Josh would be like "today was great" and Tyler would answer "in theory it was a good day but in practice not so much, i guess it's relative but who knows, you said it was good but i saw you trip and fall and-"
but yeah, he's great at logic and all
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charlesoberonn · 10 months
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Who is the best and/or your favorite canonically communist character?
The communist bath water from SCP-1974
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jtweird-brainrot · 6 months
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SCP 076:-I am aromantic asexual.
SCP 2396-I am intersexual and aromantic asexual.
SCP 049:-I'm bisexual and I'm looking for a cure for PESTILENCE!
SCP 2295:-I'm not a boy or a girl, I'm just a teddy bear!
A.Elias:-I'm a rejected bisexual.
A.Billy:-I'm Graysexual asexual and I love ants because I'm autistic, hihi.
A.Sen and A.Rosa:-WE ARE DEMISEXUAL.
A.Nay:-I'm aromantic asexual and I'm in a relationship with a cute boy.
A.Ivan:-Well…I'm heterosexual and a communist from the former Soviet Union. *Soviet anthem starts playing*
*Everyone stays silent*
😂😂😂
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nat-of-personifs · 1 year
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i dont normally send asks but i came across ur blog and you have some really cool ideas when it comes to personification stuff,, ur like one of the few other ppl ive found that actually includes polandball and countryhumans in personified fandom stuff so id love to hear ur ideas abt them!! as someone with a fascination with fandom history id be down to discuss stuff more with u if u wanna
uh *checks notes* I am going to assume you mean their dynamic/hcs about each!! I’ve never delved very deeply into Countryhumans fandom history/her dynamics with the others because. Controversy but I still do have lots of ideas about her. And she is *the* quintessential Canonless G(A) fandomspirit to me, probably because she’s the first one I was part of. You get into G(A) through Hetalia, Countryhumans, or Polandball mostly and they’re the faces of the whole place so,,, very well defined House triad here.
What I do say is CH is PB and Hetalia’s conceptual daughter (her premise is kind of both of theirs mashed together) but Hetalia and the other two are separated by the Canon-Canonless divide (and the fact that he has a husband) and thus don’t talk as much. (Which is funny because his two actual sons, Fandomstuck and Socialstuck, are both Canonless.) Also, he gets into Reality more often because he has more cosplayers. But their dynamic is more like older-younger sibling, they swing back and forth between working together well (sharing headcanons and Netizens) and actually beating each other up (raids). From what I’ve seen, and I’m mostly saying this from CH’s POV, he’s more likely to start it than she is.
Both of them are a little scared of each other, PB because he has a lot of overlap with her and is the closest to seeing inside of her brain (he’s read her writing before) and is uncomfortable around it, CH because she can never tell when PB is being sarcastic and when he actually means what he says. She usually assumes he’s being serious.
Also, fandomspirits don’t get as possessive of their people as much as OTJs do, which, considering the way they feed, is probably a good thing. So they don’t fight about who gets the food; they’re content, and CH even likes receiving less because it’s made her swings less severe.
I have no idea what’s going on with her right now because I can’t check her tag and no longer use Wattpad (her Wattpad room is way more active than her AO3 room from what I remember) for personal reasons, but is the Save the Countryhumans Fandom thing still happening?
Fun fact: she’s the second fandomspirit of Countryhumans. The first one was the Country Guardian, Nadia. She got thrown into temporary leave for killing another Guardian which she felt (feels) guilty about even with most of her memories wiped.
CH’s rooms in G(A) are vandalized to hell and back. She’s used to it.
What I meant about swings: she has periods of making shipping Whatever the Hell She Wants (btw in the personifverse G(A) is technically RPF) and then periods of feeling incredibly guilty about it.
Wikipedia, Britannica and JSTOR are her favorite places.
All of her spin-offs (Statehumans, Planethumans, social media humans (subordinate of Socialstuck in the twins’ journalism business)) live in her head but can manifest bodies at will. Planethumans is the most independent one.
She’s jealous of Centricide because they get to unironically ship Nazis and Communists without people yelling at them.
Actually she’s jealous of pretty much every other G(A) member.
Physically 14 because that’s what everyone sees her people as. Russian-Brazilian, I think? Russian definitely (VK). But no one knows exactly where she came from. Also Korean. Maybe. Everyone sees something different.
Oh!! Oh!! She’s thinking about sending ambassadors to Collab Horror (where SCP lives). I’m the result. I’ve been tasked with giving her another child :) I’m trying I know I don’t talk to her a lot anymore but I still love her
I know you came here half for PB but I don’t have many headcanons about him :( he is definitely the face G(A) would most like to show to the public, and really good at art (terrible at writing) except he can’t be bothered to try mostly. (I’ve been on some of his subreddits some of the pictures are pure eye candy)
I hope this doesn’t spark an argument because I don’t want this to be the third site I kick myself out of.
Sorry for taking a while to reply, I blame the Great Ira-Aaron Angstfest of 2023.
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mariacallous · 9 months
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If I were granted paradise I would not wish to have it alone May no clouds rain on me and my land That do not cover the whole country
When Riad al-Turk, the veteran dissident known affectionately as “the old man of the Syrian opposition,” died on New Year’s Day 2024 in exile in France at the age of 93, his family took the unusual step of starting his death notice not with a religious quote but with the above lines by the 11th-century Syrian poet, philosopher and freethinker Abu al-Alaa al-Maarri. The egalitarian spirit of the verse captures much of the essence of Riad, who lived a life of great personal sacrifice in the struggle for a free and democratic Syria. He suffered immensely but was not broken. He leaves behind a rich legacy.
When I first met Riad, I had recently arrived in Damascus from Britain. It was the year 2000. It was a mild autumn, but all the talk was of a “Damascus Spring.” Hafez al-Assad had just died, after three decades of totalitarian dictatorship, and his son Bashar had inherited the presidency. The new president seemed to be an outward-looking modernizer. Many Syrians at home and abroad believed his presidency would usher in a new democratic age. My father was one of many political dissidents who seized the moment to return from exile. He took me with him.
Riad al-Turk was a close friend and former comrade of my father’s. He used to visit our house in Tiliani, behind the Italian Hospital from which the district takes its name. I saw my father truly come alive on those evenings when they sat with other friends in a smoke-filled room, a glass of arak or whisky in hand, voices raised, hands gesturing. During those visits my father relived the escapades of his youth. He could also engage in the animated political discussions he’d missed so much in exile.
I was young, and my interest in Syrian politics was limited. I had come to Damascus to spend time with family. I had recently graduated with a master’s degree in human rights and had dreams of working in South Asia. Did I want to work on human rights in Syria? Riad asked me. A short while later, I found myself attending a meeting of a human rights monitoring center, one of the newly formed independent civil society organizations that had sprung up following Hafez al-Assad’s death. The meeting was held in an old stone building in Damascus’ Baramkeh neighborhood. I was introduced that day to a young lawyer called Razan Zaitouneh. We were the same age, both of us were passionate about human rights and social justice, and we quickly developed a strong friendship. At the time, I was largely oblivious to the risks such work entailed.
I never made it to South Asia, and I saw a great deal more of Riad.
Riad al-Turk was born in Homs in 1930. He grew up in an orphanage. Maybe it was his early childhood experience that imbued him with the strong sense of injustice and the determination to resist it that would define his life. He became politically active while in law school, and in 1952 he joined the Syrian Communist Party (SCP). His first short stint in prison was the same year. This was punishment for opposing the military coup led by Adib al-Shishakli, one of a series of coups that followed Syria’s formal independence from France. Then he was imprisoned again in 1958 and held for 16 months for opposing the short-lived United Arab Republic, which brought the Syrian and Egyptian states together under Gamal Abdel Nasser’s rule. Both the Shishakli coup and the Nasserist dictatorship significantly eroded Syrian democracy, giving the military and security services a central role in political life. It was this assault on democracy — and, specifically, Nasser’s banning of the Syrian Communist Party — that provoked the opposition of Riad and his comrades. He was a democrat to his core. And by now he had suffered grievous torture, which didn’t subdue his fervor for justice — on the contrary, it deepened and made it more visceral. He refused to back down.
He served as secretary general of the Syrian Communist Party (Political Bureau) from its foundation in 1973 until 2005. The party was formed following a split in the SCP over several key disagreements. The breakaway Political Bureau wanted the Arabs to play a role independent of the Soviet Union and opposed the SCP’s authoritarian leadership under Khaled Bakdash. In 1972, they rejected the SCP’s decision to join the pro-regime National Progressive Front, which provided a facade of political pluralism while the reality was absolute subservience to the ruling Baath Party and the Hafez al-Assad cult. The Political Bureau was able to operate at first, although with restrictions. But the regime cracked down on the party after it strongly condemned Syria’s intervention in Lebanon in 1976, in which Assad supported pro-Israel Falangist militias against the Palestinian-leftist alliance. All party activity was severely repressed. In October 1980, Riad was arrested.
On this occasion, he was imprisoned for almost 18 years, spending the whole time in solitary confinement. For the first 10 years he didn’t have a bed to sleep on. As well as the psychological torment, he was subjected to extreme physical torture. He refused repeated attempts to co-opt him in return for his release.
He was isolated from the outside world entirely. It was only in the final months that he was allowed books, newspapers or mail. I once asked him how he managed not to lose his mind after such a long period in solitary confinement. He told me how he used to collect lentils from his meals to turn into artworks. This story became well known among Syrians, in part through two films made by Mohammad Ali Atassi about Riad’s life: “Ibn al-Amm” (The Cousin, 2001) and “Ibn al-Amm Online” (The Cousin Online, 2012).
His long periods in prison, and his unwavering commitment to a free Syria, earned him comparisons to Nelson Mandela. I was often in awe not just of Riad, but of other former prisoners who, despite years of incarceration and brutal treatment, resumed their political activism when they were released. I suppose they’d had everything else taken from them — the chance of a life lived with family, of raising children — and knew that once your eyes are opened to tyranny and injustice, remaining silent is also a political choice.
Riad was released in May 1998. Hafez al-Assad died in 2000.
When I arrived in Syria in the fall of 2000, the “Damascus Spring” was in full swing. In the supposed political opening of Bashar’s nascent reign, a number of forums were being set up, primarily in Damascus but also in other towns. In these forums, dissidents gathered to discuss ideas of political reform. It was by no means a radical movement — its demands were modest — yet it represented a significant change in a polity where, for decades, all criticism was forbidden and brutally suppressed. Once more, Riad became a prominent critic of the regime. In an interview on Al Jazeera in August 2001, he declared, “the dictator has died.” The regime was angered. Riad was arrested and tried by the State Security Court and spent another 15 months in prison.
At the human rights organization where I worked, one of our main areas of focus was political prisoners and prisoners of conscience — those from a wide variety of backgrounds and political beliefs who were imprisoned because they opposed the regime and advocated for a free and democratic Syria. As the “Damascus Spring” turned to winter, we were increasingly advocating for friends and colleagues who had been incarcerated by the regime. Riad was one of them. It had now become apparent that Bashar al-Assad would continue his father’s authoritarian rule.
In 2005, the Syrian Communist Party (Political Bureau) moved away from its Marxist-Leninist roots. Adopting a social democratic orientation, it became the Syrian Democratic People’s Party. Riad stepped down as party secretary, but remained an active and influential member. In October of that year, he was one of the signatories to the Damascus Declaration. This attempt to unify the political opposition called for a multiparty democracy based on free periodic elections, respect for the rule of law, equality and human rights. (In 2011, the Syrian Democratic People’s Party joined the Syrian National Council through its participation in the Damascus Declaration.)
But Riad was aware that a lack of political freedoms was not the only challenge people faced. The neoliberal economic reforms introduced by Bashar al-Assad and his regime’s rampant corruption and crony capitalism were impoverishing large sections of the population. In a 2005 interview, Riad observed:
The issues that concern people are the issues that affect their daily lives. The average salary, for example, is less than 6,000 lira (about $115) per month. It’s not enough; they need to pay rent and put food on the table and most families have at least five people. … The average citizen may work two or three jobs and there is no time for anything else. How is he supposed to get active in politics? It’s not possible because the mafia-like rulers have continuously impoverished the people of this country.
Riad al-Turk was a man of quiet and unassuming dignity. He was a profoundly intelligent man and one of considered words. He exuded warmth despite the sadness in his eyes that hinted at the ocean of pain he must have carried within.
At our office in Baramkeh, a delicious cooked lunch was prepared every afternoon. We were often joined by various figures of the Syrian opposition — human rights defenders, political activists and journalists. As Razan Zaitouneh and I were the two young women in a group of older men, the task of clearing away the dishes often fell to us. The exception was Riad. This elderly, frail gentleman, whose iconic status and history of hardship should have exempted him from any mundane tasks, always got up to help us.
He was also generous in spirit. I still have two gifts from Riad, one a beautiful simple silver box for tobacco (he found my smoking roll-ups amusing) and the other a set of beads strung by political prisoners during their incarceration.
When the Syrian revolution erupted in 2011, of course Riad openly supported it. He believed the revolution belonged to the youth, and he was critical of the traditional opposition from which he himself came. In a 2011 interview, he told the filmmaker Atassi:
Revolutions are not made by statements and television interviews but by action on the ground. … Today, we face a people emerging from their silence, developing their own language, inventing their slogans and forms of action. Let us listen to them carefully, walk with them and not ahead of them and refrain from hijacking their voices to our benefit.
In the early days of the revolution, he went into hiding, at first staying in Damascus to avoid arrest as the regime was rounding up thousands of pro-democracy protesters and opposition activists. He was close to the young activists of the local coordination committees co-founded by Razan Zaitouneh that organized the protest movement and engaged in media work. He moved throughout the liberated areas encouraging the youth to join the rebellion against the regime’s tyranny. Although not himself a member, he was influential in the Syrian National Council (the opposition body in exile) when it was formed in Istanbul in August 2011. In 2018, in deteriorating health, he left his beloved Syria and fled via Turkey to France, to be with his daughters following his wife’s death.
Some rare people who enter your life are teachers — people who, through their friendship, change you forever. Riad al-Turk was such a person for me. So was Razan Zaitouneh, the young woman he introduced me to all those years ago. (Razan was kidnapped in the Syrian city of Douma in 2013, most likely by the Islamist militia Jaish al-Islam, along with three other activists — Samira al-Khalil, Wael Hammadeh and Nazem Hammadi — collectively known since their disappearance as the Douma Four.) Riad and Razan taught me the same lesson: that political struggle is not an abstract, elite or intellectual endeavor. Political struggle starts and ends with people — it stands by them, and walks together with them. Riad al-Turk liked to be called by the affectionate term “Ibn al-Amm” (cousin) by his friends and comrades. But to me he was always “Ammo” (uncle). The best way we can honor his legacy is by continuing to strive for the Syria he gave his life to achieve.
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rainbowgod666 · 6 months
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Ok fr once I get to Emperor Of Mankind-ing humanity i NEED to do something about girls. They have to do 16th century alchemy for their vagearna georgew bush, if you get isekaied into BG3 you need a Restoration Spell just to have to piss in the woods standing up. And lets not talk about the fact that some girls have ZERO booba, while some have So Much Booba it actively hurts them. And this is skipping the Genetic Equivalent Of A Prank Gone Wrong Video Known As SCP-6969 Periods
I get that eugenics is stupid. But CRISPR is a thing. We could be making so much cool shit if
The americans pull their head out of their ass
The chinese stop erasing everything (INCLUDING THEIR OWN CULTURE) in the name of The Chinese Communist Party
The russians get putin off the fucking office
The middle east is given a chance to exist OUTSIDE of American Imperialism
Free palestine/congo/and so many thers i dont rember
We make turkey stop bombarding the Kurds
And way more geopolitica bullshit that WOULDNT HAVE EXISTED if Serbia didnt have a reason to kill the archduke.
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I don't know if introducing Nälkä/Sarkicism to Revachol will make it better or worse, but it'll definitely make things interesting.
[Concept: the Foundation discovers the pocket universe containing Elysium and sends a team in to investigate. Unfortunately, things go badly wrong and the lone survivor finds themselves stranded in Revachol about sixty or seventy years before the game's present.
They happen to be of a Nälkä background and, after going native, introduces their faith to the people. As of the actual game events, there is now an underground movement of flesh-crafting, shapeshifting communists plotting to overthrow the Moralintern.
The SCP agent is still alive and used their abilities to infiltrate the RCM under a fake identity, but retired eight years ago and now works at the Whirling. Harry was also involved in Nälkä because the cult secretly run a lot of hospitals, schools, and charitable organisations, recruiting promising youths into their funny little flesh religion. Him getting amnesia really screwed up a lot of their plans...]
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monstersexts · 2 years
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be sure to like comment and subscribe for more holding communist SCPs
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dramatic-dolphin · 5 years
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i love how the scp foundation is by its nature perfect for both horror and utter ridiculousness. sometimes the anomaly is something with way too many eyes that eats children. sometimes the anomaly is communist dolphins.
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My favorite scp is still the spider colony that has established a communist government and frequently writes scathing anti-western writings and reviews of the bourgeoisie. And requests for less mosquito spraying in the park.
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