there is a small russian channel that fully mirrors misogynistic memes made by men just by changing one or two words and holy fuck the men are so angry about that.
all of these memes were first created to hate on women, but the owner of this channel called "РНМЭ" just reverses them. this channel had been banned multiple times on the same platforms where the originals were posted without any repercussions from the moderators, but the admins are still going strong more than five years after the original channel was first created.
when the main admin gets a death threat from a male, or even finds a misogynistic comment of his, she sends the screenshots to all of his family members she can find online. sometimes she finds their schools, universities, workplaces. she's cleaning up the internet from this hateful trash all by herself. she doesn't make up anything, she just shows everyone how hateful these men are because people deserve to know the truth about them.
Contrary to what some “progressives” claim on here, being exclusively same-sex attracted doesn’t imply you don’t care about personality. It simply means that being of the same sex is a requisite for your attraction, not the sum of it.
There’s no contradiction between a gay guy talking about loving dick and loving men for who they are.
Neither are lesbians doing anything wrong for expressing their love for vulva. She’s not hurting anyone.
When people claim that declaring our same-sex attraction makes being gay seem shallow or predatory, that’s not our fault. That’s their fault for perceiving it that way.
the beauty in the soft roundness of a woman's belly
vriden, anders zorn | jeune femme nue, henri-jean guillaume martin | duo, leonor fini | etude de femme nue, henri fantin-latour | female nude, william getty | venus au bain, jean-baptiste camille corot | seated nude, emile baes | mountain stream (detail), louis michel eilshemius | gammal spegel, anders zorn | liegender akt, emile baes
I love when singers think maybe their song requires a little prerequisite information so they just cover it real fast so everyone’s on the same page. I love that TLC opens No Scrubs quickly reviewing exactly what a scrub is and when ABBA was like “just in case you didn’t know, famed 19th century militant ruler Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated in the battle of Waterloo. We though perhaps not everyone would know that. Alright, so moving on to my love life, which is similar to that actually,”
Thinking about that Ruth Bader Ginsburg quote that's like "When I'm sometimes asked when will there be enough [women on the Supreme Court] and I say, 'When there are nine,' people are shocked. But there'd been nine men, and nobody's ever raised a question about that." You can apply this to everything, from members of governments to the authors whose books you read. Men are centered almost everywhere and have been for years. Equality doesn't have to be 50% men and 50% women. It can be 100% women to balance the decades when it was 100% men. Choose women's liberation and choose only women.
A TV series about the early Roman emperors, except:
It's a comedy.
It starts with Julius Caesar (who keeps correcting the narrator that he's a dictator, not an emperor, as if it makes any difference).
The narrator skips over military campaigns like the Gallic War and Claudius' conquest of Britain in favor of "Haha check out Augustus' shitty poetry" and "Caesar once tried to overthrow the republic with a wardrobe malfunction."
You can tell the narrator gets bored of certain emperors because he keeps going off on tangents about Julius and Augustus after they're supposed to be dead.
The characters get frustrated because they're trying to act out a serious drama but nooo the narrator would rather gossip and it's only 50% in chronological order.
Some of the characters start pointing out things the narrator says that are physically impossible, don't make logical sense, or which their enemies made up.
Tiberius storms out partway through his episode and the rest of the narrative has him played by a sock puppet voiced by Caligula doing a falsetto.
Caligula attempts to sic the Praetorian guards on the narrator for making up filthy lies about him. Like, he's still a huge dick, just not in the way the narrator claims.
Claudius just wants to teach the audience cool facts about the Etruscans but the narrator talks over him.
Nero is actually a Korean boy band singer who keeps trying to explain to people he's a musician, not the emperor, and isn't sure what he's doing in ancient Rome. No one listens.
Galba is played by Rob Halford, the "stately homo of heavy metal."
Galba, Otho and Vitellius have to share an episode, and even then the narrator half-asses it and leaves with 10 minutes of runtime to fill, at which point the characters (including the dead ones) break into the production studio and reveal the narrator is Suetonius.