power-electronics
power-electronics
World In Motion . . .
19K posts
I’m a sexworker and i have borderline and my blog reflects this. i like taking laxatives and eating peoples leftovers in restaurants sometimes nsfw
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Image credits: Miles Herbert/Caters News
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Dogs who beat cancer and are happy to spread the news
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Waves, flowers, volcanoes and palm trees. California to Hawaii cruise brochure art. 1970. Front cover.
Huntington Library
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Female students with skeletons at the at the first medical college for women (c. 1895)
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Morris: A Cat For Our Times, 1986
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Wales, 1965.
Photographs by Bruce Davidson
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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Kerry James Marshall - Plunge (1992)
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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i wish it was 1600 so i cood spelle words howe everr my harte desyred
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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No one:
Me in my room at 3 am with no pants on:
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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because they fucking
slap
next question
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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I can feel…the serotonin and dopamine dropping…i need to make…Crafts
i must make…
b e a d l i z a r d
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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The Phyllomedusa Bicolor (Giant Monkey Frog) covers itself in a skin secretion to avoid drying out in the sun.
(source)
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power-electronics · 6 years ago
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“anti-prostitution feminists implicitly agree with the Erotic Professional. They, too, think that the question of whether sex work is work should primarily be fought on the terrain of whether sex work is good work. They merely disagree that commercial sex could ever fall into the category of ‘good work’. They therefore position work in general as something that the worker should find fulfilling, non-exploitative, and enjoyable. Deviation from this supposed norm is treated as evidence that something cannot be work. ‘It’s not work, it’s exploitation’ is a refrain you hear again and again. One feminist policymaker in Sweden told a reporter, ‘Don’t say sex work, it’s far too awful to be work.’ Awfulness and work are positioned as antithetical: if prostitution is awful, it cannot be work. Anti-prostitution feminists and even policymakers often ask sex workers whether we would have sex with our clients if we weren’t being paid. Work is thus constantly being re-inscribed as something so personally fulfilling you would pursue it for free. Indeed, this understanding is in some ways embedded in anti-prostitution advocacy through the prevalence of unpaid internships in such organisations. Equality Now, a major, multimillion-dollar anti-prostitution organisation, instructs applicants that their eight-to-ten week internships will be unpaid (adding that ‘no arrangements can be made for housing’). Such posts are common: Ruhama advertises numerous volunteer roles that could easily be paid jobs. In 2017, a UK anti-slavery charity came under fire in the national press for advertising unpaid internships. In 2013, Turn Off the Red Light, an Irish anti-prostitution NGO consortium, advertised for an intern who would not be paid the minimum wage. The result of these unpaid and underpaid internships is that the women who are most able to build careers in the women’s sector – campaigning and setting policy agendas around prostitution – are women who can afford to do unpaid full-time work in New York and London. In this context, it is hardly a surprise that the anti-prostitution movement as a whole has a somewhat abstracted view of the relationship between work and money. Work may be mostly positive for those who can largely set the parameters of the conversation, like high-profile journalists. However, this does not describe reality for most women workers or workers in general (or even many journalists). Most workers suffer some unfair conditions in the workplace and would not, as a rule, do their jobs for free. Work is often pretty awful, especially when it’s low-paid and unprestigious. This is not to say that this state of affairs is good, or that we should accept it because it is normal, but nor is it useful to pretend that work is generally wonderful and exclude from our analysis the demands of workers whose experience does not meet this standard. As with other jobs that women do, sexist devaluation of ‘women’s work’ erases the emotional labour and hustle that constitutes the bulk of sex workers’ actual efforts, reducing our job to simply being available for penetration at all times.”
— Juno Mac and Molly Smith, “Revolting Prostitutes: The Fight for Sex Workers’ Rights”  (via anti-oedipussy)
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