Tumgik
#koofi
Text
TW: grooming!!!
Pov: you're mourning the fact ur fave roblox youtuber turned out to be a secret minor liker, only to find out litterally today that ur former fave meme animator also liked minors.
I don't understand why ppl can just...not like kids? My heart goes to their victims.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
ghvmhjf · 12 hours
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
These girls from Koofy
2 notes · View notes
Text
Koofy situation is crazy
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I thought he was a good person based on his vids & personality but I guess not
2 notes · View notes
ayeitzagusty · 17 days
Text
NOOO i just saw a video by kaka v420
koofy (the roblox youtuber i used to watch) being weirdo WAS NOT IN MY 2024 BINGO. (i never watched kelogish) (plus i didnt know koofy was a weirdo,,)
4 notes · View notes
panicinthestudio · 2 years
Video
youtube
Taliban further restricts women's rights, forcing aid groups to halt work in Afghanistan, December 26, 2022
This weekend, the Taliban ordered that women can no longer work for non-governmental organizations, including relief agencies. Any such group that continues to employ women will lose its license, according to the economic ministry. Vicki Aken of the International Rescue Committee and former Afghanistan Parliament member Fawzia Koofi joined Lisa Desjardins to discuss the latest.
PBS NewsHour  
5 notes · View notes
no-way2 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
whdksudaudakduakdukadhakhda NOOO WHAT THE HEELLL OMGGGG NO WAYAYAYAYAYYA-
5 notes · View notes
lanaonyxnite · 11 days
Text
TW FOR DECAPITATION AND BLOOD !!
"smile! Your death is on camera"
Tumblr media
LANA ONYXNITE ARTWORK YALL!!
0 notes
lazyartistunderscore · 3 months
Text
KOFI? should I?
i wanna open a koofi,, maybr 3-5 dollars?? ill post sketches,, sneak peaks, speedpaints, vc with me painting live maybe? mostly for project updates yk? idk if anyone is interested though,
14 notes · View notes
feelingpoorly · 2 months
Text
£5 top surgery fundraiser commissions?
This might be a totally shit idea but I’m currently trying to raise money for top surgery so I was thinking of doing some super simple commissions for like a koofi donation of £5 for say 1000 word ficlet
Idk if anyone would even be interested in that but I would aim for a pretty quick turnaround (like 24/48hrs) and could easily do it with characters A/B so you can explore your favourite tropes or things you’ve been wanting to see. Also happy to use character names or OCs with a basic bit of background on them first.
If you’re interested in my writing style you can find examples of my sickfic work on AO3 under ash_the_elf
-
Things I’m happy to do:
Emeto, fever, general illness stuff, injury, whump, snez, scat (in the context of illness)
Things I would avoid:
Anything blatantly nsfw or explicit or obviously anything illegal ie minors etc etc. I will also not be able to accept commissions from minors for obvious reasons
If you have any questions I’m more than happy to answer what I will and won’t write etc
-
I would share my actual go fund me but think that’s probably not a good idea due to privacy/ anonymity and doxing stuff
-
Please help a trans guy out and let me know if you would be interested!!
(Before I lop these suckers off w the garden shears lmao /hj )
10 notes · View notes
my-vanishing-777 · 29 days
Text
New Taliban laws that prohibit women from speaking or showing their faces outside their homes have been condemned by the UN and met with horror by human rights groups.
The Taliban published a host of new “vice and virtue” laws last week, approved by their supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada, which state that women must completely veil their bodies – including their faces – in thick clothing at all times in public to avoid leading men into temptation and vice.
Women’s voices are also deemed to be potential instruments of vice and so will not be allowed to be heard in public under the new restrictions. Women must also not be heard singing or reading aloud, even from inside their houses.
“Whenever an adult woman leaves her home out of necessity, she is obliged to conceal her voice, face, and body,” the new laws state.
Men will also be required to cover their bodies from their navels to their knees when they are outside their homes.
From now on, Afghan women are also not allowed to look directly at men they are not related to by blood or marriage, and taxi drivers will be punished if they agree to drive a woman who is without a suitable male escort.
Women or girls who fail to comply can be detained and punished in a manner deemed appropriate by Taliban officials charged with upholding the new laws.
The restrictions have been condemned by Roza Otunbayeva, the special UN’s representative for Afghanistan, who has said they extend the “intolerable restrictions” on the rights of women and girls already imposed by the Taliban since they took power in August 2021.
“It is a distressing vision for Afghanistan’s future, where moral inspectors have discretionary powers to threaten and detain anyone based on broad and sometimes vague lists of infractions,” she said in a statement on Sunday. “It extends the already intolerable restrictions on the rights of Afghan women and girls, with even the sound of a female voice outside the home apparently deemed a moral violation.”
Speaking to Rukhshana Media, Mir Abdul Wahid Sadat, the president of the Afghan Lawyers Association, said that the new laws contradicted Afghanistan’s domestic and international legal obligations.
“From a legal standpoint this document faces serious issues,” he said. “It contradicts the fundamental principles of Islam [where] the promotion of virtue has never been defined through force, coercion, or tyranny.
“This document not only violates Afghanistan’s domestic laws but also broadly contravenes all 30 articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”
“The Taliban government does not have any sort of legitimacy and these new edicts designed to further erase and suppress woman are an indication of their hatred towards women,” says Fawzia Koofi, an Afghan human rights activist who was the first woman vice-president of the Afghan parliament.
“When they say women cannot speak in public as they regard women’s voices as a form of intimacy it is incredibly frightening yet the whole world acts like this is normal. There have been very few reactions of comments to what is happening and the Taliban are emboldened by this indifference. It is not only women but all human beings they are targeting. They must be held accountable.”
Shukria Barakzai, a former Afghan parliamentarian who was Afghanistan’s ambassador to Norway, agreed the international community’s silence on the Taliban’s oppression of Afghanistan’s 14 million women and girls had played its part in the criminalisation of women’s bodies and voices.
“It is concerning that international organisations, particularly the United Nations and the European Union, instead of standing against these inhumane practices, are trying to normalise relations with the Taliban,” she said. “They are, in a way, whitewashing this group, disregarding the fact that the Taliban are committing widespread human rights violations.”
In the three years since seizing power from the US-backed government, the Taliban have imposed what human rights groups are calling a “gender apartheid”, excluding women and girls from almost every aspect of public life and denying them access to the justice system.
Prior to the new “vice and virtue” laws, women and girls were already blocked from attending secondary school; banned from almost every form of paid employment; prevented from walking in public parks, attending gyms or beauty salons; and told to comply with a strict dress code.
Earlier this year, the Taliban also announced the reintroduction of the public flogging and stoning of women for adultery.
3 notes · View notes
seethesound · 1 year
Text
681 days since the Taliban banned girls from going to school and 221 days since they banned women from going to university.
This is the Taliban’s barbaric reasoning for why they won’t allow women and girls to study in Afghanistan. Joe Biden and American military leaders need to be tried for war crimes for the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan. They have sent billions to Ukraine but done nothing for these girls and women.
A teenage girl ended her life last week by hanging herself at her home in Afghanistan's rugged central province of Bamyan, Anadolu has reported. Her family refrained from disclosing any details about her death, but a neighbour told local media that she was particularly distressed about not being able to go to school, a result of the Taliban administration's ban on education for women and girls.
A day later, in another part of Afghanistan, a 23-year-old woman shot herself. According to local media reports, she took the step as an escape from an abusive household to which she was confined.
Social media accounts of Afghan news outlets are teeming with such reports of women committing suicide. Activists say that there has been a surge ever since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021. With concrete figures hard to find, rights groups fear that the issue and numbers are vastly underreported.
According to local channel Tolo News, there were 250 suicide attempts in the country last year; 188 of them were women. Maryam Marof Arwin, who heads Afghanistan Women and Children Strengthen Welfare Organisation, said that the local NGO receives reports of at least nine to eleven suicides by women every month, many of them young girls. However, the actual number could be in the hundreds, she told Anadolu.
“Most of the suicides are in places such as Takhar, Kunduz, Bamyan, Badghis, Faryab, Mazar-i-Sharif, and other rural areas," said Arwin. She cited two main factors for the underreporting of the issue: reluctance on the families' part and pressure from the Taliban. "The Taliban tries to suppress reports of suicides. Most of the time it doesn't allow the media to publish these reports. But we are seeing an increase in the number of suicides, and we are worried about the situation of women, especially girls."
The main reason for the spike in suicides among women is their deteriorating living standards in Afghanistan, say activists. Depression is rampant, they claim, particularly due to the ban on education and employment, which is aggravating the already dire economic conditions of scores of families mired in poverty. Other factors include forced marriages, domestic violence and the general lack of any social life.
The former deputy speaker of Afghanistan's Parliament, Fawzia Koofi, told the UN Human Rights Council last year that Afghan women were taking their lives out of desperation. "Every day, there are at least one or two women who commit suicide for the lack of opportunity, for the mental health, for the pressure they are under," she said. "The fact that girls as young as nine years old are being sold, not only because of economic pressure, but because of the fact that there is no hope for them, for their family, it is not normal."
More recently, a June report by UN-appointed rights experts warned of systematic "gender apartheid" and "gender persecution" in Afghanistan under the Taliban. "Grave, systematic and institutionalised discrimination against women and girls is at the heart of Taliban ideology and rule, which also gives rise to concerns that it may be responsible for gender apartheid," UN Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan Richard Bennett told the council in Geneva.
The interim Taliban administration, however, rejected the claims. Spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid accused the "UN and some Western institutions and governments" of spreading "propaganda that does not reflect reality."
However, activists disagree. Due to the curbs imposed by the Taliban, they say, many women, including widows and those with no men in their families, have been left with no means to earn and survive.
“These women were actually responsible for supporting their families. The Taliban took away their jobs and they are now jobless," said Hamid Samar, the founder of ZAN TV, the first channel to broadcast specifically for Afghanistan's women. "They're at home now and worrying about how they will feed their families."
16 notes · View notes
dead-dolphins · 2 months
Note
https://www.tumblr.com/dead-dolphins/758209115218739200/have-you-thought-about-opening-coms-would?source=share
Please the koofi thing 🙏🏻 🙏🏻 🙏🏻 So we can tip you ♥️
I will think about it! Thanks so much guys, you're really supporting to me ♥️
3 notes · View notes
clunkerbunker · 5 months
Text
i also want to mention that this youtube video by Koofy has unavoidable strobe lighting at the start, accompanied by a blaring noise. There’s no other flashing lights that i know of during the rest of the video. i haven’t watched him in a long time, so i’m not sure if there’s flashing lights in any other of his videos. if there is, please let me know!
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
Text
I was recently jolted awake at 3 a.m. by a call. As I answered the phone, at first all I could hear was girls screaming in terror and sharp banging on a metal door. Seconds that felt like hours passed before I heard the trembling voice of a teenage girl on the line. “Help us Ms. Koofi, please help us! We are locked inside our dorms by the Taliban, they are going to kill us,” she told me. From thousands of miles away in Washington, D.C., I tried to comfort the girls by promising them that I would not let their suffering, which is the reality for countless women and girls across Afghanistan, go unheard. With a heavy heart, I hung up the phone. I tweeted about these girls and their terrifying experience. I then reached out to my contacts inside Afghanistan and nearby countries, seeking help to try and save these brave yet petrified girls. The Taliban finally agreed to release the girls from captivity after videos of their treatment circulated on social media. I was relieved to see them released, yet the horror that these teenage girls went through that day provides only a small glimpse into the tragic saga of the fearless girls and women of Afghanistan who are languishing under Taliban’s gender apartheid regime. Since returning to power last August, Taliban leaders have issued more than 30 edicts banning, banishing, sanctioning, and restricting girls and women in Afghanistan from life, liberty and the pursuit of their hopes and dreams. Although the Taliban’s ban prohibiting teenage girls from going to school seems to occasionally make the international news these days, the tragic and painful reality of Afghan women’s lives under Taliban is far more horrific. The Taliban have created an ecosystem of violence aimed at strengthening their gender apartheid regime to eliminate women and girls from all realms of public life. The ban on girls’ education is only one element of this.
Please reblog this.
8 notes · View notes
no-way2 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
🤯
3 notes · View notes
fazbearedits · 18 days
Text
Welp,koofy just got exposed,great
1 note · View note