Want to know why the OnePlus 12 is the perfect Raksha Bandhan gift this year? Read the full article to discover all the amazing features and deals!
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Uncover the Essential Details as OnePlus 12 Debuts in Indian Market
OnePlus has officially launched the OnePlus 12 and OnePlus12R in the Indian market. These latest flagship smartphones were unveiled at a special event in New Delhi. This introduction coincides with the company’s tenth-anniversary celebration.
Pete Lau, the founder of OnePlus, expressed enthusiasm about the OnePlus 12, describing it as a comprehensive flagship phone that signifies the brand’s decade-long technological leadership.
Here are the essential details that you need to know about the newly launched smartphone from OnePlus-
1. The Price of the OnePlus 12 starts at Rs 64,999
The price for the base model of the OnePlus 12, featuring 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, begins at Rs 64,999. Meanwhile, the 16GB+512GB variant is available at Rs 69,999. Starting from January 30, the OnePlus 12 will be available for purchase through the OnePlus website, Amazon, and various retail outlets.
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So someone sent me an anon ask saying something like “well you’re terrible at writing so maybe you should stop and get a new hobby” I don’t want to bother publishing the ask (already blocked and deleted oop) to give attention to it but one thing about it kind of stuck with me. My question for people with this thought process…. do you…..do you think you have to be “good” at something for you to be ‘allowed’ to have it as a hobby? My dudes..hobbies are about doing things you enjoy… for you and you alone…. it has nothing to do with being arbitrarily ‘good’ or not friend.
To anyone worried about not writing / drawing / whatever else because you aren’t good at it, you don’t have to be! life is about creation and fun and finding joy in the things you do and where you are
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Late to the game as I’ve kinda been kinda non-here for a minute but I scrolled through the Dot and Bubble tag, and thought I wanted to write this post into existence.
There's this part in Doctor Who Unleashed where RTD says this:
“What we can’t tell is how many people will have worked that out before the ending. Because they’ve seen white person after white person after white person, and television these days is very diverse. I wonder, will you be ten minutes into it, will you be fifteen, will you be twenty, before you start to think, everyone in this community is white. And if you don’t think that — why didn’t you? So, that’s gonna be interesting. I hope it’s one of those pieces of television you see, and always remember.”
And I'm like. Yeah. But the reason this works even as well as it does is largely thanks to the work of the previous showrunner with the previous creative team, which was notably the first era to have any writers of color (amongst other firsts in terms of inclusivity in directors, composer, actors). While Chibnall fumbled whenever he tried to write about race himself, he did have the self-awareness to have Black and South Asian writers writing the episodes where race is the focus (and a female writer for the episode where sexism is a focus; my point is, he seemed to know his shortcomings).
I wonder what the current creative team looks like? (not really, but I wasn't 100% sure for all of them)
To quote RTD:
“...before you start to think, everyone in this community is white.”
This is pretty non-self-aware, right? It's pretty “It is said, and I understand this, there was a history of racism with the original Toymaker, the Celestial Toymaker, who had ‘celestial,’ and I did not know this, but ‘celestial’ can mean of Chinese origin, but in a derogatory way,” right? (from The Giggle Unleashed) It's pretty “and I had problems with that, and a lot of us on the production team had problems with that: associating disability with evil,” right? (from Destination Skaro Unleashed)
—none of which are issues that should be overlooked, but think how much exponentially better they might’ve been addressed if he’d consulted with Chinese writers and wheelchair-using writers before going straight to giving the Toymaker weird fake accents and making Davros walk?
How many Black or non-white people do we think saw the Dot and Bubble script before it landed in Ncuti’s hands?
And this just keeps happening.
And like, from some of the shocked responses I've seen from white viewers to the ending of Dot and Bubble, maybe the episode's unsubtlety was needed? From the way RTD talks about it in Unleashed, the episode was written with a white audience in mind, Baby's First Microaggressions (where of course the microaggressions come from people who are pretty self-admittedly white supremacists). Ricky September, a more seemingly normal depiction of someone in the racist bubble of Finetime, seemed like an interesting element, up until the way he died.
The ending worked for me, because I do think the Doctor's reaction is true to how the Doctor would react. I just keep thinking of how much better the core themes could've been handled by someone with actual lived experience on the subject matter.
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Imagine suddenly dying on the battlefield, accepting it wholeheartedly, but then getting revived against your will, without your consent, and nobody doing anything to stop it or pointing out how unethical it is.
Furthermore, 3 of your subordinates and comrades' souls unwillingly get stuffed inside of you, forever unable to rest in peace. And even after months, decades of living as a forced stitched together corpse, no one has a problem with it.
That's the current life of Izuru Kira.
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