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#ss truthers see ss truthers
tinogiehd · 1 year
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There's just no way 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 How did anon get here 😭😭😭 -🌻
like how did things go so wrong for them 😭😭
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quackitytheduck · 2 years
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quackbur and karlnappity i'm feeling discoursy today
FUCK TNT/DUO I HATE TNT/DUO RRRRAAAHHHH SUCK ON MY BIG FAT MAN TIDDIES BITCHES RRRRAAAAAGGGHHHHGHGHHH
im a karlnapity truther until the end of time even if the egg ends the world on saturday i will simply not see it <3 las nevadas fiances real idgaf. i think it was actually one of my first poly ships and it really opened my eyes lmao their dynamic is fuckin fantastic and i think about them every day. they r soooso strange and unusual. ckarl is a bitch
one thing that ive def mentioned before and is a hot take apparently is FUCK KINOKO!Q it is so ooc and if u believe in kinoko q u dont know him like i do. leave him alone. give him to me [ss twt dms abt raymond acnh iykyk]
quack/bur is. so. hngh. hrrmmgh. listen yeah they for sure had a fling maybe during manburg (nikis bday party) and def during pogtopia but i promise you i swear to god it never went further than that. idgaf what anybody says including ccbur or q. i dont care. i dont care. fuck you. fuck quack/bur. shut up w ur fuckin yin yang shit idgaf what about “i dont think about you at all” huh little bitch what about “you are a walking second place medal” huh??? what about that huh. fuck you
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takaraphoenix · 4 years
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Winndox?
Thanks for asking! ^-^
Who’s the...
...werewolf/hunter: Huuuh. Werewolf!Brainy? But Winn wouldn’t be so much a hunter as more a “WEREWOLVES ARE REAL AND I AM GOING TO PROVE IT, JAMES!”-truther?? xD
...mermaid/fisherman: Merman!Brainy!!! He would get to keep his green skin and white hair for this one!!! And an additional tail and his peculiar way of expressing himself is due to the cultural difference ^o^ Winn is just like “why did I let you talk me into this fishing trip? James got that big fish, Kara got that billionaire chick with the yacht and I got a merman. What am I supposed to do with a merman?” (Winn is in deep denial :D)
...witch/familiar: Mmmh. Warlock!Brainy and Winn being a cute but distracting kitty-cat??
... barista/coffee addict: Okay so I can see this either way. Barista!Winn who is trying to figure out who Brainy works for (the DEO still being a thing in this AU), ooor barista!Brainy and Winnn comes to get the coffees for Catco??
...professor/teaching assistant: Clearly professor!Brainy and Winn is just sooo stupidly in love but Brainy remains oblivious to it???
...knight/prince(ss): Mh... Prince!Brainy but like reluctant knight!Winn? He doesn’t want to be a knight, really, but he is super in love with the prince so he decides to join and hey his friend James is head of the royal guard he could help him find his footing, right?
...teacher/single parent: This is tough for the lack of children. Okay so maybe teacher!Brainy and married!SuperCat who are away on their one month long honeymoon and sure uncle!Winn can babysit Carter or so he thought because one evening of being the fun uncle is one thing but actually being a strict parental figure is a nightmare and what is he supposed to do when the school calls?! Cat Grant is going to kill him and also why is Carter’s teacher so cute?? :O
...writer/editor: Writer!Winn and editor!Brainy. Oh, editor!Brainy would actually be a nice one
Ship Dynamic Game
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repwinpril9y0a1 · 7 years
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CONFIRMED: Trump a Lying Liar Who Lies
My wife Kate has a more expansive view of reality than I do. For the most part, I believe that reality is consistent with the world as described by science (the exception being monsters, which are totally real, so shut up). Kate on the other hand believes in spirits and ghosts and other things that my so-called "science" has yet to find "evidence" for. She believes in astrology and palm reading and card reading and other activities for channeling the spirit world. Kate would often say it just seems intuitive to her that there's a world beyond what we can perceive, and that some people are just more sensitive and can pick up on it, and that of course the positions of the planets when you were born influences your life. One time I challenged her, with all the geek-laden certitude I could muster, saying "Yeah, well what about Pluto??!!!" See, because Pluto used to be a planet, but then it got demoted and isn't a planet anymore, so if Pluto isn't a planet, it shouldn't influence astrology, but if it does, then why not include Charon and Orcus? And with that, the whole logical edifice supporting the system of astrology crumbles down upon its very foundations. Oh, for snap! But, as I soon learned, if one believes in astrology, logical inconsistency is not a deal-breaker. So Kate and I agree to disagree on the existence of the spirit world, and I am a supportive husband every time Kate comes home from a reading and wants me to listen to the recording (punctuated by Kate repeatedly stopping the tape exclaiming "How could she know that???"). So it was Mother's Day 2013, and I got out of bed and was coming downstairs around 1:30 pm (because that's how we party), to find Kate looking at a Rose-Breasted Grosbeak in the feeder by the window - not the rarest bird in the world for these parts, but worth a look. It was sitting in the feeder chirping at Kate long enough for me to run upstairs, get my camera, and return to photograph it from every conceivable angle. The Rose-Breasted Grosbeak is a very special bird for Kate because her grandfather Earl, who was an astonishing wood carver, carved a Rose-Breasted Grosbeak for her as a present (with an inscription that she was his favorite grandchild, making it extra special, even after she learned the birds received by her siblings had the same inscription). After it flew away, Kate said to me, "That was my grandparents coming to say hi to me." And I said "That's great, Tweety," and that was that. Or so I thought. "Do you really believe that was my grandparents, or are you just saying that?" It was one of those questions I knew needed to answer carefully, kind of like "Do these pants make my butt look flat?" And in the few moments I had to consider my response, I realized there were a number of important, unanswered questions. For instance: How did the grandparents get into the bird? Does each grandparent get their own bird or can they share a bird? Whose grandparents are the rest of the birds and why are they in our yard? And, perhaps most alarmingly, what about the squirrels??!!! It was all very confusing. But again, I am nothing if not a supportive husband, so I said, "Yes, I really believe that was your grandparents visiting in bird form." "But do you REALLY???" Time to come clean. "No, but it's easier for me to think you're joking than to think you believe something that's not true." For a democracy to function effectively, we need to have a basic set of facts we all agree on (1+1 = 2, sun rises in the morning, Trump has tiny nano-hands). That said, we can accept a certain amount of cognitive dissonance in areas where no one gets harmed (religion, UFOs, bird-relative visitations). While Kate's belief in her grandparents visiting in bird form may strain credulity, it does her no harm to hold the belief, and it does me no harm to be married to a grandparent-bird truther. So I've learned to be a good husband and accept this belief as part of Kate's quirky charm and not dwell on it. What I cannot accept, however, and have no choice but to dwell on, is the twilight zone of "What is truth?" bullshit coming out of the White House. And while Kate's belief in spirit-inhabited birds may do no harm, a President can do a lot of damage when the demonstrably false things he believes are used as the basis for national policy. Tuesday's press briefing was a sad exercise in the cognitive dissonance being pawned off as the new normal. When Trump's press secretary Sean Spicer was asked whether Trump actually believes that 3-5 million "illegals" voting cost him the popular vote, as Trump claimed to members of Congress (in a story involving golfer Bernhard Langer that is getting weirder by the moment), he responded that yes, that is Trump's belief. What followed was Orwellian - Press: But that's not true. SS: It is what the president believes. Press: Based on what? SS: Based on information he's seen. Press: What information? SS: Information that has crossed his desk. P: Can you share that information? SS: It is what the president believes. P: Is that what you believe? SS: What I believe is irrelevant. P: But if the president believes there was unprecedented (unpresidented?) voter fraud, why is he not ordering an investigation. SS: Maybe we will. P: Based on what. SS: What the president believes. And sure enough, on Wednesday, Trump tweeted that there will be a major investigation (likely at a cost of billions of dollars) to investigate his delusion of massive voter fraud that cost him what we all agree is the utterly irrelevant popular vote. Putting aside the question of whether this is actually what Trump believes, and not an elaborate ruse to protect Trump's wounded, grievance-laden paranoia about crowd/hand/penis/voter-fraud size, you might be asking: what does it matter what Trump believes about voter fraud? The election is over, he won, no harm no foul. But is it really no harm? Because now we see the darker side of basing policy around Trump's febrile delusions. On Wednesday, Trump announced that he believes torture works. His advisors at the highest levels are telling him that it works. Absolutely. 100%. Even though it doesn't. But Trump believes it, and we've given him the power to wield the extraordinary might of the US military and the extraordinary wealth of the US government at his discretion to act on his beliefs. So he's open to bringing back the torture, open to restarting the black sites, open to full-on putting the band back together for a "fuck the world" reunion tour. And America First, so fuck international law and fuck the Geneva conventions and fuck everyone else who thinks they can tell us what to do. And how many lives will be lost in the process. When someone believes something that's not true, that person is delusional. When someone repeatedly says something that's not true, after being presented with evidence to the contrary, that person is a liar. When someone repeatedly lies without remorse, that person is a sociopath. We need to call it what it is. And if the answer to Trump's dissembling is "that's what he believes," the follow-up question needs to be, "So are you saying the president is delusional, or that he's a liar?," because really those are the only two options. A lot of us have friends who said they were reluctant supporters of Trump. You know, the ones who said they weren't that excited about the racism and the sexism and the misogyny and the volatility and the unhinged-ness, but either really hated Hillary or thought it would be a good idea to shake things up in Washington, drain the swamp, see what happens; the ones who liked the way Trump made them feel, but didn't think he would actually do all the crazy shit he was saying. Well, now we're seeing what happens, now we're seeing the unhinged behavior that shows no sign of abating, and now we're beginning to see the havoc being wrought by a president and administration with a limited grasp on reality. And if those Trump supporters were being honest about their reasons for supporting Trump, this could be an opening to start engaging them. I've found a good ice-breaker to be: "I know you voted for Trump, but you can't be happy about the lying, right?"... It's a start. Together we win.
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