#unity generative
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sirenofthegreenbanks · 5 months ago
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《山河令》 WORD OF HONOR (2021) | Episode 34/35, congratulations to the happy couple! may you share all joys and sorrows as a family
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geekysteven · 3 months ago
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mocha-bunnie · 2 months ago
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Assassin’s Creed Unity fans know of the absolutely torture it was to complete “The Tournament” side mission in single-player mode (particularly the obstacle course portion…I was quaking with rage) But at least I got to see these handsome men, so it was worth it 😍
Bonus: Me after throwing a smoke bomb and then watching the guards freak out when they can't find me when the smoke clears
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dreaminginthedeepsouth · 1 year ago
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Birth of the World :: Joan Miro
* * * *
"All human lives are so profoundly and intricately entwined - those dead, those living, those generations yet to come - that the fate of all is the fate of each, and the hope of humanity rests in every heart and in every pair of hands."
~ Dean Koontz, 'From the Corner of His Eye'
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blackstarlineage · 4 months ago
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Toxic Black Parental Behaviours: A Garveyite Perspective on How Parenting Can Empower or Destroy Black Liberation
From a Garveyite perspective, parenting is not just about raising children—it is about nation-building. The strength of the Black race is directly connected to how Black parents raise their children. If parents fail to prepare their children for leadership, self-reliance, and Pan-African unity, then Black communities will continue to suffer from disunity, dependency, and internalized oppression.
Unfortunately, many toxic parenting behaviours within Black families—a result of generational trauma, colonial indoctrination, and white supremacy—are weakening the potential of the next generation. These behaviours create mentally, emotionally, and economically enslaved children, rather than future leaders of Black liberation.
This analysis will explore:
The origins of toxic Black parenting as a result of slavery and colonialism.
Harmful parenting behaviours that sabotage Black children’s success.
The impact of emotional and psychological abuse in Black households.
How the failure to teach self-reliance and Pan-African values cripples Black youth.
Garveyite solutions to raising children who will restore Black power.
1. The Origins of Toxic Black Parenting: The Legacy of Slavery and Colonialism
Many of the toxic behaviors in Black parenting today can be traced back to slavery, colonialism, and white supremacy, which deliberately:
Destroyed traditional African family structures and replaced them with European patriarchal dominance or forced single-parent households.
Encouraged physical punishment as the only form of discipline, making Black parents replicate the violence that was used against them.
Demonized African cultural traditions and replaced them with Eurocentric religious teachings that promoted obedience, submission, and fear.
Instilled economic dependency, making Black parents focus on survival rather than long-term generational wealth.
Example: During slavery, Black parents had to beat their children to stop them from acting out, so they wouldn’t be lynched or sold. This mentality was passed down for generations.
Key Takeaway: Many toxic parenting behaviours in Black families are not natural—they are the result of white supremacy shaping how Black people treat each other.
2. Harmful Parenting Behaviours That Sabotage Black Children
Toxic parenting can destroy a child’s self-worth, mental strength, and ability to become a leader in Black liberation. Some of the most damaging behaviors include:
A. Over-Reliance on Harsh Physical Discipline (Beating Instead of Teaching)
Many Black parents believe beating a child is the only way to discipline them, but this comes from slavery-era trauma, not African culture.
Constant physical punishment teaches fear, not respect—making children obedient, but not critical thinkers or problem-solvers.
Studies show that children who are frequently beaten develop low self-esteem, aggression, and struggle with authority in adulthood.
Example: Garveyism teaches education, guidance, and responsibility—not just punishment. A child who understands why discipline is needed will grow into a self-sufficient adult.
Key Takeaway: Discipline must be based on education, not fear, if Black children are to develop into leaders.
B. Emotional Neglect and Suppressing Black Children’s Voices
Many Black parents tell their children:
“Stay in a child’s place.”
“You don’t have an opinion.”
“You’re too young to talk about that.”
This prevents Black children from developing confidence and leadership skills because they are not allowed to express themselves.
When children are raised in homes where they cannot communicate, they become passive adults who fear speaking up against injustice.
Example: Garvey encouraged strong oratory skills and confidence in Black youth, preparing them to be public speakers, organizers, and leaders in their communities.
Key Takeaway: Black children must be taught to express their thoughts, speak boldly, and defend themselves—because white supremacy will silence them if they don’t.
C. Gaslighting and Emotional Abuse
Many Black parents mock, dismiss, or insult their children when they express their feelings, teaching them to bottle up their emotions.
Common toxic phrases Black parents use:
“You’re too sensitive.”
“Stop crying before I give you something to cry about.”
“You think you know everything.”
These behaviors break a child’s confidence and make them emotionally dependent on external validation, often leading to mental health struggles.
Example: Strong mental health is essential for Black revolutionaries—Garveyite leaders must be emotionally strong, not afraid of criticism or manipulation.
Key Takeaway: A Black child raised in a supportive, emotionally healthy environment grows up to be a fearless warrior for Black liberation.
3. The Failure to Teach Self-Reliance and Economic Empowerment
One of the biggest failures in Black parenting today is not preparing children for financial independence.
A. Raising Children to Be Workers, Not Owners
Many Black parents teach their children to get a “good job” working for white corporations instead of building their own businesses.
Schools do not teach Black children about entrepreneurship, real estate, or financial literacy, leaving them trapped in the cycle of economic dependency.
Without financial education, Black children grow up to live paycheck to paycheck, stay in debt, and rely on white-owned banks, companies, and institutions.
Example: Garvey established Black-owned businesses, shipping companies, and schools, proving that Black people must control their own economies.
Key Takeaway: A Garveyite parent raises their child to be an owner, investor, and leader—not a lifelong worker for white institutions.
4. Promoting White Dependency Instead of Pan-African Identity
Many Black parents unknowingly teach their children to idolize whiteness and reject their African heritage by:
Forcing them to assimilate into white culture instead of embracing their Blackness.
Teaching them that white approval = success (e.g., “If you speak properly, white people will respect you.”).
Praising Eurocentric beauty standards and ignoring African beauty.
Not educating them about African history, Pan-Africanism, and global Black unity.
Example: Parents in Asian and Jewish communities teach their children to build with their own people, while Black children are taught to seek white acceptance instead of Black unity.
Key Takeaway: A Garveyite parent raises their child to be PROUDLY Black and never dependent on white validation.
5. The Garveyite Solution to Toxic Black Parenting
To break the cycle of generational trauma, Black parents must:
Teach self-discipline, not fear – Children should respect authority, but also learn leadership skills and independence.
Encourage emotional intelligence – Black children must learn how to express themselves without fear of ridicule.
Prepare children for financial independence – Teach them about business ownership, investing, and economic self-sufficiency.
Raise Pan-African leaders, not followers – Instill a strong Black identity, pride in African culture, and a mission for Black liberation.
Create a Black-centered learning environment – Expose them to books, media, and mentors that reinforce Black excellence.
Final Takeaway: Garveyism teaches that strong parenting is nation-building. A weak, miseducated, and emotionally broken generation can not lead a revolution.
Conclusion: Black Parenting is the Foundation of Liberation
If Black parents:
Raise fearful, dependent children who need white approval…
Suppress their children’s voices and potential…
Fail to prepare them for economic and intellectual independence…
Then Black people will never be free.
As Marcus Garvey warned:
"The greatest weapon used against the Negro is disorganization."
The solution to this disorganization begins at home. Black parenting must create leaders, warriors, and builders—or the next generation will be lost.
The time to reclaim Black parenting as a revolutionary act is NOW.
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imaginal-ai · 11 months ago
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"Triple-Headed Angel" (0002)
(More of The Trinity-in-Unity Series)
0001
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philosophybits · 1 year ago
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Time and space come into being together and are therefore probably one, like subject and object. Space is enduring time — time is fluid, variable space. Space — the basis of everything enduring — time — the basis of everything changeable.
Novalis, General Draft
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marveltournaments · 2 years ago
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verum-artifex · 1 year ago
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Twins of Twilight. ♊
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slitherpunk · 1 year ago
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as someone who works on a lot of npc/enemy intelligence for her job i sure do hate how searching the keyword AI went from meaning stuff like pathfinding and behavior trees to just.. machine learning, chatgpt nonsense
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stra-tek · 4 months ago
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A very positive review of PC point-and-click adventure Star Trek TNG: A Final Unity, from the short-lived Gamepro UK, issue #1 July 1995.
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anheliotrope · 5 months ago
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this is how i felt showing the unity3d official the exact patch note where they said they added webgl audio compression, along with the documentation that changed to reflect it, along with logs from a unity3d official 4 years ago telling me that the exact problem i'm facing again today would be fixed in unity 2020 (it is now the year of our lord 2025), then handing them the most minimal repro project possible.
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joosthead · 4 months ago
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rlly funny seeing twt up in arms about united by music … the man has referenced south park and family guy in his music and you guys think he’s past satire like that idk change my mind
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corgicabal · 2 months ago
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a tiny procedural animation experiment 👀
where should it go from here?
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videogamepolls · 1 year ago
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Requested by @elevatorcait
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abrahamvanhelsings · 10 months ago
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honestly the npcs in acii are so important to me bc you can punch a guy off a building so he drops to his death and some woman with an italian accent will go 'ah!! well he probably had it coming'. meanwhile five seconds later you crawl up a wall like a monkey and some guy proclaims you a drunk and tells you you're going to break your neck and when you reach the rooftop there's a gaggle of thieves commending you for your skill. you start a fight and everyone stops to watch and cheer you on then calls you an italian slur when you loot the bodies. most italian game ever made.
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