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honey-sunsets · 8 hours
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Knowledge is empowering
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honey-sunsets · 8 hours
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I am once again thinking about digging holes
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It's so fucked up that digging a bunch of holes works so well at reversing desertification
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I hate that so much discourse into fighting climate change is talking about bioenginerring a special kind of seaweed that removes microplastics or whatever other venture-capital-viable startup idea when we have known for forever about shit like digging crescent shaped holes to catch rainwater and turning barren land hospitable
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honey-sunsets · 8 hours
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Today Crowley had to reassure the Bentley that the only reason they were taking the train was because Aziraphale loved trains, and in-turn, that Aziraphale did not love trains more than the Bentley, they just both believed it should get to have a break once in a while.
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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Listen I'm aroace as hell but ouhgr...... aesthetically that does something to me... you agree with me
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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in the hour or so it took me to draw this op turned reblogs off
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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#growth
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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gender euphoria is looking rly hot to other queer people and offputting to everyone else
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honey-sunsets · 12 hours
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FULL VERSION👀
I swear, the cottage wives au is getting written, I have two witnesses…… but I can’t resist some art in the meantime
Ko-Fi
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honey-sunsets · 13 hours
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honey-sunsets · 13 hours
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flameless sword
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honey-sunsets · 13 hours
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I had to put these two images together. Just too ineffable. 🥂
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honey-sunsets · 14 hours
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“If a society puts half its children into short skirts and warns them not to move in ways that reveal their panties, while putting the other half into jeans and overalls and encouraging them to climb trees, play ball, and participate in other vigorous outdoor games; if later, during adolescence, the children who have been wearing trousers are urged to “eat like growing boys,” while the children in skirts are warned to watch their weight and not get fat; if the half in jeans runs around in sneakers or boots, while the half in skirts totters about on spike heels, then these two groups of people will be biologically as well as socially different. Their muscles will be different, as will their reflexes, posture, arms, legs and feet, hand-eye coordination, and so on. Similarly, people who spend eight hours a day in an office working at a typewriter or a visual display terminal will be biologically different from those who work on construction jobs. There is no way to sort the biological and social components that produce these differences. We cannot sort nature from nurture when we confront group differences in societies in which people from different races, classes, and sexes do not have equal access to resources and power, and therefore live in different environments. Sex-typed generalizations, such as that men are heavier, taller, or stronger than women, obscure the diversity among women and among men and the extensive overlaps between them… Most women and men fall within the same range of heights, weights, and strengths, three variables that depend a great deal on how we have grown up and live. We all know that first-generation Americans, on average, are taller than their immigrant parents and that men who do physical labor, on average, are stronger than male college professors. But we forget to look for the obvious reasons for differences when confronted with assertions like ‘Men are stronger than women.’ We should be asking: ‘Which men?’ and ‘What do they do?’ There may be biologically based average differences between women and men, but these are interwoven with a host of social differences from which we cannot disentangle them.”
— Ruth Hubbard, “The Political Nature of ‘Human Nature’“ (via gothhabiba)
Yes.
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honey-sunsets · 14 hours
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honey-sunsets · 1 day
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