Daily reminder that it's so worth it to be in love with you. I love you so much, and it's been the most fun I've ever had. <3
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Into/Across the Spiderverse has probably the best soundtrack ever made in cinema like no joke. It’s just so
it’s so
MMMMMMMM
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I can't even explain how much I fucking love Hisoka.
I just
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ai art fills me with so much unspeakable rage, whoever thought it was a good idea, i genuinely hate them
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Three Days Grace is like. Okay without Adam I guess but the somebody that I used to know cover is literally genuinely the worst cover and possibly the worst song I’ve heard
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Listening to GY!BE - LYSF from 3am-4am was an emotional experience I've never had before as far as recent memory goes.
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You're in a meaningless hypothetical competition and your opponent comes out with this, wyd?
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hot take but I think the "we're only talking about people who identify as queer when we talk about the queer community" thing was and is one of the worst arguments in defense of the word.
I am talking about you when I say "the queer community", and "queer people", and "queer studies". I'm describing a thing that a large group of people have in common, and you share that thing in common. Your individual comfort with the word doesn't change the definition of it.
I'm sorry you don't like that word. You don't ever have to call yourself that, and you don't have to like it, and I won't ever call you that if you don't want me to.
What I am going to do, however, is decide what language I use based on A) how inclusive it is, and B) how well it communicates my point to the relevant audience.
"Inclusive" here is an important criteria; this refers to the number of people who should be included, that are included, ideally without some kind of weird hierarchy (like we see in "LGBT+" and variations). The technical definition is what we're talking about here- putting personal comfort aside, could the word "queer" describe you?
There will always be someone who doesn't like a particular word for themselves- even if it could apply. Lots of people don't like "LGBT+" (I don't really), even if it technically applies to them. You're not more important than they are.
You can identify one way on a personal level, and still understand that when we're discussing the larger community of people and the histories attached to it, you're included in that- even if you don't personally identify with the specific word we're using. Your story, your voice, and your presence matters.
Y'all need to learn to distinguish "broad term for an experience I share with others" from "personal identity label I use to describe my individual experience to others". ASAP.
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He looks desperate and funny, miserable and funny, speechless and funny, silly and funny
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