theshitpostcalligrapher:

hirilelfwraith:

theshitpostcalligrapher:

asundergrowth:

theshitpostcalligrapher:

pillowsquids:

terpsikeraunos:

who hasn’t fantasized about illuminating manuscripts by candlelight in a medieval scriptorium tbh

@theshitpostcalligrapher

hey. hey @terpsikeraunos

i’m

fuckin

living

the

dream

and you can buy em as prints

No Navy seal copypasta 0/10

@asundergrowth

dude that one’s being remade – i had one completed, but it was just under year ago and my skills have improved since then.

Since that one was my very first illuminated meme, i’m going to time it to release the new and improved version as a print exactly upon its one year anniversary (august 13th)

i like how this post is organized because the first example is such a lovely piece illuminating a poem that’s very dear to my heart and then it just immediately descends into hell and builds a house there

bruh.

“then it just immediately descends into hell and builds a house there” 

is an excellent summation of my entire goddamn life

broadlybrazen:

I’m gonna dickpunch the next idiot who says some version of “A BAD THING ALSO HAPPENED UNDER [ANY AND EVERY ADMINISTRATION IN 20th/21st CENTURY” with the implication that this means nobody is allowed to be angry when Trump sees various messes and immediately acts to make it 1000x WORSE

1) bitch, people were angry about shit then too! people have been protesting and yelling about injustice ALL THIS TIME and the fact that you didn’t hear them speaks to your own ignorance. also people have been screaming their heads off about problems w/immigration policy as long as I can remember; if you don’t think people have vehemently spoken about these issues since the 90s (at the very least) then you either can’t remember or didn’t bother talking to anyone who DOES

2) my ass couldn’t participate in the political process 20+ years ago because I was in goddamned elementary school. I don’t have to fuckin accept the consequences arising from choices people made then & seeing those consequences makes me even MORE invested in avoiding worse choices now! I’ve seen the harm caused by our nation’s mistakes and you wonder why I protest when folks wanna create even bigger mistakes?! WTF

3) what the fuck is wrong with you that you see a horrifying mess and instead of thinking “WE GOTTA FIX THIS” you fuckin pontificate about the fact that horrifying messes have existed before this and maybe people I like have also made messes

none of us can fix the past but we can always, ALWAYS do something about the present and the future

in conclusion: quit being such weenies and just try to fix broken shit

closet-keys:

y’all need to include date/time and look in notes for follow-up before reblogging those posts notifying folks about ICE being in an area. 

It’s vitally important information, but becomes virtually meaningless if it’s outdated or if it’s ambiguous as to whether or not it’s outdated. And the ambiguous posts can just add to people living in fear 24/7 when they don’t need to be, or making an area seem unsafe that might at this point be more safe as ICE moves to other areas. Sometimes outdated information is more dangerous than no information. 

It’s good to spread the word on ICE presence, but it needs to be spread with proper context to be effective and safe. 

solacekames:

flowercowetherial:

solacekames:

thecheshirecass:

citizen-zero:

like no offense but there’s a lot of y’all leftists on here that are like super well versed in theories and ideology and like you’re not necessarily wrong about things but my GOD do a lot of you love to ignore material realities.

like there’s a lot of you that talk about both political parties being the same and in a lot of ways you’re right but you can’t fucking tell me with a straight face that we’d be in the same situation we’re in now if Clinton had won that election. like you cannot tell me shit would’ve definitely gone this far off the rails under a democratic administration.

and like honestly you can talk all you want about ~the revolution~ but personally I’m at a point where I deadass do not give a fuck. if you’re gonna be more focused on a distant hypothetical pipe dream, instead of working with the reality we’ve got and supporting the people and efforts that have the most real chance to keep the government from fucking us till we’re dead, then I can’t fuck with you. you can’t fight in a revolution if you can’t fucking feed yourself or house yourself or afford to keep yourself alive. a lot of y’all are the mother theresa’s of politics.

Also most of the leftists preaching revolution sure as shit aren’t jumping out into the streets and putting themselves in harm’s way. They want a lot of poor, brown bodies in front of them when the bullets start flying.

I’ll go farther. A lot of these people are just a bunch of goddamn spoiled lazy bitches. Creating real change outside of the electoral system means doing a lot of organizing and community building work. It means fighting (literally or figuratively) with rightwingers every step of the way, and building coalitions with people who don’t look or talk like you or share all of your values. It’s so much easier and safer to yell at so-called “liberals” on the internet, most of whom are just terrified, vulnerable people of color desperate to maintain the rights they’ve won in living memory.

If you’re a fellow leftist who isn’t like that, I strongly believe one of our top priorities, on the cultural level, needs to be getting these assholes who pretend to be on our side to either shape up or ship out. Most of the ones from rich white families are going to turn apolitical or Republicans once they hit their mid twenties, so it’s not like they’d be a great loss. All they do is alienate the potential popular base for a real revolution with their incessant cryptoracist bullshit.

The only thing i’ve seen from the far left is a concerted effort to run better candidates then the democratic establishment. While far too few on the left are canvassing, calling, nocking on doors, or even voting in primaries, it’s also true that centrist democrats have had their chance to fight for our rights, and have thus far folded to the republicans every time. The reality of the situation is that both main stream parties are committed to doing what their donors want from then so they can win elections and stay in office. You know, where they vote for their own pay raises. With the majority of Americans believing third parties are futile, the our best opportunity is to elect better candidates to the democratic ticket in the primaries.

I have to disagree with you partly because getting a candidate elected is only the first step, and it’s much easier than keeping an elected politician accountable and on track. Where the far left can run successful candidates on a Dem ticket (like in The Bronx) they definitely should!  But that’s not a broad sustainable strategy and I’ll try to explain why: 

Legislators, especially state legislators, don’t get paid that much. It’s a relic of our archaic system that legislators are supposed to be gentlemen farmers, basically. For example, in the state of Georgia the yearly compensation of a state legislator is $17,000. That’s impossible to live on, much less hire the kind of services a legislator needs to fully understood the bills they’re supposed to vote on. So generally the only people who run for office are already rich and already dialed into the good old boy network. They’re going to get richer off their elected position, sure, but it’s all through connections and kickbacks and consulting. Often small salaries are more indicative of corruption than large ones, because while salaries are transparent to the public, other forms of remuneration are much less so.

If you put a good leftist candidate into that kind of system, if they don’t have a lot of community support and backing, they’re either going to flame out very quickly or become corrupt. 

My hope for greater far left involvement under a Democratic tent:

  1. Field good candidates who seem to truly represent their communities
  2. Support those candidates once elected, don’t turn on them once they start making compromises that all politicians have to make
  3. But also keep those candidates accountable, make sure they realize they can be turned on and voted out if they don’t deliver!
  4. Operate on principles of harm reduction, not purity tests. If a formerly centrist Democrat starts pandering to the left because they realize that’s what’s going to get them elected, that’s a win, not a loss.
  5. Educate people about getting involved in the electoral process. This includes fighting voter suppression among communities of color, which is something centrist Dems are already doing, either because of personal belief or simply because they know it’s in their best interests. 
  6. Talk about electoral politics as simply one branch of possible political engagement. Other branches include things like community service, self-defense groups, mutual aid, direct action, counter-recruitment (and I’m going to stop now because I’m running out of time but OMG I wish people were working more on counter-recruitment because it’s so important right now. But every time I go looking for material on it, I run into websites that haven’t been updated for ten years)

There was a controversy in the governor’s primary over here over one of the candidates asking for a pay increase as a state legislator. Her opponent spun it as her asking to be paid more out of greed rather then trying to fix that system. I think dirty politics like that encourages state legislators not to rock the boat even if they arent independently wealthy.