themoufofthesouth:

ukrindian:

themoufofthesouth:

ukrindian:

themoufofthesouth:

versphobic:

themoufofthesouth:

Yes I identify as a top. And yes I bottom. We exist.

The League of Tops has deemed this statement untoplike, condoning vers behavior and is therefore revoking your topping membership immediately.

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You can have my Top Card©. The premium benefits package was pretty nice but dealing with our bottom clientele was more hassle than reward. The Versatile & Position Non-Binary Alliance™ has a better working model and more upward mobility (if you catch my drift). I’m good luv, enjoy.

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bottom academy still recruiting for the 2019-2020 academic year sistren

I attended my freshman year. No benefits, malicious environment, sub-par healthcare, terrible alumni package, the dinning hall only served fiber pills and water, and don’t get me started on the strict top associates. Made some good hunties tho.

we applied for funding through the BBB (Better Bottoms Bureau) and now offer cross-disciplinary trainings and a diversity initiative to recruit, train, and properly integrate vers bottoms into our workforce :) plus we got a bidet now!

I’m so proud that yall are making strides to improve but it’s gonna take years to improve your RateMyProlapse score. Good luck boo

imfemalewarrior:

lets-do-get-help:

catvincent:

surelytomorrow:

moniquill:

rubyvroom:

Can I watch a great film knowing the actresses in it were terrorized and mistreated the entire time? Can I watch a football game knowing that the players are getting brain injuries right before my eyes? Can I listen to my favorite albums anymore knowing that the singers were all beating their wives in between studio sessions? Can I eat at the new fancy taco place knowing when the building that used to be there got bulldozed eight families got kicked out of their homes so they could be replaced with condos and a chain restaurant? Can I wear the affordable clothes I bought downtown that were probably assembled in a sweatshop with child labor? Can I eat quinoa? Can I eat this burger? Can I drink this bottled water? Can I buy a car and drive to work because I’m sick of taking an hour each way on the subway? Whose bones do I stand on? Whose bones am I standing on right now? 

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Originally posted by ihiphop

On one hand, it’s a privilege to be able to choose to acknowledge these horrors or not–we’re going to acknowledge that privilege. On the other hand, I once attended a lecture by the explorerer-conservationist Jacques-Yves Cousteau’s daughter and son and they had a lot of opinions about what we could do to help the environment and the ocean and I talked about how in my country, we have to drink bottled water, because it’s a desert and there’s only salt water all around, but we’re contributing to pollution and all of these things…

And she looked at me and told me not to fall into the trap of “activist guilt.” I couldn’t remember the exact words, but, it was the first time I’d heard the term and it took a weight off my shoulders.

We do what we can. It’s so much better than giving up entirely or not doing anything at all because we can’t do it perfectly. It doesn’t benefit anyone in the end if we just sit around feeling guilty about every little thing in life. I’d just joined tumblr back then (haha, so like, eight or nine years ago at this point?), I was being exposed to way more than I’d ever been before (I was previously just into feminism and animal rights/wildlife conservation/environmentalism since I was a kid), and it was weighing on me.

As long as humans are humans and living flawed lives, many consumed by greed, there will not be anything in this world untouched by evil.

I usually avoid stuff that says it was made in China or other cheap looking knockoffs, out of fear of them being made in sweatshops (now, I know even a lot of big brands use those…), it’s exhausting. Then, I read something about how people who actually lived and worked in those would still buy this cheap stuff and how this shocked the foreigner reporting on it, but they just looked confused like, it’s what they can afford and them avoiding consuming it isn’t going to change the whole system from the ground-up.

… it went on about how “money talks” and choosing where to put your money still feeds the whole capitalist system and is nearly a way of comforting yourself, but you not buying doesn’t mean everyone else isn’t. What needs to be tackled is at a much higher level than any of us can reach.

Of course, I’d still, given the choice, give my money to companies I agree with and I’ll boycott what I know to support awful stuff, but I also feel no superiority over this and know now it’s not as black and white or easy as I thought it was.

This is the same reason that moral purity “you can’t enjoy [x] because it’s Problematic ™” is such nonsense, because nothing is pure. There’s something bad about everything if you dig deep enough. As long as we lived in flawed human societies we’ve got to make the best of what they offer us. If you have the choice and means, please, do support those who do good, but also, don’t beat yourself up over not living up to an unattainable ideal.

No one can. You’ll just make yourself so miserable, you either burn up and stop fighting entirely or you’ll make yourself a non-productive, depressed heap just out of a bleeding heart left unchecked. You can’t make a change to this world if you refuse to engage in it.

Have a related article with self-care tips for activists.

Purity is one of the worst, most harmful myths humans ever invented.

The way I’ve always kinda looked at it is to support the movements that are calling out the horrible things happening. Fight for the changes to be made, for the wrongdoers to be punished, because silently boycotting everything won’t make as much of a difference

I read this article about activists in (I think) the Philippines. 

They were working on attaining labor rights in sweat shops that make clothes commissioned by fast fashion companies. 

They wore the merchandise from the companies that were creating dangerous/unhealthy working conditions and the journalist asked them why they didn’t boycott the companies (as is often the tactic used in the USA and Europe). 

If they recall correctly they didn’t think it mattered whether or not they wore the merchandise because they felt collective bargaining would be more effective to create systemic change for everyone. 

So basically: fight for changes to be made to the system instead of using your energy to try and avoid anything that isn’t pure; you’re using all your energy to try and decrease your individual impact instead of using it to fight the system. 

-FemaleWarrior, She/They