About

In short I Possibly Will Post About: Nature, Beauty, Lessons, Bears/Cubs, Queer Activism, Funny Shit, Body and Sex Positivity, Genderbending/makeup
https://www.facebook.com/grinnan.bearette




I'm a 260lb student Queer activist with an interest in psychology. I love to longboard in the ocean and on land. I'm a nature enthusiast. I can be on either extreme of the gender spectrum but find most of the confines in our society on the subject ridiculous. I genderbend to challenge hetero normative constructs of gender sometimes and othertimes I do it to raise money for charity in the community.
I live in Humboldt and love the redwoods.
Here is a list of my likes and dislikes. Expect to see me post about most of them :P
Likes: The coast, forests, the beach, ocean, rivers, consistency, feel good music, chocolate milk, sleep overs, driving, Dancing funny, sunsets, traveling, swimming, walking around Barefoot,being called Ty, sandals, All animals, howapia, Coffee, Tea, dances, Pretty eyes, Dancers, musicians, intellectuals, jokes, hikes, wave runners, ATVs, pictures, paint ball, science fiction, laying in the sun on green grass, dressing up, inside jokes, staring, sentimental objects, boxer briefs, video games, helpin people, blue-green, accents, being vegetarian, being Queer, warmness, learning and love

Dislikes: spaghetti, shoes, itchy blankets, city light pollution, homophobia, rape culture, sexism, animal cruelty, ignorance, classism, ableism, humans as a society of stubborn consumerists, strict hetero-normative constructs of gender roles, gender identity and sexuality , and ,finally, when my tea or coffee is to hot to drink.


I think you could define me as an Agnostic Taoist Pantheist.
Yeah so here is a basic sum of me and some of my feelings. I hope you enjoy what I post but I mainly use tumblr a an archive of stuff I like.
xx
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Uhm yes

bfleuter:

Hiiiiiiiii!

Terrifying

thefirstgentleman:

casual reminder that for every person who doesn’t want to label their sexuality theres another person who prefers the tangibility of a word and both are ok

Yes.

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The Molding City

The molding city is a photo installation from a swedish artist and theatre deisgner Johanna Mårtensson. It was built completley out of bread and then the artist just let it mold, and photographed the process.

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If you don’t know about Amina or the topless jihads world wide today I suggest you get googling, Amina Tyler is a 19 year old woman who posted bare breasted photos with the slogan “My Body is My Own and Not the Source of Anyone’s Honor” on her chest. She was arrested and sentenced to “100 lashes” and being “stoned to death”. She went missing and in response FEMEN activists are staging bare cheated protests. This image displays a man kicking an activist protesting outside a mosque. WAKE UP. NUDITY IS NOT A CRIME.

le-kif-kif:

The truth in Kanye’s anti-prison rap

The backdrop to Kanye West’s “Saturday Night Live” performance was a lie. Projected behind the rapper, as he let loose with two rage-filled and politically fueled tracks, were the words “Not For Sale.”

Yeezy wouldn’t have graced the set if he wasn’t hawking a soon-to-be released LP. But his incendiary performance was peppered with damning truths: Angry and pointed condemnations of institutional racism and the prison industrial complex, which disproportionately jails young men of color to fill state budget holes and enrich private corporations.

In the final verse of “New Slaves,” a track released Friday with the coordinated projection of a video on 66 buildings worldwide, and the second performance in his “SNL” set, West raps:

Meanwhile the DEA
Teamed up with the CCA
They tryn’a lock niggas up
They tryn’a make new slaves
See that’s that private owned prison
Get your piece today

Condensed and reduced to flow in rhyming verse, West’s lyrics smack of the conspiratorial. But he is correct: The War on Drugs, abetted by and fueling the private prison industry, currently serves to incarcerate hundreds of thousands of black men in the United States, who provide dirt-cheap labor. Various industries — from call centers to weapons manufacturers to retail companies — rely on prison labor. Private prisons pay inmate workers as little as 25 cents an hour; prisoners who refuse to work are regularly held in isolation. These are the de facto “new slaves” of the prison industrial complex. The CCA (the Corrections Corp of America) is one of two major private prison corporations (along with the GEO Group) that share in a market worth $70 billion.

And West’s implication that the CCA and the DEA are “tryn’a” lock up black people, leaving racist intentionality aside, is supported by troubling statistics. While the entire U.S. population is only 13.6 percent black, 40 percent of its vast prison population (over 2.5 million) is black. In 2010, black males were incarcerated at the rate of 4,347 inmates per 100,000 U.S. residents of the same race and gender, compared to 678 inmates per 100,000 for white males. The disparities are striking, especially when the majority of those held in U.S. prisons are guilty of minor drug offenses. This brings us to Kanye’s reference to the DEA.

As attorney and author John W. Whitehead pointed out in a HuffPo comment piece last year, states specifically opted to make sentencing laws for minor drug offenses harsh in order to fill private prisons — prisons which promised to fill gaping holes in state budgets:

[W]ith an eye toward increasing its bottom line, CCA has floated a proposal to prison officials in 48 states offering to buy and manage public prisons at a substantial cost savings to the states. In exchange, and here’s the kicker, the prisons would have to contain at least 1,000 beds and states would have agree to maintain a 90 percent occupancy rate in the privately run prisons for at least 20 years. The problem with this scenario, as Roger Werholtz, former Kansas secretary of corrections, recognizes is that while states may be tempted by the quick infusion of cash, they “would be obligated to maintain these (occupancy) rates and subtle pressure would be applied to make sentencing laws more severe with a clear intent to drive up the population.” Unfortunately, that’s exactly what has happened. Among the laws aimed at increasing the prison population and growing the profit margins of special interest corporations like CCA are three-strike laws (mandating sentences of 25 years to life for multiple felony convictions) and “truth-in-sentencing” legislation (mandating that those sentenced to prison serve most or all of their time).

As has been well-documented, young black men are disproportionately targeted by police for marijuana arrests. In New York City, for example, nearly 90 percent of the people arrested for marijuana possession are blacks and Latinos. The logic is simple: If states rely on minor drug arrests to fill privately run prisons, and young black men are targeted in minor drug arrests, then states rely on young black men to fill private prisons.

Or, as Yeezy put it: “See that’s that private owned prison/Get your piece today.”

image

lokidindeed:

i-deduce-youre-a-bitch:

YOU NIQQAS WANNA LEARN ELVISH?! HERE YA GO!

Ignore dumb comment can’t clear on my iPod but interesting!

feminspire:

The birth of digital image editing has revolutionized photography forever. It has changed the way we mentally process photos, it has changed the way we view the world around us, but most importantly, it has changed the way we view ourselves. While programs like Photoshop provide an…

Oh boy

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Qwo-Li Driskill: “Stolen From Out Bodies: First Nations Two-Spirits/Queers and the Journey to a Sovereign Erotic” (via livelaughawesome)

Not a TWoC, but the point is very much relevant to our struggle within white-centric society.
- Saandusti

(via trannypowah)

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Awwwwww