closet-keys:

a-little-bi-furious:

natashiyaa:

shatteredchrystal:

runaon:

a-little-bi-furious:

asherehsa:

samjoonyuh:

Perspective. 

“Looting? I thought these were supposed to be nonviolent protests”

I know it’s incredible! People are literally coming out of the woodwork to comment on this photoset to focus on the looting headline with “well yes it is nice they were helping people hit with the tear gas, but stealing is still wrong uwu” as if they’re back to kindergarten morality.

Like everyone who’s gone to boot camp I’ve been tear gassed. They put about 50+ of you in a gas chamber and toss it in. You have to stay there until your rank is allowed to exit. Before that though, you have to say your name, rank, and social security number. You then exit and file into ranks (again) outside and are not allowed at any point to rinse your face or eyes for the entire day.

That right there? Easily the worst part of boot camp. My eyes were literally swollen shut. I was blinded for a good 30 minutes and my chest hurt for days.

I have zero problem and not and ounce of judgement for people raiding a mcdonalds that can easily afford to repair damage for ANYTHING to help ease the shittiness that is being tear gassed. Esp because every one of us in boot were medically sound to deal with tear gas. Children, asthmatics, people prone to panic and anxiety attacks, the elderly as sooo many more are NOT going to handle tear gas well at ALL.

Or that smoke the police use either.

It’s easy to sit there and judge someone from the safety of your home and say things like “it’s just tear gas” or “it can’t be that bad”.

Fuck you. As someone who HAS been gassed, you need to stfu.

I remember all the preparation they did to get us ready for the gas chamber in boot camp. We were taught how to handle ourselves, how to control our breathing, not to touch anything, how to avoid the worst of the gas. But it still didn’t matter. I remember taking in that first breath and feeling like I had just been kicked in the chest. I remember a few guys in my platoon falling down and vomiting. We knew the gas wasn’t as bad on the floor but we were the fifth platoon through and the vomit kept us from bending over more than absolutely necessary. I remember a few guys, guys in peak health training to be infantrymen, breaking ranks and running for the door only to be dragged back in kicking and screaming until they said name, rank and serial. They were expecting it, trained for it, bragging about how it wouldn’t bother them.
I remember standing there with all of the mucus from my nasal cavity on the front of my ACUs and thinking to myself “This is the nonviolent option?”
Covered head to toe and my skin still itching I looked down at the silver wedding band hanging next to my dog tags and realized that the gas had eaten little pits into its surface.
I stood there and thought of all the news reports I had seen over the years. The uprisings and revolutionaries being gassed, the crowds running from men in masks.
That’s the moment I got it, staring at my ruined wedding band, that’s the moment I realized terrorism isn’t about bombs or who is using them. It’s about controlling people through fear. It’s about removing their ability to act reasonably, to make them seem like the monsters. Terrorism is about triggering people to fight or flight then blaming them for not being rational. It’s about power. Remove someone’s power to act with reason, and you remove their humanity.

Oh fuck

My god this commentary is perfect. Also a reminder that it turned out this “looting” was not that at all, the police bust that window with a bullet and the staff were gracious enough to hand milk out it seems, the protestors did not break in but even if they did just look at what they were trying to do with that milk, look at what they went through. The immense endurance that’s been shown by the people of Ferguson in the face of all this is incredible.

“It’s about controlling people through fear. It’s about removing their ability to act reasonably, to make them seem like the monsters. Terrorism is about triggering people to fight or flight then blaming them for not being rational. It’s about power. Remove someone’s power to act with reason, and you remove their humanity.”

Whiskey tango foxtrot, over

obsessionisaperfume:

Okay, am I the only one weirded out by that rollaway in the motel room?

(original image from @almaasi)

Because bunking in with two GROWN-ASS MEN–WHO INCIDENTALLY ARE OLDER THAN YOU– even though you understand they’re your sons, seems a leeeeeeetle on the weird side, you ask me… 

Well, I suppose.  But if your funds are limited, paying for another room when, actually, it makes you more comfortable to know where everyone is at all times so you don’t panic, doesn’t make much sense.  

I think it does, though, point out the implications of a hunting lifestyle, that because of these practicalities it is going to promote very enmeshed relationships.  When weighing the pros and cons of your resources and risks, lots of boundaries get busted in the service of maintaining the family’s mission and keeping everyone safe.   

I would have given good money to see that fight over the rollaway, though.  

schmerzerling:

you know what’s really interesting about this episode though–bobo gave the dynamic a whole new dimension that I really didn’t expect

i’ve known since i saw the twist at the end of s11 that dean and sam would be disappointed by their real mother and disenchanted when they realized that she wasn’t this monolithic, idyllic, flawless ideal that their father made her out to be–with how much John built her up when they were boys and how little they actually knew about her, there was no way that she could ever be to them what they wanted her to be

what i WASN’T expecting was how disappointed mary would be by her boys

she didn’t want them hunting and that’s a given, she doesn’t like the life john chose for them, of course–but more than that, dean and sam represent the same thing to her that she represented to them all their lives, and i guess i never really thought about that

for dean and sam, mary represents a calm, normal life–the life they would have had were it not touched so early by the supernatural

and for mary, sam and dean are also her escape, her normal life, her soft little baby boys that came well-deserved at the end of a horrible hunting-centric adolescence–a peaceful, perfect twilight that she’s been living out happily for the last thirty-odd years

and now they’ve both discovered that they are all Real People and they’ve lost what might be their last ties to that elusive happy ending

and is it just me or is the fuckin haze of disillusionment in here thick enough to cut with a KNIFE