I wonder if she's reading this too?
This is just a place for random stuff I like.
Check out femonster for things that I like related to feminism.
This is just a place for random stuff I like.
Check out femonster for things that I like related to feminism.
Information
- Website:
- http://
Following (Random 9)
I think my cat is reading my diary...
In the 101 top-grossing family films…from 1990 to 2004, of the over 4,000 characters in these films, 75% overall were male, 83% of characters in crowds were male, 83% of narrators were male, and 72% of speaking were male. When the American Psychological Association commented on this research, they said, ‘This gross under-representation of women or girls in films with family-friendly content reflects a missed opportunity to present a broad spectrum of girls and women in roles that are non-sexualised.’
Natasha Walter, Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism, pages 69-70, 2010. (via bitemebeautiful)
Bringing this back as people have started reblogging this again and EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW THIS.
(via bitemebeautiful)
(Source: good-morning-revival)
Windows 98 Screensavers
(Source: seeyouaroundriver)
Being a Fan of Something Does Not Mean That
- you have to love it unconditionally
- you cannot say that there are things wrong with it
- you have to quantify your love for it
- you cannot live without it
- your entire existence revolves around it
- you have to be in a fandom
if you like something, you like it. if you love something, you love it.
thassit.
you ain’t gotta prove anything to anyone.
So far in the history of capitalism, with important exceptions, capitalist preferences have governed what politicians do. So capitalists leave Detroit for China and then China for Bangladesh. Capitalists’ relocation decisions were never about ‘efficiency.’ No one ever could or did count all of the social costs and benefits associated with those decisions. No one knows or could know whether the benefits outweigh the costs. Efficiency claims are fiction used to disguise the victory of some social interests over others as if society as a whole had gained. The Detroits of the world, past, present and future, stand as powerful wake-up calls about the costs of capitalist freedoms and the injustice governing who bears them.
Richard D. Wolff, Professor of Economics Emeritus, UMass-Amherst (via prshnth)
I wish I had taken an Econ class..
cat :) by Alina Rustamova on 500px

