strange: (Pagan: Do no harm but take no shit)
I was just watching Childish Gambino's This is America. Again. I do this on the regular, partly because it and he is amazing and partly because he's saying SO many things in a 4 minute span and it's hard to focus on all of it (yes, I know that's the point) and for these reasons it simply warrants numerous... if not infinite... watches. SO. Ok. I just had an insight I'd never had before, and that I haven't seen anyone else on the internet have, at least not where I saw it. The internet is a big place and all.

So here's the thing I was struck with THIS time through. When he slaughters the choir, he enters the area all smiles and joy. Dancing and laughing and doing his thing. Then, he gets sad for about 2 seconds, and someone tosses him an "assault" rifle with which he instantly murders all the people in sight. This is, by my eyes and feelings, a comment not just on how ridiculously easy it is to get high-powered killing machines in America, but also on how very swiftly people in this country in this day and age (at least) move from "everything is fine" to "KILL EVERYONE I CAN". A decently "normal" person feels slighted or sad or angry. Instead of any number of other possible outlets, they turn strait to their gun to punish people who most likely didn't even have shit to do with their feelings of ineptitude (or whatever). Part of this issue is the fact that gun sellers do literally (don't even try to tell me they don't unless you're willing to show your work and have an honest, open-minded, discussion) just throw non-handguns at people just cause they want one. So it's readily available if someone happens to have a day of sadness. Part of this issue is that people in America hard-core shove mental illness to the side and try to bury it. So even if a "normal" person was depressed, etc, they're not getting the help they need (and possibly because we're so anti-mental illness awareness said person may not even know about their own) and therefore don't recognize their other outlets or tools they might have available to combat their own brand of darkness. Now I dunno that the mental illness interpretation I just found myself with was Glover's intent, but from where I'm sitting with my life experiences, this handful of seconds spoke volumes to me about it and how we handle it here. People handle sadness by punishing others rather than introspection.

I feel like I'm struck with a new thing at least every other time I watch this video. This man is a treasure and a fucking genius. I love that he won't comment or explain. It's art, he says. Art is supposed to mean different things to different people depending on the glasses through which they view it and/or the world. I'm paraphrasing as I can't find the specific interview, so I didn't use quotes.
strange: (Diane Kruger: Curled and cocked)
I just need to say; please stop blaming EVERYONE who belongs to *insert ANY political or even religious group here* for the inevitable extremists and their reprehensible actions. You're just making the polarizing effects of it all much much worse.

Just as one can't say "cops are all corrupt assholes", one also cannot say "black folk are all criminals." You can't say "men are all scum", just as you can't say "women are all weak." It's simply not true, and that is fact. Yes, there are cops who are assholes. Yes, there are black people who are criminals. But the fact is that most are not and people should be judged individually, not by what so-and-so extremist member of said group did.


Note: This doesn't apply to hate-only groups such as Nazi's, etc. Please, always blame hate-only groups for hatred, that's perfectly fair, as it's all these types of groups stand for.

FACEPALM

Jan. 31st, 2017 09:04 am
strange: (Misfits: Rudy ewface)
LOOK. I'm all for religious freedom, but when you're doing active harm to others, human or otherwise, in the name of your religion? FUCK YOU AND THE MUSTACHE YOU RODE IN ON! Not fuck your religion. Fuck YOU.

JUST SAYING

*mic drop*
strange: (Doctor Who: PROTEST!)
I'm completely and utterly heartbroken by the hatred and contempt and abject cruelty I see in my fellow humans lately. I don't care what is going on politically, why does it entitle you to be so fucking rude and horrible to everyone around you who happens to not share your opinions. Are we not all human? Are we not all sat here on this ship, together? Sink or sail, we're all right here next to each other.

When you're insulting someone because they don't share your views, you are part of the problem. When you use violence in the face of peace, you are part of the problem. When you allow yourself to become so angry that you lash out, despite what you stand for? You are part of the problem.

Remember that for every insult you post on facebook or twitter or tumblr or anywhere, every time you say "people with such and such an opinion are stupid/lame/whatever" you're insulting someone you supposedly love. Because I guarantee there are people in your immediate circle who have the opinion you just belittled so cruelly, people you're close to. People who you just hurt very very deeply with your thoughtless hate-mongering.

Trust me, I'm one of the people you love who you just brought to tears. I've been viciously attacked indirectly numerous times each and every time I even glance at (not only, but especially) Facebook over the last few months. Because I believe in peace. I believe in equality. I believe that no one has the right to tell another person how to live their lives. I believe that religious myth should never be put into law. I believe that primary and higher education should be available without debting your entire life away. I believe that love is love and love is never wrong. I believe in basic human rights for everyone. I believe in turning our backs on hatred and bigotry and closing our hearts to fear of difference and diversity. I believe that LGBTQ folk have every bit as much right to marry and publicly snog their partners as hetero folk. I believe that sexual assault is never ok, and is never the fault of the victim. I believe in standing up peacefully if you think there's an injustice that needs righting. I believe that the only way forward is to get over ourselves and stop trying to be the biggest most powerful bully on the playground. Try just being kind for once.

Sadly, the majority of the people in this country right now seem to believe that you should sit down and shut-up and do what the rich man in the tower says. That you shouldn't have any opinions if they differ from theirs. That segregating ourselves from the world is how to solve our problems.

Let me just say that it's not strength or fear or hatred that made America great. It was that acceptance, that diversity that made America great. That ability to open our hearts to others and help them. That's what made this country great. Kindness and the desire to help each other. The tired, the poor, the huddled masses. Not the wealthy, the spiteful, the charismatic.

You and me will all go down in history with a
sad statue of Liberty
And a generation that didn't agree.