September 2024

highonlife22:

alascene:

I literally have this exact thought multiple times every day when i talk to anyone i know. and theyre always watching a new show im like wtf even is that ive never watched a tv show in my life

same-pic-of-neptune-everyday:

catchymemes:

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

comicaurora:

I’ve been reading some stuff on punitive justice, and it made something click for me that I’ve observed a lot online but haven’t been able to put into words before.

When someone does something wrong, that’s bad, and the damage it does needs to be repaired while the person needs to try to do better in future to minimize repeating harm. We learn it in preschool - say sorry, don’t do it again. If they keep at it, remove them from the situation where they can do the harm until they prove they’re responsible enough to go back in.

So if it turns out someone DIDN’T do anything wrong, that should be a relief! There’s no damage to fix, no internal errors to correct. Less work for everybody, literally no harm done. False alarm, all good.

The thing I’ve observed is, lots of people want them to have done something wrong. There’s almost disappointment when it turns out there’s no harm done. And I think that’s because of this general undercurrent of punitive justice as morally righteous and desirable: someone does something wrong, you get to punish them. Turns out they’re innocent? That’s disappointing. Find another reason you get to punish them, or find another bad person you get to punish. But at the core of it is that desire to punish someone. Someone you can hurt in a way that makes you a better person for hurting them.

This particular brand of almost cannibalistic pseudo-justice is super common in tumblr, one of the most ostensibly liberal spaces on the internet; I see more borderline savagery in online discourse here than in the actually toxic parts of the internet that are just openly cruel for cruelty’s sake. It’s always thrown me for a loop, and has frankly also hurt me, because on the rare occasions I get personally dogpiled, it only actually stings when it makes me worry that I’ve legitimately hurt someone. If I did something wrong, or more realistically when I inevitably do something wrong, that would make it good and right for people to give me shit about it every day until I’m dead.

The thing that clicked for me most recently was this bit in Ijeoma Oluo’s Be A Revolution:

Punitive justice is specifically, uniquely appealing to people who have suffered injustices. Of course it’s the Tumblr zeitgeist. Everyone here is a marginalized person failed by at least one system. Punishing someone for perceived injustice is how someone the system has deemed worthless proves their value in blood, even if the person being punished hasn’t harmed you directly - even if they haven’t harmed anyone. “Righteous” anger isn’t about the target in these cases, it’s about the inflicter. This is how much my pain is worth.

And that kind of violent validation is so alluring and so very dangerous. It seeks an outlet, wearing the justification of justice. Who’s in reach? Who’s an acceptable target this week? What’s a good reason to use?

Is there anything they could do that would make me stop?

yeehawpim:

yeehawpim:

a comic about different types of storytellers

Vinyl sticker with handwritten text, "LET'S ALL KEEP TELLING EACH OTHER STORIES UNTIL THE SUN EXPLODES." The text is in speech bubbles coming from an anthropomorphic pencil being held up by a red cartoon hand.ALT
Digital illustration of the same sticker on a blue background with watermark "@yeehawpim"ALT

✏️Made a sticker for this comic!✏️

$3usd

baddywronglegs:

broccoli-bitching:

broccoli-bitching:

broccoli-bitching:

Have you ever been bitten by a white person?

Yes

No

See Results

No I will not explain why I’m asking

I love how this post has become white people just admitting they bite people

Folks, if you wake up with a strong physical aversion to sunlight and an unexplained craving for cheese…

kaban-bang:

kaban-bang:

memingursa:

kaban-bang:


To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Rick and Morty. The humor is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer’s head.

disgustinggf:

zer0-g:

doubleca5t:

If Kendrick calls Drake a pedophile at the Super Bowl I think Drake might just have to go into witness protection because like how are you supposed to keep making music at that point

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

ditzyclown:

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

canadianno:

ditzyclown:

ditzyclown:

I found narinder’s child guys (I named him nibbles)

I don’t think i will ever make a shitten design mainly because I have this little guy, he’s cannon, he’s my son, I love him, and I will never give him up nor let him down

You can’t hide that shitten concept design on the right from us, Mo

That was the 1th attempt, Nibbles was superior

WRONG

It doesn’t even have a body designed!!!!!!!!1 Doesn’t count!!!!!!

(back to purgatory with thee!!!!!!!)

Pls excuse the messiness I am at work </3

it’s third eye is looking into the fourth dimension, what are you smiling at evil creture, born from pentagram and ichor, you will never know what true family is.

They’re beyond your comprehension, fool

you’re tempting me to draw the far superior nibbles

YEAHHHHHH LITTLE BABY SHAME!!!!!!!!!! Love them sm. Congrats on the new baby Lamb and Narinder

what do you see in that creature

I just,,, love them. They’re fluffy and very visually appealing. Listen if the Lamb and Nari won’t keep them, give em to one of the bishops or somn. If you’ve got Leshycat give them an adoptive shitten kid. I think it’d be funny

magnus-rhymes-with-swagness:

hey reminder that connecting humanity is extremely low on esims rn and desperately needs esim donations and also that there are a lot of cool things you can get in exchange for a donation

aapokriff-deactivated20231127:

Oh bippo!

asteroidtroglodyte:

calvinandhobbescomic:

{The World does not die on my watch}

rickybabyboy:

tiktoks-for-dead-pope:

i umderstand

formertokenstraight-deactivated:

thememedaddy:

Yeah it brings me to tears every time

lierdumoa:

cheeseanonioncrisps:

angel-alistary:

wholesomepostarchive:

floatingrockinthesky:

sketchy-pebbles:

pancakeke:

flannelgeek:

johnnyjoestarrelatable:

hellobendykitty:

You can make one here

same energy

and another

The holy trinity

This is so fucking wholesome wtf

1/23/2022

How could we forget.

This post has strong 1997 internet energy.

:

this is how i feel when ppl say genshin has diverse body types sorry

biggest-gaudiest-patronuses:

biggest-gaudiest-patronuses:

what do you MEAN they FUCKING MISSED???

cottoncandylesbo:

babymyleopard:

cottoncandylesbo:

it’s dumb fuck tuesday reblog if you’re nothing

today is wednesday, you dumbfuck


imagedescribed:

mercymomentmurdermeasure:

justheretoread-ao3:

faeriekit:

“This fic was ai generated—” Cool, so lemme block you real quick

i immediately thought of this

[ID:

[Image 1] Tags that read as follows:

#the ethics are whack but more importantly you didn’t even want to write it?? who is it even for?? not you? not me? #you didn’t even have enough interest in the premise to take a crack at it?? then who cares? #please don’t populate in my search results I’m looking for things that people wrote because they liked something #ao3

[Image 2] A Bluesky post by @ iboudreau.bsky.social that reads as follows:

I think the best response I’ve seen to Al anything has been, “Why should I bother reading something that nobody could be bothered to write”

/end ID]

talisidekick:

A while back my pharmacist saw my deadname on my profile and accidentially called it out, he corrected and deleted my deadname from the system so only my preferred name shows up now. There was a crowd of people behind me, so as he hands over the pills he apologized, in equal tone and volume as when he called my deadname and lied saying it’s been a long day and he didn’t mean to call out -his own- name. I quietly told him it was fine and he didn’t need to do that for my sake.

His response: “No, it’s my name now.”

I went to the pharmacist yesterday, his nametag is my deadname. He informed me he’s immigrating and in the process he’s changed his first name to my deadname to have an English sounding name. That’s why he’s now able to get a reprint of his nametag to be my deadname. And repeated, with the intense seriousness of someone who is going to die on this hill: “It’s mine now. Not yours. I’m taking.” His tone indicated that decision is final.

Bro literally deadnamed me once, and has committed to flat out stealing my deadname. It’s his now. Legally. Officially. I over heard his co-workers call him by the name.

aearyn:

runawaymarbles:

doorstoplord:

doorstoplord:

doorstoplord:

Hey has tumblr heard about the Chase “Infinite Money glitch” debacle from tiktok yet because

I cannot believe

I cannot believe that people actually tried this

And even less can I believe that they’re going full Karen to Chase customer service workers. Like you did check fraud. You did a crime. You don’t get to complain about the consequences.

Wait like some people don’t know

So there was a glitch in Chase’s check deposit system. Usually when you cash a check, only a fraction of the full amount is available to you immediately until the check clears. The glitch made it so you could cash a checks full amount right away no matter how big.

So. People were writing themselves massive checks and immediately withdrawing cash they technically didn’t have and then closing their bank account. They were calling it an “infinite money glitch” like it’s the Sims or something.

But it’s not like a cheat code that was suddenly discovered. It’s just check fraud. It’s just straight up a felony. And a good chunk of them filmed themselves doing it.

So people are waking up finding they’re in the negative however many thousands of dollars they pulled.

What BAFFLES me is that people are calling Chase demanding their accounts be reopened, demanding their money back. Work from home Chase agents have shared the calls they’ve been getting from people angry they’re in the red. Like it’s not your money anymore, love, you STOLE it and they took whatever you had originally to try to pay the balance back!! That’s not yours anymore!

People are being SNIPPY on tiktok when people tell them that they did a CRIME. This one lady was like “you don’t know the law, my lawyer knows the law” and it’s like honey! Your lawyer is going to do his fuckin best but you did a crime and then you FILMED YOURSELF. You’re going to jail! Now is the time to start practicing what my therapist calls radical acceptance!

So that’s the tea on the money glitch. Most banks are giving them 30 days to pay the amount back but some people I’ve heard are already being arrested.

Slate magazine’s write up

i’m sorry the S H A D E

but vertical video apps have empowered financially illiterate creators to push their ideas directly to other financially illiterate users.

theoneofwhomisblue:

fleetwood-mac-andcheese:

theoneofwhomisblue:

196 rule

I’m confused. Is this person claiming that God’s last name is Bible?

Yup

theoneofwhomisblue:

fleetwood-mac-andcheese:

theoneofwhomisblue:

196 rule

I’m confused. Is this person claiming that God’s last name is Bible?

Yup

theoneofwhomisblue:

fleetwood-mac-andcheese:

theoneofwhomisblue:

196 rule

I’m confused. Is this person claiming that God’s last name is Bible?

Yup

theoneofwhomisblue:

fleetwood-mac-andcheese:

theoneofwhomisblue:

196 rule

I’m confused. Is this person claiming that God’s last name is Bible?

Yup

lakemojave:

You dumb motherfucker life isn’t about smelling flowers or feeling radiant sunshine on your skin or making meals with your loved ones. You idiot son of a bitch. It’s about apps. It’s about scrolling through apps.

lakemojave:

You dumb motherfucker life isn’t about smelling flowers or feeling radiant sunshine on your skin or making meals with your loved ones. You idiot son of a bitch. It’s about apps. It’s about scrolling through apps.

dragon-in-a-fez:

ltwilliammowett:

The Danish training ship “Georg Stage” (1934) dresses in rainbow colour, 2021 

not the kind of gay ship I’m used to seeing on tumblr but cool

two-entire-bits:

sodium-bitch:

nick-nonya:

ti0mumu:

harperhug:

abraxasrinbalt:

grimeclown:

velvetys:

How is bnha anime of the decade…… they aren’t even anime of the hour of the minute of the second

The notes on this post were so toxic that staff just axed em

1969………

Yes, when the original post is deleted from the server (not just the blog, but the Tumblr servers), there is no root post for notes to be added onto, and also no root post for time to be counted from, so it starts from zero. Most computer operating systems use Unix, which was launched in 1971 with t.he epoch date of midnight on January 1, 1970 as 1. Therefore zero is one second behind that date: December 31, 1969. Also, very unfortunately, this also means nobody except you and anyone you reblog it to will see this explanation, as you cannot open the notes to see comments when there are no notes.

Tumblr is truly one of the webbed sites ever

ohmg

ominous-signs:

leochantisallspiders:

hometoursandotherstuff:

@ominous-signs

Official ominous sign

homunculus-argument:

I had a dream that I witnessed something so funny that I needed to draw a comic about it, but nobody in the dream wanted to have a look at the comic or read it. I don’t remember anything else about the dream but I needed to draw the comic and show y'all what it was.

mahmoudjsy-deactivated20250128:

STOOP SCROLLING

Urgent Help 📣🚨🚨

I’m Mahmod From Gaza

help me and my Family 😭To escape gaza from the fierce war

We have been suffering for more than 11 months.

MY campaign has been vetted by @beesandwatermeoln #190 here

fakecrimepodcast:

this is your captain speaking……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..sorry i’m a little shy to be honest

a-frogge-bip-a-smal-beastie:

fagslop:

a-frogge-bip-a-smal-beastie:

fagslop:

ahmed-mohammed1:

Hello,

I am Ahmed, 31 years old, with my wife Asmaa and our children: Mohammed (9 years old), Kareem (6 years old), Namer (4 years old), and Sahad (1.5 years old). We have faced many challenges in this war, starting from the destruction of our home to the famine we continue to endure in northern Gaza.


My son Mohammed suffers from motor and


hearing disabilities, among other health

issues. I used to have a workshop for windows, kitchens, and all aluminum work, but due to the war, my livelihood was completely destroyed, and I can no longer meet our basic needs.


This is our home that was destroyed in this terrible war.


My goal is to leave Gaza to save my family’s lives. The cost of travel is $5000 per adult and $2500 per child, plus travel and accommodation expenses.


Together, we can support Ahmed and his family during this ordeal. Your donation, regardless of its size, can make a difference in the lives of these children who need a fresh start.


If you’re looking to support Ahmed and his family, please consider providing assistance directly or through relevant charitable organizations.



I hope everyone is safe

Ahmed Alanqar

huda-yousef:

Thank you all

We are thrilled to announce that our GoFundMe campaign has reached €1020 out of our goal of €60,000, thanks to your incredible support.

Your donations have been more than just financial contributions—they have been a lifeline and a beacon of hope. Your generosity is directly helping us escape Gaza and seek a safer and more stable future away from the harsh conditions we face.

GFM

Every donation and share has made a significant impact, giving us a crucial boost towards achieving this humanitarian goal. But our journey is far from over, and every additional contribution will bring us closer to our target.

We encourage you to continue supporting us, whether by donating further or by sharing our campaign with your friends and family. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for everything you’ve done. You are the true heroes in our story.

Sorry for mention you .

Keep reading

ironedorchid:

not-available-for-comment:

shadowblinder:

dragonforsale:

batmanisagatewaydrug:

batmanisagatewaydrug:

girlmuppet:

Do any of u have decent recipes that are like 5 ingredients (not including spices) and take 45 mins or less to prepare i gotta stop eating sandwiches for dinner

yeah hang on

ignore the title of this google doc because it’s a long story but it’s a really solid recipe for southwest chicken alfredo

this is a vegetarian potato curry recipe that’s about 75% spices; once you get the potatoes in there you can really do whatever you want with it

this is literally just pasta, broccoli, and cheese babey and you can live off that shit for DAYS it makes such a big portion

bro this spinach/pesto/3 cheese flatbread is so fucking tasty bro

also you can make the flatbread yourself it’s super quick!!

oh hey I’m eating this white chickpea chili right now, much like the curry it’s mostly spices and you can do p much do whatever you want with it

don’t let the name fool you these potatoes are delicious any time. not just breakfast.

this is slightly more than five ingredient when you add them together but if you have time and really wanna fuckin treat yourself I recommend these chicken strips + this cornbread + either these potatoes or these buttered veggies on the side.

These are my two favorite comfort foods. They’re very easy to make and dont take long to cook.

Garlic butter rice

Orzo mac and cheese (comes out a little bit soupy)

this recipe for gogumabap (sweet potato and rice) saved my life when i couldn’t eat hardly anything for a long time. the recipe itself calls for a heavy bottomed pot but you can absolutely use a rice cooker and put the rice and diced sweet potato in together and just let the machine do its thing

Time for me to beat my little clown drum again for Indian-ish by Priya Krishna, aka The Easiest Recipes I Have Ever Fucking Made. Dal that takes 15 minutes. Easy aloo gobhi. Easy saag feta. Buy. Cook. Eat.

This recipe for oven baked gnocchi with broccoli and lemon is awesome, and I appreciate that there are instructions for making your own version with different vegetables and toppings.