“Dead Man’s Town: ‘Born In the USA’ Revisted” is a decent cover album of Springsteen songs. Personally, I think Jason Isbell’s arrangement of “Born In the USA” is the best on the album; it’s a haunting rendition that could never be mistaken for jingoistic praise of said country.

The woman covering “Dancing In the Dark” has a nice voice, but the decision to change “hey baby/hey there baby” to the surprisingly jarring “hey man” ruins that cover for me. People use “baby” for both women and men, and “hey man” does not match the use as a term of interest/endearment of the original. It makes you sound like an aging hippie rather than someone looking for a connection.

eyeshadow2600fm:

prokopetz:

That thing about how cats think humans are big kittens is a myth, y’know.

It’s basically born of false assumptions; folks were trying to explain how a naturally solitary animal could form such complex social bonds with humans, and the explanation they settled on is “it’s a displaced parent/child bond”.

The trouble is, cats aren’t naturally solitary. We just assumed they were based on observations of European wildcats – but housecats aren’t descended from European wildcats. They’re descended from African wildcats, which are known to hunt in bonded pairs and family groupings, and that social tendency is even stronger in their domesticated relatives. The natural social unit of the housecat is a colony: a loose affiliation of cats centred around a shared territory held by alliance of dominant females, who raise all of the colony’s kittens communally.

It’s often remarked that dogs understand that humans are different, while cats just think humans are big, clumsy cats, and that’s totally true – but they regard us as adult colonymates, not as kittens, and all of their social behaviour toward us makes a lot more sense through that lens.

They like to cuddle because communal grooming is how cats bond with colonymates – it establishes a shared scent-identity for the colony and helps clean spots that they can’t easily reach on their own.

They bring us dead animals because cats transport surplus kills back to the colony’s shared territory for consumption by pregnant, nursing, or sick colonymates who can’t easily hunt on their own. Indeed, that’s why they kill so much more than they individually need – it’s not for fun, but to generate enough surplus kills to sustain the colony’s non-hunting members.

They’re okay with us messing with their kittens because communal parenting is the norm in a colony setting, and us being colonymates in their minds automatically makes us co-parents.

It’s even why many cats are so much more tolerant toward very small children, as long as those children are related to one of their regular humans: they can tell the difference between human adults and human “kittens”, and your kittens are their kittens.

Basically, you’re going to have a much easier time getting a handle on why your cat does why your cat does if you remember that the natural mode of social organisation for cats is not as isolated solitary hunters, but as a big communal catpile – and for that purpose, you count as a cat.

cat socialism

spaceshipsandpurpledrank:

mascpriv:

this local woman who has a tomboy kid reached out to my butch group to see if a few of us wouldn’t mind having brunch with her family and a couple more of the girls tomboy friends, cuz she read that it’s important for your development to have adult versions of “people like you” in your life when you’re growing up. which is definitely true. so we’re going over tomorrow. can you believe that? like, I’m gonna cry.

@lycaanroc

Here are some tips to (literally) surviving capitalist exploitation of the medical-industrial complex:

vaspider:

thatpettyblackgirl:

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https://www.goodrx.com/

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http://www.needymeds.org/

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https://www.pfizerrxpathways.com/

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This is wonderful information, but it’s all so *exhausting*. People shouldn’t have to jump through these hoops to get the meds they need. it’s a fucked system and people are dying.

One thing I would also add is if you are having issues with a medication, you may want to check the delivery system of that medication. I couldn’t ever take a specific migraine medication which is very effective because it tore my stomach up, and since I already have nausea with my migraines, it was basically useless…

… as a pill.

Now, my current healthcare won’t pay for the more expensive migraine meds which are gentler on my stomach than the one which tore up my guts and made me throw it up, but they WILL pay for me to get basically an EpiPen of that medication.

It’s like magic. I get a certain number of injectables every 21 days. I haven’t been to the ER for my migraines since they changed the delivery system of my medication from pills to subcutaneous injections. 

I don’t like needles at all, but it’s an EpiPen kind of injection so I just go ‘ah yes, my anti-migraine hypospray’ and my Star Trek heart is gladdened and there you go.

vaspider:

closeonmarksnosedive:

i’ve seen a lot of people concerned about questioning kids lately.

lots of people who were concerned that young girls might identify as nonbinary, for example, because of internalized misogyny. or young gay people who might identify as ace or aro, because of internalized homophobia.

i honestly have a lot of sympathy for people who mis-identify themselves. it’s something that most of us have struggled with at least once before realizing that we aren’t straight or aren’t cis. many of us have struggled with it twice, three times, or a dozen times!

it’s not fun to realize you were wrong. it’s not fun to live one way, feeling wrong and lost and strange and broken, because you wrongly believed that that must be who you are.

but. mis-identification is not caused by having “too many” options.

i understand this concern. i really do. I have no doubt that those examples i mentioned above do happen, very often. but it’s not really any different than my experience, and i would not blame it on any other person but myself. i was a “tomboy” little girl, i was gender nonconforming, i was a trans guy, i was a bi chick, i was a gay guy.

the way i choose to identify is ultimately up to me. i went through the trials of finding my identity in the haystack like everyone else.

i care a lot about the people who mis-identify, and i’d like to offer them support. this support does not mean that the groups that they mis-identified with are wrong or evil for allowing this person into their ranks. it means spreading the message that mis-identifying is okay! that it’s okay to change your labels as much as you want, and to try out different identities, and to change your mind or change over time. THAT is how you support a confused, questioning person.

try to remember that for every confused gay kid who thought they were ace because they couldn’t cope with the idea that they were gay, there was also a confused little ace kid who thought they were gay because they couldn’t cope with the idea that they were just “broken”.

try to remember that for every young girl who has been taught to hate femininity and herself, there is also a trans or nonbinary kid who is constantly being told “no, you HAVE to be a girl. there is no other option.”

we will make mistakes. everyone mis-labels themself. practically no one just knows themself without any effort – it’s a process of self-discovery, and it is painful and complicated. and we should be helping each other.

mis-identification happens when someone doesn’t know all of the options that exist. it happens because of stereotypes, because of bigotry, because of societal pressure and peer pressure and and and.

it is too complicated to blame on one thing. and you don’t know another person better than they know themself. assuming that is dangerous.

present all of the options to someone who is questioning instead of disguising, denying, or slandering some options rather than others. knowledge is power. that questioning person should be well-equipped to think, and try, and get to know themself, without you adding even more prejudice to the list.

concern is one thing, but pushing other people to identify one way instead of another because YOU think it’s right or better (or more likely!) is another thing entirely.

be careful. be kind. and support that questioning person no matter what they end up identifying as.

I just want to cry when I hear people talking about how kids have “too many” options these days, because – honestly – 

– honestly –

Do you know how much I would have given when I was a teenager to know that non-binary was even an option? Do you know how many years of confusion and upset and frustration it would have saved, how much time desperately trying to fit into a form of womanhood that wasn’t for me, because it wasn’t what I was, if I could have just had the idea of non-binary genders as an option? If I’d had that language, how much pain and misery I would have avoided? 

I don’t honestly know how different my life would be if I would have known at sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, when I was saying ‘I want a dimmer switch for my gender, I’m somewhere on the dimmer switch’ because I didn’t have the words and the only options I knew were man/woman. On/off. One/zero. That’s all I knew. 

Look, I genuinely don’t care if people call themselves galaxygender or faekingender. To me there’s no such thing as a ‘fake’ gender, because it’s all, in the end, about relating to yourself. About understanding yourself. And if you go through sixteen genders with names that sound ridiculous to everyone else and you finally say ‘you know, actually, it’s fine, I’m a woman,’ then that’s okay. And if you go through three genders and then decide you are something that sounds absurd to everyone else, that’s fine too. 

I am just so fucking happy that the language exists, and that kids are having these discussions, and really able to think about their gender and how they relate to it and what it means to them. I would have given so much to be able to have those discussions. It would have saved me so much pain to know it was even an option

spaffy-jimble:

spaffy-jimble:

spaffy-jimble:

spaffy-jimble:

spaffy-jimble:

Half of being trans is being hypervigilant against transphobes. Like, I spent 15 minutes scrolling down on a blog that I would be super interested in just to make sure that it wasn’t going to start reblogging stuff from my favorite transmisogynists. Turns out that my hypervigilance was right again.

Things to look for:

  • References to “vagina envy.” This is what initially got me scrolling. This alone isn’t a sure indicator.
  • Andrea Dworkin quotes without criticism
  • Reblogging from troll accounts like confirmed-/-terf

Most cis wlw on Tumblr are, in fact, supportive of trans people. Most cis wlw who mention “hating men” are not using this as an attack on trans women. However, because of my experience with the small, insular, and vitriolic trans-exclusionary feminists on Tumblr, I have learned to be hypervigilant and it Really Fucking Sucks and Really Fucking Hurts when I am right.

I am a lesbian. This kind of blog would have been My Shit. But I’ve been taught to distrust the very women I connect with the most. I’ve been taught to feel afraid in my own home.

Being a transgender lesbian is constantly walking on eggshells to not prove them right. And their standards are ever changing so it’s inevitable that you’ll prove them right. Righteous anger will be taken as “male propensity towards violence,” which closely mirrors the way men see outspoken women as “shrill.” If we do anything to fight back outside of debate within their terms, we are immediately casted as “violent men.” They will not be satisfied until we shut up, lie down, and die.

Cis wlw can and should reblog this. Help me remember my allies.

otahkoapisiakii:

Hey! This is really important! Some prominent Indigenous NoDAPL Water Protectors are in prison and you can write to them. Show your support!

In case you can’t read the tweet, here are the addresses:

Red Fawn Fallis
PO Box 2499
Bismarck, ND 58502

Michael Giron (Little Feather)
PO Box 2499
Bismarck, ND 58502

Dion Ortiz
New Moon Lodge
PO Box 969
Ohkay Owingeh, NM 87566