vaspider:

stratosphericstrawberryslimexlr
commented on tilthat’s post “TIL Minnesota keeps the original Confederate flag hidden and refuses…”

Let MN burn it.

No.

It’s pretty damn obvious from everything in the thread in the link that MN does not want to burn the flag, so there is no letting about it. They preserve it as a reminder of the heroism of the men who died and the men who lost almost everyone that day, who held on even though they probably expected to die themselves, because someone had to hold the line.

Everyone needs to read the info in the link.

Feel free to burn any Confederate battle flag belonging to any asshat who either embraces the racism inherent in said flag or who claims that it’s about “heritage, not hate” or anyone who has the bright idea to fly it side by side with the flag of the United States of America (do not ask me how much I see this; I live in the South and it’s a lot), but do not say what the holders of the preserved, hard won trophy of a Union regiment that was almost wiped out in defense of the the Union should do with that flag.

thenarator:

thenarator:

as someone with a bachelor’s degree in english, i am inexpressibly tired of people telling me to get highly specific jobs that often require highly specific degrees. “just go write for a magazine!” you need a journalism degree for that. “just teach!” you need a teaching certificate, and also fuck you. “just go work at a tutoring place!” tutoring children with learning disabilities, which make up the majority of the clientele at those places, requires not only a teaching certificate but a specialized master’s degree. “just go work at a library!” you need a master’s degree in library science to be a librarian. it is actually a highly skilled and extremely competitive field. you don’t just “go work at a library,” you train for years in the vain hope that you will get one of handful of available jobs. “just go work at a library.” the nerve. the unmitigated gall. “just go work at a library.” ugh.

alright listen up. i had no idea this was going to be the most popular post i ever made, and i’ve gotten some really nice comments and some pretty condescending ones. let’s get a few things straight:

first, this post is based on MY experiences and MY research in MY geographical area. i don’t know if it really is any different in big cities, small towns or elsewhere in the world, but where i live this is how it is.

second, this post is not about my burning desire to work in a library. i honestly don’t want to, it’s just something that’s been recommended to me ad nauseam. 

thirdly, i don’t KNOW what you can do with an english degree. if i knew that, would i be having all these jobs recommended to me? i don’t have a job! i haven’t figured out what i’m doing with my life! i don’t KNOW!

and finally, several people have expressed their confusion about why i or anyone would get an english degree if there are no jobs for it, and i find these comments to be especially tedious.

i. was. told. there. would. be. jobs.

english is the only thing i’ve ever been good at, so i knew that’s what i wanted to study. it was my passion, and i was assured that following your passions was what college was about. i went to a meeting for prospective english majors freshman year and the head of the department told us all that he was constantly getting requests from employers who would tell him “send me all your english majors!” he told us if we majored in english we’d have the critical thinking skills to do whatever we liked. we’d be in impossibly high demand.

these were all, as i have found out, baldfaced lies. BUT, not in the way you think.

it’s true, english majors are not in as high demand as the department head led us to believe. but you know who is in incredibly high demand? NO ONE! there is no major that makes you imminently employable, not a bachelor’s degree or a master’s degree or a doctorate. you are equally unemployable with a business degree, or a law degree, or a degree in marine biology. you could have a degree in any STEM field and you’d still struggle to find a job. the only difference between those degrees and an english degree is where you’re told to “just get a job doing x.”

we are in an employer’s market right now. there are more people than there are jobs to be had, partly because none of the baby boomers will fucking retire, but also because of all the people who have to work two jobs to make ends meet because nowhere pays a living wage anymore. no one is safe, nothing is sacred, and if you think “well if you’d only gotten a different degree this wouldn’t be happening lol” then you need to pull your head out of your ass and look around you my friend. this is not a result of our poor choices. we did not do this to ourselves. it was done to us, by the ivory tower shit-heads who line their pockets with our student loan money.

tldr: major in english. eat the rich.

frogmunist:

He’s giving 2 billion dollars to start up pre-schools and anti-homelessness campaigns, which you think is cool until

Having gone through teacher training in the past…5 years, “student = consumer in the capitalist consumption sense” is not an uncommon idea, unfortunately.

For the first time, I am experiencing a positive feeling about the possibility of managing to get top surgery/double mastectomy.

I still don’t know how my various doctors will react when I introduce the subject.

I still don’t know how or when I would manage the money.

But for for the first time, I am having a positive moment about the possibility going forward.

And I am embracing that fully, even if part of this might be the ativan talking.

starlightomatic:

phoenixyfriend:

starlightomatic:

starlightomatic:

starlightomatic:

starlightomatic:

I’m not gonna argue that you have some existential obligation not to schedule things on Jewish holidays but I am gonna say that when you do it, it makes Jews a little less welcome in your space

And this is especially an issue in a space that is already for a marginalized group and is trying to be intersectional, eg. an LGBTQ group

And like, I know there are Jewish people who’d still go, but tbh that’s kind of part of the issue — by scheduling things this way, you’re contributing to the stress of having to choose, the pressure to assimilate, and the tension of being a Jew in the diaspora

Non-Jews can reblog this

If you’re like me, then your first reaction to this was “Okay, but there are a lot of holidays and a lot of religions, how do I schedule around all of them?”

So I went and found an Interfaith Calendar of Holy Days for major religions.

(More under the cut.)

Keep reading

Thank you for this addition! I was actually thinking of linking this exact calendar. And very good point about checking in with someone from the religion — many holidays are minor or at least don’t really get in the way of going to events. Like, scheduling something on, say, Tu Bishvat would be totally fine.