Anonymous asked: You using sign language is cultural appropriation. You're taking something from Deaf people, people who have beautiful culture and language and butchering it.

pieofthelord:

saekas:

glumshoe:

anditwaspun:

wait sorry what’d you say? 

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a little bit louder please? 

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no just a tad bit louder

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OH WAIT I CANT HEAR THE HATERS

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BECAUSE IM DEAF, ASSHOLE

also

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also “don’t learn sign language if you’re not deaf because it’s cultural appropriation” is. it’s just. it’s the most incomprehensibly terrible argument i have ever heard.

Tumblr is a wild wild place

“don’t learn to communicate with deaf people, it’s offensive, let them be put aside of society instead”

black-american-queen:

Oh look, a prank that isn’t harassing or harming someone, but instead giving them the option of participating or not.

(Source: ruinedchildhood, via adelindschade)

I don’t want to be famous, I just want to be successful to where I can be lowkey and travel the world

(Source: thetattedstoner, via bleedingwillow96)

ultrafacts:
“Kānāwai Māmalahoe, or Law of the Splintered Paddle/oar, is a precept in Hawaiian law, originating with King Kamehameha I in 1797. The law, “Let every elderly person, woman and child lie by the roadside in safety,” is enshrined in the...

ultrafacts:

Kānāwai Māmalahoe, or Law of the Splintered Paddle/oar, is a precept in Hawaiian law, originating with King Kamehameha I in 1797. The law, “Let every elderly person, woman and child lie by the roadside in safety,” is enshrined in the state constitution, Article 9, Section 10, and has become a model for modern human rights law regarding the treatment of civilians and other non-combatants.

It was created when Kamehameha was on a military expedition in Puna. His party encountered a group of commoners on a beach. While chasing two fishermen who had stayed behind to cover the retreat of a man carrying a child, Kamehameha’s leg was caught in the reef. One of the fishermen hit him mightily on the head with a paddle in defense, which broke into pieces. Kamehameha could have been killed at that point but the fisherman spared him. Years later, the same fisherman was brought before Kamehameha. Instead of ordering for him to be killed, Kamehameha ruled that the fisherman had only been protecting his land and family, and so the Law of the Splintered Paddle/oar was declared.

Kānāwai Māmalahoe

E nā kānaka,
E mālama ‘oukou i ke akua
A e māmala ho‘i ke kanaka nui a me kanaka iki;
E hele ka ‘elemakule, ka luahine, a me ke kama
A moe i ke ala
‘A‘ohe mea nāna e ho‘opilikia.
Hewa nō. Make.

Law of the Splintered Paddle

Oh people,
Honor thy god;
respect alike [the rights of] people both great and humble;
May everyone, from the old men and women to the children
Be free to go forth and lie in the road 
Without fear of harm.
Break this law, and die.

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(via ultrafacts)

lesbolution:

my hatred for rapists is unconditional. i don’t care who you are, if you rape, you have revoked your humanity and you belong in the fucking ground.

(Source: frequentlypolitical, via amusewithaview)

galacticmilky:

our prime minister may be a lizard man from the depths of hell, but at least our country is home to some pretty cool facts

[x]

(Source: astranaut, via adelindschade)

classfirefly:

firefly + genres (insp)

(via bronzedragon)

awkward-fallen-angel:

prokopetz:

Why do the movies never show us this Spider-Man?

i would love to see this Spider-Man

(Source: breakourbones, via thepainofthesass)

other-romantic-verbs:

Why don’t I have superpowers?

You pretty much do, baby girl.

ahobbitscourage:

do you ever check how much time there’s left of an episode just to make sure they won’t stop there

(Source: asexualfeministagenda, via cthulhu-with-a-fez)