- 30
- 62
9 11 is canon in mlp
— domomajig (@stonydomo) January 28, 2025
- 76
- 48
- 35
- 35
- SerGay : Marking this NSFW would be a violation of Trans Rights
- Awoo : Actually caught me on the work wifi with this one. Thanks π
- Lv999_Lich_Saiyan : posting gay s*x outside of chudrama where it belongs
- eletric_maniac :
- AIDS_IS_A_CHOICE : old + fat cis gay porn
- AvoidTheFoid : This is still less disgusting than that diss track about a toddler getting molested
- JustAStupidFuckingGayKONG : ^ grillcast should unironically be permanent for libertarian nonsense
- Kaczinsky : I was promised copter but instead I found OP spending afternoon with his uncle
- Grue : Unmarked 18+ content
- OofYikes : Gay
- 6
- 12
- 37
- 80
No idea what I'm expecting here in terms of advice tbh.I was involved with a man who I regarded as my soulmate, things were looking serious. We talked about marriage and the future.
He was from a Muslim background in the Middle East. I'd always been interested in his religion (Islam) and had been studying it. After a couple of years with him, I took the step of converting. Everyone in my family and friends were supportive as they knew it was my choice. There was never any pressure from him.
After converting, we scaled back on the physical side of things and both said it would be best to get married. I was all for this, loved him to bits and wanted my life with him and believed he felt the time.
Unfortunately, his parents back home in his native country had other ideas and wanted an arranged marriage to someone of their choice... After months of trying to make them see reason, he wasn't strong enough to stand by me. So I ended our relationship as I could see it was going to end in tears.
I feel so alone in Islam now. I live in a small semi rural area with no mosque, no community to speak of and I've been shying away from wanting to move on. I feel at a crossroads. There's no chance of meeting a Muslim man here. I feel so lost without him, although I feel ending it with him was the right thing to do as he'd never go against his parents' wishes. Even though he was almost 30 and well-educated.
I'm no so much looking for a husband.. It will take me a long time to get over losing him. He was the first man I ever really loved and imagined a life with. I'm just feeling a bit isolated in terms of being "the only Muslim in the village" so to speak. It's a small and very "white", middle-class community. My ex and I met at uni in a big city, where it's more common to see other Muslims and different nationalities.I'm feeling so many different things, feel like he's thrown me under the bus. I made so much effort and sacrifice for him, changed my whole way of life and even aspects of my diet and appearance. Yet he couldn't even just stand up for me (with his parents) when it mattered. He claimed to be in love with me (I was his first), yet didn't feel able to have any firm discussion with his parents about marrying me and going through with it.
I feel that being Muslim, this would put non-Muslim men totally off me. Especially with all the negativity around the religion in the media and so on. I don't even have anyone to do Ramadan with, or even talk about the religion.
tfw only muslim in the village
also he absolutely knew he was eventually going to marry someone else, but as she said, they were engaging in the 'physical side of things' and moids will be moids if you let them do that
- TotalVatniggerDeath : kill all moids
- 23
- 52
indigenous woman who is also a vidya designer, on the "indigenous" section on CBC:
Neighbor why are "indigenous" and "aboriginal" activist foids always like the Whitest motherlovers on the planet?
When the video game Custer's Revenge first came out more than 30 years ago, a successful boycott eventually caused it to be pulled from store shelves The controversial video game, made for the Atari 2600 by Mystique (now defunct), depicts indigenous women tied to trees and cacti and r*ped.
When indigenous game designer Elizabeth LaPensΓ©e found out this game was again available for play online she took to Twitter to voice her outrage.
"The game reinforces systemic violence against native women," said LaPensΓ©e.
Daniel Starkey, a Chickashsha Nation game journ*list, was researching a story about Native American representation in games when he came across YouTube videos of Custer's Revenge. Starkey spoke with LaPensΓ©e about his find. The two of them were able to find several game-play footage videos on YouTube, but it wasn't until Starkey dug deeper that he actually found a playable link to a remade version of the game.
"I'm not in a position to go to that link, download it and play it. I don't know how far back that would put me in my personal healing," said LaPenΕee from her home in Oregon. But Starkey did download the game to prove that it can be played.
"[It] made me sick to my stomach and brought me to tears," said Starkey. "I respect its right to exist, but it's almost impossible for me to figure out how anyone could consider the game of cultural value to anyone."
B-WORD THIS IS A FRICKING ATARI GAME FROM 1982
1 9 8 2
IT WAS ALREADY BOYCOTTED WHEN IT CAME OUT
THE COMPANY THAT MADE IT DOESN'T EXISTS ANYMORE
THE DEVS WHO CREATED IT ARE IN THEIR 70S OR 80S IF THEY ARE STILL ALIVE
ARE YOU GONNA CALL FOR THE BOYCOTT OF SALΓ AND ERASERHEAD NEXT?
LaPensΓ©e is a former game journ*list turned game designer. Until now, LaPensΓ©e had not spoken out against violence against women in video games. The gaming industry has come under fire for its sexual harassment against women and female game designers and journ*lists have had their safety and lives threatened.
LaPensΓ©e said she has stayed quiet for this very reason.
"If anyone were to attack me in that way, I just don't have the allies in the game industry who would help protect me and look out for me, I have the native community too," said LaPensΓ©e.
For me stepping out isn't just about the game industry, it's about personal experiences and having to be the voice of someone who is part of a statistic, that a game like this is reinforcing what creates that statistic.
- Elizabeth LaPensΓ©e, video game designer
LaPensΓ©e, who designs games that promote indigenous heritage and healing, said her decision to speak out now is based on her career's work.
"This has been my whole life's work, starting off as a g*mer and then looking at native representation in video games. And finding the places that we can step up, and step in and define our representations ourselves," said LaPensΓ©e.
"For me stepping out isn't just about the game industry, it's about personal experiences and having to be the voice of someone who is part of a statistic, that a game like this is reinforcing what creates that statistic."
In the last 24 hours, since LaPensΓ©e`s initial tweet and the follow-up Twitter conversation, several videos of game-play footage have been taken down. Starkey added the footage violates YouTube's terms of service by containing explicit content and uncensored nudity.
LaPensΓ©e said that even though a game like this exists, the indigenous community can change the narrative by replacing the content with positive messages.
"We can make games too. We're completely capable of it. The cowtools are much more accessible, the technology is much more accessible than it used to be," said LaPensΓ©e, adding a lot of her work is responding to a game like this.
Holy fricking shit, imagine sperging out about a game that was 31 years old (now 41) by the time this article was written, this is even more pathetic than the Brapzilian Pentecostal TV channel in 2011 sperging out against Duke Nukem 3D , this is like if Jack Thompson came back from the shadows and started to shit on Doom and Doom 2 30 years later
- 113
- 112
I trust everyone understands the seismic impact of what's occurring here with Trump effectively letting the water that's been long diverted into the ocean, to flow down into California.
— AwakenedOutlawβοΈ (@AwakenedOutlaw) January 28, 2025
Imagine the visible impact this will cause as the state greens quickly and the water flows⦠pic.twitter.com/rDy3AEYmvi
Oh nevermind all he did was turn on a few federal pumps that had been down for maintenance for three days
- 7
- 34
- 10
- 42
- 26
- 35
Not uncommon actually. pic.twitter.com/VDPJL2GDyz
— HannahReading π (@readtoyourkid) February 5, 2025
- 45
- 22
I kinda hate rationalists but I haven't heard a convincing counter argument on AI doom.
- 4
- 11
- 189
- 173
BREAKING: Ross Ulbricht has been pardoned by President Donald Trump
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) January 21, 2025
If you don't know who Ross is
FREEDOM!!
FREEDOM!!!! pic.twitter.com/itRuuyFAxe
β Free_Ross (@Free_Ross) January 22, 2025
- 7
- 20
US Air Force is paying $90,000 for a bag of Bushings that normally costs well under $100
β Defiant Lβs (@DefiantLs) February 8, 2025
Where are the money going?pic.twitter.com/QWbQWcUdGz
- 49
- 49