(Source: zuzzolek, via lilpanda93)
(Source: anastazzie, via laughterbynight)
How did these two even win the hunger games?
(Source: stay-together-always, via theghostofjaneeyre)
(Source: brokenchi, via wincenworks)
Lady Captain America and Lady Thor
Art by Yasmine Putri
One of the few female versions I’ve seen that portray the strength of the characters instead of being a vehicle to show Cap with a midriff or Thor with tremendous cleavage.
These are very cool.
(Source: llbwwb, via grey-gardenia)
Women are afraid of meeting a serial killer. Men are afraid of meeting someone fat.
—
When Strangers Click, a 2011 documentary about online dating.
It reminds me of that famous Margaret Atwood quote: “Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.” It also reminds me of something written by one of the mods of Sex Worker Problems: “Misandry irritates. Misogyny kills.”
(via plasticbags)
(Source: tealeafprincess, via grey-gardenia)
I asked all of the gay male students in the room to raise their hand if in the past week they touched a woman’s body without her consent. After a moment of hesitation, all of the hands of the gay men in the room went up. I then asked the same gay men to raise their hand if in the past week they offered a woman unsolicited advice about how to “improve” her body or her fashion. Once again, after a moment of hesitation, all of the hands in the room went up.
These questions came after a brief exploration of gay men’s relationship to American fashion and women’s bodies. That dialogue included recognizing that gay men in the United States are often hailed as the experts of women’s fashion and by proxy women’s bodies. In addition to this there is a dominant logic that suggests that because gay men have no conscious desire to be sexually intimate with women, our uninvited touching and groping (physical assault) is benign.
(Source: bleerios, via thosepaperscut)
(via scumlungs)