twinkletwinkleyoulittlefuck:

why-animals-do-the-thing:

bigbootyavocados:

crimsoncatacombs:

blazepress:

Tortoise skeletons are the weirdest skeletons.

I never wondered what they looked like before. Wow. I literally just gasped. How neat!

Which is another reason you shouldn’t pick them up by their top shell

Everyone knows that you shouldn’t pick up a tortoise or turtle by their shell since their backbone is fused with it, but often it’s not really an easy thing to visualize how that works. Here’s a really cool image for that… 

Almost NOBODY knows this, because people don’t bother to simply show you a fucking image like this in school so before i saw this on tumblr i thought a turtle was simply a loose animal in a shell like a snail

kalinara:

You know what I think is fascinating:

There are people who tend to criticize the Star Wars franchise on a whole, as being very black and white.  But I think the current Star Wars movies have done something really interesting with that:

We see a man, raised from infancy as a Stormtrooper, brainwashed and with no other moral compass, who is ordered to take part in a massacre, but chooses not to.  Later, he seizes the opportunity to rescue a tortured prisoner and escape with him.

We see a scientist ordered to build a death weapon, still manage to leak out information to the people who can stop it, and build in weaknesses that can be exploited.

We see a career Imperial choose to defect rather than continue to work for a corrupt regime.

The new movies have given us a number of stories about people who on the wrong side, by choice or by force, but still choose to do what’s right in the end.

And that’s why I get so frustrated by fans who insist that Kylo Ren MUST have a redemption arc, because Star Wars is “about redemption.”

Because they’re right and they’re wrong.  Star Wars is about CHOICE.  It’s about people who choose to do the right thing, even when it’s hard, even when it’s painful, and even when they might have started on the wrong side.  It’s about abandoning the darkness, and choosing light..

Vader didn’t have a “redemption arc.”  He had a moment of choice, and despite all of his past evil, when it came down to it, he chose to save his son.  

Kylo Ren chose to leave the Light.  He chose to betray Luke.  He chose to join the First Order.  He chose to massacre villagers.  He chose to torture helpless prisoners.  He chose to aid in a genocide.  And when face to face with the same choice that saved Vader, he chose to murder his father.

We do not need this mass murdering patricidal monster to represent the Star Wars theme of choosing light over darkness.  We have Finn, we have Galen Erso, we have Bodhi Rook.  

That’s where you’ll find themes of the Star Wars Universe alive and well.  Not Kylo Ren.

myebi:

thebiscuiteternal:

there-was-fire-in-those-eyes:

“You can’t have a character with big boobs and not sexualise them”

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“There aren’t any feminist female characters that want to do things that are typically feminine”

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“There aren’t any badass gay characters”

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“There aren’t any cool/badass disabled characters”

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“Okay well what about disabled POC characters?”

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“There are no interesting or complex villains! None that ever question their morals, or have an interesting motive”

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“There aren’t any women characters that don’t just do things for men”

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“I want a poc character that fights against racism”

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“There aren’t any cool characters that aren’t young and healthy”

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“There are no male characters that like feminine things”

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Need I go on? Go watch Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood.

Fullmetal alchemist also tackled the issues of imperialism, genocide, PTSD, friendly fire, racism, war brutality, and military corruption unflinchingly. “Most military commanders are killed by their own disgusted soldiers.” indeed.

THIS POST IS SO PERFECT I SWEAR.

mikerugnetta:

joekewlio:

naidje:

rasec-wizzlbang:

slartibartfastibast:

Deep Frog

do you think this is what lovecraft meant whenever he described something as being beyond description

“It was a terrible, indescribable thing vaster than any subway train—a shapeless congeries of protoplasmic bubbles, faintly self-luminous, and with myriads of temporary eyes forming and un-forming as pustules of greenish light all over the tunnel-filling front that bore down upon us, crushing the frantic penguins and slithering over the glistening floor that it and its kind had swept so evilly free of all litter.”

— H. P. Lovecraft,

At the Mountains of Madness

This.. actually makes a fine reference to what a lovecraftian eldritch abomination SHOULD BE. not just.. tentacles and darkness. Perpetually changing, not cemented in form, with an otherworldly feel to it. Completely unrecognizable by most human descriptions, and only able to be viable perceived by those fine enough to be an adept wordsmith.

Seeing through the eyes of Deep Dream, we get the closest we’ve been to experiencing the indescribable: a sensory occurrence built upon foundations distinct, totally, from our own. The frog is not the unknowable thing–the technology is.

belinsky:

going off my tags on this post; the prequels emphasizing anakin’s love for padme as the tipping point for his fall to the dark side doesn’t, i think, make his intrinsic humanity his ultimate flaw or his passion/love, which a lot of people have critiqued the prequels for doing– and, true, the acting/script in the prequels isn’t strong enough to emphasize anything beyond this, essentially.  but i think what the anakin/padme romance actually does, and what if i want to give lucasfilm credit for the films are actually trying to do, is give further and essential strength to anakin’s final choice to murder palpatine and save luke.  because anakin’s love for padme isn’t what turns him into a sith– palpatine is.  when anakin believes padme is going to die, he doesn’t tell padme (who not only is, you know, the subject of discussion here, but has throughout the story been an avatar of calm rationality), he doesn’t tell obi-wan (who he loves probably in equality to padme and is his connection to the jedi and the force and those who actually want to help him), he tells palpatine.  and what’s essential about that choice is that anakin’s arc is all about deference.  

anakin is born a slave, lives nine years in slavery, and when he’s rescued he’s immediately dragged to the jedi (told he’s too old to be a jedi! rejected by the people who saved him! only allowed to be trained because qui gon was killed by a sith and demanded obi wan– first sithkiller in a thousand years– train him as his dying wish) and told that a) he is possibly the most powerful being in the universe b) as the most powerful being in the universe, he should shut up and listen to some people he’s never met about how to use that power and how someone that powerful should live their life.  the jedi council is very consciously i think depicted as what we would think of as an organized religion, only one where the deity empirically exists (think the catholic church if saints and prophets had laser swords).  the council have some good ideas about how to use the power of the force, how jedi should live their lives, how they should act and interact, but to take essentially the messiah– a messiah who has been a slave for nine years, ripped away from and told he must never see again the person he loves most in the world, and who is already a roiling mass of anger and pain– and tell him that he should live a completely ascetic life is just asking for it.  and indeed, the first thing anakin does when he’s given a solo mission is act like a ridiculously powerful nineteen year old boy and go after his boyhood crush.  (and then slaughter the people who hurt his mom.)  palpatine’s not an idiot.  palpatine’s probably the smartest man in the galaxy.  palpatine sees that this ridiculously powerful child is being told he can’t have feelings by the people he most looks up to and cares about in his life.  

and so palpatine sweeps in and tells him not only that feelings are great and important but most essentially that palpatine is always there for him if he needs to have feelings.  palpatine plants himself as the one person in anakin’s life he can actually be a human being around.  not the jedi, who saved him, because they’ll tell him he’s not a good person.  not obi-wan, who he most looked up to, because obi-wan will chastise him.  (whether or not obi-wan would actually have given him a tonguelashing over caring about people is debatable (see: obi-wan, crying over qui-gon’s corpse; obi-wan, biggest flirt in the galaxy; obi-wan, ‘you were my brother, anakin, i loved you’) but anakin never dares ask because obi-wan is, in his eyes, ultimately first and foremost a jedi and a mouthpiece for the council), not padme, who he loves enough to tank the republic, because she’s too reasonable and wouldn’t know the way anakin does the way people can betray and humiliate you.  palpatine is the only one around whom anakin can be himself.  and by placing himself in that position palpatine makes himself anakin’s ultimate master, before anakin even knows he’s anything but a politician.  so of course he runs to palpatine with the fear of padme’s death.  of course he doesn’t make the “right” choice.  he can’t trust anyone else, because they’ll kick him out of the jedi, out of his marriage, out of all of he knows and loves and all the way back to watto and jabba.  (obviously they probably would not do this. but anakin has been systematically conditioned through circumstance to think this way.  anakin’s story is high tragedy, where situations pile up to the point that, through one mistake, he topples a whole society.  oops.)

anakin makes the wrong choice.  anakin doesn’t love padme too much.  anakin isn’t too little of a jedi.  anakin isn’t ultimately too selfish.  anakin doesn’t stand up for himself.  passionate, angry, idealistic, firestorm anakin was never told by anyone that it was okay to make his own choices, or that what he thought was as important as what other people thought.  anakin loves padme so much he breaks the jedi code to marry her, and then never tells anybody about it because he’s terrified of the council.  anakin loves qui-gon and obi-wan so much that he agrees to leave his mother, and then never goes back for her because he’s told she’s an attachment he has to let go of.  anakin feels so guilty about never going back for her (despite, see above, being conditioned to not make his own choices) that he slaughters an entire innocent village.  anakin begins the prequels saying that he’s going to free every slave, and then ends up being ‘held on a leash’ by tarkin.  anakin thinks the woman he loves is going to die– what’s he to do?   he’s not allowed to have married her. he can’t trust the people he loves.  so of course he runs to the sith.  the sith proclaim to be about selfishness, about power, and ultimately, about freedom– but the sith, too, are run on a system of masters and servants.  anakin lives in a universe that has been shaped– with lots of help from palpatine, who’s the only person who comes out on top in this, of course– to tell him that he’s not only not allowed to make his own choices, but even thinking them will harm him and the people he loves.  and so anakin chooses the only thing he thinks he can.  the only thing that will actually save padme.  anakin chooses the sith.  and anakin becomes even more chained than before.  

and this inability to choose for himself, to try to find the right among all the things that have been (fairly literally) beaten into him, continues through the original trilogy– in anh, he’s completely under the thumb of tarkin despite demonstrably being able to murder anyone in the room with a thought.  in esb, when he’s told about luke, his first instinct is that they ‘rule the galaxy as father and son’, and when luke says no, he goes running back to palpatine.  anakin doesn’t even consider throwing over palpatine himself until palpatine attacks luke– he brings luke to palpatine to be his new apprentice.  luke’s existence isn’t enough.  padme’s death isn’t enough.  the fall of the jedi isn’t enough.  becoming palpatine’s pet isn’t enough.  what is the only thing that allows anakin to finally make an independent choice?

“father, please”.  his son– his untrained child– the only thing left of padme, who he failed, of obi-wan, who he betrayed, of himself, when he cared about something– is completely and utterly helpless, and the one man anakin thought cared about him is going to murder him, painfully, in front of his eyes.  luke is given the same choice as anakin– the people you love will die, your society will be despotic and inhumane, you will be betrayed by your family and friends, you will lose everything– and luke says, “father, please”.  luke not only demonstrates to anakin what it is to make his own choices, luke also demonstrates what it is to willingly trust someone else with your love and your life in the most dire of circumstances.  and in doing so, luke willingly hands anakin the reins.  and anakin looks between the man who’s held those reins for twenty years and the man who is looking at him saying ‘i love you enough to let you choose’, and finally gets to actually make a choice.  in these circumstances, that choice is easy.