i’m a diehard environmentalist and i still think plastic straws are valid and useful so these people have no excuse tbh

aegipan-omnicorn:

thebibliosphere:

lordognar:

thebibliosphere:

thebibliosphere:

Honestly? Same.

People have no idea what I do to try and help the planet. They have no clue the lengths I go to to live in an environmentally friendly house and to minimize my impact on the earth.

I even wrote a god damn article about environmental activism vs performative activism in the Zero Waste movement, and gave examples on how to live a more eco-friendly life.

It’s ugh, it’s whatever. People are going to complain no matter what. At least I’ll be hydrated while they do it.

@kristanlf here you go, tumblr version:
Sustainability vs the Mason Jar Aesthetic

Are y’all five and can’t drink from a glass without a straw?

I have profound nerve damage in my face and throat that prevents proper muscle function. I also have cfs and other muscle problems. I recently discovered that using straws helps to alleviate some of the pain and difficulty out of being able to drink fluids, because it puts less strain on certain muscles. This means that for the first time in over two years, I have been able to finish a glass of water without choking. So no, not five. Just very fortunate to be alive.

Have a good day, and I hope life is kind to you.

Think about why toddlers and small children need straws to drink: their muscles and brain have not fully coordinated with each other.

Well, there are plenty of adults in this world, who either loose that coordination (due to stroke, or Parkinson’s or nerve damage, like @thebibliosphere mentioned), or we never had that coordination to begin with (like me – I have cerebral palsy).

And with our population aging, the proportion of people who are disabled will end up growing – no matter how advanced our medical interventions get. ‘Cause Sh##t happens, and the longer you live, the more chances that you’ll be standing in the wrong spot when the sh##t hits the fan.

(In my dream solar punk future, all “trash cans” at movie theaters and fast food places will sanitize, break down, and remake plastic straws and other tableware [3-d printing, anyone?] So they stay in-house, and out of oceans)

At first I was having a grand ole’ time laughing at the antis and how stupid they are, but then I saw some of the things they have said to people that left me speechless. I don’t know how anyone can even think of saying some of the things they say? Racial slurs galore, death threats and suicide baiting, purposeful misgendering, telling people that they deserved to be abused. They sound like they are from 4chan or something? Truly revolting.

korrasera:

lines-and-edges:

discoursecatharsis:

The things they say and do are horrible. And all over cartoons too, it’s unbelievable tbh.

At one point I was honestly starting to wonder if they’re 4chan trolls trying to make tumblr/shippers look even crazier than normal, but antis are so numerous (and they’ve made themselves known irl like the vld sdcc incident), so I doubt it

Some of them are indeed from 4chan:

  • Some are right-wing trolls from 4chan intentionally and maliciously seeding right-wing attitudes.
  • Some are people who got here from 4chan and think they’re left-wing because they don’t agree with the overt anti-gay, anti-trans and race/gender bigotry. What’s happened is that environment has fucked with their Overton window and they’ve absorbed and propagated a lot of covert bigotry that they don’t even notice. To them it’s just “locker room talk”.
  • The social strategies practiced on imageboards tend to be authoritarian. Tumblr traditionally existed on mutualism for a long time; standard raids couldn’t touch it for this reason, but authoritarians who actually establish a long-term presence are able to colonize others’ social circles (and then the 4chan attitudes and rhetoric propagate through people who didn’t come from there originally.)

As a side-note about the authoritarianism here, I believe that a lot of ‘strategy’ that authoritarians engage in isn’t really directed or intentionally strategic. Rather, they somehow grasp how to manipulate people intuitively, in the same way that abusers are often really good at manipulating their victims because they get so much practice in being terrible and externalizing their own emotions.

The problem is, I don’t know how to factor that into a strategy to stop them or teach people how not to be manipulated by them.

argumate:

glumshoe:

vampireapologist:

Tumblr and twitter discussing ancient folklore and myths and beliefs is so wild bc one day someone will without sources comment on a post like “actually! [fact about faeries or vampires or witchcraft or the gods etc without any links to back it whatsoever]” and people will be like “omg how did I never know this that makes so much sense!!!”

And then six months later I’ll reference the lore and like 200 people will be like “actually did you know,” and they’ll cite the “information” as a fact with usually no awareness that it came from a tumblr post that also provided no sources and 9/10 times it’s absolutely baseless and it’s

Just such a strange study in the rapid and traceable spread of absolutely sourceless misinformation being accepted as fact.

One Of My Least Favorite Phenomenons 

actually! Ancient Folklore is literally just comprised of one guy mishearing a story down at the pub and repeating it to his friends later but getting the details wrong and those friends tell their kids but clean it up a little and those kids tell other kids but make it much more gruesome and those kids grow up and go down to the pub and tell the story–

accessibilityfails:

renegadelibrarian:

crimson-chains:

foxlover19:

zoddamnit:

thebibliosphere:

thehalfdrunkwerewolf:

prismatic-bell:

typical-atheist-scumbag:

coolmanfromthepast:

thefreakhasgreeneyes:

phoenixonwheels:

phoenixonwheels:

Just for once I’d like to tell the gate agents and flight attendants that my folding wheelchair is going into the onboard closet and not have them tell me there’s “no room”. Bitch that’s a wheelchair closet, not a “your bags” closet. Move your damn bags where they belong.

Ok, so according to my friendly aviation expert, this is a Big Fucking Deal. In fact, if an airline argues with you about putting your wheelchair in the wheelchair closet or even suggests there may not be room, unless there is already another passenger’s wheelchair in that closet, they have violated federal law.

CFR Title 14, Chapter II, Subchapter D, Part 382, Subpart E, Section 382.67, Subsection (e)

“As a carrier, you must never request or suggest that a passenger not stow his or her wheelchair in the cabin to accommodate other passengers (e.g., informing a passenger that stowing his or her wheelchair in the cabin will require other passengers to be removed from the flight), or for any other non-safety related reason (e.g., that it is easier for the carrier if the wheelchair is stowed in the cargo compartment).”

Source

This is hugely important because it means that if this happens to you, you should report their asses to the DOT. Why? Because these statistics are published every year for every airline, and the airline gets a huge ass fine for every violation. If we want to see change, we need to make airlines literally pay every time they treat us this way.

@annieelainey you should share this with your followers! This is important info!!

To my mutuals on wheels, print out the law before you fly and whip it out at the gate if they don’t accomodate your wheels.

Thanks a lot for posting this, bro! Flying while crippled is already difficult enough without people pulling this kind of shit. Also, make sure that if there is a piece of your wheelchair or something important missing off of it, that you make a big fucking deal out of it! I’ve had pieces fall off of my wheelchair and nearly lost a decoration I had on it that meant a lot to me because people were careless with my chair. Don’t let them mistreat your wheelchair.

Non-wheelchair folks:

Now that you know, speak up.

You never know when you’re going to see someone who needs an ally.

@thebibliosphere can you reblog this?

I was actually looking for this post the other day for someone who was worried about flying with their chair. I can’t remember your username, but here! this is the thing I was talking about!

Former Alaska customer service rep/trainer here:

If you have an electric chair, confirm that they’re NOT going to carry it down the jetway stairs.

They need to drive it to the elevator (this means they might need a 10second tutorial on how to turn it on). But it takes longer to get someone who has access to drive it to the elevator and instead, the baggage crew invariably tries “save time” and manhandle it down those steep, sharp stairs at the back of the jetway and this is how shit gets busted-up and outright broken. Remind the gate agent that your chair needs to go to the elevator to get down to the tarmac.

Quick tutorial: anymore, the baggage crew almost never works directly for the airline. They’re pretty much all contract companies. Meaning, they don’t report to the same people that your gate agents do. They don’t get the same training and the job is so hard that an enormous number of people quit during the week of initial training. I seldom met a ground crew member who actually knew they weren’t supposed to use the stairs.

So it is crucial that the *gate agent* knows and is enforcing the loading policy.

There is little to no contact between the gate agents and the baggage handlers unless we specifically run them down to tell them something (we couldn’t just call them, we had to go physically find them) and it can be difficult to find someone senior enough to help once boarding has begun, so I recommend touching base with your gate agent about it before boarding begins, when possible.

At least on Alaska, it was expressly forbidden for baggage handlers to carry electric wheelchairs down the stairs and it still happened all the goddamn time. If you have to, remind the gate agent that the airline is 100% liable for any damage done to a mobility device. This is true (and also an enormous pain in the ass for you) and sometimes may strike fear into the hearts of a reluctant (read: shitty) agent.

If they cannot/will not confirm, or just seem to deflect or dodge the question, don’t get out of your chair. Sit right there in the bottom of the jetway and tell them that you’ll wait until the crew supervisor arrives with the elevator key (this was always this issue, most of the ground crew didn’t have access so they needed a crew supervisor or an actual airline manager) to surrender your chair. They will probably continue boarding around you, that’s fine–if they did not build enough time into the schedule to properly load the aircraft, that’s their fault, not yours.

It deeply angers me that you have to be so knowledgeable about every tiny damn policy just to do something as simple as board a fucking plane. The only other insight I can give is that after safety, the airlines’ next biggest concern is being on-time so if you’re not being heard or helped:

Make. Them. Wait.

Agents deal with distressed people all day. Getting screamed at or cried on can happen dozens of times a day (and for most people, think 10-12 hour days). Some agents get hardened to passengers’ distress as a coping mechanism (or just because they suck, that’s true sometimes, too). But they all have a manager breathing down their neck to push planes on time. Very few non-safety problems will get addressed as quickly and concisely as one that is threatening to delay a departure.

I think I’ve reblogged this post in past but new info has been added