the-emergency-medical-hologram:

damianmcgintleman:

i hate when someone says “don’t make jokes about rednecks and hillbillies” and some white 21 year old trying to be ‘woke’ says “haha… go ahead and cry your white tears sweatie (:”

no one thinks it’s a racial issue against white people. that’s not why people say to stop that shit. it’s an issue of classism. because the truth is that the majority of y’all who think you’re amazing activists just REALLY fucking hate appalachian people, and i know that because y’all think it’s funny to say “karma’s a bitch!” when something bad happens to an appalachian state.

you don’t care about the poverty in the appalachia and you don’t care about queer people and/or people of color who live in the appalachia. you don’t care about education in the appalachia and you don’t care that these low rates of education mean higher rates of poverty and child poverty, which persist over the years. rural children are twice as likely to live in areas with persistent poverty. you care that poverty stricken children are statistically less likely to not have timely immunizations, have higher delinquency rates, and have lower academic achievement — but only when we’re talking about urban areas outside of the appalachia.

people in our region die earlier than most. mortality rates are higher in the appalachia, and they’re even higher for people of color that live in the appalachia. suicide rates are higher than anywhere else in the country by 17% — it’s 31% higher in central appalachia, and in rural areas within the appalachia, it’s 27% higher than metro appalachia. cancer morality rate is 10% higher, and it’s 15% higher in rural appalachia than metro appalachia. COPD mortality rate is 27% higher, and 55% higher in rural appalachia than metro appalachia. injury mortality rate is 33% higher, and it’s 47% higher in rural appalachia than in metro appalachia. stroke mortality rate is 14% higher — and you guessed it’s, these rates are higher in rural areas vs metro areas by 8%.

the rate of Years of Potential Life Lost, which measures premmature mortality from all causes of death, is 25% higher in appalachia, and 40% higher in rural vs metro areas.

the appalachia has an opioid epidemic. in 2015, our rate of death with drugs was 65% higher than the national average. 69% of those drug deaths were from opioids. these deaths have a connection to our poverty and education rates. the poorer you are, and the less educated you are, the more likely you are to die from an opioid death.

when i say “don’t make jokes about rednecks and hillbillies”, that doesn’t mean i think you’re being racist against white people (and again — the majority of people who claim this also happen to be white 🙄). i say that because you are perpetuating extremely toxic rhetoric about our region, you are promoting stigma, you are encouraging blatant classism, and you are furthering the idea that we somehow “deserve” it because our elected officials vote republican. it’s not cute. stop acting like none of us have the right to call you out on your classist bullshit. like i’m sorry if this comes off as too aggressive but i am sooooo sick of y’all thinking it’s funny that our region is suffering.

and before anyone asks me for resources and links: google exists. i did my research and you can do it too.

EDIT: https://www.arc.gov/assets/research_reports/Health_Disparities_in_Appalachia_Trends_in_Appalachian_Health.pdf

here, since y’all are too fucking obnoxiously incapable of taking 2.3 seconds google and instead want to claim I pulled random numbers from my asshole

also here https://www.arc.gov/assets/research_reports/Health_Disparities_in_Appalachia_August_2017.pdf

a big problem with the people who say stuff like this is they don’t realize just how many “rednecks and hillbillies” are non-white. there are so many appalachian and southern POC that also suffer through these conditions but people like to cling to their idea that the only hicks are white hicks, so they couldnt care less if places like WV or KY just fell off the map, and to hell with who it is that’s actually hurting.

people also act like it’s only appalachian and southern whites that voted for trump and that vote republican and it’s not true – half of all white women voted for trump. the rich ones and the poor ones. it’s not a problem that’s tied specifically to southern and appalachian white people but it’s an easy scapegoat and allows people to not think about what they’re actually saying.

as long as they can say that it’s just them shitty racist white hicks that are suffering, then they don’t have to actually care about them. they can ignore them and not do anything to help them. like another person said in the notes, the teacher strike in WV is a better example of leftist organization than a whole lot of the people saying shit about hillbillies have ever done but they don’t care about that because, well, theyre just white hillbillies so what does it matter?

Too relevant, yet again: THE LEGACY OF SOCIAL DARWINISM IN APPALACHIAN SCHOLARSHIP

naasad:

naasad:

ja-ll:

eevee-morgan:

autism is widely underdiagnosed in girls because autistic women tend to present as quiet and reserved, which is just how women are supposed to be.

personality disorders are underdiagnosed in men because they tend to present more explosively and involve more narcissistic behaviours, which is just how men are supposed to be.

sexism isn’t good for anyone. don’t be fooled.

when ppl ask why gender roles are dangerous!!!!! peep this!!!!!!

Another reason autism is under-diagnosed in girls! Special interests! When I was little, my special interest was horses. But every little girl has a horse phase, right? When I was a preteen, it was makeup. But every girl has a makeup phase, right? Then it was books, mostly Lord of the Rings, and well, I’m a short brunette who wears glasses. It wasn’t until I spent years “obsessed” with superheroes that anyone suspected I related to my interests a little differently than your average allistic.

Stereotypes are harmful. Besides the above example, stereotypes kill at least thousands of people of color every year (I don’t have the emotional energy to look up the actual statistic right now, but I’ll insert a source soon.)

Gender roles are another set of stereotypes, steeped in sexism, widely accepted by society either as “the way it’s supposed to be” or “the way they’ll always want us to be”, and they really just need to be done with.

Let them die, kill them if you have to. (I still haven’t seen that movie.)

Also, I feel like op is talking just as much about how disabilities are stereotyped as they are about how sexism impacts the healthcare industry. Maybe that’s just me, idk, but I see a lot of other people calling them ableist for their phrasing and wanted to share my thoughts on that.

Another effect of the layers of stereotyping that doesn’t get discussed nearly as much: If you’re seen as a girl and not presenting autism/ADHD more quietly, it’s liable to get viewed as particularly Bad and Wrong.

There must be something horrible going on if a child is acting that far outside some particular cultural expectations. (Whether or not they’re actually coming from the same culture, as an additional confounding factor.) They may be extremely sick and fucked up from a medicalized perspective, and/or they may be deliberately disruptive because Bad. Too often both. But, unexpected sterotype-violating behavior is likely to make some adults even more upset and get pathologized in some different ways.

Filtered through sexist/racist/etc. assumptions, the exact same behavior can get interpreted in a completely different light. Often as indicating issues seen as even worse, and requiring Sharp Measures to “fix”. And everyone knows that autism and ADHD are for middle/upper-class white boys anyway, right? :/

Similar no doubt holds true dealing with kids perceived as boys violating stereotypes, but I don’t have the same direct experience there.

Basically, there are just so many ways these layers of stereotypes can harm real people.

nonbinarypastels:

the idea that no one should donate money to individuals (whether online or offline) ever because there are some people who lie in order to receive donations has always struck me as rather cruel.

like, by all means check out a person before you give them money online — talk to them if this is an offline situation, gauge their sincerity — and decide for yourself whether or not they’re genuine. that’s good, you should do that. and if you would rather donate money or good to organizations rather than to individuals then that’s fine, too, that’s your right.

but coming from a person who has been on both sides of this (both poor as fuck and having to beg for help and still poor as fuck but having a bit of extra cash that I could afford to give to someone else without it severely impacting me for the week), i would always rather help a thousand people who didn’t actually need it than to turn away a single person who did – who i could have helped but didn’t because there are some people out there somewhere who try to take advantage of other people’s good will. i literally never want to get to a place in my life where i refuse to help anyone because of the possibility that someone i help might not need it at all or need it as much as they say they do.  

because there is just….something distinctly uncomfortable about seeing people who are quick to criticize this “donation culture” and “e-begging” that happens online but who never say a word of criticism about what has driven people to have to do this in the first place. the fact that living expenses have only risen and risen while our minimum wage has stagnated and how so many of us are living on a week to week (or even day to day) basis where the slightest emergency, a broken down car or an unexpected illness, can literally ruin our lives and finances in one single swoop. all of this happening while rich people continue to get richer, continue to profit off of the exploitation and oppression of the poor, continue to build upon an impossible wealth that they will never be able to spend in a single lifetime – that their children and their children’s children will never be able to spend – because it is so very much.

criticism of “e-begging” is framed as being about greed—people being so greedy for money that they’ll beg random strangers for it—rather than the desperation that poor people live with every day, but it’s the desperation (and the visibility of it) that really pisses people off and drives their criticism. people like the poor to be invisible until we “make it” and we can be the rags to riches story they can tout out to other poor people to say “see? if only YOU worked hard, this could be you”, a way to ignore how difficult it really is to escape poverty because if they acknowledged that then they’d have to actually acknowledge that poor people aren’t poor because it’s their own fault.

with the way people asking for donations online has become common and normal, though, it’s much harder to ignore the poor. the same classism that makes people sneer at someone standing on the street with a cup held out for donations and ignore them because “they’ll probably spend it on liquor and crack” rears its head online as well because the fact is that people absolutely hate poor people who have the audacity to be poor around them, to ever draw attention to the fact that they are poor, and, even worse, to ask for help. the more desperate you are—the more dire your situation is, the more you’re willing to openly talk about it—the more they hate it and the more they criticize.

because poor people are supposed to be invisible, their poverty unnoticeable and easy to ignore, their existence and their struggles only brought to light when people more well-off than they are can use them to feel better about themselves, only helped when those same people can use their charity to brag about their own generosity. poor people are never supposed to ask for help except in the most contrite, down-trodden way possible but not so down-trodden that they make the people they’re asking for help uncomfortable with the realities of their poverty, and when they are helped they’re supposed to fall over themselves in gratitude and then go away – forgotten – to never bother their rich betters again. poor people asking for donations online (and offline) blows those expectations out of the water—suddenly they are visible, their poverty is visible, their struggles are visible, and considering that poverty is not a situation that can be cured through one donation post (unless you’re extremely lucky but most people aren’t), the poor people asking for donations don’t go away. they give updates on their situation, they ask for more donations, what was first a need for rent becomes a need to pay a light bill which becomes a need for money to pay for food — a situation that is normal, daily, routine for poor people but which rubs others the wrong way because they can’t grasp that poverty is an ongoing struggle not simply a single emergency that can be easily cured and then everything is right as rain.

and the entire “donation culture” online just absolutely galls people, particularly rich people, because it spits in the face of everything they want poor people to be (which is basically: as easy for them to ignore as possible) and so they criticize it, criticize people who ask for donations, and urge people not to donate at all because someone somewhere is probably lying about why they need the money (the same justification they use for ignoring the homeless on the street – “some of them are homeless because they’re drunks, it’s their own fault, some of them don’t deserve my help so none of them get my help”).

meanwhile, however, they never criticize the systems that are in place that continue to contribute to mass poverty, they never criticize the systems of capitalism which are run on the blood of workers that are used and used until they are no longer useful, they never criticize rich people who accumulate billions upon billions of dollars and are willing to let people die so they can get just a single penny more—so much money that it could solve all the poverty in the world, multiple times over, and yet it sits rotting away in bank accounts never to be touched because greed is more worthwhile quality to fund rather than compassion and basic humanity.

they never criticize any of that, because it is so much easier to look down on people who have the nerve to ask strangers for help with their basic living expenses than it is to look down on the classism and capitalism that put them in that situation in the first place. because, to them, the former is more worthy of scorn and shame than the latter.

a pattern I have seen a few times

fullyarticulatedgoldskeleton:

pervocracy:

pervocracy:

OP: It’s awful the direction income inequality has taken in recent decades.  Productivity is up, the stock market is up, the money is there, but working-class wages haven’t risen to match.  Our generation is poorer than our parents, and many of us will never be able to buy homes, help our children pay for college, or retire.

Commenters: Sounds like someone needs a Personal Finance Lesson!!!!  Try putting away just a few dollars at a time and you’ll be amazed how it adds up, sweaty :))))

Also: it’s frustrating how often the Personal Finance Lesson comes out to “have you tried living desperately?”

It’s understandable, if someone is in a jam or saving up for a major expense, that they might have to spend a few years living in a cramped and/or far-flung place, eating cheaply, thrifting clothes, and so forth.

It is not okay if this is the lifelong condition of people who are working full-time.

I don’t blame the personal-finance-advice people, nothing they say is technically wrong, but it’s frustrating and exhausting that this is where our society is at.  Where “tighten your belt and live without any luxuries” is advice not for students or people recovering from financial catastrophe, but for adult professionals.

Sure, if all you can afford is rice and beans, then it’s helpful to get some recipes for spicing up rice and beans.  But it shouldn’t fool you into thinking that spicy beans is all you deserve, that there’s nothing wrong with a world where CEOs have scientific-notation amounts of money and the working class is scolding each other not to waste money on name-brand beans.

“Sometimes the poor are praised for being thrifty.
But to recommend thrift to the poor is both grotesque and insulting. It
is like advising a man who is starving to eat less. For a town or
country labourer to practise thrift would be absolutely immoral. Man
should not be ready to show that he can live like a badly-fed animal. He
should decline to live like that, and should either steal or go on the
rates, which is considered by many to be a form of stealing.”
   Oscar Wilde said that.

Also, if you’re disabled no amount of saving will do you any good. The state has already decided how much you get, and that’s it. That’s the limit. You can never rise above poverty unless you miraculously get better, and they don’t want to give SSI to people who might get better to begin with.

warmhappycat:

wildcardarcana:

aleshakills:

aleshakills:

It takes a special kind of privileged asshole to complain about homeless people using public restrooms

Also the very concept of “restrooms are for paying customers” is classist bullshit that needs to be abolished! You shouldn’t have to pay money to be allowed to shit indoors!

Especially when shitting outdoors is illegal! 

Not just illegal, but a really serious public health hazard. Shitting inside is certainly nicer than the alternative for the person doing it, but more importantly, it’s something we as a society all agreed to do so that we wouldn’t have to get cholera anymore.

workingitinportland:

woody112704:

workingitinportland:

dollyriot:

workingitinportland:

plesht:

workingitinportland:

Portland is sick and the sickness is white supremacy and the toxic and myopic smugness of a middle class that doesn’t know it has voted away every support that allowed it to come into existence.

http://katu.com/news/local/neighbors-voice-outrage-concern-about-24-hour-homeless-shelter-on-se-foster

How are you gonna be mad about a homeless shelter…….

😭😭property values 🙄

Just for those of you not from Portland or who don’t know, this is the same city where people posted the private addresses of teachers and school board officials for threats bc of what was essentially the integration of a white school in a high income area with a majority black school only a few blocks farther that was mostly empty bc PROPERTY VALUES

I don’t usually add to posts but since we’re shitting on Portland………I lived downtown for a number of years, right on the boundary of where the Pearl District (richest part of town) and Old Town (epicenter of the homelessness crisis) meet. There are several consecutive blocks of green space there that act as a boundary between the two, and because there are resources in Old Town for people struggling with homelessness, there were usually people sleeping on the benches in this park, or snoozing under the trees on the grass, etc. Well the Pearl is expanding rapidly, so now the wealthy people that live there have to (god forbid) look at/acknowledge the poverty right under their noses. And oh, the complaints! The concern! The self-righteous cries for change! So loud and adamant that the mayor himself declared he was going to come see just how bad the homeless problem is……

Only the dumbass set a time and date for his visit. And, shockingly, about an hour before he was supposed to arrive, the Portland PD swept through the park blocks and cleared out literally everyone that looked even remotely impoverished. So when the mayor showed up? Empty park blocks. Not a scrap of tarp or cardboard to be seen!

And that’s just one incident, but it does a pretty good job of summarizing how Portland operates: all talk, no effective action. Not because we lack the funds, but because for the most part, the wealthy white people that live here don’t actually want to fix the problem–they just want it to go somewhere else.

Haha I didn’t know about this incident. I said it on another version of this post but do you remember when they fenced off the same park blocks bc the wine bar complained that their patrons shouldn’t have to see houseless people?

So what I’m reading is Portland is Satan’s hellspawn?

This will seem pedantic to a lot of you but using language like this detached and disengages the REALITY of structural white supremacy, a huge problem across the country and not just in Portland, and reifies it as a specifically Portland problem, and one that isn’t being replicated in various ways and degrees across the country.

What makes portland DIFFERENT is it’s reputation as a safe and progressive enclave; what I’m attempting to clarify with the original post and this one is that this reputation is a myth that functions to keep Portland’s white supremacy in place.

What commentary like THIS, yours, does, is once again make Portland a special case, although this time in the opposite direction.

Portland is not special.

San Francisco, LA, NYC, Atlanta, London, Brighton, Paris, to name a few—this is happening all over the world. This is white supremacy and this is part of what it does, to white people as well as people of color.

heavyweightheart:

poor people on SNAP or other benefits do not need “healthy eating” rules imposed on them. restricting their food choices doesn’t make them healthier. when we limit what they can buy we limit their access to sufficient calories. “junk food” is dense with calories and provides efficient energy for the body. fruits and vegetables contribute little to meeting total energy needs and their nutritional content isn’t very beneficial when overall calorie intake is too low. 

poor people don’t need food rules imposed from on high, they need ENOUGH food and they need regular access to it. i’m so done with these tepid takes (cc: pbs, npr and other liberal media) on getting poor people to eat “healthier” as though that were some kind of anti-oppressive stance… it’s not! are we willing to do what it takes to make all people food-secure, with regular access to enough food that they want and enjoy? that’s the only thing worth talking about

Along similar lines: If only poor people understood nutrition!

And once again, we’re back to the social determinants of health.

You want people to eat better? Give them enough money, a place for cooking and storage, and access to a decent variety of food.

Then you can worry about the finer points of nutrition.

Auto Mechanics Hilariously Recreate Renaissance Paintings

elfyourmother:

s-n-arly:

kinkstertime:

supernachtkuchen:

anthemofwar:

silvermoonphantom:

ashleyeleigh:

sourcedumal:

miniar:

justanothergreyface:

Da Vinci’s Last Supper

Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam

Rembrandt’s Anatomy Lesson

“Hilariously”?

Those are beautiful photos…

I’m saying. These dudes are awesome

This is amazing.

The composition, and the LIGHTING, and the grunge… lovely

but like the colors are so nice?????

@acaeus

The lighting!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I love how these guys took a classical art form and remade it with a modern lens.  The color, lighting and expressions are truly stunning.

It’s only framed as “hilarious” because of classism FYI.

Auto Mechanics Hilariously Recreate Renaissance Paintings

Your Latte Isn’t Why You’re in Debt, and the People Who Say It Is Are Lying to You

shadowwood:

deducecanoe:

onionhighonionandrenown:

flange5:

Warren and Tyagi demonstrated that buying common luxury items wasn’t the issue for most Americans. The problem was the fixed costs, the things that are difficult to cut back on. Housing, health care, and education cost the average family 75 percent of their discretionary income in the 2000s. The comparable figure in 1973: 50 percent. Indeed, studies demonstrate that the quickest way to land in bankruptcy court was not by buying the latest Apple computer but through medical expenses, job loss, foreclosure, and divorce.

Giving up a latte or another such small extravagance in this environment wasn’t going to be enough. Yet the personal finance shills continued to tell people their problems were mostly of their own making.

This strikes me as being directly related to those jackholes who are enraged when someone poor has some small or relatively small luxury: they think this is how economics work.

I’m tired of feeling guilty for every tiny indulgence that makes me feel human.

This makes me remember a story a friend of mine told me.

He was in a college course for learning financial stuff, like how to invest wisely and shit like that because he was working for the local library system in their accounting department and had to be able to advise employees on how best to use the new investment options the library was offering.

So, the professor tells the class that they should ALWAYS be saving at least $25 per paycheck into a savings account even when it’s hard because that is the only way to get into the habit of saving and also the quickest way to having emergency cash, but it was better to do at least $50.

Not terrible advice, certainly, but… My friend said there was no way he could do that. The professor scoffed at him about high dollar luxuries like coffee shop drinks or name brand food or clothes or a computer or using the bus instead of a car.

Now, my friend did not own a car; he bike rode everywhere. His wife used the bus. Both he and his wife worked. He did not buy name brand food; he got cheap store brand food in bulk and only bought what he already knew would be used in his meal calendar planned for two months at a time. He brewed his own coffee at home. He kept his electricity usage to a minimum and taught his wife and children to do the same. His kids weren’t indulged with sweets or many toys. They didn’t buy candy or hobby items. They got the free local TV channels which they honestly only used to track weather on a salvaged TV they got from a friend. They only got new clothing when their kids grew out of the old or something of theirs was too worn to patch or repair and always from thrift shops. All their furniture was secondhand and usually picked cheap from garage sales. They made the agonizing decision to purchase a home instead of renting because the net savings over all were justifiable because the house payments were cheaper than renting. They budgeted for a total of ten dollars to be put in the savings account per month, not per paycheck.

My friend and his wife planned their expenditures down to the cent at least two months in advance to make sure they could make it. They constantly researched to find the absolute best value of every item they bought. Thankfully, my friend had the analytical mind for that kind of planning. No purchase ever went unremarked upon or without heavy consideration, no matter how small. They spent wisely and stretched every dollar as far as it could go.

My friend brought in a hand written copy of his budget (because he didn’t have a computer or printer and paper was an expense he built into the budget so he could do the planning) and showed it to the professor the next day in front of the class and asked, “Where do I squeeze out $25 per paycheck?”

The professor hemmed and hawed as he went through the budget. He kept starting to say something on one line or another and then would stop himself and go to the next. Sometimes he would say shit things like “where is your gas column?” “We don’t own a car.” He spent about twenty minutes staring at my friend’s carefully planned and managed budget and could not see a single place where it could be improved.

“I guess you can’t,” the professor said and was apparently so bitter about being wrong that my friend had to keep from laughing at him even though the entire experience had soured him something awful.

People who are not struggling do not understand how money works for poor people and just assume we are horrible at managing it instead of realizing we just don’t have any. Luxury items aren’t killing us; low wages and a shit economy are.

Your Latte Isn’t Why You’re in Debt, and the People Who Say It Is Are Lying to You

Young Tory activists caught joking about ‘gassing chavs’

infernalseason:

“The revelation comes as a new Tory-supporting youth group, called Activate, was launched to try to engage young people in politics in a similar way to Momentum, the left-wing Labour campaign organisation. However, the group’s social media launch was widely ridiculed for its overuse of hashtags and memes.

Guido Fawkes (?!), which published the leaked messages, said the WhatsApp group was used as a “precursor” to the Activate group.

During the conversation, one member refers to an event as a “fine opportunity to observe the spice homo chav”.

Another immediately replies: “And gas them all.”

The first activist then jokes that he or she is “gonna run some medical experiments on them” before the second adds: “We could use them as substitutes for animals when testing.”

As the conversation continues, the pair make a string of further offensive comments about poor people.

The first suggests “experiments” could be conducted “to see why they are so good at producing despite living rough”.

Realising the direction the chat has taken, he adds: “Okay we gotta be careful otherwise this is turning [in]to a Nazi chat.“

Undeterred, the second person continues: “Vermin often populate at high rates…But seriously, chavs are an actual problem”.

As other young Tory activists join in the troubling conversation, talk turns to “solutions” for dealing with “chavs”.

Suggestions include “chavocide”, “turn the Isle of Wight into a super prison”, “shooting peasants” and “compulsory birth control on chavs”.

Anyone who thinks that these people aren’t typical of the Tory party is really deluding themselves. 

Young Tory activists caught joking about ‘gassing chavs’