
‡ Manzin ‡
26.5K posts

‡ Manzin ‡
@RevManzin
Inspiration to some, warning to others. Co-owner and Side Witch of @6Witch3. 🌞 ♐️ 🌙 ♊️ ⬆️ ♉️ he/they 🏳️🌈 #justiceforMarilynManson 🌹🍉


something urges me to make a video/write an essay about post-1990s goth and how misogynistic/liberal (not in the good way) the movement has gotten, i blame marilyn manson for this

@CoreyB08 Yes the gay community absolutes does do that. Constantly trying to influence people into LGBT lives. That’s the entire issue that people have with the LGBT community. Not BEING those things, but INFLUENCING OTHER PEOPLE to be those things. Y’all PREY on people in confused places.

About 510,000 people died of AIDS in the U.S. between 1981 and 1996. In the late 1990s, a breakthrough “cocktail” of HIV meds became available. Since then, treatment options have become more abundant and easier to take, and in the United States, HIV-related mortality rates have plunged. But now there’s risk of a backslide. States across the country are considering cuts to a program that covers about a quarter of the roughly 1.2 million people in the U.S. living with HIV. Tens of thousands could soon lose access to medication. The most extreme example is in Florida. Early this month, the state government drastically reduced access to its AIDS Drug Assistance Program, a long-standing federal initiative operated and partly funded by states that provides free or subsidized HIV meds and care. Claiming a $120 million budget shortfall, Florida chopped the annual income-eligibility cutoff for ADAP from about $64,000 (in line with many other states) to about $21,000. Half of the 32,000 Floridians who depend on ADAP would lose coverage. ADAP programs work both to help save lives and to stop the epidemic’s spread: Medically suppressed HIV cannot be transmitted. A recent study calculated that if Congress were to eliminate the act that houses ADAP, new HIV infections across 31 major U.S. cities would rise nearly 50 percent by 2030. Tim Murphy reports on how cuts in ADAP “could see the first rise in HIV incidence in decades”: nymag.visitlink.me/vh9KRx



The story of the fall in the garden of eden is an incredibly stupid story. It’s like a father who puts their child in a room with a venomous snake, then tells the child not to touch or go near the snake, knowing fully well that the child has absolutely no understanding of the consequences of touching the snake and then seriously punishing the child and all the child’s descendants that have absolutely nothing to do with the initial event, for being bitten by the snake. And then calling the father all loving and good. No story ever written is more stupid.





If the world is ending, can we just wait until Nov 2nd, please? I need to go to all the concerts. Thanks.




OH THEY ATE THAT SO BAD OMFG😭😭😭









