Sheridan (he/him... or whatever)

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Sheridan (he/him... or whatever)

Sheridan (he/him... or whatever)

@skrytch

Nonbinary Widowed Weirdo Grandpa in his 40s. living in Washington State and playing Animal Crossing... a lot. sanity is only the denial of an insane universe.

Bremeron,WA 参加日 Haziran 2009
4.6K フォロー中190 フォロワー
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anteaterfacts🐜
anteaterfacts🐜@ieatantz·
THEY FOUND BANANA SLUGS IN SAN DIEGO THIS ISNT A DRILL
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T. Bernadetti
T. Bernadetti@MrsRoyKeaneo·
Jamie Raskin is visibly shaken after reading the unredacted #EpsteinFiles "Donald Trump's name is all over these files...I saw a reference today to a 9yr old girl". Don't ever stop talking about the #EpsteinFiles. #Trump
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Morgan J. Freeman
Morgan J. Freeman@mjfree·
And just like that, it’s completely VANISHED from the media. A sitting congressman, Ted Lieu, said on the record the Epstein files are being blocked because they show Trump raped and threatened to kill children. Lets make this viral again 👇
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
Jeff Bezos, Kevin O'Leary, and Elon Musk when they have to pay taxes and contribute to society.
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Tai Tauqk
Tai Tauqk@tauqk·
Holy shit! Wtf is this animation... Old really is gold I guess 🔥
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goma
goma@soigomaa·
She faked insanity to get in... but she didn't know if she could get out. In 1887, 23-year-old Nellie Bly got herself committed to a notorious asylum to expose the truth. But the moment she dropped the act and spoke normally, the doctors ignored her. She was trapped. For 10 days, she documented ice-cold baths, beatings, and sane women locked away just for being poor. She escaped, exposed the horror, and saved 1,600 women. She didn't just write history—she changed it.
quote@itsmubashi

Hit me with the most underrated women stories

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ADHD Memes
ADHD Memes@ADHDForReal·
ADHD Memes tweet media
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Miyu
Miyu@MiyuSuzukiX·
This anime has so many unique sequences , Gero is so cool it's so PEAK 🔥
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Greentext Poster
Greentext Poster@GreenTextRepost·
sub by anon
Greentext Poster tweet media
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Furry Clips (KiloRat)
Furry Clips (KiloRat)@kilorat·
Should I even post stuff like this? It's not really furry, more like cosplay.
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Gs
Gs@Gs_Swipes·
No coming back after that 😂
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Sheridan (he/him... or whatever)
@kianamaiart Do you want chronological order? OG Linda Carter Wonder woman, then Jem, the handful of SM I watched were okay. Magical DoReMi, running out of room...so I guess my favs are ones where the girls have jobs/lives outside of magical girlness
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Kiana Mai 🌹
Kiana Mai 🌹@kianamaiart·
favorite magical girl series and why? (can be anything from the look, the characters, the overall story, the scriptwriting, the vibe, etc.). not limited to anime either! for research purposes ✍🏾
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Anime Shots
Anime Shots@anime_shots·
What the hell is happening at the end
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Flork
Flork@FlorkOfCows·
Flork tweet media
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AnimeStrikerz
AnimeStrikerz@AnimeStrikerz·
She insulted him but somehow he ended up at her shop😭
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
In 1984, Ruth Coker Burks was 25 years old, visiting a friend at a hospital in Little Rock, when she noticed nurses drawing straws outside a patient's room. Someone had to go in. She didn't wait for the straws. She opened the door herself. What she found inside would define the next decade of her life. 🕯️** Inside was a young man reduced to bones — maybe 80 pounds, dying alone, terrified. He kept whispering one word. *"Mama."* Ruth told the nurses to call his mother. They laughed. *"Honey, we've called. He's been here six weeks. Nobody's coming."* Ruth made them give her the number. She tried one last time. The mother's answer was cold and final: her son was sinful, already dead to her, and she would not be coming. So Ruth went back into that room. She took his hand. She stayed. For 13 hours, she held the hand of a dying stranger, promising him he wouldn't leave this world alone. When he died, his family refused to claim the body. Ruth decided she would bury him herself. She owned plots in her family cemetery in Hot Springs — where her father and grandparents rested. The nearest funeral home willing to handle an AIDS death was 70 miles away. Ruth paid from her own pocket. A local potter gave her a chipped cookie jar for an urn. She used posthole diggers to dig the grave herself. She spoke kind words over the earth because no minister would come to pray over a man who died of AIDS. Ruth thought that would be the end. It was the beginning. Word traveled through the quiet networks of fear and desperation across Arkansas. *There's a woman in Hot Springs who isn't afraid. There's a woman who will sit with you. There's a woman who will make sure you're buried with dignity when your own family won't claim you.* They started arriving. Dying young men from rural hospitals across the state, abandoned by the people who were supposed to love them most. Over the next decade, Ruth Coker Burks cared for more than 1,000 people dying of AIDS. She personally buried 40 of them in Files Cemetery — digging the graves herself, with her young daughter beside her carrying a small spade, holding their own funerals because no one else would speak over these graves. Of those 1,000 people, only a handful of families didn't abandon their dying children. Ruth called parents. Begged them to come say goodbye. To claim their child's body. Most refused. *"Who knew,"* she said, *"there'd come a time when parents didn't want to bury their own children?"* But she also witnessed something else — something that stayed with her. She watched gay men care for dying partners with a devotion that shattered every stereotype. She watched a terrified community take care of its own — and take care of her. *"They would twirl up a drag show on Saturday night and here'd come the money. That's how we bought medicine. That's how we paid rent. If it hadn't been for the drag queens, I don't know what we would have done."* By the mid-1990s, new treatments emerged. The crisis began to shift. And then, like so many heroes of the AIDS crisis, Ruth Coker Burks faded from public memory. She wrote a memoir in 2019 called *All the Young Men* because she needed people to understand what happened in Arkansas. What happened across America. What happens when fear convinces people to abandon their own children. And what happens when one person refuses to walk past a door everyone else fears. She didn't have medical training. She didn't have institutional backing. She didn't have money. She had compassion. Courage. Posthole diggers. And a family cemetery. That was enough to make sure 1,000 people didn't die believing they were worthless. The next time someone says one person can't change anything — Remember the red bag on the door. Remember the 13 hours she stayed with a stranger. Remember the 40 graves she dug with her own hands. She walked through that door in 1984. And 1,000 lives were forever changed because of it.
The Husky tweet media
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Amazon MGM Studios
Amazon MGM Studios@AmazonMGMStudio·
Salute! Spaceballs: The New One is coming to theaters April 23, 2027.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
NASA landed an 8.5-ton capsule in the Pacific at 17 mph on Friday and four astronauts walked out of it. If they had aimed for a field, those astronauts would be dead. Water doesn't cushion the capsule. It displaces. When Orion hit the ocean, it punched a hole in the surface and transferred its kinetic energy into shoving tens of thousands of pounds of water sideways. The deceleration happened over several feet of penetration, not a single crushing instant. Metal hitting concrete absorbs impact by crushing itself. Water absorbs impact by flowing aside. That's the entire physics of splashdown. Every American crewed capsule since 1961 has landed in water. Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Dragon, Orion. The Russians chose differently, and the reason comes down to geography. Soviet launch sites sit in Kazakhstan. Their navy was never set up for open-water recovery during the Cold War. What they had was steppe: millions of square miles of unpopulated grassland. So they built a capsule that lands on dirt. To make dirt landings survivable, Soyuz carries soft-landing retrorockets that fire roughly a meter above the ground. A pair of altimeters triggers them in the final moments. The rockets add weight, add failure points, and still leave the landing feeling like a car crash. Cosmonauts wear custom-molded seat liners to survive the G-loads. Orion skipped every bit of that. The ocean is the retrorocket. It's always there. It requires no precision. The Artemis II recovery zone off San Diego was roughly a thousand square miles of open water. Miss the target by 20 miles and you're still inside it. NASA actually considered switching Orion to a land landing. The original Constellation plan used giant airbags to cushion a ground impact. They ran the numbers against splashdown and switched back. The ocean does for free what three layers of engineered hardware do expensively. Water is enormous and willing to move. That's what brought them home.
Aakash Gupta tweet media
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Jesus Chrysler
Jesus Chrysler@JesusChryslerII·
This TV ad, which was broadcast back in 1971 during the Vietnam War, is weirdly relevant today. Fight for your slice
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