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#Morals
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altf4d3lete · 2 months
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So are we gonna talk about how wenclair also makes the most sense in terms of Wednesday’s morals?
Wednesday is shown to be someone who cares greatly about outcasts and about their place in the world. She nearly sacrifices herself to fight Joseph Crackstone and save the school, she seems to be upset at the notion of being the reason people at the school are hurt. She’s very clearly enraged by the way Goody is treated and by the outcasts being executed in the barn.
Tyler: Tyler was raised with a very negative view on outcasts, and that was only fueled by Thornhill. He already hated them before Thornhill even came along, and now he hates them even more, to the point of willingly going along with a genocide plot. While we don’t know his true intentions, as of now they don’t make much sense together, given that Wednesday seems to hold the treatment of outcasts fairly high on her list of things she’s upset about.
Xavier: I have a feeling that because Xavier is a psychic and his father is rich/famous, he doesn’t have to worry about things that other outcasts have to worry about. Maybe this is just a writer thing, because I find it weird he wouldn’t be more fired up about it given that he was literally hatecrimed, but when Wednesday opens up to him about what she saw and is clearly upset about it, his response is essentially “so?”. He very clearly doesn’t care about things like the unfair treatment of outcasts unless it directly affects him.
Enid: Then you have Enid. A werewolf. She can’t shift, but she has claws that make it hard for her to visually hide that she’s an outcast. She’s one of the outcasts directly affected by the fact that she can’t hide who she is, one of the most likely to be hunted and/or hatecrimed as well, since werewolves would be viewed as violent creatures (probably why they have the Lupin cages). She’s more similar to Wednesday. Untrusting of normies, likely stemming from a fear of being hatecrimed or the dislike of them knowing that they have hatecrimed people in the past.
In terms of morals and senses of political justice, Enid aligns the most with Wednesday. Of course hate can be unlearned and a sense of justice can be taught, but as the three love interests stand, Enid makes the most sense.
Thank you for coming to my Ted talk 🙏
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awetistic-things · 4 months
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awetistic things {1071}
being so obsessed with abiding by your morals that you would genuinely rather die than do or say anything that moral opposes ( and being horrified when an allistic jokingly accuses you of doing so, even knowing it’s a joke )
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saint-daimon · 4 months
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"If you crush a cockroach, you're a hero. If you crush a beautiful butterfly, you're a villain. Morals have aesthetic criteria"- Friedrich Nietzsche
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pratchettquotes · 1 month
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"Anyway, it'll be int'resting to see if it works."
"Yes, but it's wrong," said Granny.
"Not for these parts, it seems," said Nanny.
"Besides," said Magrat virtuously, "it can't be bad if we're doing it. We're the good ones."
"Oh yes, so we is," said Granny, "and there was me forgetting it for a minute there."
Terry Pratchett, Witches Abroad
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saturnisscreaming · 6 months
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People who knit
Morals aside if you had a very very long worm that could feel no pain could/would you knit something with it
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Friendly reminder that-
Israel isn't attacking Hamas, it's attacking Palestinians.
This doesn't have anything to do with religion.
There are lgbt+ people in palestine.
There are Jews in palestine and it's not the IDF soldiers.
There are Christians in palestine.
Whenever Hamas releases a former hostage, all of or at least the majority of them say that they had been treated good by the Palestinians.
When the former hostage, Emily, yes that little blonde girl was asked if Hamas taught her to share her food with those needed more, she nodded.
People who support palestine and or are Palestinian but are in other, more "civilised", countries have faced death threats, losing their jobs and even physical violence by people who support Israel.
Jesus was a Palestinian jew.
Holocaust survivors have compared the crimes that Israel is committing to the crimes nazis did back in world War 2.
The reason why no one spoke up about palestine before was due to the fact that many received death threats.
Isreal is allowed to do this because of world War 2, it's fully exploiting the hundreds of deaths of Jews along with the torture they faced.
The Pope is pro-palestine and has stated that what Isreal is doing is terrorism.
Boycotting is easy.
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"Some of the most terrible things in the world are done by people who think, genuinely think, that they are doing it for the best, especially if there is some god involved." -- Terry Pratchett
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grreenwitchannemarie · 2 months
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There’s something to be said said about being a witch a witch must have integrity morals ethics n values or she is not a true witch
An it harm none do what ye will
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nando161mando · 7 months
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When criminals run society
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iloveasmr · 18 days
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nobel trials 4
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commiepinkofag · 9 months
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A gay “kiss-in” demonstration Yonge and Bloor streets, Toronto, 17 July 1976
L to R: David Foreman, Tim McCaskell, Ed Jackson, Merv Walker, David Gibson, Michael Riordon. Credit: Gerald Hannon, Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives, accession 1986-032/08P(35).
On February 9, 1976, gay activists Tom Field and Bill Holloway were arrested at the corner of Yonge and Bloor streets in Toronto for kissing in public. They were charged with obstructing the sidewalk and committing an indecent act. Ironically, the men had been posing for photographs for an article on homophobia to be published in the now-defunct newspaper Alternative to Alienation. …
Field and Holloway were found guilty of committing an indecent act by Judge Charles Drukarsh on July 13, 1976, and were each fined $50. The ruling infuriated Gay Alliance Toward Equality [GATE], the Body Politic, and members of the community. The need for protest was in the air, but only a very special kind of protest would do. 
A few days later, on July 17, GATE and the Body Politic sponsored a kiss-in to support the right for gay people to publicly show affection. About twenty people paraded in same-sex couples at Yonge and Bloor streets, kissing as they walked. Policemen watched from the sidelines, but did not intervene. The protesters had made their point. — Donald W. McLeod
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