For a mission, you’re ordered to go undercover and create a fake, convincing family with one of the bachelors from the League of Villains.
Reblog and add your reason in the tags, if you’d like! 🖤
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He’s robbing a bakery 🔻✨
Realized it was boyo’s bday yesterday, but couldn’t post this on time… so you get it now
(Funny thing, I went to queue this up only to realize the first art of this design was coincidentally gonna be posted today… So y’all get both.)
Crud it’s also Sage’s birthday
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“How’s the castle built off people you pretend to care about”
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mspec lesbians and supporters please block this blog. They’re reblogging pro-mspec lesbian posts specifically to shame them, as well as spreading general exclusionist bs. Stay safe.
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hey so can we talk about how deku pushing himself past his limits to the point of damaging his body in order to reach his goal of becoming a hero is exactly what touya was doing as a kid?
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If I had a nickel for every time a TOH episode was leaked too early, I’d have two nickels…
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New meme, hope you lot like!
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trans exclusionary radical feminists arent even only trans exclusionary what with their incredibly specific idea of what a woman is like “oh they need to have vaginas and be able to give birth and have boobs” or whatever the fuck have you like whattabout cis women who dont have those things???
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This is my first post here, idk what to do so take this shit drawing of Ernest <3
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Texts in Like Minds: L'Etranger
The essay notes that Nigel gives to Alex are about "The character of Mersault." Mersault is the main character of the novel L'Etranger (The Stranger), by Albert Camus. Sadly, the camera shot and the handwriting itself make it very hard to distinguish the text that follows.
Here's a brief description of Mersault from an online study guide:
Meursault is psychologically detached from the world around him. Events that would be very significant for most people, such as a marriage proposal or a parent’s death, do not matter to him, at least not on a sentimental level. He simply does not care that his mother is dead, or that Marie loves him.
Meursault is also honest, which means that he does not think of hiding his lack of feeling by shedding false tears over his mother’s death. In displaying his indifference, Meursault implicitly challenges society’s accepted moral standards, which dictate that one should grieve over death. Because Meursault does not grieve, society sees him as an outsider, a threat, even a monster. At his trial, the fact that he had no reaction to his mother’s death damages his reputation far more than his taking of another person’s life.
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