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soshiism · 4 months
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minhyuk (btob) + lee junyoung
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A universidade que dá um almoço desses e ainda um bombom Oreo branco de sobremesa sério amo demais UnB
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Photo: The New York Times
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Happy belated birthday to e.e. cummings (1894-1962), American painter and poet who first attracted attention, in an age of literary experimentation, for his unconventional punctuation and phrasing. He's widely regarded as one of the most important American poets of the 20th century. 
"Unbeing dead isn't being alive." "Trust your heart if the seas catch fire, live by love though the stars walk backward." "The snow doesn't give a soft white damn whom it touches." "and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you"
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"To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you like everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight and never stop fighting."
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coochiequeens · 1 year
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A man with a receding hairline and a full beard was in the women’s restrooms and he responded aggressively when he was questioned. But yeah women have no reason to want single sex bathrooms.
Disturbing footage has emerged out of a university in Brazil showing a trans-identified male student aggressively screaming at a female student who had questioned his presence in the women’s restroom.
On December 14, footage taken at the University of Brasília (UNB) began to circulate on social media, quickly racking up viral attention in the nation. The camera-phone video showed a large, bearded male wearing a dress loudly screaming in the face of a female student, who appeared to be trying to get away from him. 
The footage can be traced back to the University’s cafeteria, and the incident was caused by the presence of the bearded man in the women’s restroom. The female student had reportedly attempted to question the man’s presence, expressing discomfort with him being there. The man then launched into a tirade of aggression, stalking the female student through the dining hall.
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In video taken by the woman being assailed, she can be heard pointing out the man’s obvious characteristics.
“But you’re a dude!” The female student says.
“I am not a dude! Nothing is keeping me from bringing my hand to your face. Girl, respect me! Respect me!” He is heard screaming, using a colloquial expression for ‘slapping.’
In some extended clips, the trans-identified male student can also be heard claiming it was a “crime” to call him a man. 
Brazilian media covered the incident today, offering a sympathetic portrayal of the trans-identified male student, who they did not identify. TV Globo also applied censorship to the available footage, obscuring the face and voice of the trans-identified male student involved.
In an interview with the student, TV Globo suggested he was the victim of transphobia, which they described as “a form of prejudice against transsexual people that can result in physical, moral or psychological violence.”
The trans-identified male student gave a statement, saying: “I felt extremely offended, I was being exposed, I was being humiliated by a person who was filming me. I ran to try to take her cell phone, and I lost control. But no one should go through this just because they want to use the bathroom.”
The female student involved in the incident similarly provided a statement, explaining that she had simply been afraid when she saw a male using the women’s facilities.
“I thought it was a man, right? Because I saw the beard. Then I asked him what he was doing in the bathroom. Because there are cases of harassment and rape that happen inside the university and I get very afraid of these things,” she explained.
In response to the TV Globo article and viral footage, Ariadne Ribeiro, a transgender officer at UNAIDS, stated it was “essential” that trans-identified males be protected in “collective” environments.
“Imagine the anguish of a human being who is unable to go to the bathroom simply because of this type of violence [and] aggression. What can we do, in terms of public policies, so that a public environment within a private institution guarantees security? Or even a public environment in a public university?” Ribeiro asked.
“It is important for [women] to know that the male bathroom for trans women is exactly as violent as they imagine it would be if they had a man in their bathroom.”
Though Brazilian media did not release the trans-identified male student’s identity, Reduxx can confirm him as being Brigitte Lúcia.
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Earlier today, following the release of the TV Globo article in which he painted himself out to be a victim, Lucia posted a photo of wall graffiti which read “there are women with penises, men with vaginas, and transphobes with no teeth.” Lucia captioned the picture, “for me, it is an HONOR for you not to like me.”
On Instagram, women’s rights advocates condemned Lucia’s behavior at UNB, and pointed to the incident as an example of why single sex spaces are necessary.
One post featuring the footage of Lucia verbally attacking the female student was captioned: “Of course we are afraid of people like you in our spaces, dude. Who wouldn’t be?”
In response to the uploaded video, many Brazilian women expressed frustration and disbelief, with some users being quick to label Lucia’s behavior as “male pattern” violence.
“Today I saw a case of a man who killed his four children to take revenge on his ex-wife. Then I see a guy like this screaming and threatening a woman. Nobody comments on this being male violence. He’s a spoiled man who thinks he can have whatever he wants until he assaults women,” one Instagram user wrote in the comment section of the video.
Other users questioned whether the female student was safe at the facility, and noticed the lack of intervention from bystanders.
“Nobody defends the woman out of fear of being judged and suffering retaliation,” one Instagram user observed, with a reply stating: “If someone says something, they’ll be arrested for transphobia.”
Brazil has become a hot spot in the gender ideology debate in recent months, with multiple incidents out of the country sparking international attention and outrage.
In July of this year, a similar incident took place at a high school in Maringá, Brazil. Violent footage showing trans-identified male students physically assaulting female classmates began to circulate on social media, and it was quickly reported that the brutal attack was caused by the girls expressing concern about males being able to access the female washrooms within the school.
In one shot from the disturbing recording, a female student can be seen getting pushed to the ground. Her friend attempted to help her, but is grabbed by the hair and pulled to the side. Shortly after, she is seen being hit in the head repeatedly. Later in the clip, one of the trans-identified male students could be heard screaming: “Next time you’re transphobic, I’ll break your bones!”
Other incidents in the country include two women facing potential jail time for criminal “transphobia.” 
Isabela Cêpa, a notable feminist activist in the country, spoke exclusively to Reduxx in June and revealed that she was being charged with five counts of “social racism” after calling a trans-identified male politician a “man.” Just a few months later, a female gym owner in Anápolis was charged on similar grounds after refusing to allow a trans-identified male membership to her woman-only gym.
Update
The female student seen being attacked by a trans-identified male at a Brazilian University has come forward to Reduxx and provide disturbing new details on the incident.
On December 14, footage taken at the University of Brasília (UNB) began to circulate on social media, quickly racking up viral attention. The camera-phone video clips showed a large, bearded male wearing a dress loudly screaming in the face of a female student, who appeared to be trying to get away from him. 
Additional video was taken by the woman being assailed, and she can be heard pointing out the man’s obvious characteristics.
“But you’re a dude!” The female student says.
“I am not a dude! Nothing is keeping me from bringing my hand to your face. Girl, respect me! Respect me!” He is heard screaming, using a colloquial expression for ‘slapping.’
In some extended clips, the trans-identified male student can also be heard claiming it was a “crime” to call him a man.
Reduxx confirmed the identity of the trans-identified male as a student named Brigitte Lúcia. Lúcia, who appears to identify as a homosexual man in addition to as a transgender woman, had previously attempted to run for a position in the university’s student council. 
Laura, who is being referred to by a pseudonym as she is concerned for her safety and wishes to remain anonymous, has now come forward to speak to Reduxxabout the incident and provide additional details on what happened that day.
Laura has been a student at UNB for 3 years, but says this was the first time she had ever interacted with Lúcia. Laura explains that she had been unaware of a university policy which allowed males who simply identified as “women” to enter the women’s washrooms, even where they were not gender-neutral.
“The bathroom where everything happened is a women’s bathroom, for women. But I was informed that UNB has guidelines that separates washroom by gender identity, not sex. That is, anyone who identifies as a woman can enter the women’s bathroom. I did not know that.”
Upon entering the washroom and seeing Lúcia, Laura says she became anxious. She explained that there had been several recent incidents of sexual harassment and rape on the campus, and that males had also been entering the women’s restrooms to film the women using the toilets. 
“This caused me a lot of panic,” Laura says, “So I asked what he was doing there, because I realized he was male. He has a beard, he’s tall, he has a male voice. He didn’t look like a transgender woman.”
Laura says she wasn’t even opposed to the idea of “fully transitioned” trans-identified males using the women’s facilities, but couldn’t understand it when Lúcia began to insist he was a woman. 
“As soon as I approached him, he told me he was a woman… But I didn’t understand, because I couldn’t see him as anything but male. He came at me and he was going to attack me right there in the bathroom, but another girl arrived and defended me.”
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The other female student helped put distance between Laura and Lúcia, guiding her out of the bathroom with an arm around her. But as soon as the pair entered the cafeteria, Lúcia came barreling towards them, screaming furiously. 
“He started calling me transphobic and pointing his finger in my face … He started yelling at me and pushing me and cussing me out. He cornered me all the time and intimidated me, as if he wanted me to fight back … I was afraid he was going to beat me right then and there. I was actually afraid of dying or something,” Laura says.
Laura says Lúcia pursued her all the way to the university administrator’s office, before he pushed her into a glass wall. She says her head and arm hit the wall, and she began to feel dizzy. A university employee ultimately pulled her away from Lúcia.
Laura has lodged a complaint with campus security, as well as filed a report with the local police department for bodily injury. She hasn’t been back to the cafeteria out of fear she’ll run into Lúcia again, and worries that he is going to attempt to ruin her academic career.
When asked if she had a message to convey to the international audience of women who saw the video of her being attacked, Laura explains that she has reflected upon the views she held prior to her ordeal with Lúcia.
“Initially, I would have said that women should be more careful, and not go to bathrooms or changing rooms alone due to the threat of running into a male there … In these last few hours, since the report came out [of what happened to me], I’ve been reflecting on how I’m being accused of [transphobia] simply for acting on my own perception of reality.”
Laura says that since the incident went viral, some student trans activists have condemned her supposed “transphobia,” and have called for her expulsion from the university.
“I simply asked that person to leave the women’s restroom. His response was to insult, humiliate, and assault me. I think if he was so sure of his identity, we would have a healthy discussion without all the stress. But if a simple question I asked, based on my own perception of reality, was enough to provoke that person into a violent rage, I’d like to understand why I’m being accused of wrongdoing and not him.”
She continues: “So, I’m not going to tell women to be careful… My message is: Take action. If something makes you uncomfortable, say ‘no.’ Say ‘I don’t want to,’ or ‘I’m not fine.’ Just do it. I think it’s through action that we change things. Women are told to be nice and passive, but action is the best way, in my opinion, to change the problems that afflict us.”
By Anna Slatz Anna is the Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief at Reduxx, with a journalistic focus on covering crime, child predators, and women's rights. She lives in Canada, enjoys Opera, and kvetches in her spare time.
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elinerlina · 28 days
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JUEUN on UNB'S "Black Heart" photo teaser
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5brightplanets · 2 months
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Unbe Nonces - Cleansular Surfacism Nr. 101 |  2018 Graffiti Series  |  by Jivananda Candrāmā (James FitzGerald)
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Share able .jpg or .jpeg of this photo is on 5brightplanets.tumblr.com ; or, navigate to tumblr.com and use the searchbox to check out my blog at 5brightplanets. Photos are archived by the date of original post and make perfect screensavers for digital devices. When purposing the photos, I am grateful if you credit a shared journey within the larger story. -Jivananda (Jim)
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More background on the Graffiti Series is at http://5brightplanets.tumblr.com/post/151328969692/the-graffiti-series-grateful-awareness-of-the
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onlylaboum · 3 months
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Made a video about songs that were released in (somewhat) recent years but sound 2nd gen! It includes LABOUM and WSG Wannabe as well as SONAMOO, U-KISS, (G)-IDLE, Weki Meki, INFINITE, UNI.T, UNB, CocoSori, MINIMANI, TAN, BB Girls, and so on.
There's also a playlist:
I'm sorry for not posting any LABOUM updates this year. All I know is that Haein's husband posted some more photos and that Solbin is currently acting in another obscure web drama. 🥲
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spirituality2242 · 1 year
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Midnight photo in my city
My mind is fresh after looking this
mind fresh at night
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atlanticcanada · 2 years
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How some New Brunswickers are marking the province’s first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation has been marked with various events across New Brunswick this week, but at the Rothesay High School, it's the next chapter of the Minda Project.
The project was created by artist Bonny Hill in honour of her friend Minda Burley.
"It started when Minda told me her story about finding out that she was part of the Sixties Scoop and then we had the pandemic, and I started noticing all this extra cardboard, and then they cut it all up, they painted it all, they labeled it all," said Hill. "They organized it all and I created a pattern from Minda's childhood, one and only baby picture she had."
Hill said she then broke it into smaller pieces and recreated it on a large scale.
This time, the photo for the project will be of Burley's sister Johanne.
Burley's story has also been shared with Quispamsis Middle School in hopes it may have made an impact on the students.
"Actually meeting somebody who was born and taken away from their family brings them closer to the subject because I am a real person, this happened to me, and they're actually talking to a person that it happened to so you can tell them what your life was like," said Burley.
The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation was recognized as a holiday in New Brunswick last week.
"I'm pretty pleased that they did, so I wish it was done sooner, but it is what it is so I'm pretty content with that," said Grand Chief Ron Tremblay of Wolastoqey Grand Council.
In Saint John, Indigenous films have been playing all week. The University of New Brunswick's Lorenzo Society hopes the film festival brings reconciliation into sharper focus.
"To raise the conversation level around these very important conversations on how to move forward with reconciliation," said Todd Ross, UNB Indigenous advisor.
The Wolastoquey Grand Council will be gathering at the old burial grounds near Government House in Fredericton.
"We are there to respect the dead and also the survivors of residential school and the day schools, plus to remind people of the truth and the act of genocide that occupied in the past, and reparation that needs to take place from here on in," said Tremblay.
The ceremony on the old burial ground in Fredericton will begin at 2 p.m. on Friday.
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/MIh3flV
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don-lichterman · 2 years
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Dhaka ranks 2nd in list of most polluted cities with 190 AQI score
Dhaka ranks 2nd in list of most polluted cities with 190 AQI score
This undated UNB photo shows the view of Dhaka’s air pollution. Air pollution still remains one of the top most challenges for Bangladesh — its capital has been ranked as the second most polluted city in the world. On Wednesday, Dhaka’s air quality index was recorded at 190 at 9:00am. India’s Delhi and Kuwait’s Kuwait City occupied the first and third spots, with AQI scores of 257 and 158,…
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♥️
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rohtaehyuns · 2 years
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galaxy lemonade yuchan
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technomoss · 2 years
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unb . icc
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mbkupdates · 3 years
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KBS2's Imitation Poster
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foreverxdaydreaming · 5 years
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seoninchan · 6 years
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