Avenue of Jesters

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
chongoblog
btc-official

pokemon loves just straight up lying about things so much. “this is binkabonkus one swipe of its claws can cut down an entire forest” and then its claws do like 12 damage

btc-official

not even just stats either “the glowing bulb on bulbanjo’s head is brighter than the sun” and you can clearly see it isnt.

void-of-erebos

Magcargo

btc-official

hold on i dont actually know that many pokemon let me look something up

beefstrugglenoff
nerunodaisuki

大阪のmanchester schoolというバンドが春に出す7インチシングルのジャケ絵を描かせていただきました。
元気で跳ねるような青春感溢れる男の子!な楽曲揃いなので、Tシャツの裏表に絵を描きました。
絵の中の庭は祖母の家の庭をモデルにしました。
#illustration  #darkillustration  #cartoon  #lowbrowart  #monster  #manga  #artist #キャラクター   #漫画
#comic #kawaii#doodle #Acrylic painting
#アクリル画

cool art
beefstrugglenoff
animentality

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kaelio

No-fault divorce is actually very recent. That is, a divorce just because you wanted to get divorced and not because they were guilty of some provable transgression. California's no-fault divorce law was 1966; the latest US state, it was 2010. When I was in Catholic school, we were taught to believe in and promote anti-no-fault-divorce positions. This is very recent history, and you cannot take even this for granted. Stop being "edgy" about feminism and its flaws. Every movement will have some flaws. But do you not think that this, and the risk it represents, is significant to women as a class of all backgrounds?

furryprovocateur

it's literally as simple as "if you are against no-fault divorce, you believe that men should be able to own women like property".

redbuddi
i-was-today-years-old-when

TIL a family in Georgia claimed to have passed down a song in an unknown language from the time of their enslavement; scientists identified the song as a genuine West African funeral song in the Mende language that had survived multiple transmissions from mother to daughter over multiple centuries (x)

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ancestralia

In 1997 Amelia’s daughter, Mary Moran, and other members of the Moran family were invited to Sierra Leone, West Africa, where they were welcomed in Freetown by Sierra Leone’s President and then flown by helicopter to the country’s interior.  There, in the small village of Senehun Ngola, Mary and Bendu Jabati met and sang this song together for the first time.  Years earlier, Bendu’s grandmother had told her that this song, which had been passed down in her village from mother to daughter for centuries, would one day reunite her to long-lost relatives.

In addition to finding out where in Africa her ancestors were abducted into slavery, Mary Moran discovered the meaning of the Mende song: a processional hymn for the final farewell to the spirit, it was sung in Senehun Ngola by women as they prepared the body of a loved one for burial.

(The OP's link leads to a site with a recording of the song sung by both Mary Moran and her mother, Amelia)