it is a privilege to engage in theoretical gender discourse, and while politicians, doctors, families, and friends ask themselves if it is right or wrong, transgender people are being beaten to death. teenage trans kids are issued death threats, and across the globe our body count rises. it is here, at the intersection of oppression, where violence is commonplace. how can we still wonder which bathroom she should use? privilege affords the gender debate at the expense of our most vulnerable community members. when a trans woman dies you can read about it in the newspaper, where you see her described as a man instead of the woman she died for. and we wonder how to best protect our children, forgetting that some of our children are trans. TDOR reminds me that our precious politics have a very real consequence. this is a critical moment in the history of transgender rights. will we remember those who did not survive it?

diana tourjee, transgender day of remembrance, 2013 (via andrewgibby)

wecansexy:

wecansexy:

in fifth grade we had a project where we had to design our own utopia and mine was in the future where everyone lived in the clouds and i guess men had gone extinct so everyone was a girl and they reproduced with genetic cloning?? and everyone had cool hair and bright colored dresses but let me just repeat 10 year old me’s idea of an utopia was lesbian cloud heaven, i was so gay wtf

this is one text post that i am not upset became popular, the world needs to know

mcclonalds:

vuitos:

I saw this cute girl at a coffee shop sitting all alone and I came up to her and asked her what she was drinking she told me “That’s none of your business” bitch I was trying to be fucking romantic and find love at a coffee shop

Fuck you and your fucking coffee

maybe she was having a bad day and didn’t wanna be bothered by your ugly hipster john green fantasizing ass