Icon by @ThatSpookyAgent. Call me Tir or Julian. 37. He/They. Queer. Twitter: @tirlaeyn. ao3: tirlaeyn. BlueSky: tirlaeyn. 18+ Only. Star Trek. The X-Files. Sandman. IwtV. OMFD. Definitionless in this Strict Atmosphere.

“This year alone [2016] 6,093 people have been killed by guns in our country. This includes the one hundred and twenty-five people who were killed by guns in the three and a half days since Orlando. A hundred and twenty-five more people have died since Orlando. If we stood here and provided 6,093 victims a minute of silence, we’d be standing here for four days, five hours, and thirty-three minutes. Moments of silence are not enough.”

— Senator Mazie Hirono (D) of Hawaii putting the amount of people who die by gun violence in the United States into perspective during her filibuster speech (via coldwarlesbian)
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Anonymous: What's going on with a filibuster?
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fluent-in-lesbianism:

Oh, man. It’s so wild, anon:

  • Officially hit 13 hours (it’s after midnight in D.C. right now)
  • Started with just 7 Senators head by Sen. Chris Murphy from Connecticut, now it’s grown to 40 from varying states
  • They’ve hit topics all over the place: the need for the Equality bill to pass (which would protect the LGBTQIA community from being fired at work and other equality laws to protect us), the call for religious tolerance involving the Muslim community, how the incident with Matthew Shepard affected the LGBTQIA community, etc.
  • But the main topic has been how unbelievable it is that people on the no fly list can’t get on a plane, but they can still legally buy guns at a gun show or on online venues, such as Facebook and Instagram
  • Some standout speeches (that I’ve personally seen) include those by Sens. Tammy Baldwin, Cory Booker, Mazie Hirono, Brian Schatz, Sherrod Brown, Bob Menendez, and Angus King
  • Each speaking Senator has explicitly called out Republicans for accepting money from the NRA and doing “absolutely nothing” to help their constituents
  • Sen. Brown basically called them cowards for deferring to them when confronted with decisions on gun control (it was fucking awesome)
  • Sen. Murphy asked why Republican Senators even signed up to be Senators if they’re just going to ignore the slaughter of people they’re supposed to protect (again, fucking awesome)
  • Every mass shooting we’ve had has been talked about in depth, including Orlando and its impact on the LGBTQIA and the Latino communities alike
  • There’s so much more that I know I’ve missed, but I’ve been watching for like 7 hours now and it’s all running together

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

blackphoenix1977:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

writingwithcolor:

eastasiansonwesternscreen:

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East Asians on Western Screen – Text Printed across GIFS reads:

Constance Wu - I think in my early years being Asian was an advantage to me because that was a time when casting was more concerned about hiring POC actors to be PC. Not because there was a curiosity in the thing that made them unique. I was going out for the auditions that were “the best friend” or “the assistant” to sort of “put color” around the lead white person’s story. 

Lucy Liu - I wish people wouldn’t just see me as the Asian girl who beats everyone up, or the Asian girl with no emotion. People see Julia Roberts or Sandra Bullock in a romantic comedy, but not me. 

Daniel Wu  - I don’t want to play an Asian character that white America finds cute and funny because it’s a variation of Long Duk Dong in Sixteen Candles. I remember going to a Rush Hour 2 premiere and talking to a producer, and he was really excited talking to me because Hong Kong films were really kind of cool at the moment…And he goes, “How come you don’t have an accent?” And I told him that I was from Berkeley. And immediately I wasn’t as interesting to him anymore, and he walked away. But if I was from Hong Kong, and with a funny accent, maybe i’d been cuter to him, and more something that you can market.

Steven Yeun - People ask, “So, how are the roles now? You must be getting so many!” And it’s like, I don’t know if you know, but i’m Asian still. It’s not a complaint, that’s just how it is now, and I have to forge my own path through it and see that through. I think that if I had not been Asian, I probably would have a whole plethora of roles, at least to audition for, but it’s just not what has been written. 

Ming-Na Wen - That’s definitely been my lifelong career goal; to break stereotypes and not be afraid to embrace what our culture has to offer.

John Cho - I experienced racism, and in my professional life, I try to take roles (and have always tried to take roles) that don’t fall within the parameters of any Asian stereotype. And so to me, hopefully, that’s a positive thing I can put into popular culture and so maybe in some bizarrely tiny way that helps people not think of Asians in one particular way.

Ardon Cho - Turning down another role. Super-hot Asian trophy wife with a thick Asian accent. No thanks. #racist Even though it’s a studio film with stars.

Daniel Dae Kim - I’m such a fan of films and books like Lord of the Rings and even Star Wars, despite the fact that, as an actor, I’ll never be employed by them, simply because of my race.

Sandra Oh - I’d always known that I worked in an industry that blatantly excluded people based on their race. But i’d believed, naively, that I could break through those barriers if I just worked hard enough. I still have to squeeze my way into auditions, because people often can’t imagine that someone who looks the way I do could play a certain role. It doesn’t occur to them - but I know I can make it occur to them, if they just give me a chance.

Daniel Henney - I grew up in a farm town and was the only Asian. So you looked at television for inspiration. Even then, there was nothing aside from martial artists and sidekicks with accents. The Asian man has been desexualized ; in Western media] and that’s something I always fought against.

Masi Oka - Hollywood is fickle, it follows trends. If a show or a film did well with an Asian lead, then it would take off.

While it’s great that Heroes made Masi Oka a main character and one of the most lovely and kind and genuinely heroic of characters not going to lie I will always side eye the way it had him pretend to have a much thicker accent than he actually had and play a character who struggled to learn english when the actual actor speaks english perfectly well and does not have anywhere near as strong an accent as Hiro has…like, the Petrelli’s are an Italian-American family but they don’t have Peter and Nathan talking like Mario and Luigi but with the asian character him they decide has to basically have ‘This is a Japanese Man from Japan’ tattooed on his forehead

Like it might not even be a concious thing I mean Hiro’s actual character is very lovely and neat so I don’t think the writers were conciously TRYING to be racist against Japanese people but I do feel like there is some subconcious racism at work there in how they wrote his character

They at least let Masi Oka use his real voice when he played future Hiro

This is true :)