Icon from a picrew by grgikau. Call me Tir or Julian. 37. He/They. Queer. Twitter: @tirlaeyn. ao3: tirlaeyn. 18+ Only. Star Trek. Sandman. IwtV. OMFD. Definitionless in this Strict Atmosphere.

hatpirestuff:

cannibalcoalition:

If you give money to rich people, they will hold onto it because it has no meaning for them. They hoard it, they put it in their bank to make more money because it’s a number to them- it’s a status symbol. 

If you give money to poor people, they spend it. They put it back into the economy in one way or another. They have bills to pay. A person who couldn’t afford food last week can afford food this week. 

The two are fundamentally not the same. 


And I don’t care if not caring about investors or company owners makes me sound callous. I’d like to see them work my job for a day on the pay that I make and see how long it takes them to get fed up. They have less to lose from a company going under than I do from slowly circling the drain.  

The lives of human workers are more important than people’s portfolios. 

In the years I’ve worked at a bank, there’s been so many people who have come in that I’ve never seen before, and they go–

“Do I have any accounts with this bank?”

And, lo and behold, they have an account with like, fifty thousand dollars that they forgot they had. It boggles me.

Fifty thousand. Sitting there for years, forgotten.

traumailse:

felthry:

knox:

traumailse:

traumailse:

can 2017 be the year of hearies being Good Allies to d/Deaf people?

how to be a good ally to d/Deaf people

  • recognize that audism (the oppression of & discrimination against deaf people) is still a very real issue. it can include things like believing that deaf people are “stupid” or “broken” and that deaf people need to be “fixed” (aka made hearing), as well a general lack of awareness about deaf issues, how deaf people communicate, or even that deaf people exist
  • recognize the consequences of audism, like deaf children being forced to speak and not being allowed to learn ASL, deaf people being denied jobs (yep, its illegal. still happens), and even deadly police brutality 
  • reblog/signal boost posts about d/Deaf issues as well as positive posts about d/Deaf accomplishments, information about d/Deaf people, etc
  • if you can: learn a little bit of your local sign language! even just fingerspelling and knowing a few basic signs. i especially encourage anyone who works in customer service/retail to learn a little ASL if at all possible! (this is a big thing so i def don’t fault anyone for not doing it, but if you have the time/ability it’s a pretty cool thing to do)
  • stop using phrases like “falls on deaf ears”, “deaf to their pleas”, anything that frames deafness in a negative way
  • recognize that there are different levels of hearing loss!! hearing people generally categorize hearing as: “not being able to hear perfectly but still hearing” = hard of hearing; “not hearing anything” = deaf; but for deaf people, anyone with any degree of hearing loss is considered deaf! if someone tells you they’re deaf but you know they can talk/sing/play instruments/listen to music, believe them
  • theres a lot more honestly but i dont wanna let this get too long!! anyone can feel free to message me about any of this/if u wanna hear more. i’d really appreciate if people (esp. hearing people) could reblog this

can hearies also stop thinking ASL is important for how “cute” it is or how it fits their aesthetic or “lol swears!!!!” this language in particular (in america, I don’t know about other countries deaf history) is steeped in our culture and it’s insulting that hearies try to strip it from our hands and make it into their jokes

Quick question from a non-d/Deaf person who wants to make sure it has things straight: Why the term “d/Deaf”? is the capitalization distinctive? Is “deaf” different from “Deaf”? If so, how?

“deaf”/“little d” refers to anyone with the medical condition of deafness (i.e. hearing loss of any severity larger than around 10-20dB, depending on age)

“Deaf”/“big D” refers to (deaf) people who are actively involved in Deaf culture. I can’t link because I’m on mobile, but if you just google “deaf culture” you get a bunch of results! I recommend the Lifeprint and Gallaudet pages on it.

So, not all deaf people are Deaf but all Deaf people are deaf (i.e: everyone who’s part of Deaf Culture is deaf, but not all deaf people consider themselves part of Deaf Culture).

The d/D is used when discussing topics that pertain to all d/Deaf people so that those who are part of Deaf culture are recognized as such but those who aren’t are still recognized as being affected.

Let me know if you have any other questions!