tcampbell1000 ([personal profile] tcampbell1000) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-12-18 12:32 pm

Despot, Dome Scandal: JUSTICE LEAGUE EUROPE #3-4 (JLI 38)



JLI #16-17 introduced the Queen Bee and her alliance with Jack O’Lantern. In that first appearance, she was all poise and grace. Despite her chilling games of mind control, she also exuded a false warmth that snared lovers and allies and disarmed her enemies.

In her second appearance, the warmth is gone. It’s true what they say: holding high political office ages people before their time.

But why won’t certain office-holders DIE of old age already? )
muccamukk: Jeff standing in the dark, face half shadowed. (B5: All Alone in the Night)
Muccamukk ([personal profile] muccamukk) wrote2025-12-18 09:23 am
Entry tags:

Links Links Links

Fandom and Art Stuff
[personal profile] elasticella: sapphic stocking stuffers.
Lots of great prompts! Open for fills until 31 December, or they're all full, whichever happens last.

Street Art Utopia: The Giant Kitten.
By Oriol Arumi at Torrefarrera Street Art Festival in Torrefarrera, Cataluna, Spain

Rolling Stone: Taylor Swift’s Last Album Sparked Bizarre Accusations of Nazism. It Was a Coordinated Attack.
I read this, and was like "hmmmmmmm." Because it seemed plausible that there were bots or whatever, but also a lot of people I'd seen critiquing the album were definitely humans that I knew. But also human conversation can be driven by bots without the humans realising it. And also, I don't care enough about TS to look into the whole mess. Then I saw the following.

[youtube.com profile] MedusoneDeluxe: Rolling Stone embarrasses itself to defend Taylor Swift. Again. (Video: 41 Minutes).
I love it when people actually read the research. So probably not a significant number of bots, but also the science is so sloppy it's impossible to tell.


Trans Rights Are Human Rights
The Walrus: Kids Deserve a New Gender Paradigm by Kai Cheng Thom.
Lovely, thoughtful look at how we see gender, and maybe kids have this more figured out than a lot of adults to. Older piece, but I enjoyed reading it again.

The Guardian: The WI and Girlguiding have been pressured to exclude trans women – yet the law is clear as mud by Jess O'Thompson.
The Guardian published something non-terrible about trans people in the U.K.! Do the Dance of Joy!

CTV News: Skate Canada to stop hosting events in Alberta due to sports gender law.
Solidarity! From a national sporting organisation! A MIRACLE!


Canadian Politics Stuff
The Tyee: Human Rights Tribunal on RCMP Methods Delays Decision Nearly a Year.
This is some fucking bullshit. The elders are dying of old age before they're seeing any kind of justice. I am enjoying how Amanda Follett Hosgood is so out of fucks to give on the publication ban that she's basically putting up a bright red arrow pointing to A.B.'s name, even if she can't actually say it. Which is John Furlong, incidentally. And seriously, fuck that guy.

The Globe and Mail: Leilani Muir made history suing Alberta over forced sterilization.
This is an older obit, but I dug it up for a school project, and thought it was worth sharing. Not enough people know about Canada's eugenics policies.

Times Colonist: Residential school survivor says he will protest OneBC at other campuses.
We shouldn't need our elders to be superheroes, but nonetheless many of them are.

Times Colonist: Water-contaminated fuel caused crash of Port Hardy-bound plane: TSB.
This is neither here nor there, really, but I find Transportation Safety Board investigations really interesting. Even if they take a really long time (i.e. I found this while looking for information about a more recent crash, but will probably have to wait a couple years to find out what happened to that guy).


Slightly Dated U.S.A. Politics Stuff
Heather Cox Richardson: Letters from an American: December 6, 2025.
Beautifully ties in the events of Pearl Harbor with the politics of today.

Rebecca Solnit: Solidarity Stitches Us Together: Today, World AIDS Day, Is Also the 70th Anniversary of Rosa Parks's Historic Protest.
The fabric of this country is forever being torn apart by hate and exclusion; it is forever being stitched into, as the site says, new patterns, new connections, new relationships. Solidarity is always about connection across difference, about the way you stand with someone you have something crucial in common with but who may be different in other ways. It is a quilter's art of bringing the fragments together into a whole. It is e pluribus unum.
loved: (Default)
♡ ([personal profile] loved) wrote in [community profile] icons2025-12-17 05:00 pm

Holiday Friending Meme! 🤎




Hello everyone!

Tis' the season to stay home and journal away our thoughts and feelings to complete strangers that turn into friends.🎄🎁☃️

ALSO!!!! I am searching for a mod that can help me with this community. 🫶🏽 If you are interested, please comment "Interested" in the comments below. 👇


Lets make some new friends, to keep our online journaling aesthetic alive!

Just copy and paste this code below as a comment, and let the friendships begin!
Feel free to reference this Friending Meme to others too!
(you can take out some of the questions to your liking as well.)

case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2025-12-17 05:29 pm

[ SECRET POST #6921 ]


⌈ Secret Post #6921 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 24 secrets from Secret Submission Post #988.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
raptureofthemoon: (solitude)
ilcuoreardendo (Lins) ([personal profile] raptureofthemoon) wrote2025-12-17 11:36 am
Entry tags:

Does anyone know where the love of God goes, when the waves turn the minutes to hours?

 
I've gone down a rabbit hole - or maybe, a whirlpool - over the last month. In November, I started watching videos about maritime ghost stories. And from there maritime tragedies.

I've always loved a good ghost story. And ghost stories are often rooted in tragedy. 

And there's nothing so terrifying and desperately lonely as tragedy striking on the sea.

Or in the Great Lakes, which are, for all intents and purposes, a freshwater sea. 

This November was the 50th anniversary of the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald

I used to watch those CD compilation commercials in the late 90s and there was one for the classics from the 70s and I remember hearing a snippet of Gordon Lightfoot's "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald." At some point, somewhere, I'd come across the fact that it was based on a true story. 

But I never looked into it, until recently.

And it took hold of me. For a couple of reasons, I think. 

One reason being that it happened in 1975, in a time when we, societally, thought we were so modern, so advanced. That we had it all figured out. We had these beastly ships that could carry thousands of tons of ore year over year. We had weather satellites to keep us ahead of storms. And yet, one of these beastly ships - a maritime rock star so robust in size and build people thought it was unsinkable - disappeared into a storm within 10 minutes of its last radio contact with the Arthur M. Anderson

The other being how capitalism destroys things. The push to break records, to haul more, to haul faster, to keep going through storms...all of that so shareholders could make profit, led to the loss of 29 lives. 

In the few decades prior to the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald, there were great wrecks and large losses of life (the SS Daniel J. Morrel in '66 and the SS Carl D. Bradley in 58 - and that's just in the few decades prior), but in the 50 years since the Fitz went down, no commercial ships have sunk on the Great Lakes. 

It took not just a tragedy, but a repeat tragedy buoyed by a beautifully haunting song to make a change to the commercial shipping industry. 


 
tozka: a rabbit in front of a computer (computer rabbit)
mx. tozka ([personal profile] tozka) wrote2025-12-17 11:09 am
Entry tags:

online life for 2026

I decided to tweak how I engage with online life for 2026, and have been busy the last couple weeks trying to get it ready so I can test it before the new year actually starts.

So:
1. Switch back to posting on DW as my main journal (external blog will close)
2. Move website from pixietails.club to tozka.fyi (partly to save money on the domain renewal cost lol)
2b. Website will be more for evergreen content and not so much tracking content. So pages like a list of what I read this year will be deleted from public and kept private instead, but all my tutorials and fanlistings will still be there.
3. Self-host RSS feed reader (done), link collector (done)
4. Set up Obsidian as my personal hub (done). This'll be where I keep my tracking stuff, personal data, whatever.

So basically be a little more private with my info, be more proactive with keeping my own data, and settle back in to the communities I want to engage with.

I liked having my own little blog domain but it felt very exposed, which made me not want to post. Dreamwidth is more cozy! Even if I post in public here, I don't feel like the eyes of the entire internet are on me. Also tbh when I posted from my blog first it didn't give me an incentive to come over here and actually read my friends page, so I've gotten very behind on my correspondence.

Further changes: I want to get away from AI intrusions a bit more, so I've installed Linux on my main computer (Manjaro) and deleted Windows entirely.

And while I've stopped using most social media besides Mastodon, I still visit Facebook a lot for the groups. I'm going to make it a priority to join and engage in forums instead.
muccamukk: Brick red background, text: We're here. We're queer. I have a brick. (Misc: Queer Brick)
Muccamukk ([personal profile] muccamukk) wrote2025-12-17 09:35 am

Reading Wednesday, the Dog Days of Summer Edition

These are probably going to be short and sweet, given I read them in late August through September. I'll hopefully catch up to where I am now by the time next term starts, and I go back to only reading stuff for school. Expect a bunch of books about gender, followed by all the romance novels I read on my off time, lol.


Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins, narrated by Jefferson White
I had only the vaguest memories of the account of Haymitch's games from Catching Fire, or anything else from Catching Fire, for that matter. I never did read the other prequel. If Haymitch is one of your favourite characters, and you just want backstory on all the olds who show up later in the original series, this is solid fun. Collins did a good job of thinking through where everyone came from, and how they got like they are when Katniss meets them. Effee showing up is especially fun. We also get confirmation of several queer characters (which I assume she wasn't allowed to do in 2008), and an interesting note about the Capital banning generative A.I..

I enjoyed all the themes of the amount of groundwork needed to put into a revolution, and how the lives of the people in this story eventually led to the events of the first books. Especially how the characters themselves feel like they've failed and wasted everything, but the reader can tell how it's more a process of (horribly) figuring out what works and what doesn't.

At the same time, it didn't feel like a story of only moving pieces into place for the "real story" that will start later. It certainly doesn't read as a stand alone novel, but it does stand up as being about these characters in this moment. Haymitch is such a sweet kid when we first meet him, and is a bit more of a dynamic lead than Katniss (i.e., he actually likes people and wants to talk to them), and given the pile of characters we meet for the first time (because these games have twice the number of tributes), each of the new people get enough development for the reader to become least somewhat invested in what happens to them (spoiler alert: it's the Hunger Games, so...).

I always found the games themselves the least interesting part of the earlier books, which is largely true here as well, but the story still moves along pretty fast. They probably would've been more interesting if I remembered what the story was supposed to be, as Collins puts a lot into the contrasts and surprises. The post-games section did draaaaaaaaaaaaag though. Especially the recap of the games we'd just read about, and the part that was set up as this huge poetic tragedy. I think if you're like... 14, you'd be weeping through the end, but I found it overdone, and thought her editor should've made her stop.

Still, I'm happy to have read it.


The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I hadn't read these in fifteen years, so I thought I'd swing back through to remember what we were supposed to know about all the characters we met in the prequel. Enjoyed it. Games still dragged.

Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
So most of the characters from Haymitch's book actually show up here, it turns out. So I read this one. Enjoyed this too, though found the games section dragged a bit. The love triangle continues obnoxious, and I did myself the favour of not reading Mockingjay again.


On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy Snyder
I've been hearing bits of this quoted since it came out, and it's quite good. I think the target is more people involved in public life, but it was still good to listen to, these being the times that were given to us. I know it's his area, but I wish there had been more examples from autocracies other than 1930s Germany, for the sake of variety, if nothing else (there were a handful of comparisons from the Soviet bloc, but it was very Nazi centric).

I think it's on YouTube for free, if anyone wants to listen. I'll probably go back to it later, so that I take more on board.


Rainbow heart sticker Transforming: The Bible and the Lives of Transgender Christians by Austen Hartke
Solid primer if you're interested in the a gender-diverse approach to Christian theology. Hartke talks to a variety of other trans and non-binary Christians, especially those involved in ministry, about their relationship with God and the Bible. Each chapter focuses on a few lines of scripture, which are largely clobber verses, and discusses how they can be seen as trans affirming. It's really beautifully expressed, and thoughtfully takes on some difficult parts of the Bible. Hartke does talk about how frustrating it is to feel like he has to spend so much time justifying himself and talking about the clobber verses, when he just wants to talk about religious gender euphoria. He's since put out a second edition, which might refine that approach, but I haven't looked at that yet. I really appreciated this edition is an intro, however, and helped me put together a church service for Trans Day of Remembrance.
AO3 works tagged 'Peter Parker/Tony Stark' ([syndicated profile] starkerao3_feed) wrote2025-12-08 09:23 am

Toni teasted Peter pushing him to act

Posted by Mrsmut1234

by

Toni teased Peter Parker and pushed him to act

 

A.I prompted writing fic if you don't like don't read

Words: 876, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2025-12-16 05:22 pm

[ SECRET POST #6920 ]


⌈ Secret Post #6920 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 35 secrets from Secret Submission Post #988.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
linky: Saki leaning up against a wall. (Sukeban Deka: Saki - Stand)
Linky ([personal profile] linky) wrote in [community profile] fandom_icons2025-12-16 03:59 pm
Entry tags:

24 Sukeban Deka Icons

24 icons for the original live action Sukeban Deka.


Find them here at [community profile] chemyxstory
AO3 works tagged 'Peter Parker/Tony Stark' ([syndicated profile] starkerao3_feed) wrote2025-12-16 07:12 pm

buona morte

Posted by fioridelmale

by

Когда Тони после Щелчка лежит в отделении интенсивной терапии с обгоревшим телом, все вокруг думают, что это конец. Но нет, через неделю он может сидеть, есть, пить и даже немного ходить. Они ошибались - это совсем не конец. Это начало конца.

Ведь тело Старка разъедают межгалактические неизлечимые токсины и его начинают сжирать изнутри адские боли. Любящие Тони люди сталкиваются с вопросом: что такое жизнь и можно ли убить человека, если он сам того просит?

(основано на дискуссии про эвтаназию)

Words: 1594, Chapters: 1/3, Language: Русский

AO3 News ([syndicated profile] ao3_news_feed) wrote2025-12-16 07:22 pm

The Randall Morgan Memorial Archive is Moving to the AO3

Randall Morgan Memorial Archive

The Randall Morgan Memorial Archive, a Queer As Folk (US) fanfiction archive, is being imported to the Archive of Our Own (AO3).

This memorial account was set up with the assistance of Open Doors and Irishcaelan, the maintainer of Randall’s personal website, Randall’s Rambles. Randall also wrote under the pseudonym Brian Hennessey. Randall Morgan was taken from us in 2013, and this site is a permanent place where the fanworks he so loved to create will go on.

Open Doors will be working with Irishcaelan to import Randall Morgan’s works into a separate memorial account on the Archive of Our Own. As part of preserving his works in their entirety, all graphics currently in his works will be hosted on the OTW's servers, and embedded in their own AO3 work pages.

We will begin importing works by Randall Morgan to the AO3 after December. You will find them on the RandallMorgan_memorial account.

We'd also love it if fans could help us preserve the story of Randall Morgan and Randall’s Rambles on Fanlore. If you're new to wiki editing, no worries! Check out the new visitor portal, or ask the Fanlore Gardeners for tips.

We're honored to be able to help preserve the works of Randall Morgan, and while we mourn the loss of Randall, we also realize that we are fortunate that he had a friend who was given permission to collect and preserve his works on the AO3 so that they will not be lost. Thinking about the death of a fandom friend may be difficult, but it can also be an opportunity to consider what will happen to your fanworks and accounts and those of your friends after your deaths. The Archive of Our Own has an option to name a Fannish Next of Kin, someone who would be able to gain access to your accounts in the case of your death or incapacitation. By naming someone who can act on your behalf, you can decide ahead of time how you want your AO3 accounts handled going into the future.

- The Open Doors team and Irishcaelan

Commenting on this post will be disabled in 14 days. If you have any questions, concerns, or comments regarding this import after that date, please contact Open Doors.