siege1:

three-ice:

strawberryr:

teacupballerina:

strawberryr:

It’s always kind of funny when the Powerpuff Girls, in fanart, are drawn with fingers and noses and toes and stuff and it’s like…they legit don’t have those in canon. It’s not just a style choice, they actually don’t have fingers and noses.

I mean, apparently Buttercup just sticks her hand to things to pick them up (S03E29 Criss Cross Crisis)

image
image

And in Oops, I Did it Again (s06E04B) the girls, when made without Chemical X, come out “normal” and do have fingers, feet, noses, and normal faces.

image

So like…when everyone in the show calls them “bug-eyed freaks,” “pumpkin heads,” etc, they legit mean the girls have big round heads, giant eyeballs, and stump limbs.

I think it’s safe to say that the Powerpuff Girls are objectively horrifying. I want to see fanart of that.

image


SWEET JESUS

image

Oh my god, hahahahahahaha

(via lady-neurotica-deactivated20210)

momweed:

smitethepatriarchy:

fandomsandfeminism:

notplayingthevictimcard:

I heard someone outside of this website say “hypermasculinity” seriously. The future is bleak.

One of the first studies of hypermasculinity was conducted by Donald L. Mosher and Mark Sirkin in 1984. Mosher and Sirkin have operationally defined hypermasculinity or the “macho personality” as consisting of three variables:

  • callous sexual attitudes toward women
  • the belief that violence is manly
  • the experience of danger as exciting

They developed the Hypermasculinity Inventory (HMI) designed to measure the three components.[1] Research has found that hypermasculinity is associated with sexual and physical aggression towards women.[2][3] Prisoners have higher hypermasculinity scores than control groups.[4]

Anti-Feminist Stumbles Upon Scientific Conversation, Is Bewildered and Terrified

It’s hilarious to me that there are people who genuinely believe that political and socioeconomical discourse is a thing that only happens on tumblr

(via pardonmewhileipanic)