afuckinglesbian:

this is making me so uncomfortable

… I want to see her open her mouth… 

afuckinglesbian:

this is making me so uncomfortable

… I want to see her open her mouth… 



since theres like 29857289 reblogs asking for the anime- its Plastic Nee-san (ty kuru)


alittleshadow:

uberzers:

alittleshadow:

Ah, the teamups for TEST are out! I’m so exited to find out who I’m—

Wait.

image

Wait— I—

WHAT?!

image

I HAVE BEEN JOKING AROUND I MIGHT GET TEAMED UP WITH SOME FAMOUS PLAYERS BUT THIS IS JUST

image

THEN WHY DID YOU BET YOUR MONEY AGAINST US FFFF


We shall work together and kick all the hacker asses u v u

I JUST DON’T THINK I’M GOOD ENOUGH

Anyway, I will give my best! :)

PFT we’ll be fine ;v; You’re our medic- you will save us when we’re all dying on the ground with our visions blurred and missing 98% of our blood.

Work hard and there might be a position in Virus for you 


emmyc:

sketchamagowza:

fffinger

this is amazing

emmyc:

sketchamagowza:

fffinger

this is amazing


alittleshadow:

Ah, the teamups for TEST are out! I’m so exited to find out who I’m—

Wait.

image

Wait— I—

WHAT?!

image

I HAVE BEEN JOKING AROUND I MIGHT GET TEAMED UP WITH SOME FAMOUS PLAYERS BUT THIS IS JUST

image

THEN WHY DID YOU BET YOUR MONEY AGAINST US FFFF


We shall work together and kick all the hacker asses u v u


maliciousalice:

hokuto-ju-no-ken:

superchalmers:

helpihavedementia:

dewbong:

qweety:

This is a Hatsune Miku pastry released in japon

I am actually crying

There is also a review of them and they taste pretty nice actually (no pun intented)

oh my god???

WHAT THE FUCK

WOW WHAT WHY

It wasn’t until JUST NOW that I realized what they look like and why people are freaking out.

I’ve been sitting here “it’s a cherry blossom what is everyone flipping out over”

I

man…

that’s

It’s a flower of a different kind

#-a vagina


decopinkdingo:

uberzers:

I’ve been thinking hard about what these silly warning signs mean to us as society. How for some unknown, sad reason, we have warning signs to tell us things that we /should/ as a collective, be aware of. It is a general insult to our intelligence. The implication that we need instructions informing us to not iron a shirt while wearing it or how breaking into an animal cage at a zoo isn’t going to work out well for you, is an accusation that we might not know better. However, this is not about intelligence, this is about common-sense.
Common-sense, that humans naturally should have to ensure our survival in the world. This has now been watered down with safe measure on the insistent need to make everything ‘idiot-proof’. The warnings are nothing but common-sense talking to us in a visual text-form so we no longer need to stop and think about it ourselves. We see a warning sign and we abide with it. Most times without even questioning it. I can guarantee not everyone knows why you don’t turn on your phone on a plane, or why its recommended that you go this speed limit in this area and a different speed in another. You see the rule, you abide by it. Because the sign told you to.
By doing this we have allowed- nay- encouraged the abolishment of thinking for ourselves and caused common-sense to no longer be common. We need every instruction spelt out for us in detail otherwise we don’t know what to do. We have placed our trust in the tools we use every day, to do the thinking for us and that way when something goes wrong, we have room to point the finger at the higher authority and say “Well, the label did not say that it would happen, so it’s their fault.”
Our children now grow up in this world where all the warnings are there for them when originally it was experience that taught us. You burn your hand on the stove and you never touch that stove again. While this has been done to protect everyone else thanks to one bad experience by another, we’re slowly losing the ability to stop and evaluate what consequences could come from our actions. 

its just so no one gets sued. you’d be surprised what people will do to themselves to get a cash settlement. its all legalities. they know that if someone wants in that cage with an animal they’re going to do it, whether a sign is there or not. but they sure as shit are not taking the blame. i don’t think the zoo keepers think no one knows a tiger is dangerous

Well, yes, I’m aware of that too- but I would’ve spiralled into a whole other topic if I started talking about that. It’s still rooting to the consequences of what can happen, and also the fact that people don’t want to take personal responsibility. Its easier to blame- and in some cases beneficial to the wallet too. 

decopinkdingo:

uberzers:

I’ve been thinking hard about what these silly warning signs mean to us as society. How for some unknown, sad reason, we have warning signs to tell us things that we /should/ as a collective, be aware of. It is a general insult to our intelligence. The implication that we need instructions informing us to not iron a shirt while wearing it or how breaking into an animal cage at a zoo isn’t going to work out well for you, is an accusation that we might not know better. However, this is not about intelligence, this is about common-sense.

Common-sense, that humans naturally should have to ensure our survival in the world. This has now been watered down with safe measure on the insistent need to make everything ‘idiot-proof’. The warnings are nothing but common-sense talking to us in a visual text-form so we no longer need to stop and think about it ourselves. We see a warning sign and we abide with it. Most times without even questioning it. I can guarantee not everyone knows why you don’t turn on your phone on a plane, or why its recommended that you go this speed limit in this area and a different speed in another. You see the rule, you abide by it. Because the sign told you to.

By doing this we have allowed- nay- encouraged the abolishment of thinking for ourselves and caused common-sense to no longer be common. We need every instruction spelt out for us in detail otherwise we don’t know what to do. We have placed our trust in the tools we use every day, to do the thinking for us and that way when something goes wrong, we have room to point the finger at the higher authority and say “Well, the label did not say that it would happen, so it’s their fault.”

Our children now grow up in this world where all the warnings are there for them when originally it was experience that taught us. You burn your hand on the stove and you never touch that stove again. While this has been done to protect everyone else thanks to one bad experience by another, we’re slowly losing the ability to stop and evaluate what consequences could come from our actions. 

its just so no one gets sued. you’d be surprised what people will do to themselves to get a cash settlement. its all legalities. they know that if someone wants in that cage with an animal they’re going to do it, whether a sign is there or not. but they sure as shit are not taking the blame. i don’t think the zoo keepers think no one knows a tiger is dangerous

Well, yes, I’m aware of that too- but I would’ve spiralled into a whole other topic if I started talking about that. It’s still rooting to the consequences of what can happen, and also the fact that people don’t want to take personal responsibility. Its easier to blame- and in some cases beneficial to the wallet too. 


I’ve been thinking hard about what these silly warning signs mean to us as society. How for some unknown, sad reason, we have warning signs to tell us things that we /should/ as a collective, be aware of. It is a general insult to our intelligence. The implication that we need instructions informing us to not iron a shirt while wearing it or how breaking into an animal cage at a zoo isn’t going to work out well for you, is an accusation that we might not know better. However, this is not about intelligence, this is about common-sense.
Common-sense, that humans naturally should have to ensure our survival in the world. This has now been watered down with safe measure on the insistent need to make everything ‘idiot-proof’. The warnings are nothing but common-sense talking to us in a visual text-form so we no longer need to stop and think about it ourselves. We see a warning sign and we abide with it. Most times without even questioning it. I can guarantee not everyone knows why you don’t turn on your phone on a plane, or why its recommended that you go this speed limit in this area and a different speed in another. You see the rule, you abide by it. Because the sign told you to.
By doing this we have allowed- nay- encouraged the abolishment of thinking for ourselves and caused common-sense to no longer be common. We need every instruction spelt out for us in detail otherwise we don’t know what to do. We have placed our trust in the tools we use every day, to do the thinking for us and that way when something goes wrong, we have room to point the finger at the higher authority and say “Well, the label did not say that it would happen, so it’s their fault.” and then sue them. And for some reason that’s good enough excuse to win a case. 
Our children now grow up in this world where all the warnings are there for them when originally it was experience that taught us. You burn your hand on the stove and you never touch that stove again. While this has been done to protect everyone else thanks to one bad experience by another, we’re slowly losing the ability to stop and evaluate what consequences could come from our actions. 

I’ve been thinking hard about what these silly warning signs mean to us as society. How for some unknown, sad reason, we have warning signs to tell us things that we /should/ as a collective, be aware of. It is a general insult to our intelligence. The implication that we need instructions informing us to not iron a shirt while wearing it or how breaking into an animal cage at a zoo isn’t going to work out well for you, is an accusation that we might not know better. However, this is not about intelligence, this is about common-sense.

Common-sense, that humans naturally should have to ensure our survival in the world. This has now been watered down with safe measure on the insistent need to make everything ‘idiot-proof’. The warnings are nothing but common-sense talking to us in a visual text-form so we no longer need to stop and think about it ourselves. We see a warning sign and we abide with it. Most times without even questioning it. I can guarantee not everyone knows why you don’t turn on your phone on a plane, or why its recommended that you go this speed limit in this area and a different speed in another. You see the rule, you abide by it. Because the sign told you to.

By doing this we have allowed- nay- encouraged the abolishment of thinking for ourselves and caused common-sense to no longer be common. We need every instruction spelt out for us in detail otherwise we don’t know what to do. We have placed our trust in the tools we use every day, to do the thinking for us and that way when something goes wrong, we have room to point the finger at the higher authority and say “Well, the label did not say that it would happen, so it’s their fault.” and then sue them. And for some reason that’s good enough excuse to win a case. 

Our children now grow up in this world where all the warnings are there for them when originally it was experience that taught us. You burn your hand on the stove and you never touch that stove again. While this has been done to protect everyone else thanks to one bad experience by another, we’re slowly losing the ability to stop and evaluate what consequences could come from our actions.