That awkward moment when you go “fuck yeah lets do this”. Only to click the OP and decide it’s probably better to just offer them a glass of warm milk and cookies.
She was a badass anti-whiteness radical who worked for years prior to the boycott as a secratary for the NAACP of Montgomery (1943) to investigate interracial sexualized violence of black women used by white supremacists in the south as a means to sustain racial hierarchy.
By…
This will not make your blog ugly, please take a moment to reblog and get the word out.
“No one cares if your back is bleeding.”
Quinn, who has been through the ringer for the better part of three seasons. Quinn, who got pregnant at sixteen, who got kicked out of her home, disowned by her parents, went all-out nuts from losing everything from her status in school to her child. Quinn has been abused from the very start of Glee; that’s the status quo.
So, for Kurt to flat-out tell her that her pain doesn’t add up to Dave’s pain—really? Really, Kurt, you unbelievable sanctimonious dick? I mean, don’t get me wrong, I usually like Kurt a lot, but the writers have this tendency of giving him these moments of just…really? The bisexuals-don’t-exist bit was bad, and this…is at least on par.
Yes, being outed is very, very bad. Being abused for it is fucking awful. It is godawful, and it should never happen to anyone, because no one deserves that abuse. But who is Kurt—who is anyone—to stand by and tell someone else that their pain isn’t valid?
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novelconcepts (via lea-natic) If Kurt meant that Quinn’s pain is situational, then I understand there being a difference. You can’t *overcome* being gay, you can just get better at dealing with the people spewing hate against you every day for the rest of your life. |
