A world without trans people has never existed and it never will.
Seriously just search (Trans History).
Here are some examples:
"Sumerian and Akkadian texts from 4,500 years ago document priests known as gala who may have been transgender. In Ancient Greece, Phrygia, and Rome, there were galli priests that some scholars believe to have been trans women.
Roman emperor Elagabalus (d. 222 AD) preferred to be called a lady (rather than a lord) and sought sex reassignment surgery, and in the modern day has been seen as a trans figure.
Hijras on the Indian subcontinent and kathoeys in Thailand have formed trans-feminine third gender social and spiritual communities since ancient times, with their presence documented for thousands of years in texts which also mention trans male figures. Today, at least half a million hijras live in India and another half million in Bangladesh, legally recognized as a third gender, and many trans people are accepted in Thailand.
In Arabia, khanith today (like earlier mukhannathun) fulfill a third gender role attested since the AD 600s.
In Africa, many societies have traditional roles for trans women and trans men, some of which survive in the modern era.
In the Americas prior to European colonization, as well as in some contemporary North American Indigenous cultures, there are social and ceremonial roles for third gender people, or those whose gender expression transforms, such as the Navajo nádleehi or the Zuni lhamana."
In conclusion. Being trans is not a fad and it isn't going anywhere just because some crazy religious nut jobs say we don't fit into their abusive hateful world views. We are here and always will be. So get used to it. 👋😘
for april fools we’re deleting this entire site sayonara you weeaboo shits
aa1 edgeworth be like
Ei vittu äijät 🚨🚨
Stubb mainostaa tumpussa
Narumitsu AU thoughts!! <33
Piti äske googlata hämä-hämä-häkin sanat ku mielee tuli vaa “Aku Aku Ankka kiipes katolle/kattoluukun kautta pissas matolle/aurinko armas kuivas lätäkön/Aku Aku Ankka pissi uudelleen“
Muistin va et se hämäkäkki kiipes langalle ja et se ei pissannu
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you're welcome
Oh to hell with all you clowns. My polish friend sent me this picture
and I told him that I'd seen that picture on tumblr, used as a part of a finnish pun meme, and started explaining how the finnish "kunhan" "for as long as/as soon as/provided that" is often pronounced in spoken language as "kuha", which is the name of this one specific kind of fish. So you could caption this specific picture as "rakentaminen onnistuu, kuha on vasara", which would translate both to "you can build things, for as long as you have a hammer" and "you can build things, this fish is a hammer". And then I had to look up what this specific fish is called in english
once again for the bargain price of $6.66 i will present to you a Top 5 Childhood Misadventures: April Fool’s Edition
People tend to have this idea that the middle ages were nothing but drab, crude, bleak and joyless, going back and forth between grey and dull and vividly, explicitly horrifying. That the people were harsh, judgemental, prejudiced, uneducated to the point of being uncivilised, and that their lives consisted of nothing but brutal survival, sickness death and short lifespans. If you look at movies set in the medieval era, you'd think that the weather was never anything but cloudy at best, foggy, raining or freezing. Everything's brown, grey, and covered in mud or shit.
Sure, it was brutal at times, people were quite familiar with disease, poverty, violence and death as parts of everyday life, but it wasn't all that bad all of the time. There was colour and sunshine sometimes, genuine joy, mirth and beauty. Hope and kindness just as much as there was despair and death - and the starkness between the two perhaps made both far clearer. You could live a pretty good life if you were both fortunate and careful - and if you weren't, yeah you might also get stabbed. A brutal world, but not without beauty.
Much like the city of Kouvola.