don’t even talk to me if you aren’t chilling out with the crew in the schoolyard
[ID: a pair of brown gloves with hand bones stitched onto the back, but the only finger bones present are the middle finger’s and the thumb’s. End ID]
millie | she/her | everything on main
don’t even talk to me if you aren’t chilling out with the crew in the schoolyard
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#ygo #ygo gx[ID: a pair of brown gloves with hand bones stitched onto the back, but the only finger bones present are the middle finger’s and the thumb’s. End ID]
[Image ID: :Tweet from Boots, 'with the fur' (@/ afraidOfWasps) reading: Lmfaooo,,, (extending arms) Come hither bro. Lol. (getting cold feet) Actually - Go back from whence you came, /End ID]
[Image Description: Text that says "Would he fucking say that". End Image Description.]
the first rule of detective fiction is that the detective in question should ALWAYS just be the nosiest person alive and never be a cop
This might be harsh but I think those who equate “good character design” to “character I would fuck” and express outright disgust at designs who dared to fall outside their conventional beauty norms should be trapped in the amulet for a thousand years. minimum
I think one of the reasons why tree law is so popular and people are so enthusiastic about it is because a big, old tree being killed feels so awful. You've got something that took years or decades to get that big, that provides so many benefits, and then it's just...gone and irreplaceable. Of course people are like oh boy, you didn't think that thing was valuable and now the law is gonna come for you and you're gonna regret it.
And it feels like one of the few cases where the rich (not the mega rich, but the regular rich) actually get held to account for their crimes, because the punishment is designed to match the actual damage they do. You cut down a bunch of your neighbor's trees to make your property more valuable? The punishment is basically the cost of your property.