@DXMacGuffin unsure but I bet it would make your eardrums bleed. 

faintdreams@dice.camp
Posts
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i am so very confused -
i am so very confusedYou might enjoy / be confuzzled by these also? - Someone commissioned teletubbies meets hellraiser cenobites mashup dolls...
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I wish to make Fatuous, Insipid, Vapid and Melt fashionable terms again.@pteryx I think I understand ? I copied a lot of the terms from somewhere else and the final batch - it's more about the person doing the wrong thing, doing so willfully.
You have to make choices to be an asshole, swine, git etc
I apologise for confusing concepts.
Just another example of English (as a whole) not being fit for purpose, but it's all I've got to work with :S
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I wish to make Fatuous, Insipid, Vapid and Melt fashionable terms again.I wish to make Fatuous, Insipid, Vapid and Melt fashionable terms again.
Alternatives to Ableist terms:
-: Crazy/mental/nuts
unreal, ridiculous, farcical, ludicrous, nonsensical
shocking, astonishing, unbelievable, unthinkable-: Stupid
banal, fatuous, inept, insipid, oblivious, uninformed, unwise, vapid, incurious
-: Idiot/moron/cretin
asshole/arsehole, jerk, melt, wally, git, swine
What are your favourite non Ableist terms for the above ?
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So this keeps happening and it is driving me ~slightly cuckoobananapants~So this keeps happening and it is driving me ~slightly cuckoobananapants~
News headline: Company is feeding children into a Meat Grinder. CEO states children existed so it's fine.
Everyone: No. This is fucked-up!
Company CEO: After taking legal advice we have now adopted policy that any child who specifically 'OPT's OUT' will no longer be fed into meat the grinder
Most People: Okay then carry on, Opt Out clauses are fine.
Me: NO. NO. *None of this should have been done in the first place!*
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Today I learned Oliver Sacks (Author & Neurobiologist) was MADE OF BULLSHITToday I learned Oliver Sacks (Author & Neurobiologist) was MADE OF BULLSHIT
".. Sacks described aspects of his books as "pure fabrications" and "falsifications", and that he considered his case studies as self-expression or "a sort of autobiography". In a private letter to his brother he described The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat as a book of "fairy tales" and wrote: 'Guilt has been much greater since 'Hat' because of (among other things) My lies, falsification' "