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#altin posts
altin-studies · 15 days
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Finals countdown - 9 days to d-day
April 12, Friday, 2024
Eid is finally over and studies is back in full swing.
Today's Productivity list:
Do Multiple Integrals classes
Do Vector Calculus Classes
Practice problems on Taylor's and Mclaurins Series
Practice Problems on Multiple Integrals
Tag me -> #altinstudies
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thefawnfallacy · 8 days
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Yuri on Ice was such a life changing anime, especially to have experienced in real time waiting for those episodes to drop every week. It was an open acknowledgment and love letter to queerness, to valuing and creating art, to loving yourself and loving those around you and it’s no surprise that it had such a large impact on those who watched it. Not to mention how stunning it was to be presented with an open letter to queer love during a time where same sex marriage and gender equality was still a very hot and controversial topic. It’s, in its own way, nestled itself into history.
It may not be in the way we all expected or hoped, but see you next level.
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chiarrara · 19 days
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Incorrect Yuri On Ice Quotes by @yoi-incorrect-quotes (1 - 2 - 3 - 4)
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coconutlimeverbena · 6 months
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Thinking about this cute tweet from the late Denis Ten, the Kazakh figure skater that Otabek was based on
https://twitter.com/Tenis_Den/status/811837201516494848?t=Kp99QG6mPNg2rR_ulSA_rw&s=19
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kawaiilo-ren · 1 year
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otayuri? in 2023? it’s more likely than you think
(i miss them)
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leiandroid · 1 month
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band AU outtakes !
[fic pending]
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dearvitya · 1 year
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Otabek Altin Playlist
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I took Otabek’s rock-dj hobby and ran with it. Here’s a playlist of songs that remind me of him or that I could see him enjoying / playing at gigs—an electronic-rock-metal fusion playlist!
Definitely not going to be everyone’s thing but I had fun making it.
Check it out here if you’re interested!
(and here’s the Yuri playlist I made awhile ago too!)
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3cheers4alex · 2 years
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And I'll never go home again
Favourite friend
I live in a hologram with you
We're all the things that we do for fun
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blacktrenchcoat · 1 year
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Sooo I know this is my Star Trek page and I don't think I have ever mentioned Yuri on Ice here in the entire time that I've had this account seeing as the two of them have nothing to do with each other.
But I am a writer and plan on writing Star Trek fanfiction at some point (I definitely have a very rough draft in my notes somewhere centered around Spock in the AOS timeline...so these lovely characters will join my Ao3 soon)
I've been writing in the style of novels since I was in the 6th grade. I wrote my first short story as an assignment in 5th grade and realized how much I love it. And going even further back, my mom still has the "first book" that I ever wrote from when I was about 8 and wrote my day in chronological order, complete with stick figure illustrations. :') It's in an old CD case from like 2003 and honestly, I love that for me.
Anyways, writing is important to me. And the anime Yuri on Ice is also incredibly important to me. I connect to characters better than real people very often and I took to the main character in Yuri on Ice immediately. It was also one of the first shows that I'd seen as an adult with a good depiction of mental health issues. And the best part was there's no villain. The only "bad guy" in the show ever is self-doubt. Oh, and it's a love story - not just romantic love, platonic love, the love of a parent, the love of a sport, the love of yourself. It meant so much to me at frankly, the worst time of my life.
I came up with the original idea for this story back in 2017, right after I finished the show with my friend for the first time. When I started writing this it was a story of loss, depression, sadness. Almost 6 years later I've created a story that is still about loss but I like to think that it's going to be so much more than that as well. Only time will tell, I suppose.
I published originally on Halloween in 2021. I've updated twice since then, most recently last night on Halloween 2023. I could sit and give myself a hard time for taking so long to get it written. But this story is important to me and I want to do it properly. So when I fell out of touch with the fandom and the story itself, I took a step back from it.
About three days ago something made me want to finish the next chapter and update the story. So I did. And I am so happy that I did.
I love this story. It's something that I've poured my soul into and it will forever be a part of me. I tried to create something that is true to the fandom but that can also be enjoyed in its entirety even having never seen the show.
So if you like fanfiction, and you have a spare minute, it would really mean a lot to me if you checked out the story.
And even if you don't, I appreciate you reading this far!!! :)
❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ 
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sir-fluffbutts · 7 months
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since fenrir’s human version is a parallel of him in the anthro universe, do you have any other human characters who are also parallel’s of themselves in the anthro universe :0? hope i didn’t word this weird LMAO 😭
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you have been forgiven, all good my guy 👍👍
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and YES of corse!!!!!
tbh i think almost all of my anthro characters would have a parallel universe human self, i just don't exactly draw them that much owudhs
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FOR EXAMPLE
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kenny, pepper and achii (who will have a whole ass mini figure btw) has their human altinatives
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as shown, he also have a human form
potara has a human parallel as well (the one who was carrying some flower pots in the bg at the privious post)
im pretty sure the axolotl bros (muffin, latte and chiffon) does as well but i never finished em due to idk what color of their skin would be and i don't wanna set it as something specific cause i 'd like to have people headcannon it
bunch of others have set designs as well but i feel like they're bit of an old art that i don't wanna show 😭
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altin-studies · 3 months
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Econ notes on notion~
10-02-2024, Saturday
It's been 41 days of 2024, and it is already hectic beyond measure. I started reading extensively with a 52-book challenge. So far it has been going swimmingly. My studies, however, not so good. I am far behind everything, procrastinating and it is not leaving a good impression on my grades.
And so, FEBRUARY is the month of penance. I have started learning python and practicing SQL. I also am going to start on my academic progress soon enough. However, February barged into my life with a ton of events with mandatory participation. I don't know how I will cope with 18-hour weeks with 2 cultural events jammed in it. But, we will see. Wish me luck.
tag me --> #altinstudies
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in-nature-archive · 1 month
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got my hands on pupyzu's gender nature carrd (link) & now i have a bunch of gender natures i don't currently have tumblr posts of
so if you know anywhere i can find the coining of these, mentions of them in any lists, or archived anywhere that would be amazing!
VIN/VOIN: Void in nature.
ANTIN: Antigender in nature.
NUOIN: Neuro in nature.
MOLIN: Soft/Cute/Fluffy/Loving/Mollis in nature. archive*
WIN: Weak in nature.
BIN: Binarine in nature.
MIDBIN: Midbinarine in nature.
APORIN: Non-Specific in nature.
PORIN: Specific in nature.
QUESIN: Questioning in nature.
NEUIN: Neuter/Neutrois in nature.
ALTIN: Altersex in nature.
i also really really want to find a reblog of this post (link)! *as well as molin!
tagging @radiomogai ^^
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getsusekaii · 2 months
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ROLEPLAY HISTORY!
The rules are simple! Post characters you’d like to roleplay as, have roleplayed as, and might bring back. Then tag ten people to do the same (if you can’t think of ten, just write down however many you can and tag that number of people). Please repost, don’t reblog!
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CURRENT MUSES:
jjk - 11 muses csm - 3 muses bleach - 3 muses free - 14 muses persona 5 - 4 muses drrr!! - 2 muses final fantasy - 1 muse loz - 1 muse kimetsu no yaiba - 2 muses fruits basket - 3 muses noragami - 1 muse sao - 1 muse dc - 1 muse mha - 1 muse xenoblade - 1 muse
WANT TO WRITE/AGAIN:
noctis lucis caelum (ff15) goku / kakarot (dragon ball) vegeta (dragon ball) dabi (mha) anya forger (sxf) mahiru shirota (servamp) natsuno yuuki/koide (shiki)
HAVE WRITTEN:
claire "lightning" farron (ff13)
oda sakunosuke (bsd)
atsushi nakajima (bsd)
kunikida doppo (bsd)
akane shiina (free)
mahiru shirota (servamp)
kuroh yatogami (k)
sato mafuyu (given)
ugetsu murata (given)
otabek altin (yoi)
yuri katsuki (yoi)
deadpool
haiji kiyose (run with the wind)
kaito onogi (tsurune)
psyche orihara (drrr)
roppi orihara (drrr)
virus-138 (drrr)
hibiya orihara (drrr)
sakuraya orihara (drrr)
delic heiwajima (drrr)
tsugaru heiwajima (drrr)
rubii yubiwa (drrr)
yahiro mizuchi (drrr sh)
mikado ryuugamine (drrr/sh)
shinra kishitani
goh (pokemon)
4 OCs
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Tagged: @gohjuo & @vh1ral (●ˇ∀ˇ●) Tagging: If you actually read all this, you're obligated to do this
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mariacallous · 2 months
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A BIRN analysis of hundreds of videos uploaded by TikTok users in eight Balkan countries shows the platform has become a hub for abuse of women and girls based on their appearance and actual or perceived sexual behaviour - ‘slutshaming’.
Seven years ago, when she was 13, Nora took a picture of herself in the mirror, wearing sports shorts and top after basketball practice, and shared it with her friends on Snapchat. It was when a boy from another class in her Kosovo school reshared the picture - without her consent - that the abuse began.
Attacked by older girls, sexualised by boys, the ‘slutshaming’ spread from one social media platform to another.
“The shaming and targeting were a heavy burden, especially for a 13-,14-year-old child,” Nora [not her real name] told BIRN.
Nora agreed to speak after responding to an online BIRN questionnaire concerning slutshaming – a phenomenon defined by the European Institute for Gender Equality, EIGE, as “stigmatising women and girls on the basis of their appearance, sexual availability, and actual or perceived sexual behaviour”.
Sipping tea on a cold December day in Pristina, she said the abuse had restarted, this time on TikTok, where an account with over 3,300 followers and 96,000 likes had taken photos of her and her boyfriend from their social media profiles and reshared them as video slideshows with derogatory comments.
As of February, the account featured 142 videos with more than eight million views, in many cases abusing Kosovo girls or women, including Nora and her friends.
Based on content analysis and interviews with experts, BIRN has found that TikTok is being used across the Balkans to abuse women and girls for the most ordinary of activities – taking pictures, making videos, going out or dancing.
Over the course of several weeks, BIRN identified 427 videos posted between September 2020 and November 2023 and which ‘slutshame’ girls and women; the videos were shared by accounts in Kosovo, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia. In total, the videos have been viewed more than 30 million times, each garnering dozens, sometimes hundreds of abusive comments.
None of the eight countries analysed defines cyberbullying as a separate criminal offence, meaning that slutshaming must be punished under other criminal violations such as gender-based hate speech, stalking, or the unauthorised sharing of someone else’s photos.
In late October, the European Parliament’s women’s rights and gender equality committee called for the phenomenon to be defined within legislation on hate speech and hate crime. Of the eight countries analysed for this story, only Croatia and Slovenia are members of the EU.
Altin Hazizaj, the executive director of the NGO Children’s Human Rights Centre of Albania, CRCA, which combats cyber violence against minors, told BIRN that the first slutshaming case reported to its hotline ‘I Sigurt’ [Safe] happened on YouTube in 2016. But TikTok has since taken over.
“The more popular the platform, the more cases of slutshaming and online sexual violence against children there will be,” said Hazizaj. Frequently, the perpetrator knows the person they are targeting and the motive is to “conquer” them.
TikTok did not respond to requests for comment.
When everyday activities attract abuse
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Illustration. The 427 TikTok videos analysed by BIRN fall into four categories:direct targeting of random users or women and girls (318 videos), slutshaming culture (51 videos), videos taken in public places (30 videos), and slutshaming of public figures (18 videos). BIRN via Canva
The content BIRN identified includes photos or videos of women and girls engaged in ordinary, everyday activities, virtually or in real life, including dancing, singing, hanging out, or taking part in social media trends.
In most cases, the targets were also shamed and called derogatory names by other users who left comments.
One of the videos BIRN analysed featured Nora and her friends taking part in a TikTok lip-syncing trend that was re-shared without their consent and with specific insults for each individual. The abusive language carried over into the subsequent comments.
“No matter how many times we report it, the account has not been closed down,” said Nora. “With Instagram it was different because usually we could close the accounts after a number of individuals reported it.”
In neighbouring Albania, a woman who has over 1,000 followers and 75,000 views on TikTok regularly takes aim at female public sector employees, accusing them of using sex to climb the career ladder.
Six of the videos identified by BIRN featured random women dancing in nightclubs.
The methodology
Using a method based on Bellingcat’s Hashtag Analysis Algorithm and personalised for BIRN by Albanian IT experts Klodian Maloku and Erjon Curraj of Science & Innovation for Development, BIRN employed hashtag analysis for the word ‘kurve’, meaning ‘slut’ in most of the languages spoken in the countries of the Balkans. BIRN used direct search and TikTok’s own machine learning algorithm and also gathered the personal testimonies of women and non-binary persons via its Engaged Citizens Reporting tool, ECR.
A total of 427 videos from 43 TikTok accounts were identified from eight Balkan countries, shared on TikTok from September 2020 to November 2023.
BIRN used Google Lens to assist in identifying the language and translating the captions in the photos/videos, content descriptions, and/or comments.
The videos can be divided into four categories: – direct targeting of private/random users or individuals, mostly women and girls – derogatory videos of women and girls in public places – shaming for the perceived immorality of actions and/or clothing of public figures (mostly women) – general slutshaming content
BIRN identified and analysed the videos between mid-December 2023 and late January 2024. During this period an account in Montenegro and one in Slovenia deleted all its content.
Three-quarters of the videos, 318, targeted random TikTok users or persons by mainly re-posting videos. They included explanations of why their targets, mostly women and/or girls, deserve to be called ‘sluts’. The majority of the comments are supportive of the accounts and add to the cyberbullying.
BIRN concluded that 50 of these videos directly slutshame girls between the ages of 12 and 17 and 44 included homophobic and racial slurs.
Fine Line Between Virtuality and Reality
Experts and victims say slutshaming can seriously harm the mental health of those targeted.
On February 12 this year, police in Albanian said they had arrested a 39-year-old man for “causing the suicide” of a 27-year-old woman.
“This citizen allegedly published an intimate photo (on TikTok) of the 27-year-old woman, who threw herself from a 4th floor terrace allegedly for this reason and died as a result of her injuries,” the police said.
Local media then proceeded to republish the photo, drawing condemnation from women’s rights groups.
Just a month earlier, another woman in Albania, 41-year-old Bedrie Loka, died after drinking a poisonous toxin. Initially, the cause of her suicide was attributed to derogatory content targeting Loka on TikTok via an account that media later reported was set up by her cousin.
Days later, however, Loka’s husband, Xhemal, was arrested on suspicion of “causing suicide”. Local media published videos, made by their children, of Xhemal abusing his wife; reports quoted the children saying their father had frequently threatened her.
The impact of slutshaming or other forms of gender-based violence on mental health is the same whether it happens online or offline, said Bind Skeja, executive director of the Kosovo-based Centre for Information and Social Improvement, which works on mental health issues.
“Individuals who start to think about suicide are usually in a situation where they feel there is no way out,” Skeja said. Invariably, the responsibility to find a way out falls on the victim, when it should be on society and mental health professionals, he told BIRN.
“We should deal with the perpetrators in a proactive manner; mental health work should directly involve removing risk factors”.
One respondent to the BIRN questionnaire, a non-binary person in North Macedonia, said ongoing slutshaming had caused them “depression; anxiety; a vicious cycle of unhealthy romantic relationships; and also trauma”.
“I was exposed on social media with photos which were considered to be ‘provocative’ and many people were sharing them, including online media, as back then I was part of a student movement in my home country.”
Nora, who was first targeted when she was 13, said her family supported her, but other families had taken a different approach.
“Many girls I know, since their families found out about the slutshaming, have been under strong parental control and their mental health deteriorated,” she said.
Legal limitations
Neither slutshaming nor cyberbullying is a separate criminal violation in any of the eight countries covered by this article, but they can be tackled under legislation covering other violations.
Often, however, the authorities only act when it is already too late.
On February 19, Albanian Interior Minister Taulant Balla met TikTok’s Director of Public Policy and Government Relations for Central and Eastern Europe, Jakub Olek, to request a contact point for Albanian police and increased monitoring of Albanian-language content.
In the wake of Loka’s suicide, Albanian Justice Minister Ulsi Manja took to Facebook to call on Albanian society to react to cyberbullying, “starting from our children and families, and not wait for the next victim after Bedrie Loka; as a state we should review our laws”.
Laws can be “easily fixed”, Hazizaj said. But in most cases “institutions are not capable of offering protection due to limitations in human capacities, which increases the lack of trust in institutions”.
Nora told BIRN that, in her case, at least six people had tried to report the abusive accounts to the Kosovo police. The response is always the same, she said: “The IP addresses of the accounts’ owners cannot be detected without direct contact with the account.”
Hate speech based on gender or sexual orientation features in the criminal codes of Montenegro, North Macedonia and Kosovo; Albania’s refers only to hate speech based on sexual orientation; in Montenegro, the criminal code mentions hate speech based on gender or sexual orientation only as “aggravating” factors.
In North Macedonia, Nikola Prokopenko, a state counsellor in the justice ministry, said that parliament had amended the Criminal Code in February 2023 to criminalise ‘cyberbullying and gender-based violence’ under ‘Endangering security’, ‘Stalking’, ‘Sexual harassment’, ‘Causing national, racial or religious hate, discord and intolerance’, and ‘Spreading Racist and Xenophobic Material by Means of Computer System’.
Petra Cop, public relations officer at the Slovenian justice ministry, told BIRN that “cyberbullying is determined in the Criminal Code as the criminal offence of stalking”.
Rolanda Stafa, information rights coordinator at Albania’s justice ministry, told BIRN that “the criminal legislation does not expressly provide for cyberbullying as a criminal violation,” adding that it also “does not categorise concrete criminal violations based on gender”. Criminal acts of “Insult”, “Defamation”, “Unfair interference in private life”, and “Stalking” are punishable even in “cases of online postings, comments, or in any other form that may affect the dignity and the morals of a person of any gender,” Stafa said.
Montenegro and Serbia also have criminalised stalking by ‘other means of communication’. Kosovo has a similar explanation under the criminal violation Harassment.
Cop, from the Slovenian ministry, said that “certain aspects of cyberbullying may also be covered by the criminal offence of criminal coercion and criminal offence of threat, depending on the actual situation of specific cases”. Moreover, “in connection with gender based violence, the criminal offence of public incitement to hatred, violence or intolerance… even if it is committed by publication in mass media or on the websites… is relevant,” Cop said in an emailed reply to BIRN.
The Croatian justice ministry told BIRN that cyberbullying falls under several criminal violations defined in the Croatian Criminal Code, including Threat, Intrusive Behaviour, Insult, Defamation, Violation of a Child’s Privacy, Public incitement to Violence and Hatred. The perpetrator faces more severe punishment if the crime is committed through “the press, radio, television, computer system or network, at a public meeting or in another way and becomes accessible to a larger number of people,” the ministry said in an emailed response.
The justice ministries of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo and Serbia did not respond to requests for comment. All four countries have criminalised the ‘Unauthorised Publication and Presentation of another’s Texts, Portraits and Recordings’.
Croatia and Montenegro have criminalised the ‘Unauthorised Use of Personal Data’.
As for Bosnia and Herzegovina, neither state-level law nor law at the level of the country’s two entities recognise cyberbullying as a term, said legal expert Aleksandar Jokic.
“But this can be covered with various crimes prescribed by those [Criminal] Codes,” Jokic told BIRN. “It is matter for the prosecutor whether each act of cyberbullying will be prosecuted or not. Not every act of cyberbullying could be qualified as a crime.” Bosnia’s Republika Srpska entity has criminalised the ‘unauthorised publication and display of other people’s writing, portraits and recordings’.
Fisnik Xhelili, from the NGO Mollekuqja in North Macedonia, said state institutions “are not doing enough because in the digital world the regulations are not well defined in our country, and even where there are regulations in place, they are not properly implemented”.
Victims of gender-based violence with whom his NGO is in touch say police told them to “just go home”, Xhelili told BIRN.
“Comments and perpetrator support hurt me most”
Nora’s plight has also hit her younger sister, who has been bullied at school because of the TikTok content targeting her sibling.
The abusive account is still online, and still receiving words of encouragement from followers.
“What kills me the most is when I see comments that deal with rumours. Instead of reporting the account to close it down, they give it material to continue,” she said.
“The account took a photo of my best friend from her social media and shared it together with the photo of a boy, praising him and calling her very disgusting names. People in the comments love it but she doesn’t even know him”.
Besarta Breznica, gender-based violence programme officer at the NGO Kosovo’s Women Network, said that “women and non-binary persons are often blamed based on the way they dress or behave, which adds to the rape culture and is preceded by a patriarchal mentality”.
Indeed, Hazizaj from Albania told BIRN that in many cases they found out that the slutshamers were a group of boys who would sexually harass the girls in real life.
“It starts with slutshaming to be able to reach them physically, so it is often the step before potential rape,” he said.
According to Breznica, besides the lack of a legal framework, “the victims have difficulty talking about this type of violence in the family and an even harder time reporting it to the authorities”.
The non-binary person who responded to BIRN’s questionnaire said they had not told their parents or legal guardians or any other family members.
“I was afraid they would blame me; they wouldn’t understand,” they said.
According to Skeja, the more the content gathers engagement, the greater the fear felt by the victims that their family might find out, leading to them feeling “pressured and oppressed” over photos they may have felt originally “empowered” by.
In most cases, said Hazizaj, when the abuse is criminal, the victims are too afraid to go to the police.
“My father will kill me,” he quoted many as saying. Without communication within the family, the victim bears the burden of the bullying alone.
“It is not only online shaming, but in the family, in work, and so on,” he said.
Nora said she fears for the future.
“What bothers me more at this point is that it is happening continuously, currently on a larger scale,” she told BIRN. “What will happen when I try to become part of the labour force and they see this content with one simple search online?”
“It is systematic, the same words, the same targeting, the same humiliation over and over again”.
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autisticheadcanons · 1 year
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Yuuri Katsuki from "Yuuri!!! on ICE" is so autistic coded that it can be called canon. He never acted and thought like neurotypical people do, he turns one of his hyper fixations into his career, in one scene he can't stand being touched by other people, don't know how to deal with his own feelings, and seems overall strange around people. Another post in this blog also reminded me that he avoids eye contact like, an awful lot - you can literally count the scenes when he makes direct eye contact.
One of his friends, Phichit Chulanont, seems autistic too, especially when they're together and when he's talking about his dream. Otabek Altin appears only in like three scenes but he can be seen as autistic too depending on the point of view.
If we go really deep though, literally half of the cast is autistic in very different ways.
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