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#dulce maría icons
barbiecinema · 4 months
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dulce maría icons ⑅
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celesztialbody · 8 months
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Dulce María icons (2/2)
• like or reblog if you save
• follow me for more
• see the pinned
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fantasycons · 2 years
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𖤐 like/reblog if you save or like it.
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allfavz · 2 months
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dulce maria icons like/reblog if you save
credits @aIfasquad on twitter
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sayorikaogalery · 5 months
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Icons - Rebelde: Nuestro Amor ver. Original
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Se usar, Like ou Reblog
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cosmosisforlove · 1 year
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"Dying in your arms, is a million times better than living till eternity;"
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dumpitos · 8 months
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Hi, love. Can you made some Dulce María icons with red hair? Please.
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done baby!
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nomemirasbaby · 3 months
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dulce maría icons • like ou reblog se salvar ou usar.
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rockislandadultreads · 4 months
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Nonfiction Thursday: New Book Picks
Daughters of Latin America edited by Sandra Guzmán
Daughters of Latin America collects the intergenerational voices of Latine women across time and space, capturing the power, strength, and creativity of these visionary writers, leaders, scholars, and activists—including 24 Indigenous voices. Several authors featured are translated into English for the first time. Grammy, National Book Award, Cervantes, and Pulitzer Prize winners as well as a Nobel Laureate and the next generation of literary voices are among the stars of this essential collection, women whose work inspires and transforms us.
An eclectic and inclusive time capsule spanning centuries, genres, and geographical and linguistic diversity, Daughters of Latin America is divided into 13 parts representing the 13 Mayan Moons, each cycle honoring a different theme. Within its pages are poems from U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón and celebrated Cervantes Prize–winner Dulce María Loynaz; lyric essays from New York Times bestselling author Naima Coster, Pulitzer prize-winning playwright Quiara Alegría Hudes, and Guggenheim Fellow Maryse Condé; rousing speeches from U.S. Representative Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, and Lencan Indigenous land and water protector Berta Caceres; and a transcendent Mazatec chant from shaman and poet María Sabina testifying to the power of language as a cure, which opens the book.
He/She/They by Schuyler Bailar
Go‑to expert on gender identity, Schuyler Bailar, offers an essential, urgent guide that changes the conversation. Anti-transgender legislation is being introduced in state governments around the United States in record-breaking numbers. Trans people are under attack in sports, healthcare, school curriculum, bathrooms, bars, and nearly every walk of life.  He/She/They clearly and compassionately addresses fundamental topics, from why being transgender is not a choice and why pronouns are important, to more complex issues including how gender-affirming healthcare can be lifesaving and why allowing trans youth to play sports is good for all kids. With a relatable narrative rooted in facts, science, and history, Schuyler helps restore common sense and humanity to a discussion that continues to be divisively coopted and deceptively politicized.
Schuyler Bailar didn’t set out to be an activist, but his very public transition to the Harvard men’s swim team put him in the spotlight. His choice to be open about his transition and share his experience has touched people around the world. His plain-spoken education has evolved into tireless advocacy for inclusion and collective liberation. In He/She/They, Schuyler uses storytelling and the art of conversation to give us the essential language and context of gender, meeting everyone where they are and paving the way for understanding, acceptance, and, most of all, connection.
The Golden Girls by Bernadette Giacomazzo
Over the course of seven years and 180 episodes, The Golden Girls altered the television landscape. For the first time in history, Americans (and, later, the rest of the world) were watching sexagenarians - and one octogenarian - leading active, vital lives. These were older women who had careers, families, lovers, and adventures, far from the matronly television characters of the past.
In The Golden Girls: A Cultural History, Bernadette Giacomazzo shows why this iconic sitcom is more than just comedy gold. She examines how, between all the laughs and the tales of St. Olaf, these women tackled tough issues of the time--issues that continue to resonate in the twenty-first century. From sexual harassment, ageism, and PTSD to AIDS, inter-racial relationships, and homosexuality, Dorothy, Rose, Blanche, and Sophia weren't afraid to take on topics which were once considered taboo.
The Last Two by Boštjan Videmšek
Meet Najin and Fatu—the last of the northern white rhinos—as well as the scientists, conservationists, and rangers who are fighting for the species’ survival. The last two remaining northern white rhinos, an already functionally extinct species, are kept behind three electrical fences and protected by a squad of rangers at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya. Both are descended from the last male northern white rhino, Sudan. Najin is his daughter, while Fatu is his granddaughter. Along with Sudan and another male named Suni, they were transferred to Kenya in 2009, in the hope that returning them to their natural habitat might help them regain their zest for life and reproduction.
Unfortunately, things didn’t go to plan. With the deaths of Sudan and Suni, the northern white rhinos’ destiny is now in the hands of their Kenyan caretakers and a team of scientists at the BioRescue international consortium, which is developing and using several different techniques to resurrect the species, including assisted reproduction and stem cell technologies. Will science prevail, or is it too late?
Journalists Boštjan Videmšek and Maja Prijatelj Videmšek explore this question by taking readers on a journey through the history of the northern white rhinos. They introduce the rangers, conservationists, and scientists fighting for the future of the northern white rhinos and dissect what led the species to the brink of extinction, from wars and climate change to poaching and the black market. The Last Two offers hope for the future of the environment and the fight to save the many species that call Earth home.
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yes-shewrites · 2 months
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Websleuths. Dumbasses.
Fuck true crime part 2
The true crime genre grows more popular with each passing year. It’s a multifaceted industry between all the Netflix documentaries, TV shows, podcasts and YouTube channels that sickeningly profit off of other people's personal tragedies for monetary gain. 
But what if sensationalism wasn’t the tip of the iceberg? Introducing websleuths, true crime fans even higher off their asses. They think they’re smarter and more capable than law enforcement and dedicate their spare time to cracking cold cases from their mothers’ basements. They even have their own website! (Note that the term websleuth applies to everybody online that does this though, not just the people in this particular corner of the internet.)
I can’t even begin to describe how dumb these people are. They have a combined iq of five. Their “sleuthing” is them bouncing the same outlandish conspiracies off each other. None of them including their so-called “experts” know the first thing about criminology, but they pretend they’re better than the police. Inventing conspiracy theories isn’t going to solve a murder. Leave the investigating to the actual detectives, guys.
Honestly though, we shouldn’t be laughing at them. I mean, we should, but we should also be creeped out. Their intrigue borders obsession. A bunch of the members have profile pics of iconic missing persons, and they post all sorts of creepy messages that go something like, “Poor little sweet precious baby heavenly star we hope u find your way home soon God will avenge u xoxoxoxoxo ily <333.” Get help.  
Most websleuths are relatively harmless clowns who exist purely to make fools of themselves for our entertainment. However, there are cases where sleuths have genuinely harmed victims, their families and active investigations by being nosy, delusional motherfuckers.
For example, take the disappearance of Lina Sardar Khil, a toddler who vanished from a playground in San Antonio. True crime fans started a vicious racist conspiracy theory that basically goes like this: Lina’s parents are muslim Afghani refugees, so they must have murdered/sold their child and covered it up, because, you know. For more detail, here is a link to one of the many posts on true crime subreddits perpetuating this lunatic speculation. Lina’s parents were harassed in public to such an extent that they stopped hosting community searches. 
Leave it to a bunch of armchair detectives to hinder a missing person investigation with their stupid ass conspiracies. These people are grieving the loss of their child for fuck’s sake. Keep it to yourselves if you guys think they’re suspicious. That’s for cops to decide, not you.
Another remarkably similar example is Dulce María Alavez. Like Lina, Dulce was also abducted from a playground while her mother’s back was turned. Noema Alavez Perez was a teen mom and high school dropout with a history of substance abuse. She was too busy partying to play an active role in her children’s lives, who were primarily raised by their grandparents. Not the cleanest parenting track record. On the day Dulce was kidnapped, Noema was distracted in her car 30 yards away from where her daughter was playing.
Yes, Noema was irresponsible. But the online harassment she has been subjected to is uncalled for. Scroll through any given online forum and you have a bunch of keyboard warriors calling her a “welfare bum” and a “whore,” making racist remarks (she’s Hispanic), pinning Dulce’s disappearance on her and even accusing her of selling her daughter into sex slavery. E.g. This documentary and this Facebook post. Apparently, she’s suspicious because she’s not bawling her eyes out on TV. Never mind that emotional numbness is a common symptom of grief, trauma and depression. The language barrier totally isn’t a factor either. 
Good grief. She was an immature teenager who made a terrible mistake that’s going to haunt her for the rest of her life, not a sociopath behind her daughter’s disappearance. What’s even sadder about the whole situation is that from the looks of it, Noema has really turned her life around since 2019. But that doesn’t matter to the self-righteous internet sleuths and their warped sense of justice—guilty until proven innocent.
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tokyicons · 8 months
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Luv, can I ask you for some Dulce María icons with red hair? please and thanks.
im sooo sorry because i've made mixed icons i didnt noticed the red hair info but i will post more dulce icons soon only with red hair.
hope you like these xx
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barbiecinema · 7 months
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dulce maría icons ♪
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celesztialbody · 8 months
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Luv, can I ask you for some Dulce María icons with red hair? please and thanks.
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Dulce María icons (1/2)
• like or reblog if you save
• follow me for more
• see the pinned
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holupicons · 8 months
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Hey, can I ask for some Dulce María icons with red hair? Please.
done
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iversedit · 8 months
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Luv, can I ask you for some Dulce María icons with red hair? please and thanks.
posted angel ♥︎ hope you like it!
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gurizpacks · 8 months
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luv, can u make some Dulce María icons with red hair? please and thanks.
of course, beautiful /nah
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