“Don’t call Trump supporters nazis, it hurts their feelings.”
Yes, this is real (link to tweet). Yes, Tucker Carlson is literally repeating Nazi propaganda that aided the genocide of the Romani during the Holocaust. Yes, I am furious.
(Also, although there is a large population of Romani in Romania, they aren’t indigenous to Romania. They’re a diasporic group originally from northern India.)
Romani and Jewish have been screaming at the top of their lungs for years about neo-fascism in Europe, and Americans were totally aloof.
Then neo-fascism reared its head in America, but Roma and Jews were left out of the conversation in terms of people being impacted, because our oppression was “over.”
Now Tucker Carlson is on live TV using slurs and Nazi propaganda about Romani people, and I’m 90% most people on the left are just going to ignore it.
It’s World Mental Health Day! (October 10th.) So I thought it might be useful to compile mental health resources for the Jewish community into one post. If you know of any that aren’t listed, please feel free to add them.
RELIEF – connects/refers Jewish people to therapists and other
mental health resources (focuses mainly on the frum community)
Elijah’s Journey – suicide prevention for the Jewish community (Facebook page)
The Aleph Institute – provides spiritual support for Jews in
institutional environments such as prison, health facilities, and
rehab
No Shame On U – aims to de-stigmatize mental illness by providing
comprehensive education
OHEL – comprehensive services for those facing mental health issues, with professionals fluent in English, Yiddish, and Hebrew
Yad Rachel – for mothers facing postpartum depression, also helps educate family and health providers
Send me a ‘★’ if you actually like my blog. Takes a second, means a lot.
Gosh I’ve been getting these for like a week, ahhh hello long time follower :DDDDDD <3333 I love to get these oh golly. Thank you, I really do try hard!
You’ve become so damaged that when someone tries to give you what you deserve, you have no fucking idea how to respond.
I belatedly caught that too, in the wide shot. You can see both brothers, but Loki’s chest is heaving and Thor’s is not. That made me obsessively rewind.
Loki’s as close to crying, proper heaving sobs, as you’ll ever see. He never breaks, because he’s Loki. But yeah. His entire body’s grieving. He’ll never get a chance to go back and feel Odin’s love as it was meant to be.
Unless A4 gets really timey wimey.
Well, guess I’ll be spending this day in tears. Thanks a lot 😭😭😭😭
Also i guess that’s how Tom was playing this scene, and that’s why at the Comic Con he said that line about “realising the love of his father”.
Mhh, I already saw it when I watched the movie for the first time but I still don’t consider this as a real grief for the beloved father. I look at it from a psychological perspective. It’s a normal reaction to cry when you’re coming out of an extremely emotional situation where you found out another family secret, feel guilty cause you did something cruel and became something you never really wanted because then you are no different from the one person you rejected because of that. And suddenly this person seemed to show a kind of affection, something you had wished to get all your life. You don’t know if you’re surprised, deeply touched or just misguided. It’s a common reaction to feel something towards your „abuser“, it’s called Stockholm syndrome.
I don’t consider Loki’s tears as a grief over losing his father. But that’s of course just my point of view.
I’ve never noticed this before! :’O Honestly I’m kind of in between the two ideas, from the way Odin and Loki interacted in Thor 2011, I can kinda see Loki being like, despite everything they still loved each other, but Odin from the Dark World treated Loki like the absolute worst, so I think that would lend itself towards what @motherhela said.
Either way, tho, Loki crying is the worst feeling. 😢
As moving as this is, it’s really confusing when you consider the last time Odin saw Loki.
I’m going to agree with @motherhela. Loki is visibly upset because it’s an upsetting situation.
Loki was just recently ripped away from Asgard…after seeing (and being threatened by) Thor for the first time in years. He spent 30 minutes falling. Then he saw his dad again for the first time in years, only to find out that his dad is dying. Then Loki found out that he has a sister and that Asgard is on the brink of destruction. On top of all that, his cover was blown. So, he knew it would only be a matter of time before Thanos found him, which is probably why he was considering staying on Sakaar. I’d be crying too. Or vomiting. Or both.
As far as I’m concerned Odin’s “evidence of love” for Loki was too little, too late, and frankly only served to make Loki more conflicted (been there) by feeling obligated to return affection to someone who kept him at arm’s length at best for most of his life. Odin used Loki as a convenient chess piece in his extravagantly corrupt game of imperialist conquest. There is no better way to break a people than to take one of their own and assimilate that person into the dominant culture, giving them a case of, once they learn their true heritage, internalized racism that there is no evidence Loki ever got over.
Let’s also remember it’s in the context of Odin conveniently expiring right after telling his sons of yet another problem he swept under the rug and let fester, for them to later clean up with, among other things, their total lack of a sense of personal boundaries from Odin and from each other; Thor’s learned narcissism; Loki’s learned jealousy and paranoia; and a sibling who literally wants to kill them and destroy their world, specifically because she was fed the rhetoric of conquest, and then punished for acting on it too autonomously.
Odin does not deserve forgiveness. I am glad for whatever closure Thor and Loki obtained, but it was not with their father’s help.
Loki is crying here in good part because he KNOWS he will NEVER obtain true closure with Odin. He didn’t get a chance to say a word. And that’s agonizing for Loki, who communicates both intent and emotion with exceptionally nuanced linguistic routes, far more than with action.
And Thor, how Thor mistreats Loki (and vice versa) in the wake of Odin’s death, is ripe evidence of this. Odin’s spirit has barely dissipated before Thor is wrongly blaming Loki for his death: because it’s far less painful a case of cognitive dissonance to blame the “bad” little brother than the patriarch who was “all-knowing and wise” and metonymic of your entire home, society, and values (values that in crisis you will cling too all the more blindly and tenaciously).