HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHApic.twitter.com/rAaK4ClxGs
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like, this train scene, where Agent Smith keeps calling Neo "Mr. Anderson" and then Neo's response is scream "My name... is NEO" and then throw him into a train really only makes sense if you understand that Smith is deadnaming Neohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdNzhGI0mx8 …
in the 90s, estrogen meant premarin, so the red pill meant estrogen. the blue pill was an antidepressant. it never ceases to be funny, and it's even funnier when cis women talk about it
gonna tell my grandkids that this is just an educational film about going to Planned Parenthood to get hormones in 2020pic.twitter.com/myK4W7AAnm
I mean the very first image of the movie is - Call trans opt: received
I generally read it as being anti capitalist but that makes a LOT of sense.
Guess what pill was red in 1999:pic.twitter.com/dl18n431Zc
As a cis male teenager, I didn't catch this at all. I had it explained to me much later.
Not only is allegory for their trans experience; it’s fucking great art. Very on brand that conservatives can’t detect the allegory in a work of fiction.
"pretty hard"... no, no it can very easily be read as literally any kind of facing a hard truth instead of an easy lie. It's incredibly non-specific.
Unless you know life history of the authors.
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