A Texas Judge Last Month Ordered Dr. Margaret Carpenter, Who Practices North Of New York City, To Pay

NY county clerk refuses to file Texas' fine for doctor accused of prescribing abortion pills
AP News
A county clerk in New York has refused to file a more than $100,000 judgment from Texas against a New York doctor accused of prescribing abo

A Texas judge last month ordered Dr. Margaret Carpenter, who practices north of New York City, to pay the penalty for allegedly breaking that state’s law by prescribing abortion medication via telemedicine. The Texas attorney general’s office followed up last week by asking a New York court to enforce the default civil judgment, which is $113,000 with attorney and filing fees. The acting Ulster County clerk refused. “In accordance with the New York State Shield Law, I have refused this filing and will refuse any similar filings that may come to our office. Since this decision is likely to result in further litigation, I must refrain from discussing specific details about the situation,” Acting Clerk Taylor Bruck said in a prepared statement.

This is what we're talking about. This is the resistance someone can do in their everyday job. Judgement gets passed down and you're just supposed to dot the i's and cross the t's? Don't. Just refuse.

Now, I know an acting county clerk isn't just anyone - this man had a very unique opportunity to do some very serious blockading in his everyday job - but that's kind of the point! Nobody's just anyone. You never know when you'll have an opportunity.

More Posts from Imaboringtwat and Others

1 month ago
Benjamin: I’m Not As Psycho As I Could Be And I Think Everyone Should Be Thankful For That

Benjamin: I’m not as psycho as I could be and I think everyone should be thankful for that

1 month ago
No Safety. No Food. No Aid. No Water. No Healthcare. No Education. Is This What It Means To Live? Is

No safety. No food. No aid. No water. No healthcare. No education. Is this what it means to live? Is this what world accept as life?

If a group of animals were trapped, starved, and cut off from the world like this, people would be outraged. But because it's us—human beings—somehow, the world looks away.

These are unbearable days. Everything feels heavy. Each hour presses on my chest like I’m being suffocated.

My family needs urgent help.

Basic survival has become nearly impossible. Bread—just bread—now costs over $25 a day to make.

We are not asking for luxury. We are begging for life.

Please, if you’re reading this: help. Reblog this post. Talk about us. Donate if you can. Even a small act can mean everything right now.

#crisis #humanrights #emergency #donate #pleasehelp #tumblrcommunity #survivestories #reblogtohelp #signalboost

1 month ago

i'm like homer with this typa shit

(via Instagram)

(via Instagram)

1 month ago

Hey kid you want a job?

Great get online and go to a job board. Indeed, Linkedin whatever. Now you're gonna search for a role that's in your city, fits your qualifications, and doesn't seem like a bad time.

See that easy apply button? Don't hit it they just throw those in the trash. Now you're gonna want to go to the company's website and check their careers page.

Oh? That job doesn't exist anymore. Cool go back to the job board and find another one.

Great you found another job, you're on the company's career page and the job exists!! So you're going to need to make an account on the career page website. They're using Workday, the same site as the last job you applied for? Who cares? You need to make another account for THIS job's workday page.

Now you're going to upload your resume. That'll autopopulate about 15 boxes with everything on your resume, except formatted wrong and with tons of errors. So just go through and painstakingly check the dates on all of that and rewrite everything you already laid out in an aesthetically pleasing format on your resume.

Ok time for the cover letter, explain why this specific job and company are deeply important to you. You love their mission statement and wouldn't even laugh if their ceo was gunned down in the street. You'll really want to reiterate the things you just spent the last 20 minutes filling out on the resume section

(Remember to include language from the job description, people who work in HR are lower than dogs and they need patterns or they get confused.) Write about a page, but hey don't sound too desperate or robotic this is where they judge your character!

Maybe add your portfolio site at the end here, who knows if that helps no one has ever clicked mine haha.

Anywayyy time to hit apply! Congrats! You'll see that confirmation email come in and you should be getting the rejection letter in about 2 weeks. Unfortunately your resume didn't have the right buzzwords and the AI auto rejected you :(

Time to start again and try not to kill yourself!

1 month ago

me when one of my friends says something a little out of order and i don't know if i should investigate the possibility of racism lurking amongst us

“Is My Dog Racist?” A Dog Owner’s Honest Inquiry into Behavior, Bias, and the Bigger Picture

“Is My Dog Racist?” A Dog Owner’s Honest Inquiry Into Behavior, Bias, And The Bigger Picture

Believe me or not, this is a question I’ve heard more than once, often whispered with a nervous laugh, or wrapped in caveats like, “I know it sounds weird, but...” When Cookie came into my life, I had no intention of asking myself philosophical or sociological questions. But dogs have a funny way of making you do that. Over time, I started to notice that Cookie was consistently more barky around people of color, and I couldn’t ignore the shame that came with that realization.

It sounds absurd on the surface. Dogs, after all, don’t “see race” in the way humans do. Race is a human-made construct, rooted in history, culture, power, and politics. Dogs don’t carry that baggage. And yet, what about their behavior makes us even entertain this question?

👉 Familiarity vs. Bias: What’s Really Going On?

Let’s start with Cookie. She spent her early puppy stages in Istanbul, a densely populated city with mostly white residents in the neighborhoods we lived in. During that critical socialization window, she was exposed to very few people of color. So, later on, when we moved to Pittsburgh and she encountered a more racially diverse environment, she sometimes reacted with fear or heightened alertness around unfamiliar people. Not just people of color, also tall men, people with deep voices, heavy movements or even individuals wearing bulky clothing.

These reactions don’t stem from racism. They’re a result of unfamiliarity.

Luckily, dogs are not capable of racism because they lack the complex cognitive framework to categorize and judge people based on race. What they are capable of is reacting to environmental cues and learned associations—both positive and negative. It is argued that dogs are pattern-based learners. When something doesn’t fit their learned pattern of “safe and familiar,” they may respond with fear or caution. That unfamiliarity is often mistaken for bias. But it’s really about exposure and safety.

I adopted Cookie because I was alone. What I didn’t realize at the time was that I was making a big mistake by keeping her world so small. It was mostly just the two of us. (My husband was living abroad.) Aside from the occasional neighbor, she didn’t have much interaction with others. Sure, we went outside, and she saw people and dogs in passing—but I never approached it as intentional socialization.

To Cookie, safety meant our quiet little home, just the two of us. Everything outside that bubble felt unpredictable, loud, strange, possibly dangerous.

Now, loud laughter from the neighbor or a deep voice can set her off. If someone moves in a way she’s not used to—taller, broader, heavier footsteps—she startles. It’s the same with objects. If the garbage bins are out before pickup day, she has to inspect every one to be sure it’s not a threat. A new item on the sidewalk? She clocks it immediately. And don’t even get me started on holidays... Christmas and Halloween decorations require a whole adjustment period. She used to lose it over black clothing draped around the house or large, dark trash bins. One winter, we were walking to the vet when a woman in a massive black coat passed us—Cookie froze, then bolted in panic.

The throughline in all of this? Exposure. Or the lack thereof.

According to behavioral science, dogs go through a "socialization period" early in life where positive interactions with different people, sounds, and environments are critical. As Whole Dog Journal puts it, “Dogs that aren’t exposed to a wide range of people in a positive way may develop fear-based reactions to people who are different from what they know.”

👉 Dogs Mirror Our Anxieties—Even the Ones We Don’t Speak

Here's the part that really made me pause: multiple studies suggest that dogs can pick up on human body language and emotion, even subtle, subconscious cues. This phenomenon, known as emotional contagion, can make dogs anxious if their humans are tense or nervous.

In some cases, our biases, discomforts, or prejudices may unintentionally get passed down to our dogs through our behavior. As the Rescued by Training blog bluntly states: “It’s possible that we’re the ones carrying racial bias, and our dogs are simply responding to how we respond.”

Even when we think we’re being neutral or calm, dogs might notice a shift in our posture, tone, or energy and then act on that. It’s not mind reading. It’s attunement. And they are really, really good at it!

👉 Dogs and Racism: A Violent History Worth Acknowledging

While dogs themselves can’t be racist, the use of dogs in racist systems is a whole different story and one we cannot ignore.

Historically, dogs have been weaponized to uphold racial violence. From their use in patrolling plantations during American slavery to their deployment during the Civil Rights Movement, dogs were intentionally trained and used to harm Black individuals. A DOJ report from Ferguson, Missouri, for example, noted that every documented police dog bite involved a Black victim.

“Is My Dog Racist?” A Dog Owner’s Honest Inquiry Into Behavior, Bias, And The Bigger Picture

So, when someone says, “dogs and racism,” they may not be talking about behavior but might be referencing history, and rightly so.

As a dog owner, I believe it's essential to be aware of this legacy. When a person of color sees a dog lunge or bark at them, especially in public spaces, they might not think, “Oh, this dog wasn’t socialized properly.” They might think: “I don’t feel safe.” And that is valid.

👉 The “Is My Dog Racist?” Question Isn’t Really About Dogs

It’s about us. It’s about what we teach our dogs, intentionally or not. It’s about what we expose them to. It’s about how we react in certain situations, what we normalize, what we avoid, and how we show up in diverse environments.

So instead of brushing off the question as silly, I think we should explore it. Not because dogs are racist, but because asking it helps us reflect on our own habits and environments.

👉What You Can Do

If your dog shows fear or reactivity toward certain people, here are some concrete steps to help:

Desensitization and Counterconditioning: Gradually expose your dog to new people in safe, positive settings. Use treats, praise, and distance to ensure the experience isn’t overwhelming.

Socialization Early and Often: If you’re raising a puppy, start socialization during the critical window (3–14 weeks). Make sure they meet people of different races, ages, sizes, and genders in positive ways.

Check Your Own Reactions: Are you tensing up when someone unfamiliar walks by? Are you changing your route, pulling the leash tighter, or holding your breath? Your dog may pick up on all of that.

Work with a Trainer: Seek out a certified behaviorist who uses positive reinforcement and understands the complexity of these issues.

Be Honest and Stay Curious: Instead of being embarrassed or defensive about your dog’s behavior, use it as a tool for self-reflection. Dogs are not mirrors of our prejudice, but they are mirrors of our behavior.

“Is My Dog Racist?” A Dog Owner’s Honest Inquiry Into Behavior, Bias, And The Bigger Picture

💭 Final Thoughts

Your dog isn’t racist (obviously) but sensitive. And that sensitivity, shaped by their environment and the people around them, can sometimes look like bias. That’s why it is important to ask: What can I do to make my dog feel safe in all kinds of human company? How can I show up better, for my dog, for my community, for the people they share this world with?

Because in the end, dogs are our companions, not just our pets. And raising a good dog, like raising a good human, means helping them navigate the world with confidence, empathy, and trust.

💞 Cookie & Seda

Resources

Reframing “Can Dogs Be Racist” Into a More Scientific Conversation – An Interview

Man’s Best Friend? How Dogs Have Been Used to Oppress African Americans by Shontel Stewart

Could My Dog Be Racist? By  Laurie C. Williams

Your Dog Is Not Racist – Unleashed Unlimited

Exploring ‘Racist’ Dog Reactions: Misunderstanding or Prejudice? by Kate LaSala

Not directly related to our topic but a good read: Afro-Dog: Blackness and the Animal Question by Bénédicte Boisseron.

Source: “Is My Dog Racist?” A Dog Owner’s Honest Inquiry into Behavior, Bias, and the Bigger Picture

  • but-wait-theres-more
    but-wait-theres-more liked this · 1 month ago
  • adorable-bookworm
    adorable-bookworm reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • rantspace464
    rantspace464 liked this · 1 month ago
  • spaghettisaurusrex
    spaghettisaurusrex liked this · 1 month ago
  • bhirodt
    bhirodt reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • girlfailgaymer
    girlfailgaymer liked this · 1 month ago
  • karikangaroo
    karikangaroo liked this · 1 month ago
  • blackberrylemonade
    blackberrylemonade liked this · 1 month ago
  • elsewhere-library
    elsewhere-library reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • elextric-sea
    elextric-sea reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • elextric-sea
    elextric-sea liked this · 1 month ago
  • cannibalisticgalaxy
    cannibalisticgalaxy reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • dragonfly-wings1
    dragonfly-wings1 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • dragonfly-wings1
    dragonfly-wings1 liked this · 1 month ago
  • allmychildrenarecarryingknives
    allmychildrenarecarryingknives reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • allmychildrenarecarryingknives
    allmychildrenarecarryingknives liked this · 1 month ago
  • queerical
    queerical reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • maydayprkr
    maydayprkr reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • maydayprkr
    maydayprkr liked this · 1 month ago
  • ophidiae
    ophidiae reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • ophidiae
    ophidiae liked this · 1 month ago
  • onceandfuturefangirl
    onceandfuturefangirl liked this · 1 month ago
  • dlight98
    dlight98 liked this · 1 month ago
  • emilytwistautisticwitch
    emilytwistautisticwitch reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • nspcritterstuck
    nspcritterstuck reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • nspcritterstuck
    nspcritterstuck liked this · 1 month ago
  • wahoo-stomp
    wahoo-stomp reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • minniestronni
    minniestronni reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • minniestronni
    minniestronni liked this · 1 month ago
  • hatsinspace
    hatsinspace reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • thetunkborgles
    thetunkborgles reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • purplehost
    purplehost reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • purplehost
    purplehost liked this · 1 month ago
  • awhiterose
    awhiterose reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • awhiterose
    awhiterose liked this · 1 month ago
  • izziwitch
    izziwitch liked this · 1 month ago
  • deepest-sea-fish
    deepest-sea-fish reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • deepest-sea-fish
    deepest-sea-fish liked this · 1 month ago
  • finalgirl-nihilbliss
    finalgirl-nihilbliss liked this · 1 month ago
  • leigh-fae
    leigh-fae reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • transgenderedfrankenstein
    transgenderedfrankenstein reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • laticaudinae
    laticaudinae reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • tromboneralert
    tromboneralert reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • captainherasyndulla
    captainherasyndulla liked this · 1 month ago
  • dark-whimsy
    dark-whimsy reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • dathemyscira
    dathemyscira reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • dathemyscira
    dathemyscira liked this · 1 month ago
  • inkwingart
    inkwingart reblogged this · 1 month ago
imaboringtwat - idk what to put here
idk what to put here

150 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags