Hey, I was just curious to hear more of your thoughts on the writers intent re the plantation? It’s something I’ve felt conflicted over since I watched the ending (yes, I’ve been conflicted about this going on an entire year now). I know where I stand (I think your thoughts line up pretty closely with mine), but the lack of clarity over whether or not the writers felt that the plantation was actually not such a bad place is the one thing about the ending that left me slightly uncomfortable

flintsredhair:

2/To add to my previous ask, I never actually read any of the writers interviews after watching the finale, mostly because I just wanted to sit with my own thoughts and feelings about it and I’m generally a fan of death of the author, so my vague idea of what they have said is largely out of context quotes from people on tumblr. Right after I watched the finale it didn’t actually occur to me that the plantation could be interpreted as anything but completely awful

Honestly – I think the writers did something… not very subtle at all with the end of the show and the plantation and I think that what I have a problem with is not what they wrote but with the way that people didn’t really dig into what’s there in the show. I haven’t read too many creator interviews because I’m very much of the school where the author is dead and what is in the show is what I spend my time on. Anything else is just too exhausting, and having come to Black Sails from the Tolkien fandom, I’ve learned my lesson about “well Tolkien said this,” because let me tell you that man contradicted himself a lot. So – bottom line, I see the plantation as a negative that is being painted as a positive by two people in the show who have very, very good reasons to lie to themselves about what they’re doing to other people. We hear that the plantation is a place where people are sent to be taken care of from Max, and we hear from Silver that it’s a place where people go to disappear. 

Unfortunately, in both of these cases, we’re also presented with the knowledge that the person speaking is speaking to someone they need to have on their side. Max is speaking to Silver, who has her as a captive in an upstairs room of the tavern. She can’t afford to tell him that she was planning on seeing him enslaved as the perceived lesser of two evils because who sits there and hears that and doesn’t get furious at the person who planned to do that to them? She also needs to believe, for her own peace of mind, that she WAS choosing the lesser evil, I think. I think Silver needs that same belief so he can live with himself at the end of the story, and I think that Madi is there specifically for us to see the hypocrisy of the story that both Silver and Max are telling themselves. It’s the ultimate callout, really – Silver is standing there telling his BLACK FORMER SLAVE girlfriend that he sold her friend, essentially, and then asking her to believe him when he says that he did right. We also have the metaphor about strangling the cat earlier in the show, and I think we’re meant to see that analogy in use with the plantation, and see the horror of both situations. In a just world, the cat would not get strangled. The abusive bastard husband who is beating his child for being kind would be the one punished. Similarly, in James’ case, in a just world, he would not be punished for effectively yowling at the door – for fighting for a better world. Instead, the institution that created the problem he’s fighting should be torn down, but instead, Silver elects to strangle the cat as the simplest way to make what he sees as an untenable situation stop without any real justice. I think what the writers put out there is pretty clear – the plantation is not a good place. It’s not a just place. It’s a solution – but not a good one or a pretty one (in fact it’s what I’d call a fucking disgusting one). Look at the way they say that there’s tragedy to what’s been done at the end of the show – they’re saying that what happens to James and Thomas isn’t right, and I have to agree with them. It isn’t. 

#i understand why certain characters in the show want to believe or present the plantation as a good place#but for me as a member of the audience it would be impossible to see it that way#it’s not a good place and it isn’t right or just to put people like thomas there#enslaved for his entire life for the ‘crime’ of Having Opinions While Gay#it’s absurd to me to think that that place could be anything but completely revolting#i mean sure it was better than bethlem#but that’s setting the bar so low it’s in the mariana trench#the very idea of some people being human debris that should be locked away for their entire lives is appalling#and it makes me feel uncomfortable that apparently some people watching the show think that it’s a pretty good place#for people like james and thomas#:(#i mean…#it’s interesting the way some characters defend that place#but i think we as the audience should think for ourselves and see the place for what it is#instead of relying on a character’s word for it#especially when the characters have very good reasons to claim the plantation is a much better place than it is#black sails#meta via @blacksailsflint

twodotsknowwhy:

twodotsknowwhy:

legally-bitchtastic:

I like all the coverage about SCOTUS refusing to override the PA Supreme Court in the gerrymandering case but no one is talking enough about how rather than listen to them and redrawing the congressional lines, PA Republicans are instead TRYING TO IMPEACH THE JUSTICES

When I posted this, I knew it was ridiculous, but I didn’t think it was something that would actually happen. Unfortunately, this could feasibly happen. Under PA law, the justices can be impeached based on the two-thirds vote of the legislature. And thanks to the very gerrymandering the justices sought to correct, republicans sit in 13 of the legislature’s 18 seats. Despite receiving only about 50% of the votes state-wide (textbook gerrymandering)

Now granted, if impeached, it would be Governor Wolf, who is a democrat, who would name replacements. However, it would require the legislature to confirm his picks, and if the republicans are underhanded enough to impeach every single justice of the opposite party, which would be completely unprecedented, they would definitely be underhanded enough to pull a Mitch McConnell and just refuse to hold confirmation hearings. Wolf is up for reelection in November after all, and could well be unseated.

Simply put, if you live in Pennsylvania, call the fuck out of your representatives. Tell them that they are being whiny, bratty, baby-autocrats and you are appalled by their behavior. Call Senator Bob Casey and tell him to make a strong statement against this action. Call Senator Pat Toomey and tell him that you are disgusted by his statement in support of impeaching the justices. Push your local media to cover this craven action.

The future of democracy in PA is at stake right now. Don’t let it die without a fight.

The republicans just filed House Resolutions 766 through 769 to impeach all the PA Supreme Court justices other than Max Baer.

This is an assault on democracy itself.

Make this the most important news story right now. If they are successful in this, that’s it for Pennsylvania and for the US, we cannot come back from this.

mirandaabarlow:

Madi Appreciation Week:

Day Five: Most Empowering Moment 

↪  “When this is through, you’ll present this [terms] to your people and advocate to accept them. Every fugitive slave in your camp will receive their immediate emancipation. With one condition. Any escaped slave who seeks refuge with you after the ratification of this deal will be surrendered to the law. And any pirate at any time who seeks refuge with you will be surrendered to the law. Why would we ever accept that?

fearisthe-mindkiller:

katy-l-wood:

attentiondeficitstarscream:

if you’re offline or away and i message you something (like a link to a meme or a picture or w/e) honestly just assume that i’m just leaving it there for when you get back and not expecting you to answer straight away. i don’t need you to respond with “hey, sorry, i wasn’t at the computer!” or anything. i was leaving u a gift for later.

Also. If I leave you, like, ten things in a row I’m not trying to constantly get your attention, I’m just excited and like to share. 😛 Get to it wen you get to it, lovely friends.

This, but also from the opposite angle too; if I haven’t yet replied to something, I’m probably just having trouble trying to decide what to say, or I’m mentally tired, and I’ll come back to it when I’m in a good headspace!

Name Day – Sirenswhisper – Black Sails [Archive of Our Own]

Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Black Sails
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Madi/Charles Vane
Characters: Madi (Black Sails), Charles Vane, Captain Flint (Black Sails), Thomas Hamilton, The Maroon Queen
Additional Tags: James Flint/Thomas Hamilton – Freeform, Adorable Fluff, this fandom needs more fluff
Summary:

For Madi Appreciation Week

Madi and Charles have a daughter.

Name Day – Sirenswhisper – Black Sails [Archive of Our Own]

axiological:

If every working-class person in the world decided this afternoon to install solar panels on their roofs and started biking instead of driving, the ice caps would still melt and the human race would still die off. It simply isn’t possible to end climate change while working within a system that sends all your products overseas in massive supertankers wrapped in unrecycled plastic that will be thrown in a landfill the moment it hits land – and practices like that aren’t going to go away because of your purchasing habits.

Nor are we gonna hit some magical point where using clean energy and reducing waste are suddenly the cheapest or most profitable option and so all the world’s big companies fall over each other to switch over. That has never been the case and never will be – the “free market” isn’t going to save us.

The fact of the matter is, this system needs to be torn down if our species is to survive. We don’t have time to delay the revolution anymore. Capitalism is extinction.