Especially autism. Extremely dangerous.
You should also still think twice about calling the emergency number on a suicidal friend if you live in a country with universal health care and unarmed cops.
You could be subjecting them to forced institutionalisation, forced medication, an isolation cell. And even if none of those things happen, police ‘first responders’ can often behave violently and cause intense new traumas and often if someone is too ‘weird’ first responders will – not – help.
Some examples of experiences from me and people close to me:
- Police ‘first response’ to a suicidal transgender person: They spend hours in a police cell, being interrogated by cops who were consistently using the wrong pronouns and asking them to confirm if they were really ‘Ms. BirthName’ and why they would ‘lie about their identity’.
- Ambulance workers respond to a person living in a neglected household: they refused to enter the house and send in a security employee instead who hours asking him whether he was ‘drunk’ or ‘on drugs’ and why he ‘lived like this’.
These things only pile a new trauma on what was already there. This does not make people feel better. This does not save lives in any meaningful way.
This is also why you will never see me reblogging suicide help lines or ‘report suicide to Tumblr’ posts if the post does not specify whether the people you are contacting might at some point involve the cops and those that work with them.
And don’t EVER call the police on a Deaf/deaf/Hard of Hearing person unless they are actually an active danger to other people. Remember: we can’t hear what the police are saying, they shine bright lights in our faces so that we can’t lipread, and fucking none of them sign. Police kill a lot of DdHoH people because we “fail to comply” (because we don’t know what the instructions fucking are) or because we “resist arrest” (we can’t sign if our hands are cuffed behind our backs, so OF COURSE we’re going to resist).
Don’t call the police on a DdHoH person unless they’re attacking someone/breaking in somewhere, actually committing a fucking crime that is hurting someone. Because whatever we’re doing, if it’s anything other than directly harmful to other people, the punishments the police will give us for being DdHoH will be highly traumatic at best and most likely fatal.
Calling the police on a DdHoH person except when necessary to keep other people safe (if we’re a danger to ourselves then don’t call the police. Consider instead an ambulance, but only as a last resort) is not a gamble. It is far more certain than that. Call the police on us and you’re as good as shooting us/bludgeoning us to death. Don’t fucking do it.TRUTH. & Really, there are so many more risk factors like this. And we could list all of them and it still wouldn’t add up to the total risk because cops do not exist to protect us.
So a good rule of thumb is ‘Don’t call the cops unless you are okay with everyone in that place, including yourself, dying’.
Which really means ‘don’t call the cops ever’.
Tag: mobile q
Look what I found! Had to buy it without hesitation! Who is even making spideypool merch? It’s a christmas miracle!
happy International Nonbinary Day, y’all!
This is from a scene in ‘Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs’
Legit this movie is so underrated
news flash: the term “trap” in regards to a person’s gender has only ever been used to fetishize and dehumanize trans women, and play into the disgusting idea that trans women are secretly men trying to trick cis men, a mindset that contributes to real life violence, and to try and dismiss a character’s portrayal as not being transphobic because “they’re not trans, they’re a trap” is uninformed at best and actively malevolent at worst so shut the fuck up
too many people
shitpostgenerator is going to kill us all
eye contact feels so like.. private and intimate … u can’t expect me to look u in the eyes.. how invasive…. it’s none of ur business what’s in my eyes
[x]
I’m tired of house hunters. No more white people choosing between 3 equally nice houses in the suburbs. Instead, I want a show about average millenials trying to find apartments in major cities. Give me a 25 year old trying to find somewhere habitable in NYC for $1k a month. Give me a grad student looking for a flat in San Francisco on their shoestring budget. Give me a young adult who just got a starter job in Paris and now has to figure out how to move there. Will joe choose the place with a couch for a bed, or will he go for the closet-sized crawl space? Will Kat manage to find some place in the city, or will she end up with a 2 hour commute? Will Chris go for the barely renovated warehouse or will he start sleeping in the break room at work? Find out next week on I Don’t Want to Be Homeless
