Benjamin (@dexcelrate) 's Twitter Profile
Benjamin

@dexcelrate

ID: 462420928

calendar_today12-01-2012 23:05:02

2,2K Tweet

116 Followers

289 Following

Kelly (@broadwaybabyto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If a woman chooses to put a sexually explicit photo of herself online, that’s her CHOICE. She’s consenting. If a man asks Grok to undress a woman and then reposts that photo… that’s sexual assault. There was no consent. Learn the difference.

Maryam (@hell_line0) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Telling a woman who was a victim of abuse that her experiences aren't valid because you've had a positive interaction with her abuser is one of the lowest, most disgusting things you can do.

Maryam (@hell_line0) 's Twitter Profile Photo

most men are cowards when it comes to confronting their male friends about mistreating women, cause they value male approval more than female safety.

ruchi kokcha (@ruchikokcha) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Don’t post photos if you don’t want them sexualised” is just the digital version of “Don’t wear a short dress if you don’t want to be raped.”

♱ natalie ☕️🍂 (@__marietherese_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In the U.K., you can’t see a GP without describing your health issue to the receptionist for them to decide whether the issue warrants the attention of a doctor. Receptionists don’t have a medical degree, so it’s rather confusing why the NHS has deemed them qualified for this.

woody (@nyrbhimself) 's Twitter Profile Photo

IShowSpeed was shocked to learn he can’t buy pure diamonds in Botswana because the country is locked into contracts. Even though it produces the most diamonds in the world, Botswana has one of the poorest local diamond markets 😳

Global Index (@theglobal_index) 's Twitter Profile Photo

yoxic IShowSpeed was surprised to learn that despite being the world’s top diamond producer, Botswana doesn’t sell raw diamonds locally due to contracts 😳

Martha Ahumuza (@marthaahumuza) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Employment is by definition a contractual exchange of labour for compensation. Gen z’s refusal to romanticise underpaid or unpaid work is not laziness but a response to an economy where wages lag behind the cost of living and “opportunity” is too often used to disguise