Ugly Mask Update
Jun. 11th, 2012 08:24 amAllergy Face Mask by ~Attackfish on deviantART
Not only was the mask I talked about in my previous entry ugly, it was really uncomfortable. It had a seem right under my chin that rubbed all the skin off, and the elastic irritated some old scar tissue of mine behind my ears. So I bought a bundle of cotton fabric, nylon thread, and some cheap beads, and made this instead. It holds the same carbon filter as the mask I bought, and I cannibalized pieces of that mask, such as the metal nose piece and the buckles for the ear straps, for this one.
I'd like to thank
no subject
Date: 2012-06-12 01:50 pm (UTC)Maybe if you made an Amon mask...
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Date: 2012-06-12 01:59 pm (UTC)"Would it be horrible to say I seriously thought aboutmaking an Equalist mask? But then someone on campus could recognise it and claim I was just making a fashon statement, and shouldn't be allowed to wear it.
The Equalists are basically the Avatar world's version of fanatical, terrorist disability rights activists, which is why it annoys me so much when people are like "Amon has a point, equality is good!" Of course he has a point. In the real world, almost everyone willing to do monsterous things does. Hitler had a point about how the rest of the world screwed Germany after WWI. Osama bin Laden had a point about how the US has really done some damage in the Middle East. The solution to society oppressing people with disabilities isn't to go around chopping people's legs off, it's to change how society treats people without legs."
Also, I have no idea how to do paper mache, and I'm allergic to most glues and binders.
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Date: 2012-06-12 02:20 pm (UTC)I wonder if there are many people who actually think that Amon does not just have a point, but that what he's doing is good. I get "yay I'm Team Amon" on a fannish level, because the character is fun and interesting, and his underlings are fun and interesting. (MORE LIEUTENANT PLEASE.) But does fannish liking also mean that people agree with what he does?
Related on an interesting terminology level alone, but I just read this article about the Church of England not liking gay marriage (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/12/gay-marriage-anglican-church-warning) in which a bishop does a really weird thing with the words "equality" (which in this discussion would be "have society treat benders and non-benders equally) and "uniformity" ("take away everybody's bending to create equality"). He says he's okay with civil partnerships for gay couples to create "equality", but that allowing gay marriage would mean substituting "uniformity" for "equality" and somehow deny people their right to be different (?).
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Date: 2012-06-12 02:48 pm (UTC)One of the things I find most intersting about him is that he has a point, and believes in what he's doing, and because he has a point, his followers honestly mean well. What an awesome villain, not just in general, but for a children's show. Children should see things like that.
However much I disagree with him in this instance (part of equality is symbolic and cultural equality, and the ability to say to your family and community "we're getting married" and besides, having gay marriage thakes nothing away from straight marriage) I like his linguistic point. This is it exactly.