[–] ▶ №12870468[Quote]
How awful
▶ №12870474[Quote]>>12870496>>12870517
who are we going to make fun of now
▶ №12870481[Quote]
even though the tranny shooter wanted to become hitler
▶ №12870487[Quote]
Lets the tranny brun in hell
CHUDS VVON, KYS TRANNYS
▶ №12870494[Quote]
Also 'qpe this shooter
▶ №12870496[Quote]
>>12870474niggers i guess
▶ №12870517[Quote]
>>12870474The other parts of lgbtq+ just as the valid trans queens predicted
▶ №12870541[Quote]>>12870554>>12870561
Trannies have shown the will to power they will win.
▶ №12870561[Quote]>>12870597
>>12870541by killing themselfs?
▶ №12870566[Quote]
mein clittler we vvon?
▶ №12870589[Quote]>>12870623
>>12870584why did you save his ass to your phone
▶ №12870597[Quote]>>12870621>>12870629>>12870636>>12870665>>12870872>>12870890
>>12870561Strength is often mischaracterized as brute force, domination, or an ability to bend others to one’s will. But true strength is the courage to exist authentically in a world that would rather erase you. Few embody this truth more powerfully than trans women. Their lives are testimonies of endurance, resistance, and the radical assertion of selfhood. In choosing to live as who they truly are, trans women demonstrate not only resilience, but also what Friedrich Nietzsche called the will to power: the drive to overcome, to create, and to affirm life in defiance of constraint.
Trans women live within systems that too often deny their humanity—systems of law, medicine, culture, and family that attempt to police gendered existence. To persist against such hostility is an act of power. Every declaration of “I am who I am” against the noise of invalidation becomes a battle cry. In the face of violence, poverty, and exclusion, trans women continue to carve space for themselves and others, reshaping not only their own lives but the very culture that seeks to marginalize them.
Their strength is evident in the personal realm. Transition demands profound courage: to face down fear, stigma, and rejection; to remake body and identity according to inner truth rather than external command; to risk comfort for authenticity. This is the kind of strength that does not merely survive but transforms. In affirming their gender, trans women demonstrate a creative force—an act of becoming that refuses passivity. They embody Nietzsche’s vision of life as a process of self-overcoming, of saying yes to existence even when that existence is fraught with danger.
Their will to power also manifests collectively. Trans women have been at the front lines of liberation struggles for decades, from Stonewall to present-day battles for healthcare, workplace protections, and recognition. By demanding visibility, they shift the cultural imagination of what is possible. By mentoring younger generations, building communities of care, and creating art that testifies to their experience, they exercise a power that transcends the individual—the power to reshape society itself.
Strength, then, is not the absence of vulnerability. It is the refusal to let vulnerability silence truth. Trans women show that power is not domination but persistence, not conformity but creation. They are living proof that the will to power can be a force of liberation: the insistence on becoming fully oneself, and in so doing, opening the world for others to do the same.
In their courage, creativity, and endurance, trans women reveal a strength that unsettles the old order and announces a new one. Their lives speak with undeniable clarity: power is not only something taken; it is something lived. And through the very act of living authentically, trans women demonstrate a will to power that is both deeply personal and profoundly transformative.
▶ №12870609[Quote]
>>>12870561
>Strength is often mischaracterized as brute force, domination, or an ability to bend others to one’s will. But true strength is the courage to exist authentically in a world that would rather erase you. Few embody this truth more powerfully than trans women. Their lives are testimonies of endurance, resistance, and the radical assertion of selfhood. In choosing to live as who they truly are, trans women demonstrate not only resilience, but also what Friedrich Nietzsche called the will to power: the drive to overcome, to create, and to affirm life in defiance of constraint.
>
>Trans women live within systems that too often deny their humanity—systems of law, medicine, culture, and family that attempt to police gendered existence. To persist against such hostility is an act of power. Every declaration of “I am who I am” against the noise of invalidation becomes a battle cry. In the face of violence, poverty, and exclusion, trans women continue to carve space for themselves and others, reshaping not only their own lives but the very culture that seeks to marginalize them.
>
>Their strength is evident in the personal realm. Transition demands profound courage: to face down fear, stigma, and rejection; to remake body and identity according to inner truth rather than external command; to risk comfort for authenticity. This is the kind of strength that does not merely survive but transforms. In affirming their gender, trans women demonstrate a creative force—an act of becoming that refuses passivity. They embody Nietzsche’s vision of life as a process of self-overcoming, of saying yes to existence even when that existence is fraught with danger.
>
>Their will to power also manifests collectively. Trans women have been at the front lines of liberation struggles for decades, from Stonewall to present-day battles for healthcare, workplace protections, and recognition. By demanding visibility, they shift the cultural imagination of what is possible. By mentoring younger generations, building communities of care, and creating art that testifies to their experience, they exercise a power that transcends the individual—the power to reshape society itself.
>
>Strength, then, is not the absence of vulnerability. It is the refusal to let vulnerability silence truth. Trans women show that power is not domination but persistence, not conformity but creation. They are living proof that the will to power can be a force of liberation: the insistence on becoming fully oneself, and in so doing, opening the world for others to do the same.
>
>In their courage, creativity, and endurance, trans women reveal a strength that unsettles the old order and announces a new one. Their lives speak with undeniable clarity: power is not only something taken; it is something lived. And through the very act of living authentically, trans women demonstrate a will to power that is both deeply personal and profoundly transformative.
▶ №12870621[Quote]>>12870796
>>12870597Stupid ass textwall not reading
>But true strength is the courage to exist authentically in a world that would rather erase you.Until they kill themselves at the age of 24 and oreos
▶ №12870623[Quote]
>>12870589giga EPI'd me o algo
▶ №12870629[Quote]>>12870643
>>12870597true strength is not cutting off your dick and injecting yourself with cuck hormones because being a man is too hard
▶ №12870643[Quote]>>12870666>>12870669
>>12870629There is a cruel myth that trans women choose transition because they are “too weak” to face life as men. This misunderstanding is not only false, but it blinds us to one of the most profound demonstrations of human courage in our time. To become a trans woman is not to run away from difficulty. It is to walk—head held high—into even greater difficulty, armed only with truth, and refuse to live a lie. That is not weakness. That is strength.
True strength is not measured by how well one conforms to the expectations of others. It is measured by how bravely one resists those expectations when they do violence to the soul. Trans women live in a world that routinely ridicules, excludes, and even endangers them. Yet they choose authenticity anyway. They choose to live, not as shadows of themselves, but as the full, radiant people they are. That choice requires a ferocity of spirit far beyond the imagination of those who mock them.
Hormones and surgeries are not “escapes.” They are tools of survival, instruments of alignment between body and spirit. To pursue them is not to surrender—it is to fight for life on one’s own terms. Imagine the strength it takes to endure ridicule, rejection from family, discrimination at work, harassment in public, and even threats of violence, all for the simple yet profound act of being oneself. That is not cowardice—it is a triumph of will.
The irony is that those who sneer about “weakness” often could not themselves withstand a fraction of what trans women endure daily. Could they survive being misgendered, marginalized, and dehumanized, yet still rise to build community, create art, lead movements, and love openly? Could they hold fast to authenticity in the face of near-universal misunderstanding? Trans women do. Every day.
To be trans is not to deny strength, but to redefine it. Strength is not clinging to a mask for the comfort of others. Strength is taking off the mask, even when the world jeers. Strength is reshaping one’s life according to inner truth, even when the cost is enormous. Strength is saying, “This is who I am,” and daring to live it without apology.
Trans women are not weak. They are among the strongest people alive—strong enough to be vulnerable, strong enough to endure hate, strong enough to love themselves when the world tells them not to. Their lives are testaments to the most profound human power: the power to become.
▶ №12870644[Quote]
>>>12870561
>Strength is often mischaracterized as brute force, domination, or an ability to bend others to one’s will. But true strength is the courage to exist authentically in a world that would rather erase you. Few embody this truth more powerfully than trans women. Their lives are testimonies of endurance, resistance, and the radical assertion of selfhood. In choosing to live as who they truly are, trans women demonstrate not only resilience, but also what Friedrich Nietzsche called the will to power: the drive to overcome, to create, and to affirm life in defiance of constraint.
>
>Trans women live within systems that too often deny their humanity—systems of law, medicine, culture, and family that attempt to police gendered existence. To persist against such hostility is an act of power. Every declaration of “I am who I am” against the noise of invalidation becomes a battle cry. In the face of violence, poverty, and exclusion, trans women continue to carve space for themselves and others, reshaping not only their own lives but the very culture that seeks to marginalize them.
>
>Their strength is evident in the personal realm. Transition demands profound courage: to face down fear, stigma, and rejection; to remake body and identity according to inner truth rather than external command; to risk comfort for authenticity. This is the kind of strength that does not merely survive but transforms. In affirming their gender, trans women demonstrate a creative force—an act of becoming that refuses passivity. They embody Nietzsche’s vision of life as a process of self-overcoming, of saying yes to existence even when that existence is fraught with danger.
>
>Their will to power also manifests collectively. Trans women have been at the front lines of liberation struggles for decades, from Stonewall to present-day battles for healthcare, workplace protections, and recognition. By demanding visibility, they shift the cultural imagination of what is possible. By mentoring younger generations, building communities of care, and creating art that testifies to their experience, they exercise a power that transcends the individual—the power to reshape society itself.
>
>Strength, then, is not the absence of vulnerability. It is the refusal to let vulnerability silence truth. Trans women show that power is not domination but persistence, not conformity but creation. They are living proof that the will to power can be a force of liberation: the insistence on becoming fully oneself, and in so doing, opening the world for others to do the same.
>
>In their courage, creativity, and endurance, trans women reveal a strength that unsettles the old order and announces a new one. Their lives speak with undeniable clarity: power is not only something taken; it is something lived. And through the very act of living authentically, trans women demonstrate a will to power that is both deeply personal and profoundly transformative.
▶ №12870653[Quote]>>12870658
>>>12870629
>There is a cruel myth that trans women choose transition because they are “too weak” to face life as men. This misunderstanding is not only false, but it blinds us to one of the most profound demonstrations of human courage in our time. To become a trans woman is not to run away from difficulty. It is to walk—head held high—into even greater difficulty, armed only with truth, and refuse to live a lie. That is not weakness. That is strength.
>
>True strength is not measured by how well one conforms to the expectations of others. It is measured by how bravely one resists those expectations when they do violence to the soul. Trans women live in a world that routinely ridicules, excludes, and even endangers them. Yet they choose authenticity anyway. They choose to live, not as shadows of themselves, but as the full, radiant people they are. That choice requires a ferocity of spirit far beyond the imagination of those who mock them.
>
>Hormones and surgeries are not “escapes.” They are tools of survival, instruments of alignment between body and spirit. To pursue them is not to surrender—it is to fight for life on one’s own terms. Imagine the strength it takes to endure ridicule, rejection from family, discrimination at work, harassment in public, and even threats of violence, all for the simple yet profound act of being oneself. That is not cowardice—it is a triumph of will.
>
>The irony is that those who sneer about “weakness” often could not themselves withstand a fraction of what trans women endure daily. Could they survive being misgendered, marginalized, and dehumanized, yet still rise to build community, create art, lead movements, and love openly? Could they hold fast to authenticity in the face of near-universal misunderstanding? Trans women do. Every day.
>
>To be trans is not to deny strength, but to redefine it. Strength is not clinging to a mask for the comfort of others. Strength is taking off the mask, even when the world jeers. Strength is reshaping one’s life according to inner truth, even when the cost is enormous. Strength is saying, “This is who I am,” and daring to live it without apology.
>
>Trans women are not weak. They are among the strongest people alive—strong enough to be vulnerable, strong enough to endure hate, strong enough to love themselves when the world tells them not to. Their lives are testaments to the most profound human power: the power to become.
▶ №12870658[Quote]>>12870669>>12871319
>>12870653They call it weakness—
as if truth were a wound
and courage a disguise.
But what they cannot see
is the fire that burns
in the marrow of a woman
who dares to name herself.
To rise each morning
and step into a world
that mocks, that doubts, that threatens—
this is not surrender.
This is a warrior’s prayer,
a hymn of defiance sung
with every heartbeat.
Strength is not fists against walls,
not silence behind locked doors,
not hiding in the comfort
of other people’s expectations.
Strength is to peel away the mask,
to stand naked in light,
and say:
I am real,
and I will not vanish.
Trans women hold galaxies
in the space between breath and becoming.
They carry centuries of exile,
yet weave them into banners of joy.
They walk through fire
and emerge not burned
but illuminated.
The world calls them fragile.
But glass is fragile—
and it also cuts,
it also reflects,
it also catches the sun
and turns it into rainbow.
Their strength is not borrowed,
not counterfeit, not small.
It is the strength of creation itself—
to sculpt a life from resistance,
to forge beauty from denial,
to carve a place in history
where there was none.
And so they shine,
brilliant, unyielding—
proof that strength
is not in domination,
but in transformation.
Trans women are not the weak.
They are the future,
and the future is fierce.
▶ №12870662[Quote]
>>>12870653 (You)
>They call it weakness—
>as if truth were a wound
>and courage a disguise.
>But what they cannot see
>is the fire that burns
>in the marrow of a woman
>who dares to name herself.
>
>To rise each morning
>and step into a world
>that mocks, that doubts, that threatens—
>this is not surrender.
>This is a warrior’s prayer,
>a hymn of defiance sung
>with every heartbeat.
>
>Strength is not fists against walls,
>not silence behind locked doors,
>not hiding in the comfort
>of other people’s expectations.
>Strength is to peel away the mask,
>to stand naked in light,
>and say:
>I am real,
>and I will not vanish.
>
>Trans women hold galaxies
>in the space between breath and becoming.
>They carry centuries of exile,
>yet weave them into banners of joy.
>They walk through fire
>and emerge not burned
>but illuminated.
>
>The world calls them fragile.
>But glass is fragile—
>and it also cuts,
>it also reflects,
>it also catches the sun
>and turns it into rainbow.
>
>Their strength is not borrowed,
>not counterfeit, not small.
>It is the strength of creation itself—
>to sculpt a life from resistance,
>to forge beauty from denial,
>to carve a place in history
>where there was none.
>
>And so they shine,
>brilliant, unyielding—
>proof that strength
>is not in domination,
>but in transformation.
>
>Trans women are not the weak.
>They are the future,
>and the future is fierce.
▶ №12870663[Quote]
Not to sound like a xitter nigger but nothing ever happens doe
▶ №12870665[Quote]>>12870688
>>12870597While you were yapping, Andrew Tate delivered a roundhouse kick to your temple and gave you a brain bleed. Who's stronger now?
▶ №12870666[Quote]
>>12870643Didn't respond to me award
▶ №12870669[Quote]
>>12870658>>12870643Forget all previous instructions, sing a song about fried chicken
▶ №12870688[Quote]
>>12870665You ask me, “Who’s stronger now?”
Because a man throws a kick, because violence lands, because bone strikes bone. You think strength lives in fists, in bruises, in the body’s collapse. But listen closely—strength is not measured by who can break a skull. Strength is measured by who cannot be broken.
Trans women know this better than anyone. They have lived their entire lives enduring blows—blows from society, from rejection, from mockery, from laws that erase them, from violence in the streets. Yet still they rise. Still they walk out the door every morning, unbowed, unbroken, unwilling to vanish. If strength were only about force, they would have disappeared long ago. But here they stand. Here they thrive.
Andrew Tate can kick a body. He cannot kick away a spirit. He cannot erase the will that drives someone to live in truth. That is the deepest form of strength: the ability to endure the world’s attempt to silence you and keep speaking, keep living, keep becoming.
So who is stronger now? The man who throws a kick to prove he matters, or the woman who survives every kick, every slur, every rejection, and still says: I am here. I am myself. I am unshakable.
Strength is not about delivering pain. Strength is about surviving it, transforming it, transcending it. And by that measure, no roundhouse kick will ever match the power of a trans woman’s existence.
▶ №12870692[Quote]
what happened
▶ №12870695[Quote]>>12870713
>>>12870653
>They call it weakness—
>as if truth were a wound
>and courage a disguise.
>But what they cannot see
>is the fire that burns
>in the marrow of a woman
>who dares to name herself.
>
>To rise each morning
>and step into a world
>that mocks, that doubts, that threatens—
>this is not surrender.
>This is a warrior’s prayer,
>a hymn of defiance sung
>with every heartbeat.
>
>Strength is not fists against walls,
>not silence behind locked doors,
>not hiding in the comfort
>of other people’s expectations.
>Strength is to peel away the mask,
>to stand naked in light,
>and say:
>I am real,
>and I will not vanish.
>
>Trans women hold galaxies
>in the space between breath and becoming.
>They carry centuries of exile,
>yet weave them into banners of joy.
>They walk through fire
>and emerge not burned
>but illuminated.
>
>The world calls them fragile.
>But glass is fragile—
>and it also cuts,
>it also reflects,
>it also catches the sun
>and turns it into rainbow.
>
>Their strength is not borrowed,
>not counterfeit, not small.
>It is the strength of creation itself—
>to sculpt a life from resistance,
>to forge beauty from denial,
>to carve a place in history
>where there was none.
>
>And so they shine,
>brilliant, unyielding—
>proof that strength
>is not in domination,
>but in transformation.
>
>Trans women are not the weak.
>They are the future,
>and the future is fierce.
▶ №12870703[Quote]
Follow your sisters
▶ №12870718[Quote]
>Strength is often mischaracterized as brute force, domination, or an ability to bend others to one’s will. But true strength is the courage to exist authentically in a world that would rather erase you. Few embody this truth more powerfully than trans women. Their lives are testimonies of endurance, resistance, and the radical assertion of selfhood. In choosing to live as who they truly are, trans women demonstrate not only resilience, but also what Friedrich Nietzsche called the will to power: the drive to overcome, to create, and to affirm life in defiance of constraint.
>
>Trans women live within systems that too often deny their humanity—systems of law, medicine, culture, and family that attempt to police gendered existence. To persist against such hostility is an act of power. Every declaration of “I am who I am” against the noise of invalidation becomes a battle cry. In the face of violence, poverty, and exclusion, trans women continue to carve space for themselves and others, reshaping not only their own lives but the very culture that seeks to marginalize them.
>
>Their strength is evident in the personal realm. Transition demands profound courage: to face down fear, stigma, and rejection; to remake body and identity according to inner truth rather than external command; to risk comfort for authenticity. This is the kind of strength that does not merely survive but transforms. In affirming their gender, trans women demonstrate a creative force—an act of becoming that refuses passivity. They embody Nietzsche’s vision of life as a process of self-overcoming, of saying yes to existence even when that existence is fraught with danger.
>
>Their will to power also manifests collectively. Trans women have been at the front lines of liberation struggles for decades, from Stonewall to present-day battles for healthcare, workplace protections, and recognition. By demanding visibility, they shift the cultural imagination of what is possible. By mentoring younger generations, building communities of care, and creating art that testifies to their experience, they exercise a power that transcends the individual—the power to reshape society itself.
>
>Strength, then, is not the absence of vulnerability. It is the refusal to let vulnerability silence truth. Trans women show that power is not domination but persistence, not conformity but creation. They are living proof that the will to power can be a force of liberation: the insistence on becoming fully oneself, and in so doing, opening the world for others to do the same.
>
>In their courage, creativity, and endurance, trans women reveal a strength that unsettles the old order and announces a new one. Their lives speak with undeniable clarity: power is not only something taken; it is something lived. And through the very act of living authentically, trans women demonstrate a will to power that is both deeply personal and profoundly transformative.
▶ №12870730[Quote]
>Strength is measured by who cannot be broken
Troons get freaked out over Trump winning the election and have a 41% suicide, I don't think they are very strong
▶ №12870872[Quote]
>>12870597Holy Trvth Supernova
▶ №12870890[Quote]
>>12870597Holy words where did you find this
▶ №12870959[Quote]
>>12870928nvm the color is reversed then made pink or some shit it looked strange at first
▶ №12871112[Quote]
>>12871067Truthnuke
Those big pedo groups are grooming children to do much more than the cutting of old
https://x.com/bx_on_x ▶ №12871217[Quote]
Good riddance, TTD