Viola Davis talks about the childhood hunger problem in the U.S. at Varietyâs annual Power of Women luncheon. (x)
How come this didnât get as much attention as Emma Watsonâs boring talk on feminism
DEAR READER
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we're not kids anymore.
One Nice Bug Per Day
I'd rather be in outer space đž
ojovivo
noise dept.
YOU ARE THE REASON

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izzy's playlists!

shark vs the universe

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trying on a metaphor

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Andulka
RMH

romaâ

Janaina Medeiros

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@aawazz
Viola Davis talks about the childhood hunger problem in the U.S. at Varietyâs annual Power of Women luncheon. (x)
How come this didnât get as much attention as Emma Watsonâs boring talk on feminism
Body comparative
The bookstore in my town has a racism section in honor of Ferguson and it gives me a lot of hope
Some of the Regional Languages and Ethnic Groups of Pakistan
Gloria AnzaldĂșa, Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza
I wanted to write this article sometime ago but events and developments kept intruding and my attention taken away or stolen from the critical into the tangential. As more events unfold and the death rates in the Arab and Muslim world reach catastrophic levels and the region all up in flames. My pen can no longer remain occupied with brush fires while the interests and forces shaping this calamity remain aloof and unencumbered by much needed insights and analysis.
We are witnessing massive killing fields across the region from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Palestine, Kashmir, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Mali, Nigeria, Central African Republic, and Burma. However, the critical question is not asked, why is this taking place and what are the interests being served? What are the key factors that are shaping this massive transformation and causing this high level of instability across regions and among societies that have lived in relative peaceful and co-dependence existence for centuries. Could it all be reduced to differing religions or even among the same religious group to divergent interpretations!
Indeed, divide and conquer has been the best and most effective instrument utilized by colonial powers to first achieve control over societies and then further the domination in successive periods up to the present post-colonial period. How to dominate and conquer a territory inhabited by large populations with diverse languages, cultures, racial groupings, religious traditions and political worldviews! The order of business was to explore existing cleavages and work to foment divisions at every turn while pushing forth a colonial project.
Arguments as to what came first the company or the army are very rudimentary for the question fails to take into account that the colonial project was at once an economic, social, religious, political, racial and military project. We canât and should not separate it into distinct parts for doing so will reduce the ability to critique the totality of the epistemic colonial structure and get the bigger picture lost in possible contradictions at the smaller or local details. Taking the colonial structure in parts will cause us to lose sight of the forest and become entangled in tree types and effects on each other. Colonialism always insisted on looking at tree types and not the forest or more importantly who owns it.
At the big picture, we have a daily massive transfer of wealth taking place from the colonized south to the colonial motherlands in the global north. The global north provides the arms and military hardware needed by the local despotic colonial guards, which are financed by revenues coming from raw materials, strategic minerals and oil. The colonized elites are connected to the colonial global north and place their resources in banks and corporations in the colonial motherlands. This was built into the structure from inception and not a mere smartness or cunning in the south.
Guns for raw materials, economic access for domination and possible success for the few at the expense of the overwhelming many in the global south is what colonialism offered in the past and continues to do so in this post-colonial period. The colonial project is centered on creating the appropriate conditions to constitute an elite ready to sacrifice the best interests of its own society for a narrow benefit that is never lasting or subject to control and manipulation by colonial powers. Local conflicts are part of the colonial structure for they provide the ability to extract sweeping economic and political concessions from colonized societies. Conflicts, fomenting divisions and exaggerating tensions are structural aspects of colonization and not to be viewed as part of the colonized inherent inferiority.
The same strategy worked during the European Slave Trade in West Africa: Guns for slaves, which accelerated and intensified local conflicts. Certainly, the demand for more slaves required creating the needed conditions to bring slave supplies into the coast to be transferred across the Atlantic. The more conflicts in West Africa the more slaves can be supplied and the more slaves are available the more depressed the prices get thus making the conflicting parties more violent toward one another so they can get more slaves traded for guns to protect themselves against another local competitor engaged in the same system. For sure, the need for labor force in the Americasâ plantations was the primary factor that shaped the history, society and conflicts in West Africa for over 300 years and the region still living the impacts of this catastrophic colonial project and strategy. This was not an accident; rather it was structural and set in motion by major powers involved in the colonization of the Americas and Africa at the same time since it was a major global economic, political, social, religious and racial project.
Studying history in a localized way, while is important, in this case would fail to account for this massive colonial project and its impact on Africa and the Americasâ as a whole. I have very little respect for works that spend so much time on looking at the local conflicts in parts of Africa and never asking the critical question about the forces and interests at play that continue to push these conflicts forward because so much exploitation of diamond mines, oil, uranium, gold, silver, cooper etc. Too much money at stake to leave it for the Africans to use! Thus, the present colonial mangers are sent to set the process in motion and to keep things the way they are by sending the wealth up to the global north. Africa is not poor; rather is impoverished by cunning global âcivilizedâ design.
Now one might say that I strayed away from the topic and the Arab and Muslim world with the many conflicts witnessed and cited above but also racism and discrimination toward Black Africa, abuse of foreign labor force, sexism, and ill treatment of minorities. However, this litany once again is taking the local context so as not to confront the global and the colonial powers and their continued robbing the southern hemisphere poor to enrich the already 1% of the global north even more.
The core problems at hand are rooted in divide and conquer whereby local differences are instrumentalized for a present coloniality. In the past, the colonial companies, like the British East Africa Company, German East African Company, and Dutch East India Company, all worked hand in hand with the military and state powers to penetrate new territories and claim them as possessions for the sponsoring state. One must be clear on this direct connection between colonial commercial enterprises and colonial states and their pursuit of territorial expansion. The military protected the companies and in return the commercial enterprises managed and organized the colonies according to colonial state interests. Centrally to this organizing and management was a divide and conquer strategy as well as a conniving alignment with local elites and religious authorities, who opted to protect their narrow self-interest at the expense of resistance. At a certain level, the local elites and religious authorities were completely ignorant of the new global developments and acted from pre-modern understandings that were incongruent with rapid developments underway (this is separate article for the future).
When we examine the present colonial we confront similar alignment with military industrial complex companies selling guns to all parties, while petro-chemical companies move raw materials like oil to industrial economies to act as the engine for producing finished products for the captive colonized or if we may say open-market privatize neoliberal economies. On the other end, we find a set of global corporations coming with âdevelopmentâ projects for the shakedown and clean up job for whatever is left in the pockets of elites who got paid for oil, raw materials and the robbing of local economies.
Guns for oil to further foment conflicts instrumentalized over a 200 years period and colonial development projects intended to shift resources from the local to the global while facilitating an administration of the local colonial structures. The existing elites are all acting to protect their assigned self-interest in the form of luxurious trade mark products and local dealerships, software deals, processing plants, tobacco concessions, percentage cuts on various deals etc. The local elite role is to facilitate the present colonial and in return they are given the guns to protect themselves from domestic opposition at the plantation level and external neighbors that are organized on the same principles but often belong to another colonially selected tribe, religious group or sect, and ethnic or linguistic groupings. In each case the borders and assignment of roles were set in motion in an epistemic colonial structure and not as often presented as a result of historical animosities or revelries.
The best Sunni, Shia, Sufi, Salafi, Ikhwani, Christian, Jew, Hindu and Buddist in the present colonial is a dead one if they are not ready to play and be part of this insidious dehumanizing structure. We all are caught with the news cycle but donât stop to think of how the news became news in the first place! How did the Sunni-Shia conflict become the focal point! How did ISIS emerge, why and how politics framed around sectarian discourses came to the fore! How did Muslim-Jewish and Arab-Jewish conflicts become the frame by which relations are developed and constructed since the inception of a colonial Zionist project! Why is it that we look at one another through an otherization colonized lens and accept it to define who we are and what we should do on a daily basis!
Differences among human groups are foundational and present throughout recorded history. Some, however, maintain that the human state of nature is founded upon the survival of the fittest and as such powerful groups must work to overcome and take over weaker types. However, this particular thesis is founded upon a capitalist, colonial and racist reading of history that takes developments occurring as a result of particular human behavior and project it back unto all human groups and societies then articulate a forward looking policy and action plans based on it. This thesis views conflict between human groupings as the norm and an outcome of a pre-determined imprint on the human state of nature. Thus, colonialism and its economic underpinnings are rationalized as part of a norm rather than a particular distorted mode resulting in genocide and constant visitation of death and destruction on the vast majority of humanity to maintain the engines of greed and materialism humming.
The challenge for all is how to break away from this cycle and bring the colonial otherization project to an end. I do believe it begins by affirming the human collective differences and diversity as a source of enrichment and an endowed uniqueness that can contribute to building a better future for all. We all are better when we preserve, protect and cause each other to flourish in our unique and distinctive ways. Seeking to dominate and eliminate the other is a sign of weakness, not strength. For the Arab and Muslim world to flourish it must dispense with the colonial framing and reconstitute itself within a de-colonizing epistemology rooted in the strength within diversity whereby religious, ethnic, linguistic, cultural and regional differences are opportunities to learn and develop in ways that otherwise would not have been possible. Colonialism instrumentalized diversity and difference to propel a dehumanizing project. For me a de-colonization project in the Arab and Muslim world must be rooted in reconstituting our collective humanness with diversity and difference being the bedrock for the society. Today is the time for all to work toward hastening the dying colonialism!
What were the protesters in Ferguson actually protesting on Sunday night? More than the death of an innocent black man, they were protesting the very disposability of the Black Body. The disposition of âontological deathâ, meaning what constitutes a âfull personâ (by any interpretation) is not recognized in the black population of America by the prevailing social institutions. So little significance does the Black Body hold that the media would rather talk about broken windows and burned out corner stores than the death of a living, breathing, human being. The murder of Michael Brown was not a coincidence nor is it unrelated in the scope of American history. It must be contextualized in a long and ongoing lineage of violence against the Black Body and specifically that national oppression of Black peoples which works on behalf of the racist white supremacist capitalism of the United States. Michael Brown wasnât the first innocent Black man to be murdered by racist pigs and he wonât be the last if we cannot change the course of the future. There is a war being waged right now against the most basic existence of an entire population, and itâs happening on your street. The systemic oppression of the black population is integral to the very development of the United States as has been observed historically. Black people were and still are the free labor, they were and still are the most poor and vulnerable, they were and still are the âsocietal excessâ by which every âsymptomâ of capital accumulation could be blamed upon. The war against the Black community is an âAmerican warâ in the most authentic sense of the phrase.
Justice for Mike Brown (via rs620)
Virginia Woolfâs bed in Monkâs House and Susan Sontagâs grave in Montparnasse Cemetery by Patti Smith.
Uma Narayan, âEssence of Culture and A Sense of History: A Feminist Critique of Cultural Essentialismâ
This is something that all postcolonial, anti-imperialist, even nationalist feminists should remember. Decrying the imperialist aggressor is useless and dishonest if your feminism and progressive politics does not take domestic minorities into account and include them in feminist ventures, especially when genuine and valid anti-imperialist sentiment is manipulated and coopted by the ruling elite and state to oppress minorities and even seek assistance and collaboration from the imperialist itself.
James Baldwin
Nun va Goldoon movie, directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Life is tragic simply because the earth turns and the sun inexorably rises and sets, and one day, for each of us, the sun will go down for the last, last time. Perhaps the whole root of our trouble, the human trouble, is that we will sacrifice all the beauty of our lives, will imprison ourselves in totems, taboos, crosses, blood sacrifices, steeples, mosques, races, armies, flags, nations, in order to deny the fact of death, which is the only fact we have. It seems to me that one ought to rejoice in the fact of deathâought to decide, indeed, to earn oneâs death by confronting with passion the conundrum of life. One is responsible to life: It is the small beacon in that terrifying darkness from which we come and to which we shall return. One must negotiate this passage as nobly as possible, for the sake of those who are coming after us.
- James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (via etâcetera)
This moment is monumental beyond words. It will go down as one of the defining moments in Palestinian history. This is easily the most brutal Israeli offense in the past few decades, with no end in sight. Not only by the numbers, but the theatrics of politicians, journalists and paid agents of Zionist lobbies who run themselves in circles, excavating any route to justify and encourage genocide. And some time in the future, it will be fashionable, innate almost to oppose Zionist violence. Maybe not now. Maybe not even in a decade, the day, however, is inevitable.
All of our actions and inactions will weigh on us and its a choice weâll all have to answer for. But unlike the atrocities of the far past, in this day and age, the internet preserves all.
The names and words of each of you criminals who rally behind the senseless massacre of Palestinians will be engraved into the consciousness of social media and younger generations for time immemorial. When your children, nieces, nephews and their children ask you where you were, what you thought and what you were doing when a people were declared undesirable by a colonialist political practice, what will you tell them?
When Israeli settler colonialism is long and dead and viewed as a historical tragedy, how will you rationalize that you chose to actively enable it? That you couldâve been on the side of justice and you chose to disparage it? You have a peopleâs blood on your hands and thatâs a crime you will live with forever. Are you prepared to handle that?
The first time it was reported that our friends were being butchered there was a cry of horror. Then a hundred were butchered. But when a thousand were butchered and there was no end to the butchery, a blanket of silence spread. When evil-doing comes like falling rain, nobody calls out âstop!â When crimes begin to pile up they become invisible. When sufferings become unendurable the cries are no longer heard. The cries, too, fall like rain in summer.
Bertolt Brecht (via synaesthesâia)
Linda Evangelista Vogue Italia, February 1989
Asthétiques - Perfection Tee. shop.asthetiques.com
ifloveisnotenough I haven't been on Tumblr lately, but I just saw your comment. I can't imagine any of it either - always a heavy feeling.
I really hope we get to see each other this summer soon :)