Xuebing Du
Three Goblin Art
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

JBB: An Artblog!
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★
Stranger Things
noise dept.
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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
hello vonnie
trying on a metaphor
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER

tannertan36
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@borderlessthings
“Leslie [Feinberg] was a tremendous organizer. We were so small, and we saw that something had to be done. But how could we get the people of Boston to oppose the racists? So Leslie tried something: Leslie went to the lesbian bars. There was a famous bar called The Saints. Everybody knew The Saints; it had been raided a number of times. Leslie went and started making speeches, started making contacts, started doing this, started doing that. One night, Leslie got the whole Saints bar and a sister bar to do a car caravan at midnight. They went to South Boston, which was the stronghold of the racist movement, and put up posters all night long, so when they woke up in the morning South Boston was full of antiracist posters. And the lesbian community had really taken it to heart that they were an integral part of this movement. Only Leslie could have done that. The movements at that time — gay, lesbian, and trans — were kind of isolated. And Leslie brought the lesbian and gay community to an antiracist march that was led by the black community. It was a tremendous step forward in the civil rights movement as a whole, both for the black community and for bringing gay, lesbian, and trans people into the movement. You just felt it. The movement felt it. The March Against Racism itself was fantastic. Many thousands showed up. The city opposed it, and had the police attack it. We literally pushed the police back and marched to Boston Common. It was one of the best marches Boston had ever seen. And Leslie was a huge part of it, and the gay and lesbian community was a part of it for the first time. That’s what Leslie’s life was: not just staying in the community that Leslie was part of, but making sure the working class as a whole, that we all moved together.”
—
Ed Childs, “Remember Me as a Revolutionary Communist”: Reflections on the life of Leslie Feinberg, the late radical activist and author of Stone Butch Blues. (via endwealth)
I really recommend reading the entire article, it includes lots of great stories about Feinberg’s life that I never knew.
(via endwealth)
TBT: That time in 2002 when hundreds of Australians rolled up on the Woomera refugee internment camp in the middle of the desert, tore the fences and walls down, and helped the refugees imprisoned there escape. Details.
Sooyoung Kim [Artstation]
“Here’s to the root work, to building a house of cards on a moving train, to giving ourselves a second chance to be amazed by the stillness of our hands and the length of our temper.”
—
Mila Cuda & Sarah Nwafor, “Ode to Femme”
Performing at 2018 CUPSI in Philadelphia, PA. Want Button Poetry to come to your city? You can help make it possible!
Lovers returning home on the Malkuth Line, 23:00
sometimes reality wins one
cozy dog and travel dog
Cumulomancer witches calling in the rain
Cumulomancer witches calling in the rain
Art G.Shvecova (Design graphics - SUMMER NIGHT_290718)
Art G.Shvecova (Design graphics - Galactic purple_gold stars_010718)
art print commissioned for this anthology
Lily vs rainbow
Today's gender is "accidently" summoning a demon in Wal-Mart and having to get them Ice cream for sacrifice