I’m obsessed. Play it here: http://hairnah.com/

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Not today Justin
i don't do bad sauce passes
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
DEAR READER
noise dept.
dirt enthusiast

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kiana Khansmith
Stranger Things
we're not kids anymore.
Jules of Nature
taylor price
trying on a metaphor
Cosmic Funnies
Cosimo Galluzzi
Monterey Bay Aquarium

tannertan36
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
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@decolonizehistory
I’m obsessed. Play it here: http://hairnah.com/
indeed. 💓
SAD ASIAN GIRLS CLUB ART BOOKS WILL BE AVAILABLE TOMORROW!
Three issues of curated submissions by female Asian artists and writers will be available for purchase tomorrow, as well as one full volume of all three.
Issue 1: Photography and Illustration Issue 2: Poetry, Journal Entries and Essays Issue 3: Film and Mixed Media
Thanks again to all who submitted and participated in this project!
Beautifying old buildings of Cairo ©
by Nour El Demerdash
Are you currently watching Orange is the New Black? Are you ready to make a commitment to showing solidarity to those the show is making a profit off of? On
Hey y’all, I am holding a lot of feelings for the most recent season of Orange is the New Black right now. For those of you who have not finished this season, I imagine you will soon share my sentitment. With all of my feelings, of primarily anger, I want to take some sort of action here. I don’t stand behind the storyline the show chose to make, but I do know what happened this season is not an unrealistic story. We are watching a TV show in our beds, while eating snacks, and there are real prisoners facing unjust, humiliating, and dangerous treatment. With this in mind, supporting queer, trans QTPOC, and women who a re incarcerated is overwhelmingly important. Black and Pink is an organization that I have cared about for a while because they not only find countless ways to help those already incarcerated, but they work for prison abolition (which while watching this show, particularly this season, I hope you have at least questioned the effectiveness and safety of prisons and noticed racism, transphobia, sexism, ableism, and homophobia downwardly and even laterally).Black and Pink is asking for pledges so that OITNB viewers can commit to donating to real incarcerated people for every episode you watch. I am urging any of my followers to pledge to donate to Black and Pink or one of their other partners on this link, even just a dollar per episode you watch contributes to supporting QT/POC/WOMEN who are incarcerated. If you are not able to donate or want to make an extra step, sign up to recieve a pen pal. Reblog to spread the word.
Beyoncé | 6 Inch | Lemonade
June Jordan | Memo:
Beyoncé | 6 Inch | Lemonade
Our Bodies, Ourselves
Foreword by Adrienne Rich | Directed by Desire: The Collected Poems of June Jordan
Beyoncé | Lemonade (Script)
June Jordan | Poem for Nana
Beyoncé | Pray You Catch Me | Lemonade
June Jordan | Who Look at Me
Beyoncé | Lemonade (Script)
June Jordan | Getting Down to Get Over
Beyoncé | Lemonade (Script)
June Jordan | Who Look at Me
look at the smile on me, look at the owl on me
The black power series. Coming sooner than you think
‘Black power is embracing the beauty of being black even though the whole world has taught us otherwise’ quoted from @in.maevasheart
Tributes placed for the Iraqi children and teenagers who lost their lives playing football a few days ago and receiving awards for their merits. It’s a rough knowing that IS thinks that children are bodies to weaponise. Respect, solidarity, love and peace to all the families of the victims.
Persepolis 1976, Iran, Bruno Barbey.
On March 18th 2016, a Friday afternoon, I checked in with my Black Lives Matter Toronto team. The official statement from the Special Investigations Unit had just been released; the officer responsible for killing Andrew Loku would not be charged.
On July 5th 2015, Andrew Loku was shot and killed by Toronto Police Services.
If there are any of you reading this who has ever felt driven to the edge by a loud neighbour, one who constantly bangs on your ceiling, who ignores every effort you’ve made to bargain and plead, who doesn’t care for the days and months of accumulated sleep loss, imagine being in that place again.
Now imagine being executed for it.
Andrew Loku, like many of us before, went upstairs to rebut his neighbour for the umpteenth time on their constant noise. He used a hammer to bang on their door, and banged the hallway and stairway railing as he made his way back down to his floor.
That was just before midnight, by just after midnight he was dead. […]
BLMTO held an action this Sunday March 20th, and began #BLMTOtentcity, an occupation of Nathan Phillips Square that began as a rally. The Toronto Police bullied and threatened arrest. The community, the fire keeping people warm, tents and art were all threatened by police. They were in riot gear, on horses, in vans and in cars.
The occupation moved to Toronto Police Headquarters as planned, provisions were set up, well contained community fires were lit, and the pitched tents were named to represent the gross injustices of Toronto and Canada at large.
The tents were named Alex Wettlaufer, Sammy Yatim’s friend, both of whom were killed by police, Andrew Loku and Jermaine Carby, Francisco Javier Romero Astorga and Melkioro Gahungu, who both died in Canadian immigration enforcement custody in less than a week.
They were named Africville and Afrofest, one a Black settlement that Canada made every effort to erase and another a Pan-Afrikan festival the City of Toronto attempted to demean, just as they did with massive budget cuts to Caribana. Space was held for Sumaya Dalmar, who represents the violence that is inflicted on Black trans women and sex workers, who must maneuver around TAVIS (Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention Strategy), and criminalization in order to survive. We don’t believe she died they way they said she did.
BLMTO, our ally team, Toronto’s dedicated community organizers and new converts alike have been keeping #TentCity alive. On March 21st, only one night in, the Toronto Police came and rushed the crowd of peaceful protestors, some of whom were elders and children, kicking, punching and dragging people while their sirens blared and their lights disoriented the crowd.
They attacked mostly Black women. They threw unknown chemicals into the air that landed on people’s clothing and skin. They had agents in hazmat suits pore those same chemicals onto the community fires, and broke and stole the tents.
#BLMTOtentcity is ripping apart the myth of the racial haven of Canada, a myth has been allowed to exist due to, for example, no race-based statistics on fatal police encounters are kept by the SIU, Statistics Canada, Toronto Police, or the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, and its constant investment in its false legacy as the hope in the north, denying its violent history and using language as ‘not as bad as the states’ to hide.
#TentCity is bringing together this country’s legacy of colonial violence, its anti-Black racism and three centuries of enslavement, its mass incarceration of Black and Indigenous people, Indigenous genocide, its racist and deadly migrant and immigration practices, its transphobia and misogyny, its deeply embedded Islamophobia apparent in terrorism implications with our actions.
The lie, one that has caused uphill battles for so many of us who live in Canada, is being exposed.
At this moment, BLMTO is planning to do food drives for homeless and street involved people with excess food donations we have received for our action.
The vision of truth and decolonization, the friendships, the solidarity and coalitions built, the retelling of a truer Canadian history around the community fires, the reclaiming of space, the reimagining of public safety, programming, and the flames lit in each of our hearts will exist long after this action action has concluded.
But we aren’t there just yet. #BLMTOtentcity still stands strong at 72 hours as I write this.
As for what’s next?
Keep your eye on the final hour.
Black and Indigenous community connecting through struggle and ceremony. Speaking our prayers into the sacred medicine, tobacco and placing these in the fire. Grateful for this space.#blmtoTENTCITY
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BLMTOtentcity IS STILL POSTED AT THE TORONTO POLICE HEADQUARTERS. BRING HOT TEA/COFFEE/SOUP/OTHER FOOD ITEMS AS WELL AS ANYTHING TO KEEP THEM WARM LIKE BLANKETS, SCARVES, GLOVES, ETC!!!
“Artist David Louis Wall brought these protest images from 15 years ago into the space. The Canadian state and police force anti-black long time. #BlackLivesMatterTO #blmtoTENTCITY#blmtoBLACKCITY ”
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