Decolonize America
This seemed like a good day to announce that our Decolonize Box Logo Hoodies are back in limited stock, for a limited time. Sizing is available here.
All power to the people.
Mike Driver
art blog(derogatory)

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Cosmic Funnies
AnasAbdin
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

if i look back, i am lost

@theartofmadeline
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

izzy's playlists!
Jules of Nature
$LAYYYTER
KIROKAZE
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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JVL
Three Goblin Art
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
todays bird

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@decolonizingmedia
Decolonize America
This seemed like a good day to announce that our Decolonize Box Logo Hoodies are back in limited stock, for a limited time. Sizing is available here.
All power to the people.
It’s Thanksgiving once again: that day, every year, when we are all gluttonous to celebrate the fact that ‘Pilgrims and Indians’ had a harmonious meal — at least that is how it has been framed hist…
Decolonize e’ryday.
Indigenous In New York
A new piece from Matika Wilbur and her amazing Project 562.
#DecolonizeYourPerception
From now until Infinity. People’s Indigenous Day. Indigenize ✊ Decolonize ✊ Power ✊ Unity ✊ This is our Land always has been. #FuccColumbusday #Takingourpowerback
“Indigenous People Day” by Tsinajini Grafix.
#art4 #art4change #artivism #artivist #activist #politicalart #humanrights #socialjustice #racialjustice #columbusday #decolonize #deconstructingborders #IndigenousPeople #indigenous #indigenousart #indigenouspeopleday
Abolition Journal’s Inaugural Issue – Call for Submissions
Abolition: A Journal of Insurgent Politics is seeking submissions for the journal’s inaugural issue. Abolition is a collectively run project supporting radical scholarly and activist research, publishing and disseminating work that encourages us to make the impossible possible, to seek transformation well beyond policy changes and toward revolutionary abolitionism. In that spirit, the journal invites submissions that engage with the meaning, practices, and politics of abolitionism in any historical and geographical context. This means that we are interested in a wide interpretation of abolitionism, including topics such as (but in no way limited to): prison and police abolitionism, decolonization, slavery abolitionism, anti-statism, anti-racism, labor organizing, anti-capitalism, radical feminism, queer and trans* politics, Indigenous people’s politics, migrant activism, social ecology, animal rights and liberation, and radical pedagogy. Recognizing that the best movement-relevant intellectual work is happening both in the movements themselves and in the communities with whom they organize, the journal aims to support activists, artists, and scholars whose work amplifies such grassroots activity. We encourage submissions across a range of formats and approaches – scholarly essays, art, poetry, multi-media, interviews, field notes, documentary, etc. – that are presented in an accessible manner.
Abolition seeks to publish a wide variety of work and this call is open to various forms of writing and creative material. While strict word limits will not be enforced, we suggest the following ranges for submissions:
Short Interventions (1000-2000 words);
Scholarly Papers (5000-10000 words);
Interviews (3000-5000 words);
Creative Works (open).
All submissions will be reviewed in a manner consistent with the journal’s mission. We are building relationships for a new kind of peer review that can serve as an insurgent tool to work across and even subvert the academic-activist divide and reject hierarchical definitions of “peers.” Thus, our Collective and Editorial Review Board are comprised of individuals who approach abolitionism from varied personal, political, and structural positions. Unlike most journals, our review process includes non-academic activists and artists in addition to academics. Editorial decisions will be made according to principles of anti-hierarchical power, democratic consensus, and with a preference for work produced by members of under-represented groups in the academy and publishing. For more information about the journal, please see our website, http://abolitionjournal.org. All of our publications will be accessible, free, and open access, rejecting the paywalls of the publishing industry. We will also produce hard-copy versions for circulation to communities lacking internet access and actively work to make copies available to persons incarcerated and detained by the state.
To be considered for Issue One, please submit completed work (including papers, interviews, works of art, etc.) by January 15, 2016. Submissions and inquiries can be sent to [email protected].
[Photos in banner image: Ferguson protester from James Keivom/New York Daily News; Mi’kmaq anti-fracking protester from @Osmich]
ATTN DECOLONIAL SCHOLARS
Happy Indigenous Peoples Day
#IndigenousPeoplesDay poster by Native artist Jackie Fawn showcasing young Indigenous organizers.
S/O to Remy, Naelyn, MC Rhetorik, Van and all the amazing Indigenous organizers and community members putting in much work for the struggle!
Create. Organize. Celebrate. Build.
DOWNLOAD: Staying Underground Mixtape – Collaborator 25: Culturite
Download a hype, collaborative mixtape between Staying Underground and RPM’s Culturite.
And it’s only fitting that we drop this new collab on October 12th—Indigenous Peoples’ Day.
Let’s make this a time to reorient our attention away from the evils of colonial marauders, and toward the celebration of Indigenous life—and the music that unites us in struggle for a more decolonized world.
READ THE REST & DOWNLOAD
Decolonize Your Playlist.
A huge shout out to those universities that contacted me for tees for their #indigenousPeoplesDay events! San Diego State University, Cal State University San Marcos, the University of San Diego and the Rochester Institute of Technology in NY. Check out the OXDX snapchat for their takeovers! SC: oxdxclothing
DOWNLOAD: The imagineNATIVE 2015 Mixtape, Featuring GlitClit, Madeskimo, and Akkil
RPM is pleased to present the 2015 imagineNATIVE mixtape, as part of the festival’s 16th annual celebration of Indigenous creativity.
On Saturday, October 17, imagineNATIVE will present a live music performance night “The Beat DJ POW! WOW!” — featuring electronic sets from GlitClit (Lido Pimienta), Madeskimo, and Akkil.
To get you hyped for the show, we’ve assembled a fresh, new mixtape featuring all three of the artists performing at the show.
DOWNLOAD IT HERE: http://rpm.fm/music/download-imaginenative-2015-mixtape/
#IndigenousPeoplesDay
Everyday is Indigenous Peoples Day.
WE WERE HERE. WE ARE HERE.
TODAY WE CELEBRATE INDIGENOUS EXISTENCE.
Defending the Amazon
The Guardians are one of two indigenous groups on the eastern fringe of the Amazon that have taken radical action to reduce illegal logging. They have tied up loggers, torched their trucks and tractors, and kicked them off the reserves.
As a result, such logging has sharply declined in these territories. But the indigenous groups have faced reprisal attacks and death threats for their actions, raising fears of more violence in an area known for its lawlessness.
DEFEND THE LAND.
Thousands of Zapatistas March in Mexico to Mark the One Year Anniversary of the Ayotzinapa 43
“We do not scream out of grief. We do not cry out of sorrow. We do not murmur in resignation.
Our voice is so That Those Who are absent find the path of return.
So That They Know That Even Though They are here They are absent.
So That They Do not Forget That They are not forgotten.
Because of this: from pain, from rage, for truth, for justice, for Ayotzinapa and for all of the Ayotzinapas That wound the calendars and geographies from below.
This is why we resist.
This is why we rebel.
Because the time will come When Those Who will owe us everything Have to pay.”
Read the EZLN’s full communiqué: From Pain, from Rage, for Truth, for Justice.
Resistance is the cure for Indigenous suicides. There is nothing 'wrong' with Indigenous individuals that was not caused by the relentless violence of ongoing colonization, and therefore the treatment of the fatal condition of dispossession and oppression is to right that basic wrong.
Haudenosaunee professor publishes new study into Indigenous Suicide
RESIST. DECOLONIZE. SURVIVE.
A new cultural temperament is gradually engulfing post-apartheid urban South Africa. For the time being, it goes by the name 'decolonization' – in truth a psychic state more than a political project in the strict sense of the term.
Achille Mbembe on The State of South African Political Life | Africa is a Country
WATCH: “CABRALISTA” (Part 1) - Documentary Film
Part 1 of a new documentary film trilogy exploring the legacy of anticolonial thinker and leader, Amilcar Cabral, and the rise of the Cabralist movement on the African continent.
RISE & DECOLONIZE.
Unist'ot'en clan member Brenda Michell talks about potential RCMP action at the camp