Loop for animation festival
Track by fuzzyloops on instagram

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#extradirty
KIROKAZE

pixel skylines
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Origami Around
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Stranger Things

titsay
Game of Thrones Daily

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Discoholic 🪩
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
🪼
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NASA
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.

seen from Malaysia

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@gargoogle
Loop for animation festival
Track by fuzzyloops on instagram
Curves
PRE-ORDERS NOW OPEN!
My Liege - queer knights in love
An art book collaboration between @dames-zine , us, and 60 artists! Our book celebrates queer love and warriors of all kinds.
Sneak peek: @ fellhound
Help us reach our funding goal here:
An art book about queer knights - celebrating all knights and their love.
On this day, 16 June 1982, the Bradford 12, all members of the United Black Youth League on trial for preparing to defend their community from fascists, were acquitted of all charges in a landmark case. They had been arrested for preparing a cache of petrol bombs to protect themselves from fascists who had been active in the area, carrying out racist attacks. One of the defendants, Tariq Mehmood, defended himself in court, and along with the other defence lawyers they laid bare mass police negligence with regards to defending Asian and Afro-Caribbean communities from racist attacks. The not guilty verdicts effectively established the rights of Black and Asian communities to self-defence. The trial also saw a nationwide campaign for the activists' release with their comrades declaring "The politicians and police have failed us. Our youth are our only protection. [...] Now they have been taken away from us. We must not fail them. We must fight to bring them back. They have defended our community. We must now defend them." At that time in Britain, racists considered all people of colour as "Black", so Afro-Caribbean, Asian and other activists of colour formed the idea of "political Blackness" to try to build unity against racism. Learn more from Tariq Mehmood in our podcast episodes 33-34: https://workingclasshistory.com/2019/09/18/e28-29-asian-youth-movements-in-bradford/
butch/femme date night 💘
patreon // buy prints here
enjoying the view ;)
patreon // buy prints here
Xena & Gabrielle
they were so important to me as a baby lesbian :')
patreon // buy prints here
I've got a crush on you 💘
patreon // buy prints here
let's manifest
patreon // buy prints here
On this day, 15 June 1974, Kevin Gately, a twenty-year-old Warwick University student, was killed during a demonstration against the fascist National Front (NF) in Red Lion Square, London. The NF had planned a meeting in Conway Hall with the title "Stop immigration – start repatriation". There was a large counter-demonstration, as well as a smaller contingent of anti-fascists who blocked the doors of the hall in an attempt to prevent the meeting from taking place. Anti-racist protesters were then attacked by police, including the notoriously violent Special Patrol Group. After 15 minutes of clashes Gately, a mathematics student of Irish descent, was found prone on the ground and taken to hospital. Police claimed that he had no physical injuries, but an inquest determined his death was caused by a cerebral haemorrhage following a blow to the head from a blunt instrument. Fellow protesters accused the police of murder, and several newspapers alleged that his death was most likely the result of a blow from a baton wielded by mounted police. An official enquiry into Gately's death by Lord Scarman completely exonerated police and instead primarily blamed the deaths on a left-wing organisation, the International Marxist Group, which led the blockade of Conway Hall. The attempted blockade was also condemned by the Communist Party of Great Britain, which criticised the "adventurist tactics of a minority". In the wake of the death, the first on a protest in mainland Britain since 1919, support for militant antifascism grew. We've got lots of antifascist books and merchandise available in our online store: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/collections/anti-fascist
On this day, 15 June 1990, the Battle of Century City took place, as police in Los Angeles attacked striking janitors and their supporters during a peaceful Service Employees International Union demonstration. Janitors in the Century City office complex, most of whom were employed by cleaning contractor ISS, had gone out on strike on May 29 demanding improvements to pay and conditions. On the June 15 protest, LAPD officers brutally attacked the workers and their supporters, leaving several people seriously injured, including one pregnant woman who miscarried as a result. Rather than deter the workers, the violence caused mass outrage. And ISS subsequently agreed to recognise the workers' union, provide for family health coverage and pay a living wage. The event also began to be commemorated with the creation of an annual June 15 Justice for Janitors Day. This is one of hundreds of stories featured in our book, Working Class History: Everyday Acts of Resistance & Rebellion, available with global shipping: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/products/working-class-history-everyday-acts-resistance-rebellion-book
On this day, 14 June 2017, a fire began in the Grenfell Tower block of flats in West London, which killed 72 people and destroyed 151 homes. The fire began due to an electrical fault in a freezer, but it then spread rapidly. The main reason for the fast spread of the fire was the fact that flammable cladding was installed all around the building during its refurbishment by Rydon Construction at the behest of the Conservative local council in 2016. Zinc, more fire-resistant cladding was originally proposed for the work, but instead, flammable aluminium cladding was used because it was £300,000 cheaper. For years, Grenfell’s residents, who were working-class social housing tenants, and mostly people of colour, had complained about inadequate fire safety measures in the building. Rather than blame the landlord, developers or the Conservative government responsible for fire regulations, right-wing media like the Daily Mail began a campaign attempting to demonise residents of the building, and firefighters, for the deaths. Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg even blamed those killed for their own deaths, claiming that they lacked “common sense”. However, a government-commissioned inquiry later determined that the flammable cladding was the primary reason for the high death toll, and that residents had followed the advice of emergency services. After the fire, survivors of the disaster, as well as other local residents and supporters, began a campaign demanding justice for those killed, and working to ensure no such fire happens again in the UK. More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/14644/grenfell-tower-fire
Ooh, you twitched! Was that too much?
*Delighted whimpering noises*
Oops. 😇
Definitely not getting any work done now.
[looking at people younger than me] you have your whole life ahead of you [looking at people older than me] you have your whole life ahead of you [looking at myself] its over
When the brainfog finally clears and you can think properly for the first time in ages... and then you do a ton of hypnosis to get it back. 🫠
Some of you don't know that imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy, monotonous, barren, boring, and imaginary good is boring; real good is always new, marvelous, intoxicating, and it shows.
Josephine Baker in Zouzou (1934)