Our Lady of Sorrows…
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@greyseashitpost
Our Lady of Sorrows…
Anna Archive was a goddess of knowledge worshipped in the early 21st century[1][2]. Cultists of Anna would frequently move the shrines dedicated to her from place to place in great secrecy[1][3], requiring worshippers to possess secret information in order to access the far greater knowledge provided by worship, possibly as a form of sacrifice[Original research?]. Worship of Anna is associated with the increased enforcement of intellectual property rights at the time[1][4], as well as greater inaccessibility of academic materials due to the late-imperial academic crisis[5][6][Failed verification.]. It has been suggested[By whom?] that the name Anna Archive may be the origin of the word archive, referring to a repository of information[7].
no one says big mood anymore. no one even says mood. no one says anything. all thats left is a dry wind, that scours my face until i bleed
tucker rule did you fuck ray toro. community dick tucker rule did you FUCK ray toro (and other questions like: is the sky blue?)
i love my friend who i’m at the beach w dearly. her family listens to a lot of like. clapping music. like guys in wide brim hats clapping. sonically i am tortured
I DO need to see him whimpering whining and writhing unfortunately
beach !
soon my friend will pick me up and we will go to the beach :) i love my friend and i love the beach :)
I: Who of you gets the most girls? Everyone: *laughs*
i love you lesbian frank
no and i can take it further
i’ve been spending a lot of time at the pool cause i’m unemployed and i’ve been MILITANT about my sunscreen use and im still getting really tan shout out to italy sorry to my body for the sun damage
MCR as monsters
my plans ive been looking forward to have been suddenly changed at the last minute due to circumstances beyond anyone’s control i wish i could be normal about this but i actually can’t
so i read a lot of books about native american history and i know that there is a perception of books & other informative works on these topics as being extremely depressing. this isn’t entirely wrong because obviously many discuss a history of genocide which is sad and of course an extremely serious topic. that being said, i think it’s important to know that every really good book about this history i have read takes great pains to remind you that native american communities and people are still here. that for every historical injustice, there is a triumph.
in his book This Land Is There Land, historian David Silverman spends the majority of the book taking the reader through the long bloody history of how white settlement affected the Wampanoag people. From the untold devastation of disease, broken treaties, outright murder, the removal of Wampanoag children to be raised as servants in white homes, the death of the Wampanoag language, and the fight in the 20th century for Wampanoag communities to even be recognized as native, this is generally a history of continued injustice.
but that is not how the book ends, because all of that was not the end of the Wampanoag people. today, many Wampanoag tribal members live on two reservations that were part of their ancestors’ original homeland. Silverman spends the last chapter of his book discussing many aspects of modern tribal life for the Wampanoag. most powerfully, he talks about the work of Jesse Little Doe Baird, a Mashpee Wampanoag who started having dreams of her ancestors speaking to her, only she could not understand them. inspired by her dreams, she started working to reconstruct the Wampanoag language from historical records. today, there the tribe operates a Wampanoag language immersion school, where Wampanoag children learn Wampanoag as a first language on the same land their people have continuously inhabited for hundreds of years.
never fall for the colonial lie that indigenous people have vanished. every good book on this history needs to expose that lie.