E-mail snail whose shell is a Mac 128K from 1984…
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
will byers stan first human second

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titsay
Three Goblin Art
Peter Solarz

izzy's playlists!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Jules of Nature
we're not kids anymore.
Cosimo Galluzzi
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Kiana Khansmith
🪼
Mike Driver

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seen from Italy
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@jelly-jar-jeff
E-mail snail whose shell is a Mac 128K from 1984…
sh tk ll f m vwls n th dvrc
Aand II’m maakiing gooood uusee oof theem
Cnt hv sht n dtrt
Capitalism kills art
Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day by quietly remembering that Native Americans sent more aid to Ireland during the famine than Britain or the US.
specifically, it was the Choctaw nation that sent aid to the Irish during the famine
1. “more aid to ireland during the famine than britain” okay let’s clear this up, again– there was no famine, it was a genocide, commited specifically by the british. ireland was literally packed with food. the only crop that failed was the potato crop. the british had no problem with ships FULL OF FOOD leaving british ports on british ships from ireland to other places to make money. IT. WAS. NOT. A. FAMINE. IT. WAS. A. GENOCIDE. and that probably explains why britain didn’t “send aid”. britain was literally using the “famine” they manufactured to clear the land of indigenous irish people.
2. which lends poignancy and power to the attempt by the choctaw nation to send food to starving irish people.
3. there was much fanfair about this in the british press at the time, because of course the british government was lying to its own people about what they were doing. it’s convenient to blame natural disasters like “famine” when in fact it is mass murder– kinda like what’s going on in yemen right now. but to conclude, what didn’t receive a lot of fanfair in the british press is the fact that much of the corn and other food the choctaw nation attempted to send did not go to starving irish people, it was essentially hijacked and went to feed british pigs and livestock.
4. which is why every saint patrick’s day we remember the genocide (one of many the british attempted in ireland) of black ‘47. and we always remember the native americans who responded in such good will and with such generosity to starving people an ocean away from them.
And - all through primary school (until age 12) it was taught as a famine; only in secondary school did we learn that the British caused it deliberately. There’s a fair amount of Irish YA novels about the Famine (can’t remember titles off the top of my head), and they’re all pretty brutal with the facts of what happened. Not to mention most people’s great-grandparents probably lived through it - it’s not that far back.
Also there’s a monument to the Choctaw nation somewhere up the country for the help.
It’s by Alex Pentek, it’s in Bailick Park, Midleton, Co. Cork, and it’s called “Kindred Spirits”.
“The English never remember and the Irish never forget.” (Chesterton)
Not forgetting is why there are so many Irish names here.
(The link above is to donate to the Navajo & Hopi Families COVID-19 Relief Fund - definitely contribute if you can! I could not find a website to donate to a Choctaw relief fund.)
US of A
Bulgarian folk costumes from the region of Pleven
-Lessie
i taught myself my arts so i know it’s not Right or good the materials are cheap and cringe the process ignorant nothing grand or w/e but it means a lot to me sooo i don’t mind what i don’t know that’s how i can share my work so comfortably
no more talking to myself i am not good for each other
The fierce little beasts à la Hieronymus Bosch of Ravi Zupa, master from Denver, Colorado: “Look for options!” ~ 2019
malleusdelic
Angela Davis speaking behind a four-sided bulletproof glass shield at Madison Square Garden, 29 June 1972.
Life Magazine, June 25, 1925
Jewish khamsa amulet from Essaouira, Morocco c. 1900 (source)
moths are precious
The Daily Mirror, July 13, 1931 Image © The British Library Board. All Rights Reserved.
Kati Horna, Untitled, series, Oda a la necrofilia, Mexico Galerie, 1962