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@mumfordandsluts
me: *sees stars and points at them* yes
person: what?
me: *sounding more forceful* YES
From Medium:
How Stevie Wonder Helped Create Martin Luther King Day
On the evening of April 4, 1968, teen music sensation Stevie Wonder was dozing off in the back of a car on his way home to Detroit from the Michigan School for the Blind, when the news crackled over the radio: Martin Luther King Jr. had just been assassinated in Memphis. His driver quickly turned off the radio and they drove on in silence and shock, tears streaming down Wonderâs face.
Five days later, Wonder flew to Atlanta for the slain civil rights heroâs funeral, as riots erupted in several cities, the country still reeling. He joined Harry Belafonte, Aretha Franklin, Mahalia Jackson, Eartha Kitt, Diana Ross and a long list of politicians and pastors who mourned King, prayed for a nation in which all men are created equal and vowed to continue the fight for freedom.
Wonder was still in shockâhe remembered how, when he was five, he first heard about King as he listened to coverage of the Montgomery bus boycott on the radio. âI asked, âWhy donât they like colored people? Whatâs the difference?â I still canât see the difference.â As a young teenager, when Wonder was performing with the Motown Revue in Alabama, he experienced first-hand the evils of segregationâhe remembers someone shooting at their tour bus, just missing the gas tank. When he was 15, Wonder finally met King, shaking his hand at a freedom rally in Chicago.
At the funeral, Wonder was joined by his local representative, young African-American Congressman John Conyers, who had just introduced a bill to honor Kingâs legacy by making his birthday a national holiday. Thus began an epic crusade, led by Wonder and some of the biggest names in musicâfrom Bob Marley to Michael Jacksonâto create Martin Luther King Day.
To overcome the resistance of conservative politicians, including President Reagan and many of his fellow citizens, Wonder put his career on hold, led rallies from coast to coast and galvanized millions of Americans with his passion and integrity.
But it took 15 years.
In the immediate wake of Kingâs death, the political establishment was more concerned with keeping things calm, tamping down unrest, and arresting rioters and activists. It was a violent yearâthat summer the Democratic convention in Chicago exploded in chaos and another inspiring leader, Robert F. Kennedy, was killed by an assassin. The country seemed on the verge of civil war.
Conyersâ bill languished in Congress for over a decade, through years of anti-war protests, Watergate and political corruption, stifled by inertia and malaise at the end of the 1970s. The dream was kept alive by labor unions, who viewed King as a working-class hero, with protests that slowly built up steam. At a General Motors plant in New York, a small group of auto workers refused to work on Kingâs birthday in 1969, and thousands of hospital workers in New York City went on strike until managers agreed to a paid holiday on the birthday. Kingâs widow, Coretta Scott King, led a birthday rally that year in Atlanta, where she was joined by Conyers and union leaders. By 1973, some of the countryâs largest unions, including the AFSCME and the United Autoworkers, made the paid holiday a regular demand in their contract negotiations.
Finally in 1979, President Jimmy Carter, who had been elected with the support of the unions, endorsed the bill to create the holiday. Carter made an emotional appearance at Kingâs old church, Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. But Congress refused to budge, led by conservative Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina, who denounced King as a lawbreaker who had been manipulated by Communists. The situation looked bleak.
By then, Wonder had matured from a young harmonica-playing sensation to a chart-topping music genius lauded for his complex rhythms and socially-conscious lyrics about racism, black liberation, love and unity. He had kept in touch with Coretta Scott King, regularly performing at rallies to push for the holiday. He told a cheering crowd in Atlanta in the summer of 1979, âIf we cannot celebrate a man who died for love, then how can we say we believe in it? It is up to me and you.â
Years earlier, Wonder had composed âHappy Birthday,â a song celebrating Kingâs life, dedicating the song and his next album to the cause. Originally he was going to record himself singing the traditional song to King but Wonder didnât know the music, so he âwrote the hook for a different âHappy Birthday,ââ remembers producer Malcolm Cecil. He held onto it until âthe movement for the holiday was gaining steam,â and made it the centerpiece of his next album, Hotter Than July. The recordâs sleeve design featured a large photograph of King with a passage urging fans to support the holiday bill: âWe still have a long road to travel until we reach the world that was his dream. We in the United States must not forget either his supreme sacrifice or that dream.â
That summer, Wonder called Coretta Scott King, telling her, âI had a dream about this song. And I imagined in this dream I was doing this song. We were marchingâwith petition signs to make for Dr. Kingâs birthday to become a national holiday.â
King was touched but she didnât have much hope, telling Wonder, âI wish you luck, you know. Weâre in a time where I donât think itâs going to happen.â
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tumblr flagged a post of a girl eating berries so fruit is for whores now reblog if youre a fruit eating whore
u can tell who the ancients of tumblr are bc theyâre the ones not posting anything abt where to find them if this site collapsesâŚwe know this site isnt going anywhereâŚ.the apocalypse couldnt stop this garbageâŚ..it has the cybernetic code of a cockroach
hell yeah. hey @sixpenceee, ya dig?
holy shit thank u all so much 4 the luv đ
over 10k notes??! holy shit thank u all glad u like my ink đ¤
Men think itâs ruder for a woman to say âdonât interrupt meâ than it is for them to interrupt her in the first place
id probably call that ruder. Jus cause I interrupt someone donât mean I was mentally thinking bout cutting this annoying ass bitch off. it just so happened my g.
I know you would call that ruder. Thatâs what the post was about.
Me enjoying the things that make me happy in the midst of chaos
by Emily Dickinson
tbh the worst thing about being a self aware mentally ill person is that people assume that because you understand your illness youâre automatically able to actually apply your knowledge to your life and cure yourself
my tiny human body isnât big enough to hold all the love thatâs inside me and thatâs why iâm always crying
Wow tea
but like, very specific and accurate teaÂ
hell yeah. hey @sixpenceee, ya dig?
If you are against rape, then you cannot wish rape upon inmates.
No ifs, ands, or buts.
Seriously. As a rape survivor, i fucking hate the âjokesâ about brock turner or bill cosby or whoever getting raped in prison as punishment bc it does nothing but reinforce the idea that sexual violation is deserved
Okay but I know a pedophile who raped at least two children and showed zero regret and that heâd do it again. I hope that scum is passed around like a cigarette and beaten.
Will that magically un-rape those kids or stop him raping more, or will it just make him angry and encourage both him and his attackers to rape more people who donât, in your eyes, âdeserveâ it?
Dunno. He deserves to suffer though. His wife lost custody of her child because of him. She had no clue what that sick fuck was up to and now can barely see her son. So, yes. Let him suffer.
And do all the people he will abuse afterwards, which, what with his having become angrier and more violent and no longer having anything to lose, will be more people and hurt more severely than if he hadnât been assaulted, also deserve to suffer?
Okay look. He molested me twice when we were younger then grew up to do the same to kids. Decent people shouldnât suffer. Rapists, abusers? They deserve hellfire. Iâm pisses that my tax dollars go to feeding that scum and keeping him living in breathing when all he wants to do is hurt others. Fuck him and all others like him.
Yes, and my point is that doing to him what he did to you WILL MAKE HIM DO WHAT HE DID AGAIN AND WORSE TO MORE PEOPLE, NOT FEWER. Every single study thatâs been done shows that either you get to be loudly angry or you get to actually protect kids, not both.
Itâs not about studies @chelonianmobile, itâs not about reforming the perpetrators, itâs vengeance, plain and simple, itâs about leveraging the harshest possible torture on a piece of shit individual who gave up their rights to life, liberty, and property when they did that sick shit until their sanity is broken and then hanging them like a rabid dog. As they deserve.
See, thatâs the thing. When we, as a society, prioritize what abusers deserve over what victims deserve, we are sacrificing the victims to the perpetrators. The side effect of that vengeful mindset is ultimately that rapists are enabled, and more innocents are victimized. Is that a consequence youâre willing to accept?
If not, you should probably start caring about what the evidence says about the efficacy of different justice systems.
US politicians and corporate leaders like to ignore evidence and research, too. They arenât doing it because they want the human population to die out, starting in impoverished countries; theyâre doing it because they want money, and they donât care if the consequence of their immediate gratification kills innocents.
But the world we live in is, ultimately, full of rape and catastrophic hurricanes because decision-makers arenât taking care with the long-term consequences of their actions. And actually preventing these things requires paying attention to the evidence about what does and doesnât work.
The problem with vengeance:
Itâs founded on the notion that âkarmaâ doesnât work, that there is no divine justice, that we should take the place of the gods we claim to honor and inflict the retribution we believe they would. Itâs founded on the idea that pain has mass, that it can be measured, that pain inflicted in one direction is best addressed by pain inflicted in the opposite direction, as if it were a pile of spikes and poison on a balance-scale, as if it were a spear the abuser has thrown and the way to counter that is to throw a spear the same size and shape back at him.
But abuse isnât a pile of ugly rocks and itâs not a spear. Itâs damage. Itâs torn flesh that bleeds; itâs a hole in the ceiling of your self that lets the rain in; itâs potholes in the road that force you to move slow or suffer more damage.
And you donât fix those by inflicting more damage. You donât fix its effects on a community by inflicting more damage. If someoneâs running around with a sword, cutting him not only wonât heal his victims, it wonât make the community a safer place: twice as many people bleeding is not better for anyone.
We need a different method. We need a different approach for those people in our communities who are so damaged, so misguided, so filled with hate or so lacking of empathy that they can do these horrible things.Â
If a person is irredeemable - an arguable point - then we should destroy him. Kill him and be done. But encouraging torture just means that we value torture as a tool, as a method of communication, as a way to build relationships.
(And thatâs aside from the practical side of things: While I understand the impulse to say, âI have been hurt; he should hurt as he hurt me,â rape will rarely result in that. He, after all, is not being betrayed by someone he trusted. That trauma canât be inflicted by strangers.)Â
There are ways to make most rapists suffer, to make them aware of the damage theyâve caused and repent and feel true guilt over it. But theyâre not quick and simple, and they have to be adjusted for the individual - they require accepting that this is a person, and calling out his humanity and empathy until he canât turn away from the truth.
Itâs hard. And most of us would rather just have monsters to blame. You donât have to feel guilt yourself for what happens to monsters.
And the cycle continues.
besides, if we let a rapist get raped in prison, thereâs still gonna be a rapist getting rewarded in this situation. prison rapists arenât noble defenders of justice, theyâre just rapists.
âprison rapists arenât noble defenders of justice, theyâre just rapists.â