Black women will always be too loud for a world that never intended on listening to us
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Peter Solarz
NASA

blake kathryn

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art blog(derogatory)
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titsay
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Today's Document
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Janaina Medeiros
Sweet Seals For You, Always
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
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@ofcabbagezandkingz
Black women will always be too loud for a world that never intended on listening to us
Missy Elliott photographed by Maki Kawakita for Dazed & Confused, July 2005.
muted pink
Paris Is Burning (Jennie Livingston, 1990)
Employers desire foreign workers who are accustomed to the hazardous work sites of industrial construction; in particular, they specifically solicit migrants who do not have a history of labor organizing within SWANA. In response, labor brokerage firms brand themselves as offering migrant workers who are deferential. Often, labor brokers conflate the category of South Asian with docility; [...] as inherently passive, disciplined, and, most important, unfettered by volatile working conditions. "We say quality, they [U.S. employers] say seasoned. We both know what it means. Workers who are not going to quit, not going to run away in the foreign country and do as they are told.” [...]
For migrants, the U.S. oil industry presents a rare chance to apply their existing skill set in a country with options for permanent residency and sponsorship of family members. Migrants wish to find an end to their temporary worker status; they imagine the United States as a liberal economy in which labor standards are enforced and there are opportunities for citizenship and building a life for their family. [...] What brokers fail to explain is that South Asian migrants are being recruited as guest workers. Migrants will not have access to U.S. citizenship or visas for family members; in fact, their employment status will be quite similar to their SWANA migration.
While nations such as the Philippines have both state-mandated and independent migrant rights agencies, the Indian government has minimal avenues for worker protection. These are limited to hotlines for reporting abusive foreign employers and Indian consulates located in a few select countries of the SWANA region. [... Brokers] emphasize the docility of Indian migrants in comparison to the disruptive tendencies of other Asian migrant workers. [...] “Some of these Filipino men you see make a lot of trouble in the Arab countries. Even their women, who work as maids and such, lash out. The employer says one wrong thing and the workers get the whole country [the Philippines] on the street. [...] But you don’t see our people creating a tamasha [spectacle] overseas.” [...] Just as Filipinx migrants are racialized to be undisciplined labor, Indian brokers construct divisions within the South Asian workforce to promote the primacy of their own firms. In particular, Pakistani workers are racialized as an abrasive population.
[...] While the public image of the South Asian American community remains as model minorities, presumed to be primarily upwardly mobile professionals, the global reality of the population is quite to the contrary. [...] From the historic colonial routes initiated by British occupation of South Asia to the emergence of energy markets within the countries of SWANA, migrants have been recruited to build industries by contributing their labor to construction projects. Within the last decade, these South Asian migrants, with experience in the SWANA oil industry, have been actively solicited as guest workers into the energy sector of the United States. The growth of hydraulic fracturing has opened new territory for oil extraction; capitalizing on the potential market are numerous stakeholders who have invested in industrial construction projects across the southwestern United States. The solicitation of South Asian construction workers is not coincidental. [...] Kartik, a globally competitive firm’s broker, explains the connection of Indian labor to practices of the past. “You know we come from a long history of working in foreign lands. Even the British used to send us to Africa and the Arab regions to work in the mines and oil fields. It’s part of our history.”
Seasoning Labor: Contemporary South Asian Migrations and the Racialization of Immigrant Workers, Saunjuhi Verma in the Journal of Asian American Studies
Chaz Needs an Enucleation!
This is my mom's cat Chaz. He's a grumpy old man who's been with us for about 8 years. Over the past year his left eye has been deteriorating due to cataracts and it has finally reached the point where the swelling has caused a slight tear in the eyeball and he needs surgery. My mom was able to apply for scholarships and so the total cost of the surgery is only $700, but as you can imagine that is still a large amount for someone to just have and drop. The vet office has a donation site where all donations will go directly to the vet and into his account.
I can also make art for anyone that wants to donate. Everything below is old examples, but it's still examples of what I do. I draw traditional mostly, but also paint and do collages. This comes with the added bonus that I can physically send the art to you (we can negotiate shipping depending on where you live)
Here's the link to the donation website:
Chaz needs your help | Waggle Crowdfunding for Cats
Below the cut are pictures of him from the past couple days (be warned that there is some yucky eye trauma)
Please help if you're able to. Thank you for reading!
by bjmstudioflowers
by saysie
Out of Touch
"After the Carnival" in Rio de Janeiro, photograph by Alain Draeger, 1983
In light of Hulk Hogan finally croaking and being dragged into hell, I hope pro wrestlers unionize