stopover in iceland
Cosimo Galluzzi
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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almost home
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todays bird

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we're not kids anymore.
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JBB: An Artblog!

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Kaledo Art
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@onthe10thfloor
stopover in iceland
Illustrated plates by DixonDoesDoodles on Etsy
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Because his real fear, in a universe where even stars can die, is that being the best will never be quite good enough.
Star Wars: Episode III, novelization by Matthew Stover (via dcrthanakin)
edwinreinald04
can we just appreciate the fact that my best friend, who in the past struggled with an eating disorder, called out my gym teacher bc he says a size 3 for women is “ideal”
(((The average now for women is a size 14)))
DUDE GOD BLESS HER
I can’t tell you how happy this makes me
YOU GO GIRL!!
oh my god yes
YES GIRL UR MY HERO
Reblogged so fast. ”How dare you?”
GURL YOU TELL HIM
Are you missing Underwear?
(via benji)
An open letter to the man who made me cry today -
Hello there! So to the man who called a call centre and made a lot of assumptions about the person you were talking to, while you were telling me how well you'd done financially and how well your children have done in life, I sat and listened respectfully. But when you said to me - 'Oh well I doubt you went to university. Bless' Can I just say 1. Do not assume the person you are speaking to in a call centre is not educated to the same level as you 2. Do not talk down to them for 20 minutes about how hard the life of a landlord is and how I should just resign myself to renting for life because I am such a low earner 3. I checked you out on Facebook and I actually went to a better university than you, I happened to graduate in 2010 just as the recession hit and I may 'just work in a call centre' but this is the highest paid job I've ever managed to have - sorry I haven't done as well as the children you told me you 'helped onto the housing ladder' - sorry I'm not meeting your expectations of a graduate But please, think twice before assuming the person you're speaking to on the phone is something less than you, just respect them as another human being who deserves the same amount of respect as anybody else. Don't talk down to people Don't decide they aren't educated And don't end a sentence about their assumed life with the word 'bless' I'm sorry that all the people who gained income from tax deductable profits completely f**kecd me over and stopped me from being able to jump into a decent career straight out of uni I'm sorry that my parents couldn't afford to pay for my education or my first house But do you know what - Fuck you Fuck you and you prejudices Fuck you for assuming I haven't achieved the same level as education as you And fuck you for taking to me like a piece of shit I hope you enjoy your silly yellow sports car.
Iain Andrews
Little bit of luxury
If you don’t know who Johnnie Tillmon was, look her up.
Welfare is a Women’s Issue (1972) by Johnnie Tillmon
I’m a woman. I’m a black woman. I’m a poor woman. I’m a fat woman. I’m a middle-aged woman. And I’m on welfare.
In this country, if you’re any one of those things you count less as a human being. If you’re all those things, you don’t count at all. Except as a statistic.
I am 45 years old. I have raised six children. There are millions of statistics like me. Some on welfare. Some not. And some, really poor, who don’t even know they’re entitled to welfare. Not all of them are black. Not at all. In fact, the majority-about two-thirds-of all the poor families in the country are white.
Welfare’s like a traffic accident. It can happen to anybody, but especially it happens to women.
And that’s why welfare is a women’s issue. For a lot of middle-class women in this country, Women’s Liberation is a matter of concern. For women on welfare it’s a matter of survival.
Survival. That’s why we had to go on welfare. And that’s why we can’t get off welfare now. Not us women. Not until we do something about liberating poor women in this country.
Because up until now we’ve been raised to expect to work, all our lives, for nothing. Because we are the worst educated, the least-skilled, and the lowest-paid people there are. Because we have to be almost totally responsible for our children. Because we are regarded by everybody as dependents. That’s why we are on welfare. And that’s why we stay on it.
Welfare is the most prejudiced institution in this country, even more than marriage, which it tries to imitate. Let me explain that a little.
Ninety-nine percent of welfare families are headed by women. There is no man around. In half the states there can’t be men around because A.F.D.C. (Aid to Families With Dependent Children) says if there is an “able-bodied” man around, then you can’t be on welfare. If the kids are going to eat, and the man can’t get a job, then he’s got to go.
Welfare is like a super-sexist marriage. You trade in a man for the man. But you can’t divorce him if he treats you bad. He can divorce you, of course, cut you off anytime he wants. But in that case, he keeps the kids, not you.The man runs everything. In ordinary marriage, sex is supposed to be for your husband. On A.F.D.C., you’re not supposed to have any sex at all. You give up control of your own body. It’s a condition of aid. You may even have to agree to get your tubes tied so you can never have more children just to avoid being cut off welfare.
The man, the welfare system, controls your money. He tells you what to buy, what not to buy, where to buy it, and how much things cost. If things-rent, for instance-really cost more than he says they do, it’s just too bad for you. He’s always right.
That’s why Governor [Ronald] Reagan can get away with slandering welfare recipients, calling them “lazy parasites,” “pigs at the trough,” and such. We’ve been trained to believe that the only reason people are on welfare is because there’s something wrong with their character. If people have “motivation,” if people only want to work, they can, and they will be able to support themselves and their kids in decency.
The truth is a job doesn’t necessarily mean an adequate income. There are some ten million jobs that now pay less than the minimum wage, and if you’re a woman, you’ve got the best chance of getting one. Why would a 45-year-old woman work all day in a laundry ironing shirts at 90-some cents an hour? Because she knows there’s some place lower she could be. She could be on welfare. Society needs women on welfare as “examples” to let every woman, factory workers and housewife workers alike, know what will happen if she lets up, if she’s laid off, if she tries to go it alone without a man. So these ladies stay on their feet or on their knees all their lives instead of asking why they’re only getting 90-some cents an hour, instead of daring to fight and complain.
Maybe we poor welfare women will really liberate women in this country. We’ve already started on our own welfare plan. Along with other welfare recipients, we have organized so we can have some voice. Our group is called the National Welfare Rights Organization (N.W.R.O.). We put together our own welfare plan, called Guaranteed Adequate Income (G.A.I.), which would eliminate sexism from welfare. There would be no “categories”-men, women, children, single, married, kids, no kids-just poor people who need aid. You’d get paid according to need and family size only and that would be upped as the cost of living goes up.
As far as I’m concerned, the ladies of N.W.R.O. are the front-line troops of women’s freedom. Both because we have so few illusions and because our issues are so important to all women-the right to a living wage for women’s work, the right to life itself.
still relevant today
source
HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
This Poet’s Message To Anti-Abortion Politicians Deserves A Hell. Yes.
It’s the first electrifying line from poet Theresa Davis, who, in just three minutes, takes on every politician who has ever tried to block the reproductive rights of women in America.
Ten years from now, make sure you can say that you chose your life, you didn’t settle for it.
Mandy Hale, The Single Woman (via wordsnquotes)
REMINDER
(via queeringfeministreality)