hello vonnie
ojovivo
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
almost home

Product Placement
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
No title available

Kiana Khansmith
i don't do bad sauce passes

roma★
styofa doing anything

tannertan36

ellievsbear

Discoholic 🪩

Andulka
trying on a metaphor
Claire Keane

PR's Tumblrdome
dirt enthusiast
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Oman

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Australia

seen from United States
@strawber-ta
“you will recognize happiness when you see it die”
— Georges Bataille, trans. by Mark Spitzer, from The Collected Poems: “The Dawn”
LADY VENGEANCE
Stephen Henderson on the work of Henry Dumas, Knees of a Natural Man: Selected Poems of Henry Dumas
[Text ID: Poetry as time warp. Galactic intertextuality. Descent into Hell. Into self. Music of the blood. Music of the stars.]
Miss Major in The Trans List (2016)
from the PBS special The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution which is available on Netflix.
Black Panther Party - Black Power, 1960s
Ulyana Sergeenko spring 2019 couture
Dracula (1931) dir. Tod Browning
Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace
basically if youre in the place to educate yourself on these topics and you arent
a prison abolitionist,
a harm reductionist,
for decriminilization,
and giving the land back
i really do not think your assertions of “ACAB” or “be gay do crimes” or “revolution” hold much weight
this is getting a lot of questions that could be solved with a google search into any of these topics, so i just want to respond with my own that isn’t: if you advocate for abolishing the police force but don’t support prison abolition for [x] reason—what happens to prisons in a post-police society?
you might come up with several answers here.
shit, i don’t know. we need prisons as prisons are to A) withhold certain people from harming their communities, B) punish certain people, C) kill certain people.
uh, i guess i can kind of answer this. the criminal justice system still exists. why don’t we just leave those people in charge? they’re not cops! and we should definitely let people who have committed non-violent offenses go. drug charges are stupid.
ok, i feel a little more confident answering this. we need to change the prison model for the better and follow the example of countries with restorative justice practices. incarcerated people need better access to healthcare and education, as well as access to opportunifies post-prison so that they are less likely to face reincarceration.
wait. if we’re abolishing the police for upholding white supremacy and terrorizing marginalized communities, we need to abolish a lot of shit. restorative justice sounds cool, i agree with that guy above. but shouldn’t these efforts be run by the communities affected? wasn’t the problem a white supremacist state? wasn’t the goal community terrorism? wasn’t the power taken out of our hands, especially the hands of people being systematically criminalized? i think i have things to read about.
anyway, whatever your conclusion: here are some things to read about.
darkness matters: on the surveillance of blackness by simone brown
are prisons obsolete? by angela davis
the law is a white dog by colin dayan
gendering the carceral state: african american women, history, and the criminal justice system by kali n gross and cheryl d hicks
“indigenous space and decolonizing prison abolition” from the final straw radio podcast (this is an episode of a podcast featuring ni frontiers ni prison, an indigenous prison abolitionist group)
migra! a history of the us border control by kelly lyle hernandez
disability incarcerated by liat ben-moshe and allison c carey
queer (in)justice by joey l mogul, andrea j ritchie, and kay whitlock
crazy in america: the hidden tragedy of our criminalized mentally ill by mary beth pfeiffer
inventing the savage: the social construction of native american criminality by luana ross
criminal justice facts posted by the sentencing project
is prison necessary? an article featuring ruth wilson gilmore & explaining prison abolition to children who were very good at asking “but what about [x]?” questions
and here’s an FAQ about prison abolition by people against prisons aotearoa
and then another collection of links by the marshall project.
if you have trouble getting ahold of any reading materials i can usually find you a pdf if you DM me. if you need epub i can’t guarantee i can get one for you, but i can try.
HOW TO DONATE TO BLM WHEN YOU HAVE NO MONEY
a black woman named zoe amira posted a video on youtube. this video is an hour long and filled with art and music from black creators. it has a ton of ads, and in result will rack up a ton of revenue. 100% of the ad revenue from the video will be dispersed between various blm organizations, including bail-out funds for protesters. it will be split between the following, dependent on necessity
brooklyn bail fund
minnesota freedom fund
atlanta action network
columbus freedom fund
louisville community bail fund
chicago bond
black visions collective
richmond community bail fund
the bail project inc
nw com bail fund
philadelphia bail fund
the korchhinski-parquet family gofundme
george floyd’s family gofundme
blacklivesmatter.com
reclaim the block
aclu
turn off your adblocker and put the video on repeat. do not skip ads. let it play on loop whether you’re listening or not. mute the tab if you need to focus elsewhere. but let. it. play.
youtube will donate to blm for you.
please, please reblog. for people who don’t have money to spare, this is incredibly important information to have.