Annotated this t-shirt. Who'd I miss?

oozey mess
KIROKAZE
art blog(derogatory)
wallacepolsom
we're not kids anymore.

#extradirty
tumblr dot com

Origami Around
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

ellievsbear

★

blake kathryn
YOU ARE THE REASON
Today's Document
noise dept.

Kaledo Art
Game of Thrones Daily
Peter Solarz
Claire Keane

seen from Malaysia

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seen from United States

seen from Italy
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seen from Iraq

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@studentofafrica
Annotated this t-shirt. Who'd I miss?
Amazing record sale find today! #southafrica #cosatu
Runnin' to #Naija #nigeria
#nyerere #tanzania
That awkward moment when you realize your #socialjusticebooklist is comprised entirely of books by and about white men.
#afrosuperfeelings
Thank you, cake, for bringing this important issue to our attention. #conflictminerals #cake
Country of birth? #Africa #facepalm
Miriam Makeba - A Luta Continua
Winnie Khumalo - Live My Life
DJ Spoko, the South African producer behind some of the country's (and maybe the continent's) wildest electronic sounds, has long been something of a mystery. Aside from a few scattered production credits, a handful of Youtube videos, and one solitary EP, it was pretty much impossible to HEAR the guy. That's why we jumped at the chance to interview Spoko about his new album, "War God," which features a full 20 tracks of "pure disease- and pure love." Spoko told us his story, everything from taxi-driving gangsters and clubs filled with Bacardi to the presence of the divine via Fruity Loops 1.1. We'll hear that, plus some MASSIVE cuts from his discography.
From EMBODYING AND RESISTING LABOUR APARTHEID: RACISM AND MEXICAN FARM WORKERS IN CANADA’S SEASONAL AGRICULTURAL WORKERS PROGRAM by Adriana Gabriela Paz Ramirez
Here are a bunch of books about how homosexuality is unAfrican, probably.