The more you know ðŸŒ
How to decide whether to report
💖 xoxo

#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#tim drake#dick grayson#batfam#dc fanart#batfamily




seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Sri Lanka

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Ireland

seen from Netherlands
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
The more you know ðŸŒ
How to decide whether to report
💖 xoxo
1963 Refrigerator 🤔
To be young, gifted, and black is where it’s at.
On January 1, 1830, North Carolina enacted legislation making it a crime to teach any enslaved person to read or write. The law included:
• Fines for anyone (Black or white) caught teaching literacy to enslaved people.
• Specific penalties for distributing abolitionist materials, which authorities feared could spark rebellion.
This law was part of a wave of anti-literacy laws passed across the South after events like: The 1829 publication of David Walker’s Appeal — a radical antislavery text written by a free Black man and Nat Turner’s Rebellion in 1831, which further intensified white fears and led to even harsher restrictions afterward.
Teaching enslaved people to read was seen as dangerous because literacy:
• Enabled communication and organizing.
• Allowed access to abolitionist writings.
• Empowered enslaved people to challenge their legal and social conditions.
Enslavers knew literacy was power — which is why Black communities pursued it despite the risks.
•••
El 1 de enero de 1830, Carolina del Norte decretó una ley que tipificaba como delito enseñar a leer o escribir a cualquier persona esclavizada. La ley incluÃa:
• Multas para cualquier persona (negra o blanca) que fuera encontrada enseñando a leer y escribir a personas esclavizadas.
• Sanciones especÃficas por distribuir material abolicionista, ya que las autoridades temÃan que esto podrÃa causar una rebelión.
Esta ley formaba parte de una ola de leyes contra la alfabetización aprobadas en todo el sur tras acontecimientos como: la publicación en 1829 llamada La Apelación de David Walker, un texto radical contra la esclavitud escrito por un hombre negro libre y la rebelión de Nat Turner en 1831, la cual intensificó aún más los temores de las personas blancas y dio lugar a restricciones aún más severas.
Enseñar a leer a las personas esclavizadas se consideraba peligroso porque la alfabetización:
• PermitÃa la comunicación y la organización.
• PermitÃa el acceso a escritos abolicionistas.
• Empoderaba a las personas esclavizadas para que desafiaran sus condiciones legales y sociales.
Los esclavistas sabÃan que la alfabetización era poder, por lo que las comunidades negras la buscaban a pesar de los riesgos.
what kind of fucking idiot wants to vote reform, especially as a woman. they’re trying to remove the equality act AND the human rights act!
This means women would lose the: Right to equal pay, Right to not be fired when you become pregnant, Protection from direct discrimination.
Must be stopped.