The mirror in the green room of the theatre is super flattering
Also
Red and black are ALWAYS default colors
🎭
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States
The mirror in the green room of the theatre is super flattering
Also
Red and black are ALWAYS default colors
🎭
Friends, I’ve shared some of this with you, but today marks 60 years since it happened — when the Klan murdered my protector. I was always t
When the news reached me that Mickey, who had protected me from childhood bullies, had been murdered by white supremacists — by violent bullies who would stop at nothing to prevent Black people from exercising their right to vote — something snapped inside me.
It was as if I got a new pair of eyes. I began to see everything differently.
Before then, I understood bullying as a few kids picking on me for being short — making me feel bad about myself.
After I learned what happened to Mickey, I began to see bullying on a larger scale, all around me. In Black people bullied by whites. In workers bullied on the job. In girls and women bullied by men. In the disabled or gay or poor or sick or immigrant bullied by employers, landlords, politicians, insurance companies.
I saw the powerful and the powerless, the exploiters and the exploited.
It seemed as if the world had changed, but I had changed. I had a different understanding of the meaning of justice. It became as personal to me as were the bullies who called me names and threatened me in school — but larger, more encompassing, and more urgent.
Sixty years after the Freedom Summer murders, America still wrestles with bullies.
We’ve witnessed a rise in hate crimes targeting people of color, LGBTQ people, immigrants, Jews, and Muslims.
Laws that strip Americans of reproductive freedoms.
Laws that target trans people, that ban books, that restrict the right to vote.
Politicians who insult and demean people with disabilities, women, and trans kids.
We must never give in to brutality. It is incumbent on all of us to stand up to bullies — and be each other’s protectors.
In a brutal column for the New York Times, the author of “The Trump Women: Part of the Deal,” buried Ivanka Trumpfor willingly covering for
"Maybe power tastes like ashes now" Tom Boggioni
https://l.smartnews.com/p-bqfZB/dGMRgI
Love this quote
Sometimes, power over others is not so sweet
Cracking Open Anger
By Norma Saba· ANGER IS BEAUTIFUL… How does that above heading make you feel? Why do we fear our anger so deeply? We call it bad, wrong, damaging, lo vibration, crazy, insane, ugly, tormenting. Yet through religion, and revenge, people are killing each other daily with war and domestic violence. Using God as a reason to justify the murderous acts. War has been at the hands of men since the…
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Research Details Developments In The Power Over Ethernet (POE) Controllers Market Report, Forecast 2017-2022
Research Details Developments In The Power Over Ethernet (POE) Controllers Market Report, Forecast 2017-2022
Power Over Ethernet (POE) Controllers Market Report For Full Report Click On @ https://www.reportsandmarkets.com/reports/top-5-power-over-ethernet-poe-and-africa-1582829 The Reports and Market Provide this report studies Power Over Ethernet (POE) Controllers in Global market, especially in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, South America, Middle East and Africa, focuses on the top 5…
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