Jules of Nature
Keni
Misplaced Lens Cap

⁂
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Sade Olutola
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
RMH
Three Goblin Art
Show & Tell

Andulka
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
todays bird
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
will byers stan first human second
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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@thereversecoconut
ADORN, produced and directed by Lisa Taouma, is a collection of stories from women around the Pacific about their relationship with their hair.
These 2 Pasifika girls were chosen for Voices of Future Generations Child Authors where children from 8-14 years old, in different regions of the world, are selected by the International Commission to give a unique perspective into how children from across the Earth perceive the challenges that they will face in the future, and the solutions that they believe are possible.
The Voice of an Island by Lupeo'aunu'u Vaai (12) Lupe, or Lupeoaunu’u Vaai, is from Vaoala in Samoa. She is a pupil of St Mary’s Primary School Savalalo. Her favourite subjects include Maths, English, Social Studies and Basic Science, and she loves studying about the environment and experimenting with technical gadgets to see how they work. She considers herself the family ‘enironmental and technical expert’. Lupe also enjoys reading, socialising with her friends, playing the piano, playing sports as well as Samoan and hip hop dancing. She lives with her parents and her two brothers. One of her biggest idols is Ms Brianna Fruean, who is a young environmentalist in Samoa who recently received a Commonwealth Award from the Queen in London for her work as a Young Environment Advocate. Lupe is a Catholic and she goes to church at the Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Apia. She is working to set up her own environmental group in her school in order to help support the environment in her developing country. When Lupe was 7 years old, she won her first national inter-school competition and her drawing on saving energy was produced as a sticker for promotion by the Ministry of Natural Resources & Environment. Lupe wants to continue learning so she can be either an environmental lawyer or an Information Technology expert in the future. She is especially grateful to her parents, her family, her helpers and her teachers and friends for their support.
The Visible Girls by Tyronah Sioni (10) Tyronah Sioni is originally from Papua New Guinea. She lives in Singapore with their father and her three brothers. She is a pupil of the Australian International School. Everyone calls her Tyra, she is in the 4th grade and the President of her class. She likes singing and dancing but most of all, she loves helping the planet. She hopes one day to create a worldwide charity called Evergreen. Her charity will help people in need, especially those who can’t a ord food and homes. It will also help to decrease pollution and solve environmental problems, teaching us not to take too much of something, such as over shing. She also dreams of working to investigate and ght corruption, discrimination, and harassment. She plans to try her hardest and her best to make this simple dream an amazing reality.
You can view Lupe and Tyra’s books, as well as the other amazing children authors books here in pdf format (note: these are not the full copies of the books, simply press mockups, so only the text is available with a few included illustrations. We’ll update this post if/when we get purchasing information)
remember when one of you weirdos psychoanalyzed 10 y/o Barron Trump and diagnosed him with having anxiety, ptsd, and dissociative identity disorder cause he was tired and zoning out at his fathers speech at 3 am
R.I.P. VINE Part 3
(Part 1) (part 2)
Korea's last prince, 이우. Died in 1945 in Hiroshima, Japan. (x)
The atomic bombing of Hiroshima not only took the life of one of the last Korean royals, it incinerated over 20,000 common Koreans, many of them forced laborers, at the hands of their enemy’s enemy, who not only did not distinguish between civilians and soldiers but refused to distinguish between the Japanese and their victims.
After the war, the few Korean survivors went unrecognised as victims of this atrocity, because they were not Japanese nationals, and neither they nor their offspring, many of whom suffered severe congenital malformations from the radiation poisoning, received compensation or adequate medical treatment.
They were thus triply victimized. First by the Japanese, who enslaved them. Second, by the Americans who exploded an atomic bomb over them indiscriminately. Third, by the world, for refusing to recognize them as victims of an atrocious crime against humanity. Even today, I’m surprised about how few people realise that so many Koreans were killed at Hiroshima (and Nagasaki).
Reblogged again for the commentary.
As a postscript to the above: the atomic bomb exploded over Hiroshima may have taken the invisible and now forgotten lives of tens of thousands of Koreans and one of the last Korean royals (all of whom came to ignominious or atrocious ends), but the Japanese emperor Hirohito, now known as Showa, himself of Korean origin, came away unscathed. Not only was he not tried for war crimes by an arrangement with the Americans, but he remained on his throne and lived long enough to see Japan rise again to become a dominant world power. Today the imperial family of Japan are one of the most beloved royal houses in the world, celebrated for their elegance and their dignity. In the words of one of the Korean survivors dying of radiation-induced leukemia, it is “a world of filth and fire” that we live in.
on this the 68th anniversary of hiroshima, let us try to recall the forgotten korean victims, stripped of their identity, dignity, and life, finally, in the most atrocious manner. no one will remember them.
one imagines their lives were nothing but pain, humiliation, and misery from the moment they awoke until their very final instant, when they felt their wearied flesh shuffle off as it turned into fire, then ash, that is to say, when they were finally “liberated” by the americans.
history teaches us that a sustained policy of willed ignorance, insidious rationalization, and other techniques of forgetting, revision, suppression and delay until the last victims are dead and buried will always be richly rewarded. every “great” nation, after all, was built on an unforgivable forgotten atrocity and an abomination.
the only thing left to do is to record it briefly here on tumblr, in the desperate hope that one day, some alien mind will discover the charred hardware of some human artifact and, having decoded it and shed thick black tears, wonder how such a vile and stupid race that called itself humanity, capable of such unworldly cruelty, hate, and destruction, could have produced something so marvellous and eternal as kpop, which will be the only thing that survives of us, let us hope.
reblogging as we approach the 70th anniversary of hiroshima…
joe biden can eat shit and die too stop thirsting over his mass incarcerating ass
old-ish (2015) but good article explaining how as a senator under clinton’s administration joe biden was one of the leading figure in increasing the number of cops and how it led to a rise in prison population
Joe Biden wrote the bankruptcy bill that made student loan debt impossible to discharge, and is pretty much responsible for an entire generation being stuck in debt peonage. He deserves to live in a cage for the rest of his life
somethin’ to soothe the pain
OH MY GOD
Yes, everyone should be talking about climate change, but you should also be talking about the fact that Native communities deserve to survive, because our lives are worth defending in their own right — not simply because “this affects us all.”
Kelly Hayes at Yes! Magazine. Remember This When You Talk About Standing Rock (via protoslacker)
I don’t have sisters but my girlfriend does and she’s been fighting with hers for the past few weeks and tonight is the big peak fight phone call and this is the scariest shit I’ve ever witnessed
They’re talking so fast omg.
This is 100% my existence right now
And now it’s just…done? I think they’re friends again. Will confirm.
Laughing but also still crying. Refriending on Facebook. We’re good, ppl.
You know it’s 100% good when they switch to talking shit about a whole nother sister
after Joy Harjo I am not ready to die yet: magnolia tree going wild outside my kitchen window & the dog needs a house, &, by the way, I just met you, my sisters & I have things to do, & I need to talk on the phone with my brother. Plant a tree. & all the things I said I’d get better at. In other words, I am not ready to die yet because didn’t we say we’d have a picnic the first hot day, I mean, the first really, really hot day? Taqueria. & swim, kin, & mussel & friend, don’t you go, go, no. Today we saw the dead bird, & stopped for it. & the airplanes glided above us. & the wind lifted the dead bird’s feathers. I am not ready to die yet. I want to live longer knowing that wind still moves a dead bird’s feathers. Wind doesn’t move over & say That thing can’t fly. Don’t go there. It’s dead. No, it just blows & blows lifting what it can. I am not ready to die yet. No. I want to live longer. I want to love you longer, say it again, I want to love you longer & sing that song again. & get pummeled by the sea & come up breathing & hot sun & those walks & those kids & hard laugh, clap your hands. I am not ready to die yet. Give me more dreams. To taste the fig. To hear the coyote, closer. I am not ready to die yet. But when I go, I’ll go knowing there will be a next time. I want to be like the cactus fields I drove through in Arizona. If I am a cactus, be the cactus I grow next to, arms up, every day, let me face you, every day of my cactus life. & when I go or you go, let me see you again somewhere, or you see me. Isn’t that you, old friend, my love? you might say, while swimming in some ocean to the small fish at your ankle. Or, Weren’t you my sister once? I might say to the sad, brown dog who follows me down the street. Or to the small boy or old woman or horse eye or to the tree. I know you I knew I know you, too I’m saying, could this be what makes me stop in front of thatdogwood, train whistle, those curtains blowing in that window. See now, there go some eyes you knew once riding the legs of another animal, wearing its blue sky, magnolia, wearing its bear or fine or wolf-wolf suit, see, somewhere in the night a mouth is singing You remind me You remind me & the heart flips over in the dusky sea of its chest like a fish signaling, Yes, yes it was me! &, yes, it was, & you were there, & are here now, yes, honey, yes hive, yes I will, Jack, see you again, even if it’s a lie, don’t let me know, not yet, not ever, I need to think I’ll see you, oh, see you again.
“I Am Not Ready to Die Yet,” Aracelis Girmay (via commovente)
(Private) I’m getting confused as to why Hawaiian is being spelled with an ʻokina when “Hawaiian” is not a word that comes from 'Ōlelo Hawaiʻi? Hawaiian is an English word (due to the suffix -an) so it doesn't have an ʻokina and is not spelled Hawai'ian.
Not sure what you’re intention was with the “private” when this is an anonymous ask. That being said, Hawaiʻi is ʻŌlelo, loaned into English, not the reverse. When it’s incorporated in English, it’s still ʻŌlelo. To respect Kānaka ʻōiwi, and other Indigenous peoples, the least you can do is use Indigenous peoples’ correct names, and pronounce these names properly even when they are being incorporated in English. It’s important to remember where these words come from, who they really belong to, who they describe. It’s important to remember that (if you are not of those people) these words are not (y)ours.It is loaned: borrowed. Although the word may be suffixed to make grammatical sense in English, this word and other Indigenous words and names are not English, and will never be English. We are not incorporated in it. We do not belong to it.
I've never seen another kanaka spell it hawai'ian, is that a thing?
Sacred Stone Camp Supply List
TOP NEEDS:
FIREWOOD (PREFERABLY OAK, MAPLE, ASH)
TIPIS/TIPI POLES/TIPI LINERS FOR WINTER
PICK-UP TRUCK W/ 4 WHEEL DRIVE
TRAILERS/CAMPERS (FOR WINTER SHELTERS)
SNOW TIRES - VARIOUS SIZES
GIFT CARDS FOR LOWES OR MENARDS (THERE IS NO HOME DEPOT NEARBY)
TENTS
SHIPPING CONTAINER 20 FT
SLEEPING BAGS FOR SUBZERO TEMPERATURES (INC. MILITARY STYLE)
FULL SUPPLY LIST:
AIR TANK
BANNERS, SHEETS (WE LOVE IT WHEN YOU MAKE BANNERS AND SEND THEM TO US!)
BATTERY PACKS FOR CHARGING PHONES
CANVAS - HEAVY DUTY ONLY PLEASE
CAR PORTS
CARTS AND WHEELBARROWS FOR HAULING WOOD
CIGARETTES-MARLBORO REDS AND CAMELS
COME ALONGS
FIREWOOD (PREFERABLY OAK, MAPLE, ASH) <<< THIS IS ONE OF OUR BIGGEST WINTER NEEDS
FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
FUEL TANKS
FUR BLANKETS
GAS CARDS
GAS GENERATORS
GIFT CARDS - LOWES/MENARDS, AMAZON, VERIZON
INSULATED CARHARTT TYPE COVERALLS, OVERALLS, COATS
LIGHTERS
MATERIAL FOR TOBACCO TIES (ALL COLORS)
MONEY
PAINT (INC. SPRAY PAINT)
PICK UP TRUCK
POWER INVERTER
PROPANE HEATERS (SMALL)
ROPES, TIE DOWNS
SHIPPING CONTAINER 20 FT
SLEEPING BAGS (FOR 0 DEGREES F AND LOWER - PLEASE NO WARM WEATHER BAGS AT THIS TIME)
SNOWMOBILES
SNOW TIRES (INQUIRE FOR SIZES)
SOLAR CHARGERS FOR ELECTRONIC DEVICES
SOLAR PANELS, INVERTER
STORAGE BINS - HEAVY DUTY - ALL SIZES
TARPS - HEAVY DUTY ONLY
TIRE CHAINS
TENTS (THAT CAN STAND UP TO HIGH WINDS, SNOW, SUBZERO TEMPS)
THERMAL BED ROLLS
TIPIS AND TIPI POLES
TIPI LINERS FOR WINTER
TOW STRAPS
WALKIE TALKIES WITH LONG RANGE, CB RADIOS
WATER BUFFALO (TANK)
WATER TANK WITH HEATER
WINTER COATS (FOR VERY COLD TEMPS, GOOD CONDITION ONLY PLEASE)
WINTER SALT FOR ROADS
WOOD STOVES (MOSTLY SMALL ONES FOR TIPIS)
YOUNG WARRIORS!!
Where can I send donations?Supplies, cash, or check donations can be sent to:Sacred Stone CampP.O. Box 1011Fort Yates, ND 58538
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http://sacredstonecamp.org/