what usa is about to lose:
Islam
pocĀ
abortion rights
gun control
lgbtq equal rights
obamacare
respect for women
immigrants
life as we know it
We never really had any of this stuff anyway. Time to find a way to come TOGETHER.Ā
EXPECTATIONS

if i look back, i am lost
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official daine visual archive

shark vs the universe

Product Placement
𩵠avery cochrane š©µ
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
occasionally subtle
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will byers stan first human second

Andulka

#extradirty
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Origami Around
macklin celebrini has autism
seen from Malaysia

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@thewinnerscircleisclosed
what usa is about to lose:
Islam
pocĀ
abortion rights
gun control
lgbtq equal rights
obamacare
respect for women
immigrants
life as we know it
We never really had any of this stuff anyway. Time to find a way to come TOGETHER.Ā
trump won. TRUMP WON! IT HAPPENED! You get a few days to sulk but don't sulk forever. PLAN!! PLAN!! STRATEGIZE!!
THE TRUTH. Deal with it.Ā
Ella Baker
While weāre constantly reminded of the civil rights leaders who worked in front, those who were behind the scenes often go unrecognized. Ella Baker is one of those people. An active civil rights leader in the 1930s, Ms. Baker fought for civil rights for five decades, working alongside W.E.B Dubois, Thurgood Marshall, and Martin Luther King, Jr. She even mentored well-known civil rights activist, Rosa Parks.
Ella Baker is quoted as saying, āYou didnāt see me on television; you didnāt see news stories about me. The kind of role that I tried to play was to pick up pieces or put together pieces out of which I hoped organization might come. My theory is, strong people donāt need strong leaders.ā
Diane Nash
A leader and strategist of the student wing of the Civil Rights Movement, Diane Nash was a member of the infamous Freedom Riders. She also helped found the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Selma Voting Rights Committee campaign, which helped blacks in the South get to vote and have political power.
Raised in Chicago, Nash initially wanted to become a nun as a result of her Catholic upbringing. Ā Also known for her beauty, she would later become runner-up for Miss Illinois. But Nashās path changed direction when she attended Fisk University after transferring from Howard University. It was there that she would witness segregation first hand, since coming from a desegregated northern city. Her experiences in the South resulted in her ambition to fight against segregation.
Historian David Halberstam considered Nash, ābright, focused, utterly fearless, with an unerring instinct for the correct tactical move at each increment of the crisis; as a leader, her instincts had been flawless, and she was the kind of person who pushed those around her to be at their bestāthat, or be gone from the movement.ā
Septima Poinsette Clark
Known as the āGrandmother of the American Civil Rights Movement,ā Septima Poinsette Clark was an educator and civil rights activist who played a major role in the voting rights of African-Americans.
In 1920, while serving as an educator in Charleston, Clark worked with the NAACP to gather petitions allowing blacks to serve as principals in Charleston schools. Their signed petitions resulted in the first black principal in Charleston. Clark also worked tirelessly to teach literacy to black adults. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter awarded her a Living Legacy Award in 1979. Her second autobiography, Ready from Within: Septima Clark and the Civil Rights Movement, won the American Book Award.
Fannie Lou Hamer
Coining the phrase, āIām sick and tired of being sick and tired,ā Fannie Lou Hamer was a voting rights activist and civil rights leader. She was instrumental Ā in organizing Mississippi Freedom Summer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and later became the Vice-Chair of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
Hamer stood firm in her religious beliefs, often quoting them in her fight for civil rights. She ran for Congress in 1964 and 1965, and was then seated as a member of Mississippiās legitimate delegation to the Democratic National Committee of 1968, where she was an outspoken critic of the Vietnam War.
Hamer died of breast cancer in 1977 at the age of 59. Buried in her hometown of Ruleville, Miss., her tombstone reads āI am sick and tired of being sick and tiredā.
Daisy Bates
Daisy Bates was an American civil rights activist, publisher and writer who played a leading role in the Little Rock integration crisis in 1957. Before that, Bates and her husband started their own newspaper in 1941 called the Arkansas State Press. The paper became a voice for civil rights even before the nationally recognized movement.
Bates worked tirelessly until her death in 1999. After moving to Washington, D.C. in the 1960s, she served on the Democratic National Committee and also served in the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson, working her magic on anti-poverty programs. In her home state of Arkansas, it has been established that the third Monday in February is āGeorge Washingtonās Birthday and Daisy Gatson Bates Day,ā an official state holiday.
Anna Arnold Hedgemen
A civil rights leader, politician, and writer, Anna Arnold Hedgemen was also the first African-American student at Hamline University, a Methodist college in Minnesota. After college she became a teacher. During her tenure as a teacher, Hedgemen witnessed segregation and decided to fight for its end.
After holding a position as assistant dean of women at Howard University in 1946, Hedgemen later moved to New York and became the first African-American woman to hold a mayoral cabinet position in the history of the state.
Hedgemen, who died in 1990, is the author of The Trumpet Sounds (1964), The Gift of Chaos (1977) and many more articles for numerous organizations.
Dorothy Height
While the name Dorothy Height is recognizable, many of her accomplishments are not. Height, who died recently in 2010 at the age of 98, was a social rights activist, administrator, and educator. After earning her bachelorās and masterās degrees at New York University, Height later became active in fighting for social injustices. She was the president of the National Council of Negro Women for 40 years, and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1994, and the Congressional Gold Medal in 2004.
Also during the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Height organized āWednesdays in Mississippiā which brought together black and white women from the North and South to engage in dialogue about relevant social issues.
Dorothy Height is quoted as saying āI want to be remembered as someone who used herself and anything she could touch to work for justice and freedomā¦I want to be remembered as one who tried,āa motto she lived by until her death.
learn these names my people.
Watch: Michelle Obamaās speech on the Trump tapes should be required viewing for all Americans
Correction. Education on how Hillary is just as much of a white supremacist as Trump should be required reading for all Americans.
āRedliningā just sounds like an an old-timey term, a practice that exists only in history and our re-tellings of it. The word has particular roots in the 1930s,when the government-sponsored Home Ownerās Loan Corporation first drafted maps of American communities to sort through which ones were worthy of mortgage lending. Neighborhoods were ranked and color-coded, and the D-rated ones ā shunned for their āinharmoniousā racial groups ā were typically outlined in red.
This government practice was swiftly adopted by private banks, too, during an era of massive homeownership expansion in the U.S. And the visual language of the maps became a verb: To redline a community was to cut it off from essential capital. To be redlined was something even worse.
The federal government eventually retreated from the practice, and it was outlawed by the Fair Housing Act in 1968. But black communities have warned that it still exists in subtler and changed forms, in bank tactics that have targeted these same neighborhoods for predatory lending, or in new patterns like āretail redlining.ā Some of the persistent redlining, though, still looks an awful lot like the original.
Case in point: This week the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentĀ settled with the largest bank headquartered in Wisconsin over claims that it discriminated from 2008-2010 against black and Hispanic borrowers in Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. The bank, Associated Bank, denies wrongdoing in the settlement, but HUD itself is declaring victory in āone of the largest redlining complaintsā ever brought by the federal government against a mortgage lender.
HUDās analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data concluded that the bank disproportionately denied qualified loan applicants in predominantly minority neighborhoods in Chicago, Milwaukee, and Minneapolis, compared to other lenders operating in these same communities. Now Associated Bank has agreed to a long list of actions to make amends over the next three years: It must finance nearly $200 million in home loans in majority-minority census tracts within these cities, and pay nearly $10 million in down payment assistance to borrowers or in lower interest rates. It must also open four new offices in minority neighborhoods in Chicago and Milwaukee, and invest $1.4 million in marketing loans in many of these same underserved communities.
The case is not about doling out mortgages to minority households that wouldnāt otherwise qualify for them ā itās about offering equal access to families that look just as eligible on paper as white homeowners nearby.
It is, however, a reality that historic redlining makes homeownership beyond reach for many families in these communities today, regardless of how big banks behave now. If your family was denied a mortgage in the 1930s, or the 1950s, or the 1970s, then you may not have the family wealth or down payment help to become a homeowner today. In that way, the consequences of past redlining transcend time, even as new forms of it continue.
redlining that undermined black wealth back in the day is still happening today right under our noses. people need to wake up to institutional racism. shit aināt over.
but please tell me more about reverse racism and how itās white people who are victims.
Look alive, True Believers, if the rumors are to be believed, then Zendaya is playing the role of Mary Jane Watson in the upcoming Spider-Man movie. This is the latest in a series of black women being cast in traditionally white comic book roles. First it was Candice Patton being cast as Iris West in CWās The Flash, then Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie in Marvelās Thor: Ragnarok, followed by Kiersey Clemons being cast in Warner Brotherās The Flash, and now Zendaya. While theyāre all great actresses and I canāt wait to see them in action, itās hard not to notice that only a certain type of black girl is being cast.
We all want to celebrate the fact that black women are getting more roles, but we need to address the colorism in these casting. Ā Zendaya, Kiersey, Tessa, and Candice are all lightskin black women. These arenāt coincidences; these are products of our societyās devaluing of darkskin black women, especially those that donāt meet Eurocentric beauty standards. These actresses received/continue to receive a lot of hate, doused in racism no doubt, but nothing in comparison to what Leslie Jones went through just last month.
Leslie is a darkskin black women with Afrocentric features, and the internet sure as hell wanted her to know it. Through comparison to gorillas, various racial slurs, and general bigotry, she was forced to retreat from Twitter and thus interacting with her fans. Women like her are rarely given the chance to shine and when they are, theyāre met with harassment and abuse.
Hollywood hates darkskin women so much that instead of actually hiring a darkskin woman to play Nina Simone, they had Zoe Saldana do blackface. When darkskin women are actually cast theyāre never in the roles of love interests. Viola Davis is a fantastic actress, but sheās constantly being put into the role of being an inhuman hard-ass, never a sexy powerful woman like some of her lighter-skin colleagues.
Iām really happy about Zendaya playing MJ in Spider-Man: Homecoming, because sheās an amazing actress and an important role model for black girls. That doesnāt mean I have to ignore the incredible hypocrisy and double standards between lightskin and darkskin people. There is no uniform representation of brown and black people; we canāt keep celebrating these thin lightskin girls while ignoring and devaluing everyone else. When these black women come on screen, I know they will inspire black girls, and that is incredibly important. However, itās just as important to represent different kinds of black girls on screen. Diversity is more than just throwing some people of color on screen, we need to delve into that and diversify further.
thatās why i post and reblog both
In light of the (potential) casting of Zendaya as āMary Jane Watsonā in the upcoming āSpider-Man: Homecomingā movie, letās revisit this classic amazing post by TimeMachineYeah
AND
If Zendaya wasnāt lightskin would yall always defend her like yall do? If Amandla was darker would yall care so much about what she has to say? If Willow was a little darker would she be called a weirdo instead of āquirkyā? If Rihanna was darkskin might yall be calling her a hoe for her lyrics and sexuality? What about Nicki, would yall be as stunned by her body if she was just another big-booty darkskin chick? If Beyonce was Kellyās color or even Solangeās color, would she be 5 times as successful in the white and black world as both of those two put together?
colorism in america EVERYWHERE. this not only happens in hollywood but in offices everywhere (see here, here, and here), in job interviews, dating, legal system⦠you name it, it happens there. at least a few of these actress are away of the role colorism plays in hollywood and speak out against it. however to be honest, i donāt think itās ever going away. ever.Ā
clearly white supremacy is going to play a role in keeping colorism alive. no need to dive into that, itās common knowledge however whatās not common knowledge is that the black community works overtime to keep colorism alive in two ways that get on my nerves constantly. the first is quite obvious, we engage in colorism.Ā we do it to each other all the time and itās disgusting. the other is that when we do deal with colorism, we only deal with it half way. we only talk about colorism when women are affected by it and when men do it. never the other instances when women do it and men are affected by it. hell to even bring it up usually incurs the wrath of black women. smfh. when you only deal with half of a problem the problem will remain whole.Ā
so no, colorism is here with us forever. thatās why iāll keep on making these
http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149868769213/alwaysbewoke-dark-skin-black-women-are
http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149867185638/alwaysbewoke-dark-skin-black-women-are-soooooĀ http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149866649575/alwaysbewoke-dark-skin-black-women-are-justĀ
http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149867900737/explain-to-me-again-how-dark-skin-black-women-areĀ
http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149840373359/alwaysbewoke-dark-skin-black-women-always-getĀ
http://www.alwaysbewoke.com/post/149784188557Ā
and reblogging this. i want our dark skin sistas to know they are smart, sexy and high fucking favored overhur.Ā
A clip from the Netflix original documentary ā13thā which I think everyone should watch
STOP!!! WATCH!!! GUN WAS PLANTED ON KEITH SCOTT PROOF!!!
littlekingcorona:
Random country: rich in oilĀ and minding theirĀ own businessĀ
America:
Lmao yep
In case you were wondering
Yes I root for people just because theyāre black.
šššDead serious.
Twitter deleted her thread.Ā Reblog to save it. #Love it!
Ms Davis
dammit i just have to reblog this. Ā like some moments are so bad ass you have to stop and give hommageā¦
Always reblog Ms. Angela Davis.
āš¾
Arrested for not possessing a valid drivers license, held in custody because she couldnāt make bail, āfailure to receive adequate medical attentionā is the reason of her death. On April 26th she was in a car accident and instead of taking her to the hospital they detained her. Died last Tuesday in police custody in the Walker County Jail in Huntsville,Texas. The same jail that killedĀ #SandraBland. No one knows, no one is talking about this, no cause of death has been given, and even her hometown had no idea she was dead.Ā
Whatās her name???
Symone Marshall
The same jail as Sandra Bland? Are you fucking kidding me? How many black women do they have to kill before anyone cares??
Reblog againā¦
nah man this shit grimy
Reblog if you don't have a girlfriend or boyfriend.
1.7 million ppl are single