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sheepfilms

JBB: An Artblog!
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Misplaced Lens Cap
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
almost home
KIROKAZE
trying on a metaphor

blake kathryn

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
we're not kids anymore.
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
dirt enthusiast

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@whatthehelliott
Oskar Schlemmer, Rabe House, 1930
Lisel Mueller, “Things”
“My six year old daughter Benti tells me that she will become a doctor when she grows up because she wants to help people who need her. She says that great people come from great suffering and that she will never leave school.“ #childrenofsyria
2016 on POME
Robert Crumb
Run The Jewels - Hey Kids (Bumaye) (feat. Danny Brown)
Fully expected RTJ to fall back. Not the case. RTJ3 is out three weeks early and it far exceeded my expectations. The production is understated relative to anything they’ve done. El-P is coherent and straightforward in a way that he’s never been. Killer Mike has a focused anger, maybe bouncing off his experiences over the last year being used as a political prop. That definitely seems to have left a sour taste in his mouth.
No heavy focus on punchlines, no levity. Just a full album that relentlessly confronts our reality, attacks power at its heart, and cleverly leaves you no options that sound more reasonable than revolution.
The album closes appropriately with a track titled “A Report To The Shareholders / Kill Your Masters”. Plus they brought Trina back. This will be in heavy rotation for some time to come.
Download for free (after signing up for the mailing list) HERE
(The RTJ site has been buggy. Works better in Chrome for me. You can also DL through HotNewHipHop . Either that or, you know, torrent sites)
David de Las Heras
Debtors’ Prisons: Life Inside America’s For-Profit Justice System (Part ½)
VICE’s Justice series examines the winners and losers of the for-profit criminal justice system. Imprisoning people for being poor has technically been illegal in this country for two hundred years, but it is still a reality. Municipalities with small, low-income populations and correspondingly low tax bases regularly pay their salaries, and pad their budgets by issuing “quality of life” and traffic fines to people for minor offenses—and sending them to jail if they can’t pay.
Here’s Part 2.
Chen Wei 陈维 (Chinese, b. 1980, Zhejiang Province, China) - 1: Night Paris, 2015 2: The Door, 2014 3: Through The Glass Door, 2014 4: Future And Modern, 2014 5: One More Chelsea, 2015 6: Falling Light, 2015 7: Today Is Unsuitable For Shooting The Door, 2013 Photography
The Disease of Homophobia in today’s Global Health Landscape
By: Freda Koomson
The elephant in the room when one talks about LGBT rights and those that are vehemently or even peripherally opposed is: Why do we care so much? I’ve been privy to discourse that speaks of traditional values and a breaking of certain moral and ethical codes, as if love is something that can exist within a pre-defined box of rules and regulations. There are some that cite the machismo culture that exists in many societies and note that there is of course a double standard where lesbians are seen as more acceptable than gay men. The definition of manhood to which these societies ascribe seems both outdated grossly misogynistic.
Homophobia itself, I’d argue, may fall within the realm of a mental health prescriptive. Indifference at best and hate, at worst, of an entire marginalized population of fellow humans is not becoming of a civil society. To have such strong sentiments based upon an odd obsession with whom and how someone chooses to love is something many in my generation and across the diaspora struggle to understand.
Read more on Ezibota.com
For he who leaps into the void owes no explanation to those who watch.
Jean-Luc Godard, from Godard on Godard (1986)
Portraits by photographer Parker Day
Follow on Instagram: @heyparkerday
Log Horn Breed - Evil’s Face
From new split 12″ release by Girls Pissing on Girls Pissing & Log Horn Breed. An industrial deathmarch that makes early Ministry sound like Al Jourgensen writing solo acoustic bonus tracks tracks for a Ministry compilation called “The Absolute Best Of Ministry and also solo Al Jourgensen: 2002-2008“. PS this doesn’t sound like Ministry.
Thousands join protest camp as supporters are holding a rally in Washington D.C. on Wednesday outside of Army Corps hearing. Growing in number and spirit, the Standing Rock Sioux protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline is swiftly gaining strength ahead of a federal hearing on the controversial project. Support has spread across the country, and thousands have descended on the peaceful "prayer ...
If you can, hit up the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Relief Effort Amazon wish list.
Simply go to Amazon > Lists > Find a List or Registry, search for “Standing Rock Sioux”
I haven’t seen one single post about this. None of the national news is covering it either. There is a complete media blackout.
In summary: There’s a huge oil pipeline being built in North Dakota, and it’s heading straight through sacred Native American land. Already, four thousand people are camped out there, arrests are being made, and they’ve had water taken from them in order to try and get them to disperse.
“Growing in number and spirit, the Standing Rock Sioux protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline is swiftly gaining strength ahead of a federal hearing on the controversial project. Support has spreadacross the country, and thousands have descended on the peaceful “prayer camps” in recent days, prompting state officials on Monday to remove the demonstrators’ drinking water supply. “People are getting overheated now already,” said Johnelle Leingang, the tribe’s emergency response coordinator, as temperatures hovered around 90º F on Monday. “ North Dakota homeland security director Greg Wilz ordered the removal of state-owned trailers and water tanks from the protest encampment, despite the sweltering heat. This is because, according to law enforcement officers, the protestors were threatening them with firearms and pipe bombs.
Kirchmeier said the protest had become “unlawful” as his officers reported incidents of shots being fired, pipe bombs, vandalism and assaults on private security personnel. Construction on the pipeline near Cannon Ball has been “discontinued for the time being,” Kirchmeier said.
However, protesters denied those allegations. “Firearms and weapons are not allowed at the Sacred Stone Camp and our security has done an exemplary job at maintaining safety amongst the crowd,” according to a statement released by Sacred Stone Camp protesters with the groups Honor the Earth and the Indigenous Environmental Network. “As our camp was established on an act of prayer, we are committed to nonviolence.”
“The only thing we are armed with is with our prayers.”
The pipeline threat is real; there have been 11 pipeline accidents since 2000 on lines carrying oil or gasoline across the Dakotas. One of those pipeline accidents resulted in roughly 865,000 gallons of oil spilling beneath a farm in North Dakota in 2013.
The Dakota Access Pipeline’s planned route crosses the Missouri River which serves as the entire water source for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe; the Army Corp of Engineers (ACOE) approved 200 water crossings by the pipeline in spite of requests by the Sioux to deny construction permits. The ACOE, however, reviewed and rejected an alternate pipeline route crossing the Missouri River near Bismarck as it was deemed a threat to the municipal water supply. This looks like outright racism on the face of it; the pipeline is a threat to 92% white Bismarck, but not a sovereign Native American tribe?
The Standing Rock Sioux are challenging Army Corps of Engineers permits issued for the pipeline that tribe members say violate the Clean Water Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the National Historic Preservation Act.
The Army Corps of Engineers gave DAPL permission to build in late July, despite pending lawsuits and active local resistance.
An hour south of Bismarck, protesters have gathered since April near Cannon Ball, N.D., where Dakota Access plans to lay pipe under the Missouri River. In recent weeks, the ranks of protests swelled from several dozen to more than 800.
The heavily-policed scene has not been without incident. More than 20 people have been arrested in the last few weeks, and a roadblock guarded by state police established on Highway 1806, which leads to the protest site and the Standing Rock reservation. So not only can protestors not get things like a water supply to the protest site, but the four thousand people who are already there may be stuck.
The court hearing is on August 24, where it will be decided whether to halt the construction or not. This pipeline, if it breaks, could destroy so many people’s lives, as well as decimate the environment and wildlife around them.
A petition has been started by a youth member of the Standing Rock Sioux, you can sign it here. It already has over 200,000 signatures.
Another petition to stop the pipeline is here.
Please help to save our water.
Sources:
One Two Three Four Five
‘For as long as it takes’: Native American protesters defy North Dakota pipeline construction
“Joey Montoya, like other protesters near Cannon Ball, at the northern boundary of the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota, sees himself as not just protecting the local community from a new oil pipeline – but also the country and the earth.
“Native communities are always just the first to be affected. We’re always at the front lines when oil companies come in.”
Montoya, a 22-year-old member of the Lipan Apache tribe from San Francisco, is part an influx of Native American and environmental activists from all over the country who have gathered in the remote part of the state to take a stand against the $3.7bn North Dakota Access Pipeline, which tribal members say threatens to pollute drinking water and damage sacred sites
In recent years, there have been a string of indigenous actions against oil pipelines in the US and Canada, but this one is already attracting especially broad support. On Facebook, Jon Eagle Sr, the Tribal Historic Preservation Officer at the Standing Rock Reservation, affirmed that the Seven Council Fires of the Sioux Nation – representing all Sioux groups – had come together for the first time since 1876 over this issue. Tribal chairman Archambault called in a statement for “my fellow American citizens (to) stand with my people”.
Mossett thinks that Native American pipeline activism may be at a crossroads. “This is the first time that the tribes have been coming together in recent history.”
Read the full piece here