
❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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Andulka
ojovivo

shark vs the universe
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
styofa doing anything
Show & Tell
will byers stan first human second
Stranger Things
dirt enthusiast
todays bird
YOU ARE THE REASON
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Peter Solarz

Love Begins

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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#extradirty
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@worldwide-blackfolk
"Nothing Can Come Between Us" by Sade
"This is your daily reminder that Kevin Roberts, President of the Heritage Foundation, got a PhD in African American history and then used it to author Project 2025 and dismantle civil rights. RACISM IS THE POINT"
One of the most powerful acts of resistance we can do is to learn about slavery! Powerful players have educated themselves on the system of slavery, the system of capitalism while simultaneously erasing it from history so we don't put the pieces together and beat them.
🎥Ohyesitslizzyb
"Hot Night in the City" by artist Pascal Campion
Research - just because
Blooming Hyperfixation: Production Companies owned by people with color.
Starting with this list. I feel like looking up their teams, content, what they're working on, their biggest release.
I feel like the stories are out there and I want to know where I should focus/who I should support.
1. Monkeypaw Productions
Yes I will be ranking and rating them. No the ranking/rating will not make sense to anyone but me.
Rating: 10/10!
Their instagram, the stories, what they support ✅ If I liked horror more Id rate them 11 out of 10.
....
Our dollars have been building other communities for generations. Maybe it’s time they started building ours. This isn’t about hate. It’s about strategy. This isn’t just a boycott. It’s a wealth transfer. Mind your Black business. 🖤✊🏾
@dr.deneenspeaks
On 26 June 2026, Burkina Faso became the second country in the Sahel to completely end all diplomatic ties with its former coloniser, France. On the national television network Radio Television Burkina (RTB), Gilbert Ouedraogo, the Minister of Communications, stated, “The essential conditions for promoting relations based on mutual respect, reciprocal trust, respect for the principle of non-interference in internal affairs, and national sovereignty are not in place,” referring to France. He accused the European country of supporting t*rrorism in the Sahel region, an accusation first made by Mali’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdoulaye Maïga in 2022.
Burkina Faso’s neighbour, Niger, has not, in practice, had a diplomatic relationship with France since the French embassy in Niamey closed in December 2023. Burkina Faso has had previous tensions with the French diplomatic presence in the country. On 2 January 2023, Burkina Faso declared the former French ambassador to the country, Luc Hallade, persona non grata, ordering his expulsion. However, Burkina Faso did accept the arrival of a new French ambassador to the country. Now that diplomatic ties between the two states have ended, the French embassy in the country will be forced to close.
Burkina Faso, like Mali and Niger, ended the French military occupation of its country. For Burkina Faso, the military relationship with France ended in February 2023. The three countries, united under the banner of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), also left the French-dominated soft-power organisation known as the Francophonie in March 2025.
New Alkebulan
An attempt by Opposition Spokesperson on the Creative Industries, Culture and Information, Nekeisha Burchell, to deliver her maiden contribution to the Sectoral Debate in Parliament using Jamaican patois was immediately shut down by House Speaker Juliet Holness. Burchell began with: “Madam Speaker, mi git up dis afta noon fi mek mi fuss sectoral speech pon mi portfolia…” before being interrupted by Holness who cited the Standing Orders which dictate that standard English must be used in the House of Representatives. “Hold on, hold on, hold on. Standing Orders. And I think you are fully aware,” said Holness. “If I have to stop you again during your presentation you will not get any additional time,” the speaker warned. The chamber briefly descended into crosstalk between Government and Opposition Members of Parliament (MPs). Government MPs backed the speaker’s enforcement of the Standing Orders, while Opposition MPs argued that Burchell should be allowed to use the Jamaican dialect since a majority of Jamaicans speak it. They argued that her presentation was on culture and that she was not speaking in Spanish like Minister of State Alando Terrelonge about six months ago when he addressed Cubans present in the chamber but was shut down by his fellow Government MP Everald Warmington. Warmington cited the Standing Orders then and declared that it was his right to be heard in a language he understands. When she resumed speaking, Burchell said, “Madam Speaker, perhaps I should abandon that attempt to use our local language because I have been reminded of the linguistic conventions of this honourable House. “Because maybe there is no more fitting way to begin a presentation on culture than to speak briefly in the language understood by the overwhelming majority of the Jamaican people, even if that language still struggles for full acceptance in some of our most formal, national spaces including this very Parliament”. “So let me give you the Queen’s English,” said Burchell before continuing her presentation in English. Source: https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/2026/05/13/no-patois-house-speaker-shuts-burchells-attempt-present-jamaican-
Niger has hardened its position on reopening its border with Benin, making it clear that security, not diplomacy, is now the deciding factor. Niamey insists that no border reopening will happen until it receives binding guarantees that Benin’s territory will never be used by foreign military forces to threaten Niger’s sovereignty. At the center of the dispute is France’s military presence and influence near the shared border, which Niger views as a direct national security concern. For Niger’s military leadership, this is no longer a negotiation over trade. It is a question of sovereignty.
The message to Cotonou is blunt: if France remains part of the equation, the border stays shut. Niger says it wants full transparency regarding any foreign military assets operating near the frontier, along with closer security cooperation between the two neighboring states to combat terrorism without outside interference. Whether Benin accepts those conditions remains uncertain, but Niger has signaled it is prepared to keep the border closed indefinitely rather than compromise on what it describes as its national security interests.
Bobby Bonilla Day $$$