Random Things that be on my mind Website Amiyah M. – Let's talk about writingmystictalks.wordpress.com
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I just started a small crochet business you can visit the Instagram @timeless.storybook to see some pictures and videos of my items. I just started so theres not many but I will try to make good content! 😊
Hi! I’m A and I make crochet items from accessories to hats and jewelry.
Every since I was young I loved making things for people and seeing their reaction. How people faces light up when I handmade something for them made me super happy.
I always wanted to own my own business and this year I finally can. I had time to really think about what I want to do in life and be in life.
I was born with a chronic illness which is sickle cell anemia. And since I couldn’t work because of covid I can realize my dream.
So I hope you can follow me on my journey and learn a few things about crocheting!
I will make and show others how to make their own things too.
So you can follow me @timeless.storybook on Instagram, tiktok. I already posted my first part of my beginner crochet series on tiktok and Instagram!
Thank you for reading and I hope you have a great day! 😊
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This what I image when Jester read the tyrant card to molly/lucien. I liked the idea of it being an ouroboros instead of dragons, because he have a snake tattoo.
#critical role#cr spoilers#critical role jester#critical role caleb#critical role fanart#fanart#critical role fjord#critical role yasha#critical role beau#critical role nott#critical role caduceus#critical role veth
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based on these passages from the odyssey and the aeneid (and i think it might have happened in the iliad too, though i can’t remember where):
athena and aphrodite know EXACTLY what matters and that is HEROIC BIMBOFICATION!
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Support Stewart Semple and his quest to keep color in the public domain
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Writing About Diverse Cops (Cops of Color, LGBTQA+)
Noa asked:
Is writing about diverse cops propaganda?
Recently I keep seeing posts condemning people who write black and/or queer cops, because it makes the police seem more relatable/sympathetic to marginalized groups.So now I’m anxious about some of my characters.
Due to the nature of my story, I have a lot of cop characters, some of which are black or hispanic, some of which are queer, and some of which are both, with the most prominent one being a main character who is a black bisexual man.
I don’t live in the US and only have an outsider’s view on the issues and history regarding racially biased police brutality or attacks on minorities as a whole (not saying that it doesn’t happen where I’m from, it’s just different because of gun laws etc, and well, we didn’t have a Stonewall) and I’m doing my own research on these issues and trying to incorporate them in my story (which takes place in the US), but I don’t want to seem ignorant, or worse, like I support the police, even though I think some of my cop characters are genuinely good people.
The characters in question being PoC and/or queer is pretty important to me, but I’m wondering if I should change their race/orientation to avoid possible propaganda? If not, how can I successfully portray both factors coexisting?
I admit this question might be ignorant too but I grew up sheltered so I’d appreciate any help you can give me with this! Thank you very much!
On Non-American Police Forces
While people often focus on the racism of American police forces, the systemic racism of the justice system is visible globally. Canada has 40% of its prison population as Indigenous women, when we only make up 4% of the total Canadian population. Australia has similar numbers for its Aboriginal population. The UK incarcerates more brown and Black people than white people by a large margin.
To say that you are in a country without systemic racism in your justice department is to say you are ignorant of your own country’s justice system. Just because there are less deaths by police (because a lot of police in other countries don’t carry guns) does not mean the police are incarcerating people proportionally to the population.
Racism and colonialism is a global problem. Most police forces are relics of a colonial or imperialistic past. This means they’re echos of (often white, but not always, depending on the nationalism of the place in question) supremacy still resonating within the modern day. Xenophobia, colourism, and racism play a part in justice on a global scale. All of it needs to be examined, even if there aren’t police murders hitting the news on a weekly basis.
Media is Always Political
I don’t care what you’re writing, you’re writing something deeply influenced by politics.
Dystopia is rooted in police brutality and an authoritarian state.
Alien invasion sci fi is rooted in fear of colonialism happening to you, and sci-fi in general has a lot of colonialism undertones.
Cosmic horror is rooted in racism and an “unknown not-like-you” group making their homes in your home, with Lovecraft being a terrible racist even by the standards of his time.
The Pentagon literally funds military movies to be pro-American-military propaganda, and if you’re going to use the military in your movie, you can’t paint it in a bad light otherwise you can’t use any of the American military’s official symbols.
These ideas come from somewhere. And that “somewhere” is the world around you. Police have spent decades building up “copaganda” to paint themselves as a place that can do good if the right people are in charge. This is a very deliberate, very political act.
So trying to write something “apolitical” is not only impossible, but it’s going to side with the oppressors. Because oppressors make their position look like the neutral one. When it’s anything but.
Police As-Is Cannot Be Accountable
John Oliver breaks down how prosecutors and police work so closely together that they are coworkers, and absolutely do not want to put a bad cop on the stand because of not wanting to lose the trust of the police as a whole. This is not even counting qualified immunity, or the cultural perception that police are always the good guys thanks to decades of police media showing them as the good guys. This is what leads to acquittals and not guilty verdicts, because we as a society have been primed to believe police actions are always reasonable.
Take a gander at this video to find out more about (the lack of) police accountability: Police Accountability: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
Alternatives to Police (For your story / characters)
Military (written critically)
Private investigators
Data scientists / hacker groups
Activist organizations
Doctor or nurse
Superheroes, Anti-heroes
Depending on what you’re going for, police as a profession are highly replaceable.
If you want a sense of brotherhood and community in a mostly-paperwork-but-can-be-violent setting, the military can be critiqued while also painting the military-industrial complex in a bad light. Soldiers join for a multitude of reasons, from escaping abuse to escaping poverty. Most are treated terribly, especially when marginalized.
Private investigators can also be an option, although these can be just as corrupt, there’s less systemic baggage towards the profession (and they often take on cases that police refuse to touch, such as gay men disappearing in the 80s and nobody except the families caring—Herb Baumeister is the killer that private investigators had to hand police on a silver platter before they even thought about it. The wikipedia article neglects to mention how much community pressure it took for police to act; Behind Mansion Walls does a better job of explaining the actual case progression).
Data scientists and hacker groups can also get similar “fight crime” feel, just with less shootouts.
Activist organizations can also be on the “solve problems make the world better”, where the antagonists are police and the FBI (look up COINTELPRO for data on this).
Even working as a doctor or nurse for Planned Parenthood can be extremely dangerous. But like with cops, doctor propaganda ignores the systemic racism exhibited by medical professionals, along with ableism and fatphobia (which in the west is rooted in racism). BIPOC receive much worse care than their white counterparts, and stories centering doctors should acknowledge this. Remember: unless the protagonist is explicitly the villain, readers are meant to sympathize with their choices and find their behaviour (mostly) reasonable.
And, of course, there are always superheroes who feel the law isn’t doing a good enough job taking care of actual criminals so they go out and do it themselves.
If you’re stuck on police as the only possible “good guys” when it comes to fighting for justice, then you need to do some serious examination of your pro-cop biases and realize how little they actually do in terms of community help.
- Mod Lesya
Is it the right time for this story?
This is one of those “Read the room” types of stories. There’s a lot here that can go wrong, or rather, be poorly-received from readers, particularly Readers of Color.
Police are murdering and assaulting Black, Indigenous, other PoC, and white citizens faster than our cellphone cameras can keep up with. The police brutality reports are endless. Look at current events, and the reoccurring protests over yet another Black person murdered at the hands of police.
You submitted this question before George Floyd’s murder on May 25 2020, which has kicked off one of the largest Civil Rights movement in history thus far. However, we’re in the midst of several other prominent police or authorites-killing-PoC cases. Actually, I’m confident no matter what time someone ends up reading this, there would have been another fairly recent murder at the hands of the police to talk about. Unfortunately.
Know their names: Black people killed by police in 2020
These killings are dehumanizing, and can be seriously triggering. Combine that with the fact that there’s this push to continue defending and glorifying cops time and time again.
So ask yourself: Is this the time to write a story that serves to humanize police? A group that is historically and already given the benefit of the doubt and has the backing of the majority, the government, media, the president?
Diverse Cops - but aren’t they different?
Cops of Color, LGBTQA+ or otherwise, can be complicit in the system that systemically supports white supremacy.
Look up Sandra Bland, George Floyd, and the Black cop(s) involved in the cover-up or participating in brutality against them.
Or ex-cop Daniel Holtzclaw, who specifically targeted poor Black women to sexually assault.
BIPOC can uphold and participate in police brutality and often anti-blackness, so again; we can’t really look at individuals, but at the system as a whole.
Having diversity will not necessarily balance out the fact that police as a whole harass, abuse, brutalize and kill citizens at alarming rates.
A Systemic Problem
The police force has systemic issues of discrimination. It’s built into the fabric of the institution. It’s not a matter of good cops, bad cops. Especially if those “Good cops” stand back and watch the “bad ones" harm others.
Just recently in the writing of this post, Buffalo, New York cops were filmed pushing a 75 year old white man, Martin Gugino, to the ground. He bleed from his ears from the fall on concrete, is in critical condition, and the two cops who did it were suspended. The last I read, Martin Gugino has a fractured skull, a brain injury and cannot walk.
In the video, you can see one cop trying to help the man and being stopped by his fellow officer. He obeyed. So much for the good cops who step in, huh?
In response to that suspension, 57 officers resigned in solidarity with those cops. This goes to show that police can and do respond to the actions of their fellow cops.
57 Buffalo officers resign from special squad over suspension of two who shoved 75-year-old
Also consider what happens when actual good cops step up.
A black Buffalo cop stopped another officer’s chokehold. She was fired.
(Officer Cariole Horne)
Again, it’s not isolated incidents or only about individuals. It’s a culture, a systemic issue.
On that note, Cops of Color have certainly sued their employers for discrimination in the workplace. And there are plenty of fellow Cops of Color who have been unrecognized by their colleagues and faced manhandling and abuse at the hands of their fellow officer.
Writing this Story - Recognizing Brutality Exists First
I’d be wary of a writer covering this who didn’t have awareness of the racial and social climate of The Cops vs. Citizens. Be sure to get informed. A quick search for articles or stats from your country will provide a good start.
Police brutality is not just an American issue. It doesn’t necessarily have to result in murder for a problem to exist. Lesya talks more about global police brutality issues and the prison system. So before you rule it out in your own country, just because they have stricter gun laws, do your research to fill in the gaps of your understanding on these issues.
It’s also worth mentioning that cops choke, tase, assault and beat people so a gun isn’t needed to cause harm.
Is it propaganda to write Cops of Color characters?
Not necessarily. Cops of Color exist. Lgbtqa+ cops exist. However, you aim to make these characters sympathetic and relatable. That’s where it can be hit or miss for the readers.
Acknowledge the problems
This is one of those stories that almost has to discuss or at least acknowledge the issues that exist in the policing world. That includes brutality and excessive force, discrimination, murders, cover-ups, acquittals and so on. The more the story gets all intimate and cozy with your good cops, the more I’d want something that acknowledges systemic issues and how your cops are helping and reacting with that. You may not have a place to fit it all, but some portions of it should be acknowledged as the story shouldn’t predict it doesn’t exist.
Think about police brutality and corruption.
What do your cop characters stand for?
How would they react to a situation happening before their eyes or in their department involving fellow officers?
Balance the characters
Is this story about police officers, or include some but has a variety of other characters? Having more than a story About Cops would make this much more approachable.
It’d be nice to have a wider cast of characters that are 1) not police 2) not just villains or enemies of the police. This creates some balance and allows us to feel sympathy for other characters as opposed to feeling like we’re being pushed to only care about the cops.
Let me remind you of Lesya’s police alternatives for your storytelling:
Military (written critically)
Private investigators
Data scientists / hacker groups
Activist organizations
Doctor or nurse
Superheroes, Anti-heroes
Create another focal point
I’m much more inclined to read a story with a strong plot to carry us through the story. For example, solving a murder (Many police dramas), uncovering something supernatural (Sleepy Hollow before they ruined it), surviving the apocalypse (The Walking Dead; Hey Rick Grimes and Shane Walsh!).
A fluffy, domestic cop story meant to show daily life is one thing. A story that has a strong force or goal to carry the plot and doesn’t center itself on just the cops is another. And will be better received, in my opinion.
One story is about the cops and their lives.
Another happens to have cops that are mainly doing something else.
-Mod Colette
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Calls for Justice for Aurora’s Violinist Elijah McClain Grow
Elijah McClain was a kind and gentle 23 year old who worked as a massage therapist in Aurora, CO. On his lunch breaks from work, Elijah would go to the animal shelters and play violin for the animals because he thought that they were lonely in their cages and thought that the music would calm them.
In August 2019, Elijah went to the gas station to buy some iced tea for himself and his cousins. Because he suffered from anemia he would often wear a ski/ runner mask over his face to stay warm. On his way home, the Aurora Police department were called to reports of a “suspicious man.”
(Warning: for violent description) Elijah was apprehended by a group of three cops, despite committing NO crime and being unarmed. A struggle occurred, and he was held in a very dangerous carotid hold around his neck while he cried for help, cried out that he couldn’t breathe, cried out that he was nonviolent and couldn’t even kill a fly, and was repeatedly throwing up. Elijah weighed a mere 140 pounds. You can hear on the audio footage, an officer instructing another to move their body camera out of view.
While 3 Aurora Police Dept officers violently restrained him they called Aurora Fire Dept, who injected him with ketamine (a powerful drug used to tranquilize horses or in surgeries by a trained anesthesiologist and illegal to be administered by anyone else) even though he was already cuffed and calm.
He went into cardiac arrest , slipped into a coma, and his family was advised to take him off life support 6 days later.
The cops were transferred to another department but never received charges.
HERE’S HOW YOU CAN HELP:
DONATE
Click this Link to call these Representatives and DEMAND JUSTICE!!
Especially call these numbers:
Call CO Governor Jared Polis (303) 866 2471
Call Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman (303) 739 7015
Call District Attorney Dave Young (303) 659 7720
Source / Police Video (Trigger warning)
#WAKEUP
Follow here for more news
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I think Caleb was going to ask Artagan to switch the beacon or do something with the beacon like make a fake one or something of that nature. I don’t think he wanted to ask Artagan to kill someone, and the way Jester and Artagan interact with each other is just pure chaos and I love it but I hope Jester doesn’t feel like she will lose Artagan because they made each other better.
Like Jester made him a God and Artagan made her not so lonely.
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I’m making a urban fantasy graphic novel all 2020 I will release sneak peek  on my wix blog and on instagram. You get to see the beguto end from making the cover to the last period in the novel! So please check it out, join if you just want to have conversations with others about writing and please share my wix with others!
#graphicnovel#writing tumblr#writing help#wix.com#writers#fantasy#ubranfantasy#writing#writeblr#comics#books#bookblr#ya novels#novel#funny#please check it out
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2019 Fashion year in review. (via @rover_thecat)
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tumblr friendships are hard to maintain like im sorry i know i havent talked to you in 5 months but you’re still super rad and i still consider us friends im just dumb
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Terry Crews came out and admitted he had been sexually assulted by someone in the film industry, and is now being blacklisted. I have been a fan of his since Idiocracy, and will continue to support all of his work.
So when you wonder why people don’t come forward with their assults, this is why.
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I will not have Mando is a bad dad slander in this house 🏠
He’s a gentle softie
He’s protective AF
Gives him toys to play with
Creates a car seat & travel basket backpack?
Would kill for him
Buys him food
Nap time & blankets
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The assembly knows
So people at the assembly knows that Trent experiment on his students, and how he craved runes and put crystals in their arms plus even more things we don’t know about. And Ludinus says his teaching is not for everyone wow. Just wow at this “assembly”
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Hey guys! So I wanna share with you a project that I’m very passionate about!
For the past two years, my friends and I have been working on the production of a short film called “Lucía desde el espacio” (Lucia from space) a beautiful short-film that talks about a deep-rooted issue in Mexican society: violence against women.
The story, however, focuses on this through a lens of pain, love, and innocence in the young woman’s family. It’s sad and touching and a story that needs to be told.
Two weeks ago, after two years of pre-production and scrapping for every penny we could get, we finally shot the short-film. It was an amazing and exhausting experience.
(there was a point, when shooting a specific scene, where half the crew was moved to tears)
I am dying to share this project with you (subtitles will definitely be added) but before that, I need your help!
We only have 19 days left in our Kickstarter campaign to finance post-production. This includes sound-mixing, musicalization and inscription fees to send the film to festivals where it can be screened to a wider audience.
Any little bit you could donate would make a huge difference for us. Consider, with coin exchange rates, any dollars or euros you could donate —no matter how seemingly small— are a big step forward for us!
If you really can’t help support the project, at least a reblog or share would be of huge help. Time is of the essence and the more people we can reach, the better.
This is a female-directed, written and led project, put together by a group of indie young creators who really poured their hearts and souls into it.
kickstarter
http://kck.st/2Jjp2rq
kickstarter
Also, under the cut are some pictures of the production. We are all young, passionate and in love with this film. With your help, we can make walk the last stretch to make this story justice!
Seguir leyendo
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