rienfleche
^do sol le te ↵
2K posts
If you're not black, don't fuck with this blog.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
you already know i'm leaving this shitty blog in 2017!
✌🏿
17 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
i really enjoy the feeling of walking with a nice sag. y'all don't even know.
:3
3 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
non-black asian indians in uganda
All non-blacks are antiblack, & indians are not alone in their obliteration of black life in the region—the british, most infamously, & the chinese, most recently, do the same. The following excerpts are a counterpoint to claims that black ugandan revolt against british/indian asians is somehow “racist”. All oppressors of black people can fuck off.
there was an unwritten but trusted social order in the colonial administration where Europeans were regarded as first class, Asians as second class, and Africans as third class.
For example, in trains there was a first class coach for Europeans and a few Asians, and there were coaches for Asians, and coaches for Africans. Apartheid did not start in South Africa or the US; it started with the “mother country”, Great Britain.
The same order prevailed with other facilities such as toilets. The segregation was not supported by law but it was observed in practice. Africans were not expected to go to the Imperial Hotel (The Grand Imperial Hotel in downtown Kampala). There was a sign outside the hotel that stayed there until 1952. It read: “Africans and dogs not allowed”. The waiters were Asians.
[x]
When Idi Amin kicked out the Asians and nationalized their property in 1972, most of them closed up shop for good, making new lives in India, Britain, or Canada. But some of them were among the first to return to Uganda after General Amin was overthrown.
Mrs. Madhvani was one of those who accepted the invitation of new Ugandan President Milton Obote to return. Her family owns the largest sugar plantation in Uganda. At one time the Madhvani industrial group controlled 38 percent of the industrial investment in the country.
The late Jayant Madhvani, a third-generation Ugandan of Indian origin, had expanded the farm-based industries his father began. He built a cottonseed oil factory, several cotton gins, a soap factory, a mill for grinding maize into flour and cattle feed, and a candy factory.
He operated this business empire from his estate at Kakira, eight miles from Jinja, the industrial center of Uganda, where Col. John Speke discovered the source of the White Nile.
The Madhvani group continued to expand: into steel, glass, and paper in Uganda and into industries in Kenya and Tanzania. Mr. Madhvani even became a member of the Ugandan Parliament.
Next door at Lugazi, the Mehta family, another Asian conglomerate, became one of Uganda’s biggest producers of coffee and tea for export.
[x]
Uganda’s capital, Kampala, erupted into racial violence yesterday, with three people killed during a protest against government plans to allow Ugandan-Asian industrialists to grow sugar cane on protected forest land.
In scenes described as reminiscent of 1972, when Idi Amin led a hate campaign against south Asian merchants, demonstrators attacked businesses and a Hindu temple, where police had to rescue more than 100 people seeking sanctuary.
An Asian man was reported to have been stoned to death after being pulled off his motorbike. Several other motorists were beaten and a sugar truck was set on fire. Demonstrators shouting anti-Indian slogans hurled rocks at troops who set up roadblocks to stop the protests spreading. Soldiers retaliated with live ammunition, killing two black Ugandans.
The march, which was authorised by police and began peacefully, was arranged by environmentalists, opposition leaders and religious groups angered by a government proposal to allow the Mehta Group to clear a quarter of the Mabira forest reserve to grow sugar. The 30,000-hectare (7,400-acre) reserve, east of Kampala, contains some of the last patches of virgin forest in Uganda and serves as an important water catchment area.
President Yoweri Museveni last year ordered a study into whether to allow Scoul, a local sugar firm owned by Mehta, to use 7,100 hectares of the forest. The state has a 30% share in Mehta.
Though conservationists said the move would ruin an area containing hundreds of species, the government pushed ahead with its plans for the reserve, which has been protected since 1932.
[x]
11 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
tw child abuse
confronted my parents via WhatsApp about spanking both of us as kids & beating my younger sibling as a teenager. my mom was all ‘whaAaAaA?!’ so i took it to my dad (who did most or all of it) & he was all ‘sorry if you were hurt by anything that may have happened’ & i had to be like ‘this is what happened DO YOU AGREE THIS HAPPENED Y/N’ lol. being able to do it via text was a blessing honestly. i don’t trust myself to hold the line generally, but especially not face-to-face. if we’re mutuals message me if you wanna see some examples of what this kind of gaslighting looks like in ~real time~, or otherwise compare notes/share stories.
5 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
broke: men's clothing, women's clothing
woke: clothing has no gender
bespoke: the gender of the clothing depends on the gender of the wearer
baroque: all clothes are constantly cycling through a vast array of genders at immeasurably high speeds
343 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
“not welcome on this blog” means no reblogging, liking, following, lurking, unsolicited messaging & asking, or otherwise interacting with whatever passes through here. violators to the chokey!
12 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
he jacks content from black people with less clout than him to repost. he continually platforms violently oppressive cis men (& is one himself). he translates black culture for nonblack consumption, pulls a lot of "gotta hear both sides" nonsense that really just upholds the status quo, & is an all-around happy & unapologetic coon with no apparent intentions of changing. quintessential shitty social capitalist.
Why exactly don’t yall like dj akademiks?
22 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
26 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
ever look up the people you went to high school with & think about how antiblackness & class shaped how their lives [appear to] have gone since? in my case, things have developed pretty predictably (if you know what to look for). kind of makes sense, since a lot of these things are somewhat predictable before someone’s even born, just from the status of our parents. what about y’all?
6 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Video
youtube
fuck a white interviewer, but still wanted to share this story of slavery & survival.
24 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Video
youtube
39 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Text
nonblacks catch a break in a legal system designed by & for them while black people continue to get condemned to slavery for anything & everything…shocking. fuck the left & what it stands for, y'all are no better than the right when it comes down to it.
chris hayes is among those denouncing the j20 prosecution as "an insult to the constitution", that says plenty about the ~radical politics~ on display here. lmfao
5 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
just a reminder that Zack Fox is trash. the above tweets are just the tip of the iceberg. here’s how him & his fans reacted to getting called the fuck out for being an oppressive asshole:
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
68 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Video
youtube
2 notes · View notes
rienfleche · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
packets of water being sold in port-au-prince, Haiti, during the 2010 cholera outbreak. photo taken 23 november.
98 notes · View notes