#I'm sharing the posts and I'm going to send emails to politicians and if a protest is organized near me I will go
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I don't know what to add, but I wanted to share this.
This needs to end.
This needs. to end.
Edit:
2nd edit in case this blows up: Do not be vile in the notes justifying or trying to recruit for antisemitism by using this genocide to justify another.
#palestine#Gaza#isreal#I feel so frustrated and helpless#I'm sharing the posts and I'm going to send emails to politicians and if a protest is organized near me I will go#but it feels like trying to hold an ocean in my hands#My own life is so full and overwhelming and then I look up and see this and my chest hurts and it SHOULD HURT it should ALWAYS HURT#what can I do about the hurt... I guess right now I'm sharing it#Comments under this tweet were celebrating this girl's death#Vile vile things#What can I do? What can I do?#I'm sharing#I'm sharing and waiting and hoping that others are more capable than I#I wish I could throw myself fully into everything and save the world#I wish I was superman#I wish I were God#So I could snap my fingers and bring this girl back#and everyone else#I'm not religious but I understand where it came from#I want to believe their souls are still out there and they are at peace#I struggle with dissociation and have little affective empathy so I've been feeling somewhat numb#trying to share what I can. trying not to look away just because my mind is giving me the out#this story struck me more because it made me think of my own grandmother's last text to me#so... That's why I'm feeling compelled to talk and talk and talk in the tags#it hurts and it should hurt and it should always hurt#and if it doesn't hurt then we need to cognitively recognize that hurt is happening and care and talk and stop it and stop it and stop it#free palestine
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Please remove me from the list
So at some point two people @ me for posts to reblog
While I want to help there's only so much I can do & it's piling up. I am not a vetter, I do not want to be on a list of people to contact, while there's ways to check if someone is fake or no I can only do so much.
I am getting messaged DAILY being asked by multiple people(sometimes sending me the SAME message twice or three times) I can not keep up with stuff nor can always tell if this was vetted or not or if it's fake.
I asked to two people that @ me why they did that & apparently I've possibly been put on a list of people to message/@ for some reason. They said they'd remove me but I don't think this helped as I'm still getting messaged repeatedly.
I want to help but I can only do so much, there's too many messages piling up & I can't check on everything. There's too many people, I'm getting tired & as much as I want to help I can't do much past sharing & it's too much to deal with.
I know I'm going in circles but I'm done, this is like change dot org were my email got put on multiple subscription lists at some point which includes politicians I don't know from different states(I didn't even sign partitions related to politics) & at one point some realtor site in the UK.
The point is that I never asked to be added & please remove me from any possible lists. As much as I want to help by sharing go fund me links there's too many & there's too many to check if they're fake or not & then I end up making the wrong choice if someone has to message me that I mistakenly got a scammer
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sending this as an ask because i don't feel like battling the reply character limit, but re: your post about feeling helpless about palestine
not 2 act like too much of an authority on this but just talking about it+calling it what it is Is important+doing something even if it feels like it isn't. denial is part of genocide; israel as a state wants you 2 believe that this is "complicated" or "war" so they can justify what they're doing as an act of defence. everything you say or share otherwise keeps that idea from taking root. the less their propaganda works the less power they have.
as 4 something more actionable—if you look in the notes of the post you rbed about financial aid not reaching gaza, there are quite a few links about politicians you can call or email 2 voice support. political pressure does count 4 something, especially when it comes 2 an international power like the usa.
i do want 2 say though that like i hope you're not beating yourself up about not being able 2 do more. it's upsetting but it's not your sole responsibility, especially as a guy who is like. only 18. you aren't a bad person 4 not being able 2 go out+protest 4 example. i'm kind of just assuming this is a problem you have so feel free 2 disregard this bit but you are a very kind person+i wouldn't want you 2 feel as if you're not doing enough. 👍
auuuugh thank you clancy i really appreciate it. i did need to hear that last part
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Alexandra Hunt is hoping to unseat establishment Democrat Rep. Dwight Evans for Pennsylvania's 3rd Congressional District during Tuesday's primary.
In a lot of ways, Hunt is a traditional progressive candidate. She's well-educated and has a background working in public health. She's also running on the main pillars of the progressive platform — like the Green New Deal and Medicare for All.
In other ways, she's a bit unusual for someone running for Congress.
She's spoken publicly about her brief time as a stripper in college to make ends meet. And most recently, she fired up an OnlyFans, a site where some people make money off of posting naked pictures. According to the Daily Mail, the account itself just features posts about Hunt's campaign.
At times, Hunt's unexpected background has grabbed negative publicity.
She said sexist coverage by the New York Post and Fox News has unfairly spotlighted her history as a stripper. It's coverage that she feels has overshadowed her other qualifications.
"My name has been erased and I'm 'The Former Stripper,'" she said.
In a conversation with NPR, Hunt said she's worked in public health for years and is so much more than her past.
Jennifer Lawless, politics professor at the University of Virginia, said Hunt's campaign represents how far American society and politics has gone.
"Ten years ago or 20 years ago she couldn't have even run" because of societal beliefs and pressure, Lawless said.
She added: "It's progress in and of itself that somebody with that background feels confident and qualified to run for office. I think that demonstrates some degree of progress."
Hunt fights back against the trolls
Starting the OnlyFans account was an attempt to hit back at an online troll who said they were looking forward to when Hunt loses and she starts an OnlyFans, she said.
"So I made an OnlyFans to push back on that troll, but also to push back on the stigma that this is a thing to be ashamed of, this would disqualify me as a candidate or as a politician," she said. "Because it's not and it shouldn't."
She said the account is a way to make money and shows what many people of her generation (millennials) must do to make ends meet.
"Alexandra's OnlyFans is her personal account and she does talk about the campaign as it is a part of her life. She shares her opinions, views, campaign updates, thoughts, memes or other things," Hunt's campaign said in an email. "She has shared photos and videos of herself as well. She has sent out Pay Per View content as well which has raised a significant amount for her."
Lawless notes Hunt has smartly used this as a way to connect to young voters struggling to make money.
But she added: "The risk though ... is that when you tell that story, there are going to be people who frame that story differently."
And Hunt has certainly experienced that.
The New York Post wrote: "Good luck pulling this one off. An ex-stripper from New York left behind her platform shoes for a political platform."
Hunt has faced increased vitriol as the primary neared. She's spoken publicly about having an abortion. That admission, she believes, has prompted cyber attacks on their campaign site and email system. The attacks have crippled their email access, she said.
"It's almost paralyzed our ability to send emails and fundraise," she said.
What the future holds
Lawless said the focus and criticism on Hunt's background is, unfortunately, to be expected for any candidate, Lawless said. That goes for male and female candidates.
"Once you're running for public office, every choice you made is something on which you'll be judged," she said.
Through her research, Lawless has found that in previous congressional races over time, there really isn't much in the way of explicitly sexist coverage, generally.
"When there is gendered coverage, and by that, I mean attention to women's appearances, or women's roles — and this would certainly fall into that category — women and men overall, are equally likely to receive that kind of coverage."
In Hunt's case, the extent her background will actually deter local voters, is probably minimal, Lawless said.
"The media have an incentive to cover what's novel, because what's novel is newsworthy, and this is unusual," Lawless said of Hunt's history. But that attention goes a long way in helping candidates rise above the noise, get their names out, and raise money.
Hunt has tried her best to lean into the trolling and criticism. Her campaign has made tongue-in-cheek T-shirts that read "I may have danced for money but I'm no corporate whore" and "Elect hoes."
She's also continues to use her experiences as a way to connect with voters.
"I think that the campaign demonstrates that candidates can use gender in a way that could ultimately be advantageous, even when the circumstances surrounding that use might not have been what they had intended," Lawless said.
Hunt said she has heard from people, once fearful of what lay in their past, say they were encouraged to run for office by her campaign. Win or lose, Hunt said she hopes her campaign makes a difference.
"I hope that more every day people who have these pieces of their past choose to run and choose to get involved," she said.
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