#cobalts
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necessary-quotation-marks · 9 months ago
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His mind is fucking intriguing as hell, I more than willingly follow every thread, every line of thought.
Krista and Becca Ritchie (Damaged Like Us)
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alwaysbewoke · 1 year ago
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Congo💔🕊️
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We really cannot be free until we all are free.
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janasojka · 13 days ago
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Blue night stories
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acepumpkinpatrick · 11 months ago
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Y'all still boycotting, right? Still following the BDS movement, right? You still remember that Boycotts are for life, right?? You read that the Israeli Zionist Occupation is connected to other ongoing genocides, e.g. in Congo, right???
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luminarystimboards · 10 months ago
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Some Beautiful Brandt Cormorants during breeding season. I love these blue patches they get! Their eyes are so magical. Free to use, just link back to this post when you do!
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cobalts-corner · 25 days ago
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Rotten to the core
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funky-choo-choo · 3 months ago
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Soul Eater Cobalt Real???
AU by @nartothelar!!! LOOK AT THEIR AU!!! IS SO GOOD!!!
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cobble-stone · 2 years ago
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i think the ability to have wings and just do a really big stretch with em would fix me
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truth4ourfreedom · 9 months ago
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SLAVES: 40,000 child slaves in Congo are forced to work in cobalt mines so we can drive electric cars.
In Alberta, Canada, there are tens of thousands of men who couldn't afford a post secondary education but were able to lift themselves and their families out of certain poverty through back breaking work in oil fields. They were able to buy homes and cars and college educations for their children.
The climate alarmists want that to end. They want the uneducated to stay at the bottom where they belong.
They're comfortable with cobalt mines in the Congo where women and children work as slaves in order to produce the minerals required for electric vehicles because this is the natural order of things in their minds.
It isn't about saving the planet. It's about power and control. They want the bottom to stay at the bottom because truly free markets and uneducated peasants who find success within them are a threat to the power and control they need.
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cryogenic-heat · 8 days ago
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peaceful day at the barns
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hellspawnmotel · 6 months ago
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I continue to read astro boy
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necessary-quotation-marks · 9 months ago
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His love for his siblings toughens him, not softens.
Krista and Becca Ritchie (Damaged Like Us)
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quixoticanarchy · 5 months ago
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“This system of severity of exploitation of poor people of color at the bottom of global supply chains goes back centuries. Few people sitting for breakfast in England in the 1700s knew that their tea was sweetened by sugar harvested under brutal conditions by African slaves toiling in the West Indies. The slaves remained far removed from the British breakfast table until a band of abolitionists placed the true picture of slavery directly in front of the English people. Stakeholders fought to maintain the system. They told the British public not to trust what they were told. They espoused the great humanity of the slave trade—Africans were not suffering, they were being “saved” from the savagery of the dark continent. They argued that Africans worked in pleasing conditions on the islands. When those arguments failed, the slavers claimed they made changes that remedied the offenses taking place on the plantations. After all, who was going to go all the way to the West Indies and prove otherwise, and even if they did, who would believe them?
The truth, however, was this—but for the demand for sugar and the immense profits accrued through the sale of it, the entire slavery-for-sugar economy would not have existed. Furthermore, the inevitable outcome of stripping humans of their dignity, security, wages, and freedom can only be a system that results in the complete dehumanization of the people exploited at the bottom of the chain.
Today’s tech barons will tell you a similar tale about cobalt. They will tell you that they uphold international human rights norms and that their particular supply chains are clean. They will also assure you that conditions are not as bad as they seem and that they are bringing commerce, wages, education, and development to the poorest people of Africa (“saving” them). They will also assure you that they have implemented changes to remedy the problems on the ground, at least at the mines from which they say they buy cobalt. After all, who is going to go all the way to the Congo and prove otherwise, and even if they did, who would believe them?
The truth, however, is this—but for their demand for cobalt and the immense profits they accrue through the sale of smartphones, tablets, laptops, and electric vehicles, the entire blood-for-cobalt economy would not exist. Furthermore, the inevitable outcome of a lawless scramble for cobalt in an impoverished and war-torn country can only be the complete dehumanization of the people exploited at the bottom of the chain.
So much time has passed; so little has changed.”
— from Cobalt Red, Siddharth Kara
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letmeinimafairy · 1 year ago
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New big pendant for a driftwood and sea glass necklace
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tinyangrynerd · 9 months ago
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Waiting for 1.4.5
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cobalts-corner · 3 months ago
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protected secret or something like that
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