#it’s a tragedy and it’s about to be used as anti trans propaganda
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mensfrightsactivist · 2 years ago
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oh ok now they’re saying the nashville shooter they originally identified as female used he/him pronouns. and there’s no way to verify this because they killed the shooter on-site instead of allowing a court of law to decide the punishment
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pumpumdemsugah · 2 years ago
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just curious, why don't you consider yourself a radfem? why a black feminist instead?
I've always drawn my feminist ideas from Black feminists and I haven't read much radical feminism. I think many fail to see how much Black Feminism talks about motherhood and pussy alot because it's approached in a less direct way. The weaponisation of pregnancy and rape is foundational imo in many Black feminist text. The Black female experience is very body focused and we can't get away from that.
Audre Lorde is one of the few radical lesbian feminists I've read ( not all her books just a couple ) and a couple others where I didn't finish the book, don't remember the name or read a couple of chapters 13 years ago.
I do think radical feminist theory can struggle to offer an analysis of race and sex ( and other things ) that I think is strong and I don't mean in the " all rad fems are white way" . it correctly wants to establish how patriarchy and male supremacy has rightly fucked women over, but when other forces are equally at play it can struggle appropriately discussing that. I think it's good at pointing out the position of women in the world and putting the fact that patriarchy came before capitalism or the modern concept of race.
I've always preferred to have a more woman Vs race focused Black feminism because I think Black women are prone and encouraged to downplay sex and misogyny in our analysis of our position in the world and being in environments where being Black is common, it never made sense to me to not do that lol. I think some Black feminist get caught up in proving they take racism as seriously as misogyny because of the impact Black nationalism has had but I do not care lol. Even when I go off to learn about trans Atlantic slavery, I've always gone out my way to see what it meant for enslaved women and girls. The way Black women and girls bodies were used in colonial propaganda to justify colonialism, that tragedy is of compounded oppression. There's a lot of context where focusing women wrt slavery and colonialism should be done. Tbh that's what I do. My way of doing things when I think about Black women, i focus on how misogyny and try not to come to conclusions where I treat misogyny or race as tainting the other.
I fundamentally think the position of Black women in society is an interesting one because particularly in the west, the way misogyny and sexism is sold to us, it doesn't pretend it's not going to be brutal and that it doesn't think we're worthless. Black patriarchy usually steps in here to pretend it has our dream life but it's sold as Black liberation to hide the fact its misogyny with anti-racist buzzwords . There is no cute fantasy, and this is driving some Black women to do the whole femininity journey thing because they want a cute fantasy of the ideal pampered housewife, even if that wasn't how those women lived.
That's not a particularly radical feminist approach even if it's woman centred. Keep in mind my brain has spent the last few years contracting because Im not an avid reader anymore and I don't remember certain things as clearly as I used to
I don't mind just a generic feminist label either.
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drxaria · 2 years ago
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I see every now and then this odd sentiment that I presume this post is in response to, that it’s offensive to holocaust victims and survivors and to Jewish people broadly to make comparisons of people’s suffering to the holocaust.
On one hand, yes, Hitler and the Nazis and the holocaust becoming the default example for comparing acts of evil has led to some dipshit comparisons like anti-maskers claiming to be as oppressed as Jews during the holocaust or Christians not getting to legislate religion claiming to be as oppressed as Jews during the holocaust or white suburban people getting some non-white neighbors claiming to be as oppressed as Jews during the holocaust.
On the other hand, what’s happening in the US and parts of Europe to trans people is following pretty damn parallel to the early actions of the Nazis. Republicans and other conservatives and even some civility-minded liberals might cry foul at the seemingly low-hanging fruit type of comparison to the Nazis, but the Republicans and anti-trans bigots trying to eradicate trans people should’ve thought about that before they started acting like Nazis and following the Nazi playbook if they didn’t want to deal with a bunch of Nazi comparisons. Sorry, it’s not my fault they’re acting just like Nazis and that it’s the best historical comparison for them.
But aside from the accuracy of this comparison, of GOP warm-up for a trans genocide to the holocaust, the holocaust shouldn’t be treated like some uniquely horrific event that can’t be matched or referenced lest you sound hyperbolic. It wasn’t some cosmically anomalous tragedy that happened to befall the Jews in Nazi Germany. It was the logical progression and conclusion of events driven by basic the human self-interest within a system that was inadequate at preventing genocidal authoritarian lunatics from exercising power.
And it’s definitely scarier to look at the world as one where the brutality of the holocaust wasn’t that special, but human history is filled to the brim with incredible cruelty, and the holocaust’s notability comes in part from it being recent and well-documented.
And the attitude of “it could never happen here” is irresponsible wishful thinking. The whole spirit of the phrase “never again” in reference to the holocaust is to be vigilant and preventive, rather than reactive, to the signs of creeping authoritarianism and the genocidal intent of fascism when it might be too late.
It’s tempting to think that we’ve learned our lesson from history to not do a holocaust again, but evidently authoritarian ghouls in positions of power still find themselves able to wield political power through fearful, weak-minded people who fall prey to fascist propaganda. They might not have, but if we have learned from history, then we should see the signs and stop it from happening again. Never again.
Statements that can exist simultaneously:
Being Jewish and being trans are not comparable 1:1.
The Holocaust was not about trans people. Yes, some of the people targeted were queer. But that was an extension of Hitler's general disdain for "degeneracy" and the downfall of German culture, and he blamed all of that on the Jews.
What we are seeing in the USA right now is clearly identifiable as the build up to a genocide.
The Holocaust and the building genocide against trans people are not comparable 1:1. Both of these situations are terrible and awful, but they are terrible and awful in different ways.
Things are not as bad in the USA for trans people right now as they got for Jews during the Holocaust. This does not mean things are not bad, deadly, or traumatic. We are not playing the oppression olympics here, we are trying to bring back hope.
That's because a genocide against trans people in the USA has not yet happened and we can still stop it.
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joanmustbeburned · 3 years ago
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an open letter to the western LGBT+ community
as a half Ukrainian Russian citizen I thank you for supporting Ukraine and your attention to this tragedy. my heart is with my Ukrainian brothers and sisters, my heart and soul are with my relatives who live in Ukraine. I am hurting for them and I am praying for this to be over soon. me and my Russian friends are doing everything we can to stop this war
however, I am begging you:
DO NOT HATE AND CONDEMN THE WHOLE RUSSIAN NATION FOR THE CRIMES OF THE RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT
please remember about your Russian LGBT+ family - we are family not by blood but by our souls and ideals. please remember about people who for years have been terrified to come out out of fear to face the prejudice, hate and violence. please remember about people who have been open about their sexuality and gender experience, and for this lost their jobs and their family. please remember about people who have been forced to leave their country. please remember about people who have been killed for simply wanting to live their lives in freedom and peace
right now some of my LGBT+ friends are suicidal. they are terrified to be isolated from the world, to face global condemnation. right now my trans brothers and sisters who go to anti war protests are being thrown in jails. some of them are most definitely being beaten and tortured, and I can't imagine the consequences they can face. please understand that we are hostages in this situation and don't leave us alone in this tragedy
yes, there's a lot of people in Russia who support Putin. not everyone is innocent. however, I also want you to remember that for years people here have been brainwashed by pro-Putin propaganda. yes, the majority of people is afraid to protest - but trust me, they have their reasons to be
please pay attention to the news and stand with Ukraine. but do not, DO NOT think all of us in Russia want to participate in something we didn't choose. we are not guilty to be simply born here. we love our country, our culture, and we love and respect all of you. we pray for the better and brighter future
please give peace a chance
#StandWithUkraine 🇺🇦
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just-antithings · 4 years ago
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honestly the Hetalia talks are making me feel better about liking Hetalia 😩 for a few months I've been on the down low about liking it and ffs, every time someone pops a post about "Hetalia is nazi propaganda" the OP is literally someone who knows nothing about Hetalia and cannot bring actual decisive evidence beyond vague hearsay ("I heard from a mutual who had a friend who knew a person that liked Hetalia-") or use another series' content or creator (AOT) to distract people from questioning how Hetalia or Himaruya is "nazi propaganda" despite having no evidence from the series or creator to backup that claim.
OR, most especially, they're projecting their problems onto other people (namely, blaming the fandom and other people about the nazi or confederate fetish they had when they were a 'edgy I like Dark Humour' tween (or as I noticed, because they had heritage from Germany/the South)).
Seriously, yes, there are issue in Hetalia, but whatever issues in Hetalia is also just an standard anime issue.
Lot of white or light-skin characters? Speaking as a brown person, yeah, that's tiring... But how is that different from other manga and anime (hell, that shit even applies to Western media so yall stfu when Western media is just as behind as Japan? (also why is Japan responsible for Western audience representation? Why aren't you taking that issue to Western studios?)) Fucking hell, it's rare for a character to be brown without being the tanned athlete or gyaru in manga/anime - so expecting more than one genuine brown character in anime is laughable when colorism/racism is still just an issue in Japan as it is in the West.
There's "more men than woman" in Hetalia? And? Really how is that different from any other series? It is an issue, sure, but to pretend that it's an issue that started with Hetalia is disingenuous as fuck. (Especially because you look at these anti-Hetalia fans and they'll be into series with just as a severe gender-ratio. Not much a pressing issue as they pretend it to be.)
It's "a yaoi series that caters to fujoshi" - look no matter how much shipping goes on in the fandom, Hetalia is not "a yaoi" (though, nothing wrong with that), and seriously, there is a lot of nonbinary and male fans that ship within the fandom too. Using "fujoshi" is just a misleading excuse to be misogynistic and transphobic (I've seen yall anti-Hetalia fuckers accusing trans men of "fetishizing gay men as a lifestyle").
And lastly, the idea that harassing and shaming Hetalia fans to "protect Jewish and fans of color"? Bull. Crap. Now, is there Hetalia fans who express antisemitic or racist beliefs? Yes, I've ran into them. I'm also ran into Fire Emblem, Pokémon, and Animal Crossing fans who expressed antisemitic or racist beliefs and in those fandoms, I've been told to just "drop it", "leave it", "just ignore them" (yanno, as a brown person). Hetalia is just the scapegoat other people use so as not to address the antisemites and racists within their own fandom. Select Hetalia circles (read: white prevalent, because I'm in largely POC circles) have issues on addressing those problems in our fandom, but so does every other damn fandom too! Because it's "negative drama with bad vibes".
Anyways, Hetalia isn't a perfect series and the English dub has some terrible dark humor, but the current fandom is nothing like the fandom from the early 2000/2010s because the "older fandom" (i.e. the edgy kids and teens that look at Hetalia as their cringe phase because of socialized bigotry and a lack of proper social behavior) has largely left, and those who stayed do our damnist to instill better behavior because we do acknowledge that select behaviors is bad (i.e. wubbifying or romanticizing nazism, the confederate South, ussr, etc, or current events/tragedies/politics).
But ah yes, none of that happens because we're a hivemind who all "went through a nazi phase because the fandom embraces it" (newsflash, we aren't, we don't, and hell that's a lot of projecting personal failures).
hell yes anon go off!!!!!!
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grandhotelabyss · 4 years ago
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Defeated by the hype, I watched the new Adam Curtis. I hadn't seen one of his films since 2007 and wasn’t enamored of the celebrated ones back then. I thought he was a more middlebrow Mark Fisher[*]: nostalgia for the welfare state cloaked in avant-garde aesthetics, which I was used to as a longtime reader of British-Invasion comics—the feeling is similar in Moore and Morrison and Milligan and Delano and Ellis (though not the genteel Gaiman)—but couldn’t as an American petit bourgeois quite appreciate. At the time, I was trying out dogmatic Marxism as an intellectual style, so I also took it as obvious that avant-garde aesthetics, for a variety of reasons, inherently degrade the social and conduce to the very fragmentation and alienation being lamented. Which Curtis does analyze as the theme of his work—and the sometimes patronizing voiceovers are like a parody of top-down state-socialist pedagogy—but his visual style, with its debts to Godard and Marker and MTV, enact in form what’s being attacked as content. 
I also thought Curtis also had an air of New-Atheist-type Brit-twit reasonableness that undermines the acuity of his political analyses. He persistently portrays powerful political actors as naive psychological cases, delusive and fearful types who can’t face the facts. As a literary technique developed by Curtis’s English forerunner Shakespeare, this replacement of politics with psychology can be dramatically powerful, as in the new doc’s best thread, the tragedy of Jiang Qing; but it can also impede a more precise sense of the interests in play. 
I'm no longer a dogmatic Marxist, or even a Marxist at all, and no longer think the relation between politics and artistic form is perfectly clear, so some of my objections have dropped away, even reversed—Curtis grieves that the corruptions of socialism and communism have led us to fear changing the world at all, but doesn’t his own persistent discrediting of anarchic ideas because they were co-opted by neoliberalism mirror the nouveaux philosophes?
The power of Can't Get You Out of My Head is in the nuance of the analysis. I am tempted to call it dialectical. Here Curtis does closely attend to economic motivations in recent history. Despite the banal citation of Richard Hofstadter, he also refuses to moralize and psychologize away conspiracy theory; he shows what secret agencies are known to have been doing throughout the second half of the 20th century, a record so egregious that people can be forgiven for suspecting them of more. Some of his own bland reassurances of their bumbling incompetence tripped my own paranoia—isn't that what they want us to think?—and I didn’t find his use of the JFK assassination at all compelling. Whatever you think of Jim Garrison, and I concede I was influenced early in life both aesthetically and politically by Oliver Stone, whose montage style Curtis’s also resembles, I take the Zapruder film as definitive, no-theories-needed, you-can-see-it-with-your-own-eyes evidence (“Back and to the left”) that there were at least two shooters.
Curtis places the most incendiary material in episode four, where he comes close to saying outright what I hesitated even to suggest in my Habermas post—that “humanitarian intervention” is, when we cut through the sentimentality, a mode of militarist imperialism that doesn’t even effect, and whose proponents perhaps don’t intend to effect, its stated humanitarian aims. He draws a line between the bombing of Serbia and the invasion of Iraq, but he nicely balances Bernard Kouchner with Eduard Limonov, two versions of post-political benightedness, to avoid straying into Peter Handke territory. To this he strangely adds the story of Julia Grant, the implications of which, given the rest of the film’s thesis, he mutes by creating sympathy for this person beleaguered by vicious street kids and fascoid NHS psychiatrists. Still, the inclusion of a pioneering trans activist—whose anti-feminist statements are highlighted—in a montage on the delusions of individualism will have some viewers wondering about the message. (Surprisingly, I saw no criticism to this effect on social media.)
There are vertiginous tidbits—the Boole thread connecting the Russian Revolution to managerial western democracy in the Cold War in episode one, for instance, or the fact relayed in episode five, news to me, that the director of Dr. No did western-backed propaganda for Saddam Hussein. Curtis also gives good book and music recommendations as well (but leave the sarcastic music cues—“Lady in Red” played over the radicalization of Abu Zubaydah, etc.—to Zack Snyder): I want to read My Bones and My Flute now, and the song that heads this post, which I'd never heard before, perfectly distills the epoch.
I can forgive much for Curtis’s conclusion, finally, with its exposure of the (I hope delegitimating) replication crisis in psychology and the social sciences; his satire on the squalid, hateful, maddening, and at this point almost genocidal derangement of the western liberal class, an enemy of humanity equal in its horror to its answering populist fervors, or worse because it incites them; and his call to reestablish the sovereignty of the imagination, which credo is the true part of both individualism and communism, not invalidated by what was false in those utopian ambitions, though the falsehoods in seemingly impenetrable combination are all that our present societies, from China to the U.S., currently offer.
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[*] I’ve effaced traces of this part of my life as much as possible, but I've been hanging around the weird side of cultural politics online for almost two decades now. From 2003 to 2006, I was part of the same circle of leftist blogs as Fisher—to be clear, I was a minnow in this pond—and was a contributor to a group blog that included a number of people in his milieu, notably Nina Power, who is now a member of Justin Murphy’s Salon des Cancelés. Like all left-wing social climates, this was a ruthlessly sectarian and ever-more-micro-fractionated ideological space, and I belonged to the tendency opposite that of Fisher’s. The conflict could perhaps be captioned “anti-humanists vs. radical humanists” or maybe “left-Nietzscheans vs. left-Hegelians.” I was in the camp of another still-controversial online-left microcelebrity, the figure now known on social media as Red Kahina—who was, by the way, whatever people have against her, never anything but the soul of kindness and generosity to me when I was just a 23-year-old nobody writing from a dial-up connection somewhere in Pennsylvania. Here, for instance, is Fisher’s part of one debate (the figure he variously calls with class-and-gender venom “Le Currency Trader” and “Le Opera Goeur” is Kahina). Even then, I was impressed by his characteristically electric prose: “The non-organic product of capital's ‘Frankensteinian surgery of the cities’ (Lyotard), the proletariat emerges from the destruction of all ethnicities, the desolation of all tradition, the destitution of any home.” Red’s long-defunct blog is still for me the model of the form, but Fisher’s is one of the first blogs to enter the annals of literature and will probably be regarded, not at all undeservedly, as a germinal text of our time.
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gryficowa · 4 months ago
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Here in Poland they don't even recognize them as a race (So imagine my confusion when they called me a racist and tried hard to convince me that they were a race)
The division into races is fucked up (This is my opinion), because it involves considering other people as inferior to the ideal race (in the USA, white, in the Third Reich, Aryan)
Well, the US also spreads propaganda that Poles were complicit when in practice they were victims of the Nazis (Who wanted to exterminate their national identity), unfortunately, the US and Israel have a lot on their conscience when it comes to erasing all victims of the Holocaust (And it doesn't help that that gays did not receive compensation, and only many decades later did they, because the myth was spread that gays were complicit in the rape of prisoners in concentration camps, yes, there was such a thing, LGBT+ people and Roma people are still omitted in my country, you hear more often about Poles and Jews, or about people with disabilities, it's a pity that they are omitted that Germans could also be sent to a concentration camp if they were one of these groups)
Seriously, in Poland they talk about Poles, but I see that in the USA and Israel they only talk about Jews as the only victims of the Holocaust, which is disturbing (Especially in times of the return of Nazi rhetoric and attacks against LGBT+ people)
It depresses me that they don't teach this at school, even in Poland there is only one chapter about the Holocaust and the war, the rest are stories about kings and how much land they lost, as if it was more important than the tragedy of many groups…)
It doesn't help that Poland is dominated by the right wing and conservatism, so if you are left, they look at you with disgust or as a person detached from reality :/
The generational trauma of Poles was guilty of a lot of shit, which I don't deny (Post-war Poland… Or later, it even scares me), so that's why Poles react to accusations of cooperation with the Nazis, because as I mentioned, Poland was a victim of the Nazis and is still struggling today with the shit that is generational trauma
I have to look for information on my own (and on the foreign Internet, because you won't learn anything on the Polish one, there are simply too many bigots who say they hate Hitler, but the truth is that they would support him, especially in the anti-gay campaign and trans people)
I know, I wrote a lot, but unfortunately we are in times when people believe in propaganda (full of bigotry) than in the truth and it is depressing
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This is insanity! So this just shows how Jewish is a religion & not a race! This white woman with blonde hair & blue eyes played in the Olympics because she had blonde hair & blue eyes & she could pass as “Aryan” whatever Hilter weird a** named white people who was Catholic or Christian *rolling my eyes*! And her doing the Nazi salute could not have saved her “family in the camps” smh going to an Olympics game was not worth that disgusting salute & disrespect to the Jews who was in labor camps even back in 1936. Ugh but this shows that being Jewish is a religion & you can be Jewish anywhere it’s not a race. But the people in Palestine is Palestinian & they cannot be Palestinians anywhere else but Palestine.
Jewish is a religion not a RACE! I am tired of this narrative that’s been in the world for years! It’s sad that the Jews in Israel just think they can take land from people because America & Britain said “okay take this piece of land the Muslims don’t matter there” and the Palestinians fought in WWII on Hilter said because they was upset of the British taking over their land after WWI! Smh the world politics is a mess!
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rapeculturerealities · 6 years ago
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When the internet metamorphoses into a hate-filled wasteland where strangers hurl the most vicious comments imaginable, the words “hope” or “love” can feel entirely alien to the experience of women online.
For many women, simply existing in an online space and voicing an opinion can render them a target for abuse. Those targets include: Women of colour, women in the LGBTQ community, liberal women, conservative women, women fighting for reproductive rights, women speaking up about sexual assault, women taking a stand against misogyny and sexism, women with opinions, women who are just doing their job. Women are not the only people subjected to online harassment and abuse — and whose experience of the internet is warped by efforts to silence and shout them down — but for women who speak up, the internet can exacerbate the sexism, both overt and subtle, that they face in real life.
For some of the most harassed women on the internet, all hope is not lost. They told Mashable what they love about the internet, and why, despite the vitriol, they keep logging back on.
MONICA LEWINSKY
Two decades have passed since Monica Lewinsky’s name and the intimate details of her sex life were thrust into the public domain of Bill Clinton’s 1998 impeachment trial, but strangers on the internet are still, to this day, bombarding her with hateful, obscene, and harassing messages.
Lewinsky says that, even though social media can be a source of negativity in women’s lives, it can also be a force for good, and a way of taking control of the stories that define us. “As a woman, what is vital is how social media can be used to amplify our voices or reclaim our narratives,” Lewinsky tells Mashable. “There is something powerful about direct communication — not being mediated through another’s lens.”
Now an anti-cyberbullying campaigner, Lewinsky says she finds hope in the internet’s ability to bring people together and its power to make us all realise we’re not alone. “What gives me hope is that it is so much easier to find your tribe and like-minded people on social media whether people are in your same city or halfway around the world. Knowing we’re not alone is crucial.”
JOHNETTA “NETTA” ELZIE
It didn't take long for trolls to dig up activist Johnetta Elzie’s resume and old tweets in the wake of the 2014 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. After going to pay her respects at the place of Brown’s shooting in the hours following his death, Elzie tweeted that there was still “blood on the ground” and “a cone in place where his body laid for hours today.” She documented the Ferguson unrest on social media as it unfolded, and the New York Times called Elzie “one of the most reliable real-time observers of the confrontations between the protesters and the police.”
“They were like: ‘How do you know anything about protests, you used to be a customer service agent?’ But, what does it have to do with tragedy arriving in the city where I’m from?” says Elzie, known as “Netta” among her followers.
Elzie says she has been called pretty much every insult under the sun. “I feel like I’ve been called everything possible. I’ve been called ‘nigger,’ as well as white racist combos like ‘nigger bitch’ and the typical racist shit,” says Elzie. “Then there are people who take my photos and do crazy weird things with them. I’ve had a few serious trolls who make new accounts over and over and over to troll me if I block one.”
Faced with all this, it’s not surprising that Elzie says she finds solace “off the internet.” But, that’s not to say that the internet doesn’t bring her joy. “I Iove how easily I get access to music from being online, especially on Twitter or on YouTube, and meeting new people has been fun. I’ve made a few friends from Twitter,” she says
Elzie says when she was younger she used to try to engage, but now that she’s older and wiser, she blocks and mutes anyone trolling her.
“I’ve learned not to engage. 29-year-old me, I’m just all about the block,” she says.
APRIL REIGN
“As a hyper-visible woman of colour, I have had things said to me that people wouldn't dare say to my face,” says April Reign, founder of #OscarsSoWhite. “Both I and my children have been threatened with physical violence. I've had people threaten to attempt to get me fired. Every racial or gender-based slur you can imagine has been hurled at me.”
Reign’s faith in the internet is restored when she sees “the progress that is made” and witnesses crowdfunding campaign goals being met for people “who are in need.”
“As the creator of #OscarsSoWhite, I find hope in the fact that we can see incremental changes reverberating throughout the entertainment industry based on a movement that was started online,” says Reign.
Something she loves about the internet is the ability to interact with people from around the world. “The internet allows us to have meaningful interactions with people we might not otherwise meet offline.”
ROSSALYN WARREN
Rossalyn Warren wasn’t expecting to see anything other than “chit chat and random shit” when she scrolled idly through her Facebook inbox one day. Instead, the journalist was confronted with a photo of a young man who was standing naked and holding a big knife. Even more disturbing than the image itself, however, was the message, which informed Warren that he had created the image especially for her. She reported the message and blocked the sender.
But, in spite of the barrage of gendered insults like “stupid slut” and “bitch” and graphic photos of botched abortions, Warren has not lost faith in the internet. For her, she finds promise in the way women interact and build communities online. “Over the years I’ve seen feminist networks and women from all corners of the world come together to discuss the challenges facing them within their communities, within their countries,” says Warren. “By sharing that knowledge and information they’re able to lift each other up.”
“Watching how feminist campaigners in El Salvador connect with pro-choice campaigners in Europe, watching women connect online makes us all feel a little bit less alone, and it makes us feel like a stronger force,” says Warren.
GABRIELLE BELLOT
“Primarily, they attack me for being queer,” says journalist Gabrielle Bellot. “They deny being trans is 'real' and send me simplistic links about chromosomes or send me propaganda about how LGBTQ people are, supposedly, child molesters.” When her trolls don’t realise she’s trans, Bellot is attacked for being a liberal — or rather, “a libtard,” as they phrase it. “And for being — the worst of all — a feminist — excuse me, a 'feminazi,' an 'SJW.'”
Back in January 2016, Bellot wrote an article for Slate about a bill proposed in Indiana to criminalise trans people for using the bathroom corresponding with the gender they identify with. The bill — which was eventually denied a hearing — was one of several attempts among U.S. states and localities to block trans people from using the bathroom of their choice.
Bellot received an email from a “delightful woman” — an “anti-LGBTQ activist” — with an offer for conversion therapy. “Another man refused to call me Gabrielle, despite that being my actual legal name, and called me a male version of said name — despite me never having had that name.”
Bellot says she feels “lots of optimism,” however, and the internet is “tightly woven” into that.
“We shine a light on and call out bad behaviour now on a scale that just wasn't possible before social media,” says Bellot.
She says that the internet has made way for a “prominent, brave new generation” which refuses to tolerate “archaic prejudices” any longer. “There's this beautiful sense that business-as-usual, boys-club bigotry and/or trolling against women, LGBTQ people, and people of colour can't just exist without consequences, regardless of where it happens, if someone is around to record and call it out.”
“They still tell us to be silent; to that, we say, hell no.”
KARA BROWN
For podcaster and writer Kara Brown, the worst harassment she experienced happened when she worked at Jezebel. “The worst stuff usually came after I wrote something about race. I'd have people calling me a nigger and a stupid black bitch and all that,” says Brown, who co-hosts the Keep It podcast. “The scariest was probably when someone threatened that I'd be "swinging from the trees with the other niggers." That instance was “the most direct threat” she’d ever received. She forwarded it to Jezebel’s legal department so they could monitor it.
“We all also got tons of rape threats constantly,” she adds. “The bad thing about that (aside from the obvious) is that it all ends up sort of bleeding together. You get so used to it that things stop standing out.”
But, Brown finds hope in the fact that the internet is “both real life and not.”
“I can log off. I can turn off my computer and these people no longer have access to me,” she says. “There's also the fact that while the harassment can be legitimately frightening, it's unlikely these people are going to be able to do the harm to me that they threaten.” She reminds herself that people who engage in this kind of behavior are “cowards.”
Asked what she loves about the internet, Brown says it’s the “reason” she has a career. But, she’s also thankful for the internet’s ability to unite people with memes and jokes.
“As irritating as it can be, there are some days on Twitter when a certain meme catches on or everyone hops on and starts contributing to some joke and the material is just so funny and clever.
And you realise we never would have been able to experience all this humour and joy without the internet. It makes me really happy to be able to engage with such a large group of people in those moments.”
JESSICA VALENTI
Two years ago journalist and author Jessica Valenti took a hiatus from Twitter after a troll made a rape and death threat against her then five-year-old daughter.
“I am sick of this shit. Sick of saying over and over how scary this is, sick of being told to suck it up,” she wrote in a series of tweets at the time. “I should not have to fear for my kid's safety because I write about feminism.”
After she returned to social media several months later, she told the Sydney Morning Herald that she had been accustomed to dealing with harassment, but the threat directed at her daughter felt “so different, so scary.”
Valenti told Mashable she is encouraged by the young women who are building communities online.
“Young people — young women, in particular — give me hope on the internet. The communities they foster, the support they provide, it's almost enough to make you forget about the general awfulness of things online,” she says.
She is also reassured by women’s strength and resolve when faced with unrelenting harassment experienced by many people online.
“But most of all, what gives me hope is that they're not ceding these spaces to harassers — in the same way we're not going to stop walking down the street because of harassment there, we're not going to stop using powerful online tools because of misogynists.”
LAUREN DUCA
Faceless, angry strangers send Teen Vogue writer Lauren Duca death threats, rape threats, and doxing threats on a near-daily basis. She writes extensivelyabout what it feels like to be on the receiving end of unyielding hostility. “Having to suffer the anticipation and onslaught of abuse is exhausting, and it takes a toll,” Duca told Mashable.
“If we can understand harassment as a silencing force, then simply speaking up is an act of defiance,” she says. “Using your voice as a woman on the internet shouldn't require righteousness, but unfortunately it does.”
She says she’s thankful to those who continue to raise their voices despite the constant chorus of dissent.
“I'm grateful for all of the women who keep going in spite of all the garbage,” says Duca. “Social media is an integral part of the public square, and we need to fight for including women's voices in the conversation.”
HADLEY FREEMAN
Journalist Hadley Freeman says the abuse she received is “pretty much everything you'd expect a Jewish feminist to get online now, sadly.”
“I get a lot of anti-Semitic stuff, a lot of stuff about Israel (even though I have never written about Israel), a lot of misogynistic garbage,” says Freeman. “It's usually people telling me how ugly I am, how fat I am, and what a hideous Zionist rich bitch apologist I am for Netanyahu.”
But one instance deviated somewhat from the typical barrage of anti-Semitic and misogynist insults: the time she received a bomb threat. “When I got a bomb threat I had to report it to the police, and I wasn't allowed to stay in my apartment that night,” says Freeman. “It was more annoying than scary, to be honest.”
It’s in the “fightback” that Freeman takes heart. “If I was dealing with abuse on my own, it would feel terribly dispiriting and even scary.”
She finds hope when she sees other women fighting back against abuse, racism, misogyny, and anti-Semitism. “I can see online all the other women who get abuse, and how they are fighting back, writing brilliantly and doing incredible things. Women such as Caroline Criado-Perez, Rebecca Traister, Aminatou Sow, Irin Carmon, Jessica Valenti, and Jia Tolentino are just some who come immediately to mind.”
SLOANE CROSLEY
Sloane Crosley’s resolve lies in her unwillingness to give trolls and harassers the same energy they’ve spent.
“The internet expends plenty of energy lauding, objectifying, tearing down, dismissing, demonising and deifying women but that doesn’t mean I have to expend that same energy in return,” says Crosley, author of I Was Told There'd Be Cake and Look Alive Out There.
“Perhaps my ‘hope’ is to be found in my near-total indifference to faceless strangers.”
DANA SCHWARTZ
Journalist and author Dana Schwartz says she’s dealt with so much harassment over the years, she’s found a way to tune it out. “I also turned on the strictest settings that Twitter has so a lot of the time I don't even see it,” says Schwartz. “If someone says something that does get to me, I'll just block or mute depending on my mood.”
The harassment and abuse she receives often has a personal nature to it, but Schwartz says she mostly lets it wash off her. “The most common trolls either harass me for being Jewish or for being ugly, but since I am Jewish, and since I feel pretty good about myself, it doesn't really get to me,” says Schwartz.
The internet isn’t always the kindest space, but Schwartz can’t get enough of it.
“I love the internet like way too much,” she says. “I honestly think I am addicted to the internet, and it's probably ruined my brain. Gotta get that external validation somehow.”
ANNE T. DONAHUE
Journalist Anne T. Donahue says that the types of insults she receives really depends on what her harassers are reacting to. During the 2016 U.S. presidential election, she was on the receiving end of a lot of “gender-based trolling” — including comments pertaining to her physical appearance as well as rape threats. “During the gun debate (well, one of many), I mostly got general hate from people with eagles in their avatars who sounded off about liberals,” says Donahue.
The eagle from America’s national emblem has been co-opted by Trump supporters and those who align themselves with the far-right online.
Thankfully for Donahue, the internet has redeeming qualities that bring her laughter and remind her of the goodness of humanity. “I mean, yes: Twitter and social media and the internet in general can be a hellscape, but there are also parts of those things that make me laugh, or inspire me, or remind me that people can be good,” says Donahue.
“I like the senses of community — the good kind — the internet can help foster,” she adds.
“I think about the way firsthand experiences are shared and can generate movements. I think about the way mental health discourse has evolved; I think about the way Twitter is being used to bring to light issues and conversations that some of us might not be privy to; I love the way someone's work can kick down doors and create incredible opportunities; I also like the friendships; I've made a lot of great friends through Twitter and social media; and that's something I love, obviously.”
Donahue says that even seeing a funny joke can remind her that “levity can be found amidst the darkest timelines.”
“And maybe more specifically, I think of the way Twitter can rally around what's good and around people fighting for what's right. It's not all bad, or so I try to remind myself.”
DOLLY ALDERTON
It was when Dolly Alderton was writing a dating column for The Sunday Times that she experienced the most trolling. Those remarks would be sexually explicit or insulting about her physical appearance. The author and columnist sees hope in the fact that “so many people online, particularly women, are so supportive and cheering of each other, be it promoting each other's work, retweeting each other's jokes or swooping to someone's defence.”
She also loves how the internet connects people with “similar interests, shared ideals, and a sense of humour.”
ANGELA YEE
“You suck, you’re stupid, you’re fat, you can’t get a man, your show is failing, you need a stylist, you look old, you’re useless, you’re ugly, you want to fuck (insert guest name), you’re a thot.”
These are just a few of the names radio personality Angela Yee is called by harassers. Trolls have also posted her address online as well as death threats directed at her and her mother.
Yee has thought a lot about the reasons people would want to write such nasty, hateful comments. “I realise that what these online trolls want the most is a reaction. They WANT you to respond, to be upset, they WANT to ruin your day and that’s a reflection of their own unhappiness,” she says.
She says, through thinking about what it takes to bring a person to make such comments, she feels pity for her trolls. “Imagine how miserable a person has to be that they want company, and the underlying feelings that come with that,” she says.
She finds hope in remembering that she can log out of social media and that real life exists beyond the confines of the internet.
“Just remember that social media is not real life, it is whatever people want to create. It’s so important for me to log off and focus on reality, instead of trying to document what I want to portray,” says Yee.
ALLISON RASKIN
“This is not funny. Are you pregnant? You got fat. What happened to Allison? Why is she so fat? Stick to comedy not politics. I used to like this show but not anymore. Unsubscribe. She’s pregnant right?”
These are just some of the things strangers on the internet say to Allison Raskin, host of Gossip podcast.
But, she keeps logging on because of the “good comments” and “positive feedback” from her friends and family.
“For every nasty sentiment there are at least 10 nice ones and those are the people I try to focus on,” says Raskin. “People have handwritten me letters and posted things that almost make me cry (with joy).”
FEMINISTA JONES
Michelle Taylor, known by her online pseudonym Feminista Jones, experiences online harassment every single day.
While being a woman on the internet means being bombarded with slurs and insults, it also affords opportunities.
“Being online means having access to more resources and opportunities than most people would ever have exposure to, particularly marginalised people like women of colour,” the social worker and writer says.
Hope, she says, can be found in these opportunities.
“What gives me hope is that women have greater opportunity to achieve their goals and realise their dreams because of the opportunities being online affords them.”
These women, in their refusal to cower in the face of vitriol and threats against their lives and the people they love, are sending a powerful message to their harassers: We will not be scared away. We will not be silenced.
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maneeshkr-blog · 7 years ago
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PoLi[Ti]c[e]aL [hi]Story: https://youtu.be/fnWQONkPsXc V. L. MaTanG, BMP: https://youtu.be/pdRRYCE4tNk ~10% का शासन: https://youtu.be/XyFTVJMRpPU ~90%+ पर चलेगा नहीं : https://youtu.be/bbJGbKj1L0o महेश राठी समाजवाद: https://youtu.be/KWvFh30m_3Y ~SC आपको अपना उद्धार स्वयं करना होगा: https://youtu.be/2rEd44TfSwY मा. वामन मेश्राम. koi bha[G,D]wa-n-bhag[a,u]ts Aye to Apke sonhAr+murDe ho sakte hain [zulm, {sha,sho,choO}Shak, jurm](i) poshaq? https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=414847158909004 {जाति,वर्ण}{वादी,गर्द} [अ][न्,नु]याय[-ी] व्यवस्था को ख़त्म करना हमारा उद्देश्य: https://youtu.be/RWxvvaKussY aSMiTA: https://youtu.be/dF1YDdQbZpw tHeaTre: https://youtu.be/nqsoLLhHtOI gRoup: https://youtu.be/hRrVtyadGjk {soNGs} https://youtu.be/ovW7S8yALKc [please] Do not use word-phrase {some[one,thing]} upRising[s]. It is [very, too] ofFensive. It had been used world over by [dominant, feudal] [propeller, con-vict-or]s to define-declare protests as upRisings, and then crush those, "by hook or by crook" modi operandi. You can use word like Rising Lagging/Scheduled Classes/Castes/Tribes/Dalits/Shudra. ओबीसी जोड़ों अभियान: https://youtu.be/w_ql5afL7lg बामसेफ MuSLiM{s}friEnD: https://youtu.be/GjRQFyPMxcQ https://www.facebook.com/1488418371216468/videos/1557226331002338 AmbedKarism: https://youtu.be/Vu1Klyrk05s?t=3m13s Dr. Ram Puniyani, Social aCTivist & auThor सस्ता खाना नहीं, हमें हमारी मेहनत के व-ेतन चाहिए: https://youtu.be/E93AKH2j9Ds We Need Our Stuff, Not Cheap Food Dr. Ambedkar{& his, ism}phi[Lo-So]phy: https://youtu.be/mjld-Ks_Gqw [MP] Sharad Yadav 85-90% बाहु{सांख्यकी,ज[-ा]नि}[क़] [सन्घठन, चेतना, सुविज्ञ[आन], प्रज्ञा] ज़िन्दाबाद:सम्भावित:साबित !? ................ दोनों[म,व,मा]रनेवाले [ज़्यादा,अधिक]तर [अधिकांक्षी,बहूजन,बाहूसँख्यक]85-90%[शूद्र:OBCs, दलित:Dalits, आदिवासी:Ad[h]iwasis, {धार्मिक:अल्पसंख्यक:साँस्कृतिक:नृजातीय}minorities] होते रहे गुज़[-ा]रे-गए। Brahm[a,e,i]n[ism,s] https://youtu.be/q2s3AcQZJd0 eXPosed Arya{ns} https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aryanism were aLiens-forEigners: https://www.facebook.com/MoolnivasiMedia/videos/249675415436976 to huge iNDi[an,es] subContinent Brahm[a,e,i]n Girl rePly: https://youtu.be/EQKgVytO-90 [brahmenब्राम्हणb[al]ramhu[ma]n, [k]shatriya, tradest] बस घट[-ी,ना] को {स्क्रिप्टित, son-culp-rit, स्वीकृत}अर्थवा[स्कृप्ट-लिखते, [मा,ता][नसिक,न्त्रिक]क्रियान्वित{करते}[अ]हिंसा, तमाश[बीन]बनते[नरसिँहित,गौरीमा]] गुज़[-ा]रे[ते]गए। सम्विधान, क़ानून एवं व्यवस्था: https://youtu.be/0fRtlUSg8VI प्रो. रतन लाल राष्ट्र[प्र]देश को वर्ण[su,क़ु,सम्][वर्चस्व,प्रभुत्व]ता के प्रोपेगैंडा[अ,दुर्]बोध[आतुर]एजेंडे से बचा[ना।, या?] [bLoG] ब्राह्मणी+[k]shatriya: https://brahminsexposed.wordpress.com {crime, horror, terror}ism जितनी गहराई में जाँचो{गे}पुरखो, {धर्म के आधार पर बनाईं गयीं, धार्मी[आ]धारित} [शोच,संशोध]नीय प्र[शो,को]ष[ण,क़] व्यवस्थाएं समझ[पा,ते,जा]ओगे। राष्ट्र[प्र]देश को [सम्]प्रबुद्ध [पौरुष, स्त्रीत्व, आत्मियत] प्रदान [करें।, कराया?] ................ सन्घ-ुटन:RsS [{raCe, tRaDe, cAST[L]e}st] के मनगढ़ंत इतिहास और बढ़ते सांप्रदायिक d{aNGe}r: https://youtu.be/x-HVaUje3Kg इरफ़ान हबीब, इतिहासकार सबका साथ: https://youtu.be/gUCn8y-ermk {p,m}ART[Y,iaL]Bj+{err,ar}{y,a}{n,a}{ist}v[a]ish[y,w]a का विकास; कुछ{%}कुछ का {सत्या,वि}नाश Genesis of RSS & poLiTical aGenDa: https://youtu.be/vgXZlFLpWSc 56" का सीना: https://youtu.be/9AQPU1oXEH0 {झूठ बोल, धक्{के}झट दे+दे} कर जीना [cRime{iSm}terRor, s[h]a[i]TAn[iyat, ists], ज़ुल्म{-ाना?,i}jurm] KaiRANA, aFTer proPaGanDa & ruMors: https://youtu.be/6qOoeq6dYtA कैराना प्र[चा,सा]र{-ों}अफ़वाह के बाद निचली राजनीति पर उतर आयीं हैं BJP+RsS: https://youtu.be/Jck9GOkq2yo BjP is sToOPinG to the loWeR leVeLs of poLiTics – अरुण शोरी SaHARanpur d{anGe}r: https://youtu.be/n70JQeGY07k?t=2m34s pRiMe-TiMe गड़करी + bRahmin juntA {p,m}Art[y,iars] https://youtu.be/nn98r6yyRp0 Q&As: https://www.quora.com/Is-BJP-an-anti-Dalits-party नुक्सान{गर्द{i}गर्त} moDe[L]{oPeR,proPA[G,jh]}anD{e,A,oO}] of {p,m}ART[Y,iAL]Bj: https://youtu.be/k6mQ010ueVg rac[i,e]{st}cAST[L]e https://youtu.be/hOKAd2Gj9k4 आरक्षण के ख़िलाफ़: भाजपा नेता सुब्रमण्यं स्वामी: https://youtu.be/YtWXEpm1674 {Poem} On Saharanpur, UP: https://youtu.be/p2L7zhF-fd8 b[i]ased+shrewd+Ri+gh/o+ts RajPuts V/s gullible+poor Dalits 7 Historic facts aBout RSS: https://youtu.be/MntX_MvTLj8 iNDian Hindu orGaniZation [aRTiCLe] http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2017/04/14/30-ambedkar-quotes-that-may-surprise-the-bjp_a_22039425/ Q&As: https://www.quora.com/How-is-RSS-related-to-Hindu-terrorism Q&As: https://www.quora.com/Is-BJP-anti-intellectual-and-anti-artist ................ सन्घी, मोदी, वर्ण:धर्म{राज,कूट,फूट,नीति}पार्टी, भाजपा, {भग,बल,भड़}वा[न], son{s[Q]Ar, sTripTeaSe, CuLP+RiT, sCri[p]t}[i], sont:गुरु, योगी, व दायाँपंथी [वि][भ]-ु{क्त,गत,जत}-ाँ उनकी हिन्दू बहनों को भी {गाली, धमकी} देने व {बदनाम, गन्दा?, बलात्कार?, नङ्गा?, नीचा} करने में कोई कसर नही छोड़ते: https://www.facebook.com/Jaunpurexpress/videos/433949200335843 पँखुड़ी पाठक, SP आप ये नहीं कह सकते कि हिंदू आतंकवाद नहीं है. पहले हिंदू कट्टरपंथी बातचीत करते थे, अब वे हिंसा करते हैं: http://www.bbc.com/hindi/social-41842950 कमल हसन छि: छिः [raC{i,e}st] [a]bRah[a]M[{a,i,e}N]ic{al}feUD+aR[y,e]an{ist}[k]shatriya+tRaDe{st}cAST[L]e sar[O]KAR: https://www.facebook.com/AliSohrab/videos/970741639740492 [violence, [re,op,de,sup]pression, corruption, [trans,re,ag,di]gression, terror-ism] in the name of [re[li]gion, nature, [oc,diffi]cult[ure,ism], states] which is [non-truthful, unlawful] भारत माता की जय: https://youtu.be/031Gp5PtuVg NDTV MeToO: https://www.jansatta.com/trending-news/n-light-of-metoo-campaign-dancers-make-a-video-about-surviving-seksual-abuse-for-years/483205/ TerRoR{ism}cRime has {tRaDiTional, eXTReme, orThoDox, eXCepTional} re[Li]Gions, in{Fact, Deed} aL[most a]L re[Li,Di](e)GiOns. इ/उ+न्होंने धर्म नहीं/कब त्यागा:तजा!? धर्म ने भी इन्हें न/कभी त्यागा:तजा!? Q&As: https://www.quora.com/How-non-correct-is-the-claim-Terrorism-has-no-religion [ब्रह्म/भ्राम-ान/इन, आर्य-न, are-a-n, [k]shatriya, वैश्य, वर्ण]बाद[आ]दाब[ईर्ष्या, उग्र, घृणा, भय, d-ange-r, आतंक, निरस्कार, डर, बहिष्कार, ख़ौफ़]वाद{-ा, -े,-ी}दाव https://img.ifcdn.com/images/4c3c9055eaea49a17eb2b2714564a8751eb9d4c0c6f9f0d70e75245fd44c25b0_1.jpg ................ SuPreme Court of iNDia's reTired Hon'ble JuStice MArkanDey KATju's DaRing iNTerView: https://www.facebook.com/SasuSwamy/videos/1175934229179365 [PLs] {Do, MuST}{n't misS, waTCh} pSeuDo{reG,raT,naT}ion[al][ist]s: https://youtu.be/2h0q_bkwra8 A. RANA ~10% का शासन: https://youtu.be/XyFTVJMRpPU ~90%+ पर चलेगा नहीं iNKi SoORaT kO PehChAnO BhAi: https://youtu.be/s0QETSCliRk SamBhAji BhaGat जिस रूट पर बुलेट ट्रेन चलाएगी मोदी+pART[iaL,y]Bj सरOकार: http://www.nationaldastak.com/…/route-on-bullet-train-it-ha… उस रूट की 40% सीटें खाली raC[i,e]{st}cAST[L]e {रूढ़ कूढ़, बूढ़} वाढ{a,i,e}दाव गुट:जुठ {वा,दौ,धा}{र्ण,र्म,र्ग}iQ मग़ज़+MinDSets+क्षेत्र{प्र}देश: http://naisadak.org/सारे-कूढ़मगज-संघी-नहीं-हो sLaVe girl – CRAZY SHiT tHe QURAN says #1: https://youtu.be/TIur6akd0YQ {TruTh, ReaL[ism,ity], FaCT, eViDence}s [are, should+must be] [b{e,a,u,i}tTer, iMPRoV[iS]eD] Can iNDia become a superpower? https://youtu.be/zXZ4pRhY-kU eQuaLizing Dr BR AmbedKar &|Vs reLiGiose Barrister MK Gandhi: https://youtu.be/XoQ_D5G6sXg Osho How to identify Fake News in India?? https://youtu.be/Ezcng6hyWp4 Dhruv Rathee AiB: {proPa}GAn{C,D}{hi,A,e}[un] [iN]ConGress:UPA Vs aScetic[s]{P,M}aRT[y]Bj:NDA : https://youtu.be/qStXxdRJtms good:bad cops:poLi[Ti]c[s,ing] भारत के पौड़ानिक:नौयुगी दासतानें{अ}फँसानें: https://www.facebook.com/MoolnivasiMedia/videos/249559375448580 sLavery[en]Trapments श्रमिक कोष: http://thewirehindi.com/23977/laptops-washing-machines-purchased-from-the-fund-of-rs-29000-crore-for-the-construction-workers-the-supreme-court-is-shocked/ {फ़िज़ूल, यूँ ही, al, err} ख़र्च छि: छिः [P]aRT(y{ rAj}, i[FiCi]aL)Bj+iNC, ND{A,MoDi} UP{A,ADityaNAth}, RsS, VHP, HMS, [B]Dal+Bal, [H, Br, Ks, S.R]Sena, etc, [M]aRT[s,rAj,iaL]s BjP{व,ians}iNC आय स्रोत: http://thewirehindi.com/17951/bjp-congress-anonymous-sources-of-money/ अज्ञात !! #+#+#+#
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