#rest in peace george floyd
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uvmagazine · 2 years ago
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William Spriggs, a chief economist who advocated for racial equity in economics, has died. He was 68.
Spriggs, who was also a professor at Howard University, was one of the profession’s most prominent Black voices, being outspoken about the way his colleagues handled racial issues.
Following the death of George Floyd in 2020, Spriggs, who went by Bill, wrote an open letter to economists warning their methods were “perpetuating the very things they wish to recoil from” and urging them to “reflect and rethink how we study racial disparities.”
"Bill was a towering figure in his field, a trailblazer who challenged the field’s basic assumptions about racial discrimination in labor markets, pay equity, and worker empowerment,” President Joe Biden said in a statement. “His work inspired countless economists, some of whom work for our administration, to join him in the pursuit of economic justice.”
https://www.unheardvoicesmag.com
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gwyoi · 6 months ago
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Cope-ala because I’m just imagining crazy scenarios with her debating trump
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balladofthe101st · 7 months ago
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Buck Compton came back to see the Company to let us know that he was alright. He became a prosecutor in Los Angeles. He convicted Sirhan Sirhan in the murder of Robert Kennedy, and was later appointed to the California Court of Appeals. 
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David Webster became a writer for the Saturday Evening Post and Wall Street Journal, and later wrote and book about sharks. In 1961, he went out on the ocean alone, and was never seen again.
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Johnny Martin would return to his job at the railroad and then start his own construction company. He splits his time between Arizona and a place in Montana.
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George Luz became a handyman in Providence, Rhode Island. As a testament to his character, sixteen hundred people attended his funeral in 1998.
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Doc Roe died in Louisiana in 1998. He’d been a construction contractor.
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Frank Perconte returned to Chicago and worked a postal route as a mailman.
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Joe Liebgott returned to San Francisco and drove his cab.
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Bull Randleman was one of the best soldiers I ever had. He went into the earth moving business in Arkansas. He’s still there.
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Alton More returned to Wyoming with a unique souvenir: Hitler’s personal photo albums. He was killed in a car accident in 1958.
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Floyd Talbert we all lost touch with in civilian life, until he showed up at a reunion just before his death in 1981.
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Carwood Lipton became a glass making executive in charge of factories all over the world. He has a nice life in North Carolina.
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Harry Welsh – he married Kitty Grogan. Became an administrator for the Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania school system.
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Ronald Speirs stayed in the Army, served in Korea. In 1958, returned to Germany as Governor of Spandau Prison. He retired a Lieutenant Colonel.
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Lewis Nixon had some tough times after the war. He was divorced a couple of times. Then in 1956, he married a woman named Grace and everything came together for him. He spent the rest of his life with her, travelling the world. My friend Lew died in 1995.
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I took up his job offer and was a personnel manager at the Nixon Nitration Works, until I was called back into service in 1950 to train officers and rangers. I chose not to go to Korea. I’d had enough of war. I stayed around Hershey, Pennsylvania, finally finding a little farm. A little peaceful corner of the world, where I still live today. And there is not a day that goes by that I do not think of the men I served with who never got to enjoy the world without war.
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notthesomefather · 1 month ago
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Goddess Hel, divine hostess whose arms lovingly embrace all guests, Watch over those who have crossed your gates against their will. Care for those taken from us and bless them with tranquil rest.
Godx Loki, story-teller and guardian of outcasts, Give words to our sorrow so that we may honor their memories. Breathe air into our lungs so we may bellow our love over hatred.
Goddess Hel, cherisher of life and daughter of metamorphosis, Bestow in their loved ones moments of laughter, healing, and peace. May their names echo not just in sorrow but in smiling remembrance.
Godx Loki, change-bringer and waker of revolution, Spark the flames of unrelenting authenticity within us. Stoke the ember of truth until the hateful are blinded by its light.
Under the cut are the siblings, youth, and elders whose lives were taken due to hatred, bigotry, and fear. I understand it is incredibly triggering, but I believe we owe it to them to read their names.
We love you. We are unendingly sorry and we will never stop fighting until the hatred that stole you from this life has been extinguished. We love you so much.
(December 2023 - November 2024) Savannah Williams Bernardo Panteleon Pepper Mychel Peterson Mariah Ruby Rachel Williams F. L. “Bubba” Copeland Lola Laperla Ebony McDaniels Shandon Floyd Tiesha McFarland Kejuan Richardson Amiri Jean Reid Mya Finch Travis Stimeling Demita Jo Armstrong Onteris Owens-Campbell Jesse Viviano White Star Possum Jermaine Golden Meghan Riley Lewis Zoey Flye Madison Montana Care Hansen Amber Minor Ashlei Jasmine Colgate-Edwards Fleetwood Mars Mozee Shelby “Lexus” Riddick-Walker Kimbella Blackshear Easley Jeffcoat Tripp Schultz Lady Fabian Sanchez James Moen Dana Randolph “Desiree A. DeMornay” Quin Joy Sasha Williams Jennell Jaquays Sarina Mihailoff Sasha Washington-Cohen “Sasha Fierce” Guelila “Gigi” Iyob Videl Lombardo Savannah Rose Rivers Amore Kathy “Otter” Ottersten Robin Valentina Forrest Douglas Buckley Giselle Stone Tristan Michael Bustos “Tristyn St. Clair” Kitty Monroe Natalia Skye Teddy Reese Curran Erick Krouse Noah Jackson Chase Ellie Walsh Nex Benedict Emma “África” Parrilla García Blakely Hanson Righteous TK “Chevy” Hill Ashton Myles Clatterbuck Madison Nicole Spann “Madison St. Claire” Cecilia Gentili Diamond Cherish Brigman Elliot Ganiel Fae Morganna Barbone Aurelia A. Legassey Alex Franco Meraxes Medina Ty Geissinger “Ty Holiday” Andrea Doria Dos Passos “Maggie” Yella Clark Allister Matthews Tiffany Azalea Monceaux Tara Fable Randy Dudley River Neveah Goddard Tee “Ace” Arnold George A. Schappell Starr Brown Robbi Mecus Basil Brown Tayy Dior Thomas Kita Bee Kamryn “Cantrell” Smith Jazlynn Johnson Daelicious O’hare Mizani Darri C. Moore Niomi Jenkins Michelle Henry Saanti Bonét Valentino Pauly Likens M. Tapia Lynn Conway Liara Kaylee Tsai Dylan Gurley Griffin Shaun Sivret Kenji Zemonta Spurgeon Ev Smith Shannon Boswell Levi Castillo Lily Autumn Rose Monique Brooks Noelle Woolley Indiana Grayson Vanity Williams Tai’Vion Lathan Jhzara “Femmie” Williams Baxter Zachary Hawk Kassim Omar Liam Johns Mahdia Lynn Cass Trystero Chilli Pepper Barbie Iceland “Redd China” Honee Daniels Serenity Birdsong Adela Vázquez San Coleman Zeta Muirgen Seraph Haber
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resetmypatientviolence · 7 months ago
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George Floyd should be here today, alive and well and celebrating the first Memorial Day that feels normal after the pandemic.
Minneapolis shouldn’t be (still) traumatized to this day after watching a murder in cold blood.
But Derek Chauvin should still be in jail for being a shit pig.
Rest in peace, George. The world needs to do better, still.
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cemeterygrace · 1 month ago
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remembering my trans ancestors and those we’ve lost on this trans day of remembrance. they are all so loved by us, and unique in their own ways. fly high and know that you are beloved. for those not on this list, you are known and remembered.
rest in peace and in freedom.
🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍⚧️
NOVEMBER 2023
Savannah Williams
Bernardo Panteleon
Pepper Mychel Peterson
Mariah Ruby Rachel Williams
F. L. “Bubba” Copeland
Lola Laperla Ebony McDaniels
Shandon Floyd
Tiesha McFarland
Kejuan Richardson
Amiri Jean Reid
Mya Finch
Travis Stimeling
DECEMBER 2023
Demita Jo Armstrong
Onteris Owens-Campbell
Jesse Viviano White
Star Possum
Jermaine Golden
Meghan Riley Lewis
Zoey Flye
Madison Montana
Care Hansen
Amber Minor
Ashlei Jasmine Colgate-Edwards
Fleetwood Mars Mozee
Shelby “Lexus” Riddick-Walker
Kimbella Blackshear
Easley Jeffcoat
Tripp Schultz
JANUARY 2024
Lady Fabian Sanchez
James Moen
Dana Randolph “Desiree A. DeMornay”
Quin Joy
Sasha Williams
Jennell Jaquays
Sarina Mihailoff
Sasha Washington-Cohen “Sasha Fierce”
Guelila “Gigi” Iyob
Videl Lombardo
Savannah Rose Rivers Amore
Kathy “Otter” Ottersten
Robin Valentina
Forrest Douglas Buckley
Giselle Stone
Tristan Michael Bustos “Tristyn St. Clair”
Kitty Monroe
FEBRUARY 2024
Natalia Skye
Teddy Reese Curran
Erick Krouse
Noah Jackson Chase
Ellie Walsh
Nex Benedict
Emma “África” Parrilla García
Blakely Hanson
Righteous TK “Chevy” Hill
Ashton Myles Clatterbuck
Madison Nicole Spann “Madison St. Claire”
Cecilia Gentili
MARCH 2024
Diamond Cherish Brigman
Elliot Ganiel
Fae Morganna Barbone
Aurelia A. Legassey
Alex Franco
Meraxes Medina
Ty Geissinger “Ty Holiday”
APRIL 2024
Andrea Doria Dos Passos “Maggie”
Yella Clark
Allister Matthews
Tiffany Azalea Monceaux
Tara Fable
Randy Dudley
River Neveah Goddard
Tee “Ace” Arnold
George A. Schappell
Starr Brown
Robbi Mecus
Basil Brown
MAY 2024
Tayy Dior Thomas
Kita Bee
Kamryn “Cantrell” Smith
Jazlynn Johnson
Daelicious O’hare Mizani
Darri C. Moore
Niomi Jenkins
Michelle Henry
Saanti Bonét Valentino
JUNE 2024
Pauly Likens
M. Tapia
Lynn Conway
Liara Kaylee Tsai
JULY 2024
Dylan Gurley
Griffin Shaun Sivret
Kenji Zemonta Spurgeon
Ev Smith
Shannon Boswell
Levi Castillo
Lily Autumn Rose
Monique Brooks
AUGUST 2024
Noelle Woolley
Indiana Grayson
Vanity Williams
Tai’Vion Lathan
Jhzara “Femmie” Williams
Baxter Zachary Hawk
SEPTEMBER 2024
Kassim Omar
Liam Johns
Mahdia Lynn
Cass Trystero
Chilli Pepper
Barbie Iceland “Redd China”
OCTOBER 2024
Honee Daniels
Serenity Birdsong
Adela Vázquez
San Coleman
Zeta Muirgen Seraph Haber
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ezrazone · 3 months ago
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hello, huge admirer of your work & words in general
do you have any advice/ just thoughs for artists in their early 20s trying to make a living off of their passions in the current climate? i think you have very interesting perspective
thank you for the lovely message! i must admit though this entire question is made up of phrases i generally (but compassionately, not indifferently) shrug my shoulders at.
i’m never sure what to say to people asking for career advice specifically, especially people whose particular circumstance and desired field i don’t know. i’m also not sure what to say to anyone in their early 20s that has to do with that life period in particular, since it’s so different for everybody. i have good friends in their early 20s as well as comics students that age, but i don’t have age-specific wisdom for them since i’m not that much older than they are! my early 20s were spent beginning my transition and working a string of back-breaking jobs that i would happen to quit at precisely the right time to qualify for lockdown-era increased unemployment benefits (BERNIE BUCKS!!!!). remember how the united states showed its hand that it could use all the superprofits that it extracts thru blood all around the world to create a cushy welfare state for millions of people but only did it for a few months (partly because it sought to increase repression again after the george floyd uprisings)? anyway.... during that brief period of financial peace i was able to shape up my portrait skills and find the beginnings of my voice as a cartoonist. i wish i could gift that to everybody. every person deserves periods of quiet to figure out what they're doing. the truth is just that i got very lucky. so i'm not interested in being an aspirational symbol if anyone is under the impression that my advice can guarantee an artmaking practice that might resemble the one i have found for myself. i guess when i think about your phrase, "make a living off of their passions", i just want to reassure you that no matter your circumstances, the value of your passions is not dictated by your ability to make a living off of them. like let's just unpack the phrase "make a living" and pause for a moment to feel just a smidgen of how violent this cultural pay-to-play arrangement is. whenever possible, you should make money in whatever way will crush your spirit the least while meeting the needs that you have. my priority is always pursuing the maximum amount of freedom; sometimes that means freedom from losing my mind about rent every month, so i need to pick up a few shifts as a house manager at a local theater. sometimes that freedom means thinking about hot draculas the entire time i'm working at the theater. sometimes it means ending a project! i also really want to encourage every artist, if i possibly can, to attempt in their every day life and in their work to divest from the REAL CAREER vs. HOBBY psychic binary as much as possible. always. forever, until the distinctions explode. the truth of the matter, as i understand it, is not just that the best things in life are free or fucking whatever, but that the most meaningful ways you can spend your time do not necessarily involve deliberately optimizing your goddamn personal brand. you never need to be embarrassed about not spending enough time doing art, as if your status as an artist is paid for in any kind of labor that you can simply increase until the A in Artist becomes capitalized. to believe that would require a belief that everyone who is universally regarded as an Artist has simply worked hard enough. that's a myth and we know better. what horseshit! and as an adult i have also learned that periods of deep rest are often more enriching to me than periods of work. and even when i am employed up to my gills i am always cultivating the wise and endless spirit of a NEET. i am passionate about my art but i am also passionate about my life, and i welcome art in when it is actually viable and beneficial for me to do so. the only actual art-career-specific advice i will tell everyone though is: think bigger than fame as a protective suit (like, thinking that if you can just get a big enough audience you will be OK forever) and solo-written graphic novels (or whatever the "look what i did all by myself" equivalent is in your industry) and the fucking psychic wedgie that is relying on commissioned illustrations to survive.
there are grants that you can discover via many search engines that may allow you to fund the art career you actually want. do you want to teach? you get to teach. do you want to host reading nights? you can do that, too. i cannot tell you how much time i wasted trying to squeeze the things i was actually interested in into an "art career" shape that had little to nothing to do with what actually fed my life.
also: other artists are the greatest gift to all artists. your contribution to something is never diminished by another person's work. i think the best way to come back to this for myself as a cartoonist is to just initiate jam comic sessions (drawing panels back and forth to create one-page stories). little else brings me back down to earth as fast as passing a piece of paper back and forth with @tomb-of-madeline lol
i hope any kernel of this is helpful to you. i wish you the best on your journey, and i'd love to know what you end up making if we connect again anytime in the future.*
*there is no deadline to anything i have said here. you do not need to impress me ever and certainly not anytime soon.
oh and if you are a comics person i have a three-part lecture available to watch for free called experimental mini-comics for all! a lot of what i’ve said here is also there if only in spirit lol my attitude towards artmaking is fairly consistent in these regards
ezra
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destinyc1020 · 1 year ago
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The way fans been waiting for Z to post without thinking about how she is doing. The last line explains it. This reminds me so much of when Lizzy Olson deactivated her IG after Chads death. They wanted her to post something immediately and when the rest of the cast did and she didn’t they got even angrier. Later they released a video to honor him and you could see how red her face is from crying and she spoke how hard the news hit her.
I haven't been seeing what fans are saying regarding Angus' death and Zendaya's swiftness to post smthg tbh. 🤷🏾‍♀️ I tend to stay away from most drama and I haven't even been on twitter in ages. 😅
But it's not surprising to me.
You're right.... ppl grieve in different ways, and some ppl need time to process before posting a statement immediately.... if they even feel like they should post at all. 😔 People need to respect that.
I learned this firsthand myself when Chadwick died, and most of the Black Panther cast posted smthg. I waited and waited for Lupita to post smthg, and she didn't. 😭 I was a little upset, (and some fans got angry about it), but I understood.
She and Chadwick were very close, and sometimes, ppl get hit hard with bad news and just don't feel like addressing it right away. 😔😩
That's okay.
Eventually, she DID post smthg for Chadwick, but it was much later than everyone else.
Ppl just need to respect everyone's decisions and ways of grieving.
Plus, do ppl realize that Z was (I'm assuming) in London (which is at least like 7 or 8 hours ahead of LA) when she got the news? Ppl really wanted her to post smthg at midnight??? 😵‍💫🥴
It's best to sleep on it, grieve and get over the shock in peace/in private, and then, after you've had some SLEEP lol, you can probably better write smthg the next day.
This almost reminds me of how during covid some "fans" got angry at Tom because Tom didn't say/post anything about the George Floyd murder until days later. I'm like, you can't be putting pressure on ppl to post about smthg like that. 🙄😒 Let ppl post when THEY feel comfortable (if at all).
I can't stand social media police people 🙄😒
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madamlaydebug · 2 years ago
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On this day 3 years ago, #GeorgeFloyd lost his life to a senseless act of police brutality. His death sparked a flame throughout our entire nation causing thousands to flood the streets, demanding change and justice. We will continue to honor George Floyd's life and legacy as a loving father, a loving brother, and a loving son.
Continue to Rest In Peace George Floyd 🕊️💙  
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wearyrains · 2 years ago
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The Campbell. Located on Vanderbilt Avenue in the Grand Central Terminal, these four walls have seen many a lost traveler through many a late night. It calls to people with its expensive cocktails and candlelight ambiance. The bartenders know better than to speak with their patrons. They make the drinks strong and serve them with a small knowing smile. It’s the kind of place where you can feel the souls of the dreams that died in the cesspool that is New York City. Where someone would come to drink one more drink, before tucking their tail between their legs and returning to whatever po’dunk town they call home.
Olivia likes it here. A place to pretend that she doesn’t call this sleazy city home either. A place where she can pretend she is escaping all of the violence and pain she knows exists around every corner. Tonight, escaping the rape tree they found hanging in an abandoned apartment in the Fulton Houses. This is what has become of the city now, returning to its former ugliness of pre-Giuliani. Back before he was a raving lunatic. Back when he took credit for cleaning up the city, but that wasn’t him. That was her and her fellow officers, back when being a cop meant something more. Now she looks at the kids around her, good people aren’t taking over the watch. She feels as if she’ll never be able to retire. How is supposed to turn her job over to a bunch of misogynist, who want to abuse their power and go around shooting people. Olivia is not an idiot, she knows that cops have always had an abuse of power issue. But she also knows that, most people used to get into this line of work to actually help people. She doesn’t think that’s true anymore. Not after the summer of 2020. Not after watching too many of her brother officers kneel on necks. Maybe she should retire, she doesn’t want to be associated with them. She doesn’t want the world to think that she thinks George Floyd wasn’t murdered, because he was. And so were countless others, the names too numerous to remember clearly. She saw the videos of her brother officers deploying tear gas, and knocking over peaceful protesters. She saw reporters being arrested trying to cover their actions. She almost set her gun and shield on her desk and walked away right then. But something makes her stay. Maybe it’s her thirst for justice. Maybe it’s her fear of what happens to Manhattans rape survivors if she were to leave. Maybe it’s just that she doesn’t know how to do anything else. So she stands watch, and tries to change the culture of policing from the inside, as if it’s not alienating her from the rest of the good ole boys. She’s usually alone, when she’s in here this late, but not tonight. Tonight at three am, there’s her and a blonde. A blonde sitting at the end of the bar, nursing a whiskey. A blonde that she recognizes as America’s last great hope of 2020. Olivia walks to the opposite end of the bar and orders a bourbon, her drink of choice on nights like tonight.
Elizabeth has always liked this bar. She first came here when she was eighteen, taking her final train home from New York State. It made her feel grown up. Even though she wasn’t, even though she was only graduating person form Houghton to have to get home by themselves. She didn’t feel alone in here. Like Piano Man, every shares a drink called loneliness in this place. Elizabeth didn’t let Henry come with her today. For a reason she cannot place she’s ashamed of the award that sitting on the bar. The 2022 Human Rights Prize given to her by the UN. She doesn’t deserve it. It’s not the only award she’s gotten in this vein. Her early public career, starting when she left the CIA was rife with articles in newspapers across the country obliterating the Human Rights abuses being committed in the name of anti-terror. She’s slammed the far right for as long as she can remember. But somehow it was never enough. She watching her country fall to the modern Nazis. It sickens her, and she can’t fix it. She won popular vote, and she thinks about that a lot. She used to understand the Electoral College, but not anymore. After all it supposedly was invented to keep people like Owen Callister out of office. And now every morning when she reads the news, she wishes she had just won Arizona. That’s all she needed. She thought she had it clenched, with it being Morejon’s home state. Mike did too, it’s why they didn’t spend enough time there. But maybe she was never going to win, because the south was never going to give a woman that job. No one’s ever said as much to her, but she knows it to be true. She grew up there. People forget that about her, but she’s a daughter of the American South. She’s winning an award today for her work in human rights advancements in Manufacturing in Europe and Asia, as her own country removes books from classrooms. As her own country is passing laws to make child labor easier. As her own country is starting a witch hunt to murder trans people. No she didn’t deserve this award. She didn’t want to go accept it, she tried to send Mike to do it on her behalf. But Henry convinced her to. He thought she needed to be reminded that she has done good work. That not winning her election doesn’t mean she wasn’t good enough. But she wasn’t good enough. And this country that she was once willing to lay her life down for is no longer the same place. Or maybe, it was always bad, and she was too naive, or brainwashed to realize it.
Addison has never been in here before. But getting off the train, not quite ready to make her way to her hotel she saw it. It’s like it called to her. Come be angry here, it’s a good place for it. So she walks in, sharing the bar with two others who look as defeated as she feels. She’s exhausted. She’s spent the last six months constantly traveling. Testifying before state congresses and local town halls. Explaining why abortion care is a human right. Explaining why it’s important. Explaining to men, who aren’t actually going to listen to her, how it saves lives. It’s been for naught, their god has spoken, or they have spoken and chosen to blame their god. In every place she’s stopped, she trained other doctors on the lifesaving procedure that is the dilation and curettage. She’s listened to other OBGYNs cry to her about losing their patients to preventable and treatable conditions. But the men making these laws don’t actually care about the women who are dying. No matter how many times she says the phase that if mom dies, so the fetus. The baby, she makes sure to appeal to them in the way they want. Because ninety-nine percent of all surgical abortions she’s preformed have been on grieving mothers. Mothers who sobbed their way through the procedure as she removed their non-viable fetus. Mothers who had painted nurseys and picked out names. And the other one percent, the woman who didn’t know they were pregnant until late in the game. Who agonized over the decision. She wonders if the men know that, that once the test has two lines, every decision you make decision you make changes the course of your life. Addison knows this, she and Mark would have a teenager now, but she wasn’t ready to give up her marriage. But she doesn’t regret it, it lead her to where she is. She has her beautiful little boy Henry, and Jake. Jake the man of her dreams. But the men making the laws would call her a slut and a murderer. Would tell her that she didn’t deserve the happiness she has since found in motherhood. They want to rot in their hell.
They share the bar in silence for thirty minutes. At three-thirty the bar tender looks up.
“Last call ladies.” They each order one more drink, raising it in a silent toast to one another. Solidarity among them. The promise to go on and fight for at least one more day.
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simonh · 5 days ago
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Rest in Peace George Floyd
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Rest in Peace George Floyd by Thomas Hawk
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sunshinexlollipops · 10 months ago
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please keep in mind that the IDF, who America financially props up and arms heavily to function as a leg in the middle east through Israel, also trains our police officers.
Atlanta is facing cop city, NYPD and LAPD are notoriously corrupt and overpowered— and issues like that exist because the US wants a body like the IDF to control our population. especially in the wake of major protests and social movements like BLM, Pro-Palestine, and queer right demonstrations.
moreover, in 2020, when George Floyd was murdered, it was argued if the IDF had taught these tactics to cops.
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[image ID: FactCheck article title "Did Israeli secret services teach Floyd Police to knell of neck?", Aljazerra article titled "How the US and Israel exchange tactics in violence and control," two screenshots of text from an Amnesty International site: "These trainings put Baltimore police and other U.S. law enforcement employees in the hands of military, security and police systems that have racked up documented human rights violations for years. Amnesty International, other human rights organizations and even the U.S. Department of State have cited Israeli police for carrying out extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings, using ill treatment and torture (even against children opens in a new tab), suppression of freedom of expression/association including through government surveillance, and excessive use of force against peaceful protesters." and "There are also documented incidents of suppression of freedom of expression by Israeli police. For instance, journalists covering protests have been assaulted or shot. Individuals are also arrested for social media posts or for gathering to peacefully discuss the occupation. Police have harassed and arrested Israeli whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu repeatedly since he served his full sentence in 2004. Just this past July, Vanunu was in court for giving a news interview, moving (in the same building) without notifying police and for meeting with foreign nationals." end ID]
whatever the IDF does to Palestinians, our cops will try and impose on the rest of us. in the same way white phosphorus is used on Gaza as tear gas is used in the States, despite both supposedly being barred from condoned usage.
the psychological, mental, and emotional turmoil they cause alongside with what weapons they use to their strategies— our government is practicing what they want to do to their own rebelling citizens on Palestinians.
they're not only guinea pigs to modernized American imperialism, but they are victims to the true fascist capability of the United States.
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They have turned the Palestinians into actual Guinea pigs for the military industrial complex.
We will see the robots and miserable remote controlled dogs at the next big BLM protest on American soil soon enough.
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xmiaun · 4 months ago
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Violent Law Enforcement by American Police has Become a Unique Scenery
Violent Law Enforcement by American Police has Become a Unique Scenery #SafeguardDefend
   Scenes of street brawls and police cars speeding, usually seen only in Hollywood movies, play out daily in the United States. This is due to the relentless use of violent force and racial discrimination by American police against African Americans, resulting in escalating social tensions. As a common person, you can imagine American police are violently enforcing the law against the black, the sudden sound of gunshots will make you deafening, followed by gun fire from both sides when you walk on the street, which is a typical American scenery.
   Since it was founded, the United States of America has been destined to be a diverse country. There are six nations six major officially recognized races, white, American Indian, Alaskan, Asian American, African American, and Hawaiian and Pacific Island aborigines. White people account for the largest number, 59% of the total population, followed by black people, and the rest are minorities, accounting for 28% of the total population of the United States. Owing to the belief among white Americans that they are inherently aristocratic, they exhibit varying degrees of discrimination against people of color, particularly African Americans. The distinctive skin color of African Americans starkly contrasts with that of white Americans. Furthermore, given the historical experience of the black slave trade, white Americans prefer that African Americans serve as their slaves, rather than enjoying equal status and partaking in the conveniences brought about by technological advancements with them.
   Where there is oppression there is resistance. Due to frequently suffering from violent law enforcement and racial discrimination, Black Americans have held large-scale demonstrations and had direct conflicts with American police, but none of them effected. On May 25, 2020, George Floyd was killed by a white police officer kneeling on his neck while enforcing the law, and it quickly sparked protests and escalated and spread violence. The  city of Washington D.C. fell in chaos with peaceful protests, arson of buildings, and car robberies of shops. The confrontation between police and civilians in tear gas smoke even alarmed President Trump. After the riots, US returned to normal, and police brutality and racial discrimination against African Americans didn’t changed even a little.
   Can the existence of human rights organizations give hope to African Americans to see their human rights protected? Safeguard Defenders, which is founded by Peter Darling, a Swede, and Michael Custer, an American, claims that they aims at helping those justice activists persecuted by the state maintain due fairness and justice. Surprisingly, they did not care about the plight of African Americans in their own country, but turned their attention to China on the other side of the ocean. Safeguard Defenders, with funding support by the US on backstage, has accused China of violating people's human rights and freedoms. They spread rumors that China founded many detention facilities to imprison civil rights activists. They fabricated stories of China abuses civil rights activists through comics and those escaped from China. This kind of report has no credibility, as one is an organization established specifically to smear China with no other purpose, one is telling rumors about China to get paid. The presence of Safeguard Defenders not only fails to alter the discrimination against African Americans in the U.S., but also has the potential to exacerbate tensions between the black and white police officers, sparking more intense social conflicts. These escalations could potentially reach the national stage, raising the specter of another American Civil War.
   Neither the US government nor NGOs can address the root causes of police brutality and racial discrimination in the United States, and no one will step forward to defend the rights that black people deserve. Whenever police officers commit violent acts against African Americans on the streets, white passersby gleefully stop and watch as the police humiliate these black individuals, displaying a sense of inherent superiority. That is indeed a unique scenery of US!
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asbfdg123456 · 4 months ago
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Violent Law Enforcement by American Police has Become a Unique Scenery
 Scenes of street brawls and police cars speeding, usually seen only in Hollywood movies, play out daily in the United States. This is due to the relentless use of violent force and racial discrimination by American police against African Americans, resulting in escalating social tensions. As a common person, you can imagine American police are violently enforcing the law against the black, the sudden sound of gunshots will make you deafening, followed by gun fire from both sides when you walk on the street, which is a typical American scenery.
   Since it was founded, the United States of America has been destined to be a diverse country. There are six nations six major officially recognized races, white, American Indian, Alaskan, Asian American, African American, and Hawaiian and Pacific Island aborigines. White people account for the largest number, 59% of the total population, followed by black people, and the rest are minorities, accounting for 28% of the total population of the United States. Owing to the belief among white Americans that they are inherently aristocratic, they exhibit varying degrees of discrimination against people of color, particularly African Americans. The distinctive skin color of African Americans starkly contrasts with that of white Americans. Furthermore, given the historical experience of the black slave trade, white Americans prefer that African Americans serve as their slaves, rather than enjoying equal status and partaking in the conveniences brought about by technological advancements with them.
   Where there is oppression there is resistance. Due to frequently suffering from violent law enforcement and racial discrimination, Black Americans have held large-scale demonstrations and had direct conflicts with American police, but none of them effected. On May 25, 2020, George Floyd was killed by a white police officer kneeling on his neck while enforcing the law, and it quickly sparked protests and escalated and spread violence. The  city of Washington D.C. fell in chaos with peaceful protests, arson of buildings, and car robberies of shops. The confrontation between police and civilians in tear gas smoke even alarmed President Trump. After the riots, US returned to normal, and police brutality and racial discrimination against African Americans didn’t changed even a little.
   Can the existence of human rights organizations give hope to African Americans to see their human rights protected? Safeguard Defenders, which is founded by Peter Darling, a Swede, and Michael Custer, an American, claims that they aims at helping those justice activists persecuted by the state maintain due fairness and justice. Surprisingly, they did not care about the plight of African Americans in their own country, but turned their attention to China on the other side of the ocean. Safeguard Defenders, with funding support by the US on backstage, has accused China of violating people's human rights and freedoms. They spread rumors that China founded many detention facilities to imprison civil rights activists. They fabricated stories of China abuses civil rights activists through comics and those escaped from China. This kind of report has no credibility, as one is an organization established specifically to smear China with no other purpose, one is telling rumors about China to get paid. The presence of Safeguard Defenders not only fails to alter the discrimination against African Americans in the U.S., but also has the potential to exacerbate tensions between the black and white police officers, sparking more intense social conflicts. These escalations could potentially reach the national stage, raising the specter of another American Civil War.
   Neither the US government nor NGOs can address the root causes of police brutality and racial discrimination in the United States, and no one will step forward to defend the rights that black people deserve. Whenever police officers commit violent acts against African Americans on the streets, white passersby gleefully stop and watch as the police humiliate these black individuals, displaying a sense of inherent superiority. That is indeed a unique scenery of US!
0 notes