#turtle Island
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opencommunion · 9 months ago
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incarcerated people are shutting down Alabama prisons and asking for your solidarity
Alabama prisons are the deadliest and most crowded prisons in the US. Their violence extends to gas chamber executions and illegal organ harvesting. The Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) is currently facing two federal lawsuits: one for enslaving Black detainees by denying them parole and leasing out their forced labor and another for targeting strike organizers. ADOC rakes in more than $450 million annually in profits from forced labor, and that's not including the profits incarcerated people generate for private corporations such as McDonald's and Raytheon. In response to these abuses, and in particular the horrific beating of six handcuffed detainees by Lt. Edmonds at Donaldson Prison on February 22nd, the Free Alabama Movement (FAM) has organized a minimum 90-day statewide prison shutdown/work stoppage. They are calling on supporters outside the prison walls to show solidarity. If you're located in or around Alabama, show up to the protest at St. Clair Prison in Springville, AL on Saturday March 2nd. For rideshare coordination contact the Tennessee Student Solidarity Network on IG or by email: [email protected] "Outside support for us starts at the prisons. That's where we need people. Come to one of the protests, show your face, and tell us that you support us. That's how we know that you support us. Outside support is the first step." - FAM
Everyone in the US, call Donaldson Prison at (205) 436-3681 and ask them to fire Lt. Edmonds for his brutal violence against incarcerated people.
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biophonies · 1 year ago
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when I drew this comic 3 years ago I had NO idea how far it would reach. I'm happy to finally share a corrected version with proper abbreviations, and even MORE state names of indigenous origin ♥️
however, the goal of this comic was to inspire people to do your OWN research on indigenous history. To question everything we have been taught, and everything that has been pointedly left out. This erasure, this “forgetting”, of history is not just of the past… it is happening now. - Across so-called Canada, the US, and US-occupied islands, native women are victims of murder at 10-12x the rate of non-native people, and are the most likely to go missing without being searched for by the law. - Native reservations have the highest rates of poverty in the US, with over HALF of tribal homes with no access to clean water (with more joining this list by the year) - Native people are 6-10x more likely to be unhoused than the rest of the population, and native teens suffer suicide rates higher than any other demographic. This list of modern day genocide goes on (thank you for compiling @theindigenousanarchist <3) and yet take a look at those environmental stats!
Native people manage to do SO much for the planet as a whole - thanklessly - and with all this stacked against them. Don't even get me started on kin fighting in south america. Could you imagine if there was help? #landback is resistance to genocide, and it is the key to saving our warming earth.
So look into it and the other hashtags, cuz a cartoon goose ain't a substitute for a proper education. Love to my grandparents who always kept a map of tribal territories of turtle island on their wall, to speaking on our Tsalagi & Saponi heritage. Love & solidarity forever, happy research, and happy #indigenouspeoplesday
LANDBACK.ORG
(Also, if you care to support the artist, I'm publishing a book ! and writing another - a fantastical afroindigenous graphic novel - that I post exclusively about with tons of other art on my patreon.)
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kinepiko · 3 months ago
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Hatsune Miku !
Turtle Island Version
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Everyone started drawing Miku from their country so I wanted to join in :D
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houseofpurplestars · 6 months ago
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A Department of Interior advisory committee has identified over 500 racist slurs and derogatory names attached to mountains, rivers and other geological features across the country. These names must be removed.
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orangeblossombitch · 25 days ago
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Long live the Intifada!
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canisvesperus · 6 months ago
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And we wouldn’t have to pay to see ourselves in museums.
Source
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fairuzfan · 3 months ago
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The 108-page report, which is based on interviews with more than 6,000 people during site visits over a two-year period, says the New Orleans ICE office has a pattern of holding people in detention for longer than its counterparts elsewhere, detailing multiple examples of people held at least three months after they were ordered removed.
Interviewees also reported unsanitary living conditions and meals, citing experiences where the facilities ran out of toilet paper and menstrual products, offered spoiled food at mealtimes, were infested by pests and mold, didn't have enough warm clothing, and had feces- and vomit-covered sleeping areas. Some also cited limited or no access to medical and mental health care.
In many instances, the detainees report being left hungry and laughed at by guards as they navigated unclean spaces and rotten food.
The researchers also describe extensive use of solitary confinement, including one case where a Pakistani immigrant describes being held in solitary for more than 200 days for requesting meals appropriate for his diabetes.
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guerillas-of-history · 9 months ago
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American Indian Movement (AIM) Wounded Knee, South Dakota, 1973
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bossymarmalade · 2 months ago
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CBC video: Stolen Children | Residential School Survivors Speak Out
Since their first arrival in the “new world” of North America, a number of religious entities began the project of converting Indigenous Peoples to Christianity. This undertaking grew in structure and purpose, especially between 1831 and 1969, when the governing officials of early Canada joined with Roman Catholic, Anglican, Methodist, United, and Presbyterian churches to create and operate the residential school system. The last federally-run residential school, Gordon Indian residential School in Saskatchewan, closed in 1996. One common objective defined this period: the aggressive assimilation of Aboriginal peoples.
[ legacy of hope ]
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There is nothing to celebrate today. If you are one of the lucky few with today off (as I am), take some time to learn why.
#LandBack
Repost from @intersectionalenvironmentalist
There is no pride in genocide.
As the U.S. celebrates Independence Day, we cannot dismiss the continuous acts of injustice against Black and Indigenous people.
✏️About the Researcher: @kianna_pete
Kianna was a Spring 2022 Social Media Fellow at IE and studied political science and ethnicity & race studies with a specialization in Indigenous/Native studies at Columbia University. ✨
💻Sources:
peoplesworld.org/article/july-4th-whose-independence-day-is-it/
nbcnews.com/news/us-news/six-things-you-didn-t-know-about-
fourth-july-n779331
smithsonianmag.com/blogs/national-museum-american-indian/
2020/07/01/do-american-indians-celebrate-4th-july/
meaww.com/independence-day-july-4-native-americans-do-they-celebrate-lost-traditions-early-suppression
culturalsurvival.org/news/united-states-independence-masked-genocide-and-imperialism
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opencommunion · 9 months ago
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ACT UP contingent at a >50,000-strong protest for Palestinian liberation in New York, 2 March 24
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olowan-waphiya · 10 months ago
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A huge ancient city has been found in the Amazon, hidden for thousands of years by lush vegetation.
The discovery changes what we know about the history of people living in the Amazon.
The houses and plazas in the Upano area in eastern Ecuador were connected by an astounding network of roads and canals.
The area lies in the shadow of a volcano that created rich local soils but also may have led to the destruction of the society.
While we knew about cities in the highlands of South America, like Machu Picchu in Peru, it was believed that people only lived nomadically or in tiny settlements in the Amazon.
"This is older than any other site we know in the Amazon. We have a Eurocentric view of civilisation, but this shows we have to change our idea about what is culture and civilisation," says Prof Stephen Rostain, director of investigation at the National Centre for Scientific Research in France, who led the research.
"It changes the way we see Amazonian cultures. Most people picture small groups, probably naked, living in huts and clearing land - this shows ancient people lived in complicated urban societies," says co-author Antoine Dorison.
The city was built around 2,500 years ago, and people lived there for up to 1,000 years, according to archaeologists.
It is difficult to accurately estimate how many people lived there at any one time, but scientists say it is certainly in the 10,000s if not 100,000s.
The archaeologists combined ground excavations with a survey of a 300 sq km (116 sq mile) area using laser sensors flown on a plane that could identify remains of the city beneath the dense plants and trees.
"The road network is very sophisticated. It extends over a vast distance, everything is connected. And there are right angles, which is very impressive," he says, explaining that it is much harder to build a straight road than one that fits in with the landscape.
The scientists also identified causeways with ditches on either side which they believe were canals that helped manage the abundant water in the region.
There were signs of threats to the cities - some ditches blocked entrances to the settlements, and may be evidence of threats from nearby people.
Researchers first found evidence of a city in the 1970s, but this is the first time a comprehensive survey has been completed, after 25 years of research.
It reveals a large, complex society that appears to be even bigger than the well-known Mayan societies in Mexico and Central America.
Some of the findings are "unique" for South America, he explains, pointing to the octagonal and rectangular platforms arranged together.
The societies were clearly well-organised and interconnected, he says, highlighting the long sunken roads between settlements.
Not a huge amount is known about the people who lived there and what their societies were like.
Pits and hearths were found in the platforms, as well as jars, stones to grind plants and burnt seeds.
Prof Rostain says he was warned against this research at the start of his career because scientists believed no ancient groups had lived in the Amazon.
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muffinlevelchicanery · 6 months ago
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History may not fully repeat itself but it rhymes. Arms embargo now! Land back now!!
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alfredo-zauce · 11 months ago
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EAT A DICK @staff
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bimdraws · 7 months ago
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Turtle Island stands with Palestine 🇵🇸🌎
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guerillas-of-history · 9 months ago
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American Indian Movement (AIM) Wounded Knee, South Dakota,1973
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