#we will survive
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lgbtqtext · 2 months ago
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lgbtq-userboxes · 2 months ago
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mothacita · 1 month ago
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you are seen. you are heard. you are loved.
I genuinely cannot thank each and every one of you for the amount of love and support I received during my time in this community. you all helped me feel so much better about my work and gave me the boost I needed to keep drawing, and for that I will always be grateful. yall are amazing. ily
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monzterzack · 2 months ago
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sorry if im cringe for a second, but i just wanted to send my support to any of you who are struggling right now
please live and love, that is all we gotta do
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obsxssedwithstuff · 7 months ago
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If you dont believe jewish people should have a country where they are the majority, you're the problem.
If you dont think said country should have Jerusalem, you're also the problem.
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afrofairysblog · 6 months ago
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These sudden interviews were saying platonic this platonic that wah wah wah I don't wanna fricking hear it like SHUT UP( respectfully if its said by my fav lol and disrespectfully for the haters)
You all wanna bring us down so badly, but the fight is not OVER!!!!!
(I know your game, and it's only making step ten toes down for this slow burn cause it's going to be CANON)
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motherofmisfits · 2 months ago
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I have seen a lot of hate going around today, and it will most likely be going around for a while. The events of the election were major, but we will survive.
And if I can make surviving easier for at least one person, then I will. So I wish to give some love to those who are being hated on right now with no one trying to understand them. (Any trump supporters are not on the list of people I will defend. Politely, please leave my blog and this post alone). But many non Trump supporters are receiving hate without anyone trying to understand their reasoning.
So, I am sending love to those who voted for a third party in an attempt to get a policy to gain attention. While third parties don't win, if enough support it, one of the main two usually adopts the policy. (You may have been misguided, but your intent was good.)
Sending love to those who didn't vote because they were in a controlling/abusive environment and were too scared to. Please keep fighting and surviving.
Sending love to those who were forced to vote for Trump because of the people they live with. You are not a bad person. I hope one day you can defend and stand for your beliefs.
Sending love to those who didn't vote because politics would negatively impact their mental health and tried to put themself first. Do not blame yourself. You did good trying to put yourself first. I'm sorry that things will only get harder for you.
Sending love to anyone who didn't vote for Kamala for a valid reason. If you didn't make your choice out of spite, then you are not a bad person. It is okay. Do not blame yourself. You can accept responsibility, but don't think this is all your fault. Keep the ones who voted for Trump accountable. They did this with no regard for the outcome.
Stay safe, my dears.
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ladyofspoons · 27 days ago
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in light of recent events, i am called to mind of the wise words of the Archmage Sparrowhawk, penned by Ursula K. Le Guin in the tenth chapter of The Farthest Shore:
“no darkness lasts forever, and even there, there are stars,”
every one of us is a star to someone else in our community, but if we give in to the darkness, how less heartened will our fellow stars be? remind those stars what they are to you, and keep your own light burning.
we will make it through this.
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funnypages · 1 month ago
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Lessons of Resistance from WWII: The Rosenstrasse Protest and Evacuation of the Danish Jews
So a long history rant I think people should know about and keep in mind for the future. I want to talk to people about a little talked about story in the history of WWII, the Rosenstrasse protest: the one time, during the height of the Holocaust, when the German public protested against the deportation of Jews; and they won.
1942-early 1943 was arguably the height of Nazi Germany; with most of the continent occupied, allied, or neutral to them. It was also 2 years into the Final Solution phase of the Holocaust, the planned mass killing of Jews. In February 1943, the government began the final round-up of the 20,000 remaining Jews in Berlin. This included a category of Jews that the government had previously avoided deporting: Jews married to gentile Germans. While the Nazis had cracked down on these relationships since they came to power, there were at this time 1,800 mixed couples remaining in Berlin; almost all Jewish men married to gentile women (After the consolidation of power under Hitler, more German men had divorced their Jewish partners than women).
When these Jewish men were arrested, hundreds of their non-Jewish spouses descended upon the building they were held in, bringing with them friends and families, screaming for their husbands to be released. The protests were so large, that the Nazis could not suppress news of it spreading through Germany and internationally; and they were also genuinely afraid that arresting or shooting these women could cause the situation to spiral even further into an outright uprising. As a result, the men were released, and most of them survived the war.
Now there are a lot of critiques and analyses that can be done of the protest, about privilege and gender, and noting that nothing was said about releasing the 18,000 other Berlin Jews set to be deported to camps. Still, the reaction that the public had to these deportations, combined with the shockingly hopeful story of Denmark in the Holocaust, gives some valuable lessons in how fascists can be thwarted.
Demark was invaded by Germany in 1939 and was given a degree of autonomy, being treated as the "model protectorate." While the Danish government did acquiesce to demands to ban Communist and Socialist political parties, they refused to enact racial laws targeting Danish Jews. While not to say anti-semitism didn't exist in Denmark, for reasons debated by historians and sociologists, Denmark did not have a strong history of "othering" its Jewish community, and it was largely seen as an accepted part of Danish society.
In September 1943, German plans to deport the Danish Jewish community to concentration camps leaked to the Danish government, which then alerted leaders of the Jewish community. Over 3 weeks churches, civil servants (notably mostly working independently of the government), political parties, the Danish resistance (mostly at this point made up of the before mentioned Communists and Socialists), and private individuals helped evacuate 7,220 Jews, plus 686 non-Jewish spouses, by sea to nearby neutral Sweden. For context, the Jewish population of Denmark before the invasion was around 7,800. Of the 580 Danish Jews who failed to escape to Sweden, 464 were arrested; however, work by Swedish and Danish groups saw 425 of them released. Further, when the war ended, it was discovered that 116 Danish Jews had been hidden by their neighbors. In all, a shocking 99% of Denmark's Jewish population survived the Holocaust; the most of any occupied nation in Europe.
I tell both of these stories because they show what fascists and authoritarians are aware of: the limits of their power. They are aware of the simple fact so much of their power comes from average people just accepting what they do with no pushback. These groups thrive on atomization, demonization, and otherization. Because when people refuse to let their neighbors be attacked, that's when issues pop up. There were other individuals and groups in Germany who spoke out against the Nazis (the White Rose and the Edelweiss Pirates to name a few), but they were small and disorganized, they could be arrested or exiled or killed without much effort. But large groups of resistance? How do you arrest or kill those without stopping their families and friends from protesting? And the foot soldiers enacting their agenda tend to get antsy if there is large-scale pushback to them. The big guys in charge might be safe, but them? They are vulnerable to being fired, sued, arrested, or ostracised if they are seen enacting unpopular policies. Such actions put authorities on the defensive, stall them, and make them reconsider their tactics; which in the long run, can save lives.
This is what people mean, whether they know it or not, over the last few days when they have been saying "Help those close to you, keep your friends close." They want you to think they are all-powerful. They want you to think they are unstoppable. They want you to think there is no hope in openly denying them. Because they know that if those few people openly defying them become large groups openly defying them, then things spiral out of control.
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sofluffainpink · 1 month ago
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it’s been four days since the election. honestly i’ve barely been able to wrap my head around it. I still can’t believe that such an awful person was able to manipulate himself into office. i’ve been spending these last couple of days in shock and disbelief. i’m not even angry, i’m just sad and scared. i’m scared for what this means for queer people (specifically trans people), people of color, women, and everyone else not only in the US but also across the world. obviously we’ve all been trying to understand what this means for civil liberties and democracy, but I also can’t help but have my heart ache for the women that trump has raped and assaulted and abused. I can’t even imagine how painful it must be to watch millions of people praise your rapist and abuser, and even get elected into office. it’s all so morally wrong and goes against all scales of justice. it breaks my heart to know that these women and girls have to watch this disgusting man that violated them get worshipped. and it scares me to my core that people can actually endorse, vote, and even love such a person.
I can’t lift spirits nearly as much as I wish I could, but what I can say is that we need to come together as a community if we are going to get through this. for all the trans people, queer people, people of color, women, everyone who is going to be affected by this: you are not alone. and especially to the women who trump has done unspeakable things to: you. are. not. alone. we all need to promise each other that no matter what, we will not stop fighting
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swemtpotamtam · 1 month ago
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the orange fucker has been elected only a few days ago and hasn't even had his inauguration, yet he and his goons are already twisting Ukraine's arms behind its back one of his lackeys did say that it's unrealistic to get Crimea back to which I say fuck you and your whole fucking family, pls eat a bag of dicks and choke on 'em :) ruzzia took Crimea away, is actively oppressing the Crimean Tatars, the natives of that peninsula, and some american cuck just comes out and says that we should let that slide not that I'm extremely surprised by the fact that orange fuck's posse is saying stuff like that but I am just so fueled by rage nonetheless, literally wanna explode them all with my mind
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queer-remembrance-project · 2 months ago
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Hi, I can't share my name, however, you can refer to me as Cervidae. I am a young queer person living in the United States, and I will be perfectly clear, things are shit right now. Things are bad, and they WILL get worse. But I'm not giving up hope, not until I'm 6 feet under. I implore you to read this post, please.
My current mission is to save as many queer stories as possible and stockpile them. I will make them into a book, and I will sell that book to anyone who will buy it, and any profits made from that will be given to charities.
We CANNOT let our stories die. We can't let the next generations of queer people think that they're all alone, because they will NEVER be. No matter what place, no matter what people, we're there, we always have been.
Currently I am working on my own, but I have plans to get more people on board while I still can, such as starting a go fund me (All profits will go to this project and no where else).
So please, my fellow queers, my community, my siblings, my kin, send me your stories. You can choose how much information you give me, you can tell me whether or not you want your username shared or not, and I want to make this clear, you can be completely anonymous. You can vent as much or as little as you want. You can send me stories spanning as many messages as you need, or you can send me something as small as "I am queer", it will all go in.
I'm doing this because I refuse to be forgotten, and for my community to be forgotten. We will live through this, we WILL, and we will be remembered.
I love you all so very, very much. We can't let ourselves be forgotten, we must push forward and live through this, from the oldest to the youngest of us.
No matter your race, religion, place of birth, age, or ANYTHING else, you are queer, you are a queer human, and you deserve to be heard, even if it's just in this book.
Please reblog.
-Love, Cervidae
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wheredreamsarereborn · 2 months ago
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You know, despite my negative outlook before, thanks to a lot of people, I realized that this ain't the end. Bad times are as temporary as the good ones, and even if it takes years, we will persevere.
Even when we have lost, even if the world seems like it's gonna end, we gotta rise up and keep on living despite it all. You know why?
We are survivors. Us, humanity. We have beaten evil time and time again, and even if it may seem like the end, it sure wasn't in 1940s, and let's not make it now either.
Even if you lost your faith in others, it's gonna be okay. If not for anyone else, then do it for YOURSELF. Live no matter what. Don't let these guys push you down, and keep on living as the ultimate sign of determination.
We may live amidst the worst times right now, but it sure as hell ain't the end for us.
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milkweedtussocktubers · 28 days ago
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An Extensive "What Now?" List
So, I made a list. A very extensive "Trump Is President-Elect. What Now?" list. And it's fucking ten pages long and I know it's incomplete, because I am white, and multi-gender, and own my own home, and live in a blue state with enshrined abortion rights and so honestly can't know everything that needs to be on that list. BUT I'm posting what I've got so far. I'll also post the link, because it's a Google Doc that I'm continuously updating and sharing. PLEASE do not take my word as gospel - comment, add, share, spread, correct, message me. This is just a jumping off point, because so many of my friends wanted an action plan. All links except the What If Trump Wins? website are credited to @creature-wizard; they don't know it, but I read their posts and find their work very helpful, so I hope they don't mind that I included some of their links and info. Better than reinventing the wheel.
So THIS is the link:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/10zzAchLDd_NeqpWQXixmNQpH6X5ZsGpHRVsojx38Las/edit?tab=t.0
TRUMP IS PRESIDENT-ELECT. NOW WHAT?
I put together a list of ideas that I hope folks find inspiration in. This can be a personal action plan, a path towards resistance, or just an opportunity to feel a bit better. I welcome all thoughts, suggestions and changes. Please note that I am writing this from the perspective of a white, multi-gender farmer, and that will color and inhibit my ability to see certain issues or solutions. This is not a complete list, but can be a jumping-off point.
I've found this website incredibly helpful: https://whatiftrumpwins.org. All links found within this document are credited to @creature-wizard on Tumblr. 
COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC SERVICE 
Community ties are the most important things we’ve got - that’s where our strength lies. All those small-scale mutual aid projects? That’s what’s going to make life possible on the day to day. So: 
Take a deep breath, and knock on someone’s door. 
Check in with your neighbors - this can be a scheduled date, or just swinging by with an extra loaf of zucchini bread, or chatting over the garden fence. 
Offer to help someone with a simple task - cleaning gutters, building a raised bed, taking their dog to the vet.
Create a carpool system. 
Set up little libraries, freezers and fridges. 
Develop a list of ten local people you trust, with their contact information, and who you know will try to help you. Put the list in your phone, on your fridge, in your wallet. Put yourself on someone else’s list, and commit to it. 
Make friends and meet up with them on a regular basis. Have tea, cook together, go for walks, play video games. Just be there consistently. 
Open your house once a month for community get-togethers. Maybe these are queer/women/BIPOC-only safe spaces, maybe they’re street-wide potlucks. Maybe you make art while crying together. Maybe you binge-watch Lord of the Rings, eat popcorn and share joy.
Think about starting Swaps with your community. Swaps of clothing you don’t need anymore. Swaps of home-made food, seeds, plants or artwork. Swaps of household goods. Get yourself trading and sharing with each other. 
Get a roommate or two. It’ll help each of you save money, reduce loneliness, and might save someone from becoming unhoused. Don't feel obligated to retain that roommate if it's negatively impacting you. This is about a healthy present in a chaotic world, not a desperate act that results in abuse and destruction.
Libraries are funded in large part based on the number of cards they hand out, not books. Get a library card, even if you never use it. Many libraries let you apply online. If your library isn’t physically accessible, or you can’t safely leave your home but you have a cellphone, download the Libby app for books and audiobooks. It’s free, you just need your library card number. If you live or have an address in New York State, you can also get cards to the Brooklyn Public Library and NYC Public Libraries.
Places to volunteer: libraries, hospitals, schools, mental health hotlines, small farms and community gardens, animal shelters, food pantries, mutual aid organizations, medical clinics, harm reduction centers, fire stations, emergency rescue services. 
Advocate for handicapped accessibility in all public spaces. Does your library have a ramp? Your local co-op? Your house? Learn what your disabled community members needs are that are not being met, because it will get worse. 
Do you have skills that can contribute in new ways? For instance, if you're a great bike mechanic, I'll bet you can fix wheelchairs. If you're an electrician, you could help with your neighbor's solar system. If you're handy with a sewing machine, you can make flags and banners.
Keep it local - donate to the after-school music program in your town instead of, say, Planned Parenthood. National organizations will be getting a flood of funding from concerned citizens right now, but local organizations are often more effective and know their community’s needs more intimately.
If you want to participate but in person is too much, or not accessible, go to Zoom meetings. Call or email folks. Perform online tasks, or put up posters.
If you're not sure what you can offer, just ask what people need. Sometimes someone needs their dogs walked, or an emergency baby-sitter. Sometimes a non-profit needs someone to table at an event. Perhaps someone wants a logo designed, or just someone to keep them company. It doesn't have to seem big to you; it could still mean the world to someone else.
Online communities are just as important, and often more accessible. Make the space and time for those meet-ups, whether you’re messaging folks, playing video games together, or finding forums and inspiration. 
Become a safe person for those who need to go back in the closet, or who need to trust someone with their sexuality or gender. 
Run for local office, or sit on the school board. Be the opposing voice in a conservative group.
If you feel safe doing it: advertise. Put up every damn flag at your house except the American flag. Pride, Black Lives Matter, feminism, Earth first, land back - become a visible beacon of safety and hope. If you are still safe, now is NOT the time to go underground. Now is the time to find your people, and be someone for others. So flags, volunteering, barter, lending, carpooling, offering tea, offering your guest room. Make the connections.
The more we connect with and care for our neighbors, the more our neighbors will connect with and care for us. Let’s strengthen and widen our circles. 
*I recognize that for many, much of what I offer can be a genuine safety concern. Sometimes housemates are abusive. Sometimes neighbors threaten you with guns. Use your own discretion and trust your instincts. 
ENVIRONMENT
Small plots of ecological sanctuary make a huge difference. You can plant flowers, collect rainwater, start a compost bin, let your lawn grow, build a hedgerow. Stop spraying pesticides, pick up litter, plant a garden, research native species, celebrate milkweed…
Volunteer or donate to a local conservation organization. 
Visit a park or go for a hike. Visit a local protected zone and learn about the ecosystem with whom you live. Discover your watershed. 
Learn about local pollutants and advocate for protections. Check out your city’s water health publications. 
Question the installation of new businesses, factories and industries. How will they impact the air, water, soil and human health? Protest them with your friends - on a local level, it actually only takes a few hundred people to make waves. I’ve seen huge projects stopped because my friends sat in on every town hall meeting.
Become a citizen scientist - birdwatch, identify local plants and animals, track the weather and then report your findings to naturalist organizations. The Merlin App is a free app that matches birdcalls to the birds in your backyard, iNaturalist takes really accurate photos and identifies them. It can become a whole hobby that also helps maintain consistent scientific data. 
Get your generator in working order. Storms are gonna get worse and you'll need it when the lights go out. Batteries, light bulbs, candles. Get them now. Prepare as if for a blizzard or tornado.
Consider an air filter or a gas mask for after the Clean Air Act is repealed.
Find out whether or not you’re in a flood or hurricane zone, or if you will be in one as climate change continues. What can you do to prepare for or mitigate the damage?
MENTAL AND EMOTIONAL HEALTH 
Remember that you are WORTHY of receiving gifts and help. Allow yourself to receive help with grace. ASK when you need help, even if you’re not quite sure what you need. 
Eat a lot of food and drink plenty of water; your stressed mindset will make you burn calories. 
Treat yourself. Maybe that means binging television, or buying a cute pair of earrings, or taking a bike ride to your favorite place, or resting in the bath with some fancy soaps. 
Don't isolate. Meet friends for coffee, or Ultimate Frisbee, or to learn to make a cake together. 
Create joy. 
         Don’t Hesitate by Mary Oliver
If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate. Give in to it. There are plenty of lives and whole towns destroyed or about to be. We are not wise, and not very often kind. And much can never be redeemed. Still, life has some possibility left. Perhaps this is its way of fighting back, that sometimes something happens better than all the riches or power in the world. It could be anything, but very likely you notice it in the instant when love begins. Anyway, that’s often the case. Anyway, whatever it is, don’t be afraid of its plenty. Joy is not made to be a crumb.
Greet the sun. Listen to the stars. Breathe with the trees. Lay in the grass. Cuddle a cat. Talk with the moon. Find a new book. Take up knitting. Make music. Journal. Make art. 
Have set days each week for long-distance friends, and check in with each other at least once a week. Send them care packages. Ask for care packages.
Accept that you will not do everything every day, that some days you will stay in bed until one, eat ice cream in your pajamas and just nap with the dog. That is real and beautiful. That chance to relax? That's something they're trying to take away from us. Rest and relaxation and hammocks and good books are all at risk, so enjoying them is also revolutionary. It's important to keep normalcy alive.
Think about your boundaries. Are you, for instance, comfortable housing someone in need? Comfortable helping someone through grief? It's okay if not. But find those boundaries so that you don't overtax yourself.
ART AND MEDIA
Download all of your favorite online media that feature queerness, whether it’s videos, fanfiction or artwork. If content featuring LGBTQ+ becomes listed as porn, and porn is banned, then sites like AO3 will have to wipe all of it from their listings. Contact the creators and see what support you can offer each other.
Find a list of banned books and obtain them somehow so that there are physical copies for when the online sites are shut down. 
Make your own art, and share it!
Don't be shy about your presence, and use art to make your presence known. Slap rainbow stickers on every telephone pole, spray paint a building wall with Black Lives Matter murals, knit a cozy sweater that doubles as a pronoun pin. Write a play that centers around the Land Back fights. Host an impromptu concert in the park, and invite the audience to donate to their local library fund.
PHYSICAL HEALTH AND REPRODUCTION 
Get a medical alert bracelet or have a medical alert card in your wallet. This way, no matter where you are, if you’re unconscious and sent to the ER, EMTs and staff know of your allergies and needs.  For instance, I’m allergic to penicillin, have low vitamin D and take St John’s Wort, a powerful herbal SSRI that could interfere with drugs. 
Find your state’s free Narcan programs, and request Narcan and drug testing strips so that you have them on hand if an emergency arises. 
Get a stockpile of COVID tests, decent masks, and if you plan to get the vaccines, do it now. 
Do not use a period tracking app; do nothing to alert the government to your reproductive medical needs. Unless it’s medically relevant, do not tell your doctor the date of your last menstrual cycle. Pay for all medical needs possible with cash, whether it’s Plan B off the shelf or a co-pay on a prescription. 
If you have any prescriptions, get them refilled as soon as possible. Get extras if you can.  
Get all your birth control needs met now. Implants and IUDs last for years, but if the IUD shifts, you will need medical assistance, so keep that in mind. 
Stock up on condoms and dental dams, get your STD screenings and all similar or related procedures, like colposcopies, mammograms and biopsies done now. 
Consider whether or not you need PrEP for HIV prevention. If you’re at risk but don’t have insurance, there are over-the-counter HIV test kits. They ARE pricey, though.
Stock up on pads and tampons or switch to cloth pads, period underwear or cups. They last at least six years. Cups take less water to clean, though. 
If you're planning to get yourself, your kids or your pets vaccines, do it before January. 
Those who don't want to have kids for the next four years and for whom it’s medically viable should consider a vasectomy. They're reversible, and no one gets stuck with an expected pregnancy. Tube tying is generally irreversible and reversal only has about a 50 percent success rate, depending on how the original procedure was done.
Stock up on basic first aid supplies and educate yourself in basic med training, like CPR, the Heimlich and how to treat pepper spray in the eyes (lots of water). Maybe you’ll find yourself at a protest and your friends get hurt, and you want to be able to help. Perhaps it’s an emergency and there are no safe options to call for help. 
Carry antihistamines with you, even if you don’t have allergies - the woman outside your local coffee shop may not be able to afford an Epi-Pen and you could be the one that keeps her alive long enough for the ambulance to get there. 
Get an umbrella, face mask,bullet-proof vest, and goggles, especially if you are considering joining a protest. Pepper spray, rubber bullets, shrapnel and real bullets are no joke and will be used against you. 
ECONOMICS AND RESOURCES
Invest in wood heating - real wood, not a pellet stove. When fuel prices go up, you will need to have a reliable source of heat. Best to get a wood cook stove. Investigate masonry or rocket stoves because they are very efficient and often can be built by a local company and don't rely on steel, which will also go up as more tariffs are implemented
Put some cash aside outside the bank. Put money in a high interest savings account, but NOT a CD.
Take your car to the mechanic now. Buy snow tires and get your vehicle in working order, because parts will skyrocket in price. 
In your trunk, put together a box of: motor oil, windshield fluid, a small empty gas tank, two gallons of fresh water, brake fluid, tire changing kit, tire pump - anything your car needs. Get two of everything. Have another crate with a blanket, gloves, $200 cash, dishware, a dog leash, some jars or Tupperware. That's for you, if you're in an emergency, want to bring home food, or need to rescue a stray dog. Put a snow shovel in, both for digging yourself out and for moving turtles.
Having a working bike with a tow-behind trailer is an asset, especially as gas and car parts rise in price.
Apply for food stamps, heating assistance, energy discounts, phone discounts, and health insurance now, so you have it for as long as possible before they cut programs.
Anyone close to being able to retire and collect on retirement should consider how that might impact their finances. It might be best to retire early, if you can collect.
Get all your fuel tanks filled now. Propane, oil, kerosene. Even gas stoves, and make sure they're in working order. 
Snail mail will be safer than online communications. Stock up on stamps; sometimes you can get discounts on the USPS website. If you’re sending a lot of packages, try PirateShip.com for discounts.��
FOOD AND WATER
Grow and preserve your own. Learn to cook and share with friends. Start or join a garden club or urban garden. Talk to farmers, read books, watch videos. 
Start looking around your area to see where you can wild harvest. Come Autumn, will you be able to harvest apples from the trees in the city park, or the old farmyard? Rose hips from the bushes along the sidewalk? In the Spring, dandelion leaves from your backyard?
Save seeds. Preserving specific varieties is good, but all seeds are valuable. 
Get a water filter, even if it’s just a water bottle filter. Save it for AFTER the Clean Water Act is slashed, unless your water is already too contaminated to wait. 
Find out how to buy local foods, because tariffs will raise the price of all international goods.
Stock up on food that has to cross a border, like black pepper, chocolate and coffee. Those are my top three, anyway. 
Find a space in your house to use as a root cellar, where it’s cool and damp and dark. Root crops, winter crops and fruits will store longer. You don't have to doomstock, but it's important to have a stored base until your community is strong enough to create its own food. So if during the Winter, you can't grow food, you have a few months supply until it's warm enough to grow again.
Learn how to grow sprouts or shoots on your windowsill. 
Small farms will become havens and targets. Grow with them, preserve, volunteer there, learn. 
Find a local source of meat, because the FDA will not be regulating food-borne illnesses anymore. And eggs, if possible. Buy half a cow or something.
Farmers markets will often accept FoodStamps as payment, and prices may be lower than the stores. 
Start sharing meals with neighbors - maybe you host dinner on Mondays and they host dinner on Thursdays. Lets you practice cooking and gives you a social life. 
PERSONAL AND PUBLIC SAFETY 
Unless they’re actively attacking, don’t trust anything the government says. But the minute they say they’re coming for migrants/trans folx/BIPOC - you go find those people, get them to safety, and pretend you never, ever, ever saw them. 
Do not tell figures of authority of your plans, your ideologies, your efforts to help those under attack. 
Take a self-defense course; the chances you have a weapon if you’re attacked are slim, so you need to learn how to use your body. 
Carry a lighter. It’s small, lightweight and legal with no permit. If you’re grabbed, then putting a flame - even a small one - to someone’s skin can make them let go long enough for you to run. 
Switch your Internet browser to DuckDuckGo. It blocks surveillance and ads. AdNauseam is  a browser extension that scrambles your data so it's less traceable, so the government can't see what you're doing. Get them both. They're free
Install blackout or dark curtains so that visual surveillance into your house is limited. I recognize the military has heat sensors, but your neighbor probably doesn't.
Be aware that Venmo and related apps tell the IRS what you're spending money on. Be careful what you use it for and how you record transactions. 
If making a “suspicious purchase,” like of Plan B, use cash. Wear a baseball cap, sunglasses, mask and contour makeup to hide your face from the security cameras.
Think about security proofing your windows, which makes them less breakable, or backglazing them with bulletproof glass.
The police, now more than ever, are an entity of the state. DO NOT CALL THEM, do not trust them. If you are raped or attacked, go straight to the hospital first. Do NOT shower. Go to the ER, tell them what happened and request a full rape kit. Go next to an independent organization that will help protect you and your rights, and help you decide next steps.
If there's something happening that you might otherwise have called the cops for, but there are people of color or trans individuals involved, DO NOT CALL THE COPS. They WILL kill trans and BIPOC folk. 
If you’re considering a divorce, and you’re serious about it, do it now. No-fault divorces are on the chopping block. 
If you're in the US, you can call 211 to help you find resources.
Crisis Text Line offers services to the US, Ireland, Canada, and the UK.
RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network) is a US service offers a lot of information for sexual abuse survivors.
The Trevor Lifeline is a service for queer youth in the US.
If you're a minor, you may wish to read How To Escape Abusive Parents: A Guide For Minors.
If you're an adult, you may wish to read How To Escape Abusive Parents: A Guide For Adults.
You might search on Qwant for like something like "resources for people in abuse" or "abuse resources help" or "domestic violence survivors resources".
PROTESTING AND FIGHTING BACK
Make clear decisions and plans about what protests you'll be a part of and how. Tell only your most trusted friends where you are going, but be sure to tell them.
Obtain safety/riot gear, like masks, goggles and padding. Always carry fresh water for washing out wounds and pepper-sprayed eyes.
Practice that self defense you learned. What are the easiest moves?
Become someone's protest buddy, especially if they, for any reason, might be more vulnerable. Stick to one another and get each other out of dangerous situations. Come up with a safe word, and a safe way to communicate across a protest. A song, a wolf howl, a walkie talkie.
I know nothing about apps, but there are communication apps and social media out there that folx under oppressive regimes use and recommend. Find those.
Keep emergency contacts on standby if you're going to protest. Make sure there's someone who could help bail you out of jail or can help raise money for bail. 
Know your rights, and don’t give them anything when they arrest you. Make a list of lawyers and advocacy groups you feel safe trusting. 
Train in proper video and recording methods to track what happens and what the police do. 
If you're participating in a long term protest, plan properly for your health and the health of your home, partners and pets. 
Get your affairs in order. You may not make it out of a protest alive. 
When planning discussions with folks who might disagree with you, know that you may NOT actually be the best person for said discussion. If you’re really far left and you want to chat with your MAGA uncle about immigration, maybe find someone who’s more center-leaning but unsure to be a go-between. It’s less alienating to your uncle and less traumatizing for you.  
I know I’ve said this already, but carry first-aid supplies, learn basic first-aid, and carry a lighter, so that you can help those in need and protect yourself. 
Fight back with everyday statements. When someone says, “Those illegals are taking all our jobs,” say something like, “Wow, that sounds like some shit a weird Nazi would say.” Add “weird Nazi” to your responses. Laugh at the absurdities of MAGA statements. Make them feel foolish, or give good one-liners that leave them scratching their heads. Can’t think of any? Start binging comedians to learn how to give quick comebacks. 
In order to keep yourself from falling into a bad group, it's important to develop your critical thinking skills:  (credit to @creature-wizard)
Learn to apply the Five W's (who, what, when, where, and why) when encountering any information.
Learn common logical fallacies.
Learn the difference between fact, opinion, belief, and prejudice.
Don't equate emotional reactions with some kind of innate or higher moral guidance.
Ask yourself if you're "thinking for yourself" or being led to believe you're thinking for yourself.
Know what emotional manipulation tactics look like.
Watch out for these behaviors in any new group you join.
Yes, there are ways to confirm the age of an old text without having the original text itself.
Learn how propaganda works.
Watch out for these red flags in spiritual groups.
And watch out for this red flag.
Understand that belief doesn't have to be binary.
LEAVING THE STATES
This post is again from @creature-wizard:
Get a passport. It's also an easy way to officially change your gender market. Canada is becoming really conservative, but Mexico has some of the safest queer cities in the world. You can stay there for no reason for more than three months, leave for three days and come back and keep doing that indefinitely. It's cheap and warm and the food is spectacular. Plus the entire country enshrined abortion rights. 
You will need a go bag. It should include non perishable snacks, water, paperwork, copies of your id, cash, meds, and whatever you love for comfort. Know where it is at all times. Keep it near an exit. My go bag will at least contain my ancestral seeds, my teddy bear, and extra socks.
DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE WHAT THEY WILL DO. Remember the bomb threats, the arson and the insurrection. THEY WILL NOT HESITATE TO BURN YOUR HOUSE DOWN AND TARGET YOUR LOVED ONES AND PETS. Believe them. PLEASE believe them when they say they are Hitler. Trump is just a figurehead. He has the force of an entire party behind him. It will change everything. He can implement martial law overnight. 
Make two or three escape plans. During WWII, people escaped by walking, by hiding under garbage in trucks, by building hot air balloons that they flew, by living in attics for years. 
It can be done, but you have to think ahead. We don't have the time to say, "Oh, it won't get that bad.” People are already dying. It is that bad. 
If you know someone who is MAGA or even close to it, NEVER tell them your escape plan. Never tell anyone anything if you don't trust them enough to hold a loaded gun to your head.
If you’re leaving, consider how to bring your pets. Do they need vaccines to cross a border? Do you even have a cat carrier, and adequate food for travel? What about costs for boarding while you resettled in your new home?
Who will house you if you need a safe space? Make a list of places you have friends, or couches you can sleep on.
LOOK, IT’S TOUGH. IT’S GONNA BE TOUGH. BUT IT CAN BE JOYFUL, AND MYSTERIOUS, AND FUN, TOO. SO LET ME LEAVE YOU WITH THESE THOUGHTS:
Overall, the more you rely on community and less on capitalism, the more security you could have during difficult times. The more secure you are, the more you can and will feel comfortable helping others. 
The Holocaust happened because a lot of good people did nothing, in large part because they decided it couldn't possibly get that bad. But the right-wingers know how to play the long game, and they are actively chipping away at our liberties. 
The way I see it, there are now three primary parts to this rebellion: 
Those physically stopping the issues by destroying dams and animal testing labs, harassing and attacking politicians or corporations, and chaining themselves to bulldozers.
Those ferrying others to safety and providing the necessary resources for those leaving or hiding.
Those feeding, comforting and healing others through food growing, meal prep, offering tea and therapy, and putting down roots to grow community. 
So where do you stand? Do you fight or flee? Do you share cookies or get out the protest signs? Can you do all three? (Probably not, so choose wisely.)
And in the end:
IN 150 CHARACTERS OR LESS
Everything is on fire, but everyone I love is doing beautiful things
and trying to make life worth living.
and I know I don’t have to believe in everything,
but I believe in that. 
~ Nikita Gill 
Take care of each other and take care of yourself. You are not alone. Godspeed. 
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queer-reader-07 · 2 months ago
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there is love and joy and goodness yet to be found in this world and goddammit i will find it through gritted teeth and broken sobs.
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