/tagged/reblog/page/2

brolinskeep:

Global petitions:

Stop ACTA (to the UN) (Petition Online)

Stop ACTA (Stop ACTA website)

Just Say ‘No’ to ACTA (Access Now)


Country restricted petitions:

Stop Canada from passing ACTA (Petition Online)

UK representatives: Stop ACTA (Official: HM Goverment)

Act against ACTA (to the U.S. Congress) (Petition Online)


Citizens of Europe: Contact your representatives!

go to http://www.europarl.org/, select your country (left colume) and then find the contacts of your representatives under “Parlament”, “Your MEPs” or something like this. AND LET THEM KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.

See also:

StopACTANowon Twitter

(via glamaphonic)

lolol seriously though, the new LJ comment pages are what finally convinced me to get a Dreamwidth account.  I’d been determinedly clinging to LJ for a while now, but this was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

The paper bag anon face makes me laugh though.

(Source: aduck8myshoes)

allthingsanonymous:

omfg scrolling your dash in public is like playing russian roulette with a gun made of gay porn

(Source: captaincoulson, via formerlyroxy)

harpy:

“Grandma’s Tattoo’s’: A Riveting Film About the Forgotten Women of Genocide

Khardalian is the director and producer of riveting new film called “Grandma’s Tattoos” that lifts the veil of thousands of forgotten women—survivors of the Armenian Genocide—who were forced into prostitution and tattooed to distinguish them from the locals.

“As a child I thought these were devilish signs that came from a dark world. They stirred fear in me. What were these tattoos? Who had done them, and why? But the tattoos on grandma’s hands and face were a taboo. They never spoke about it,” explains Khardalian.

“Grandma’s Tattoos” is a journey into the secrets of the family. Eventually, the secret behind Grandma Khanoum’s blue marks are revealed.

Trailer 1, Trailer 2.

Article and image via The Armenian Weekly

As it turns out, not only are most people unaware that 1.5 million Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians were killed under Turkish rule, but also that 90,000 Armenian women and children were abducted and sold into slavery and prostitution. 90,000 women and children.

(via privatethoughtsbetweenherlegs)

likeseriouslyellie:

Hahahaha this could be me. I so know THIS moment…

I have yet to see a picture that sums up my life as accurately as this one.

It’s hard not to notice that once the right number of white folks are affected, people want to take to the street. Unemployment numbers are high? We’ve had high unemployment for years. People are living in or near the poverty line? Yeah — we know.

When minorities speak up and say there is an issue, we are told maybe we are doing something wrong. Perhaps we are targeted by the police because of what we are wearing. Perhaps we don’t look for jobs the right way. Maybe we aren’t educated enough. But now that it’s affecting other folks, now there’s a problem. Now we need to come together and fight the power. Someone tweeted at me that we need to come together and not point out silly differences like race because we’re in this together!

Ah.

Yes, we can — and have (there is support from various folks of color) — come together within this movement, but you can’t expect us to throw away “race” and ignore history. Even the violence that’s happening with the Occupiers right now is looked at differently because of race. You can’t be surprised that people have reservations about this when you look at how our issues have been dealt with before.

I’m not making an argument for ignoring the movement because a lot of the movement ignored us. But I am saying take a moment to walk away from your righteousness to understand that your newfound plight has been some people’s plight for generations.

We just didn’t have a catchy name for it.

- elon james white, Dear OWS: Welcome to Our World (via monkeyknifefight

)

(Source: squintyoureyes, via glamaphonic)

Feminist texts written by women of color

mylifeasafeminista:

This list is still a work in progress, but I really wanted to get it posted.  I have either read parts of/all of the texts below or they have been recommended to me.  Please reblog and add your own suggestions to the list.  Each time someone adds something new, I’ll go back to this original post and make sure to include them.  Thanks and enjoy!

Books

  • Women, Race, and Class by Angela Davis
  • Women Culture and Politics by Angela Davis
  • Black Feminist Thought by Patricia Hill Collins
  • Borderlands/La frontera: The New Mestiza by Gloria Anzaldua
  • Aint I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism by bell hooks
  • Feminism is for Everybody by bell hooks
  • Feminist Theory from Margin to Center by bell hooks
  • Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
  • Feminism without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity by Chandra Talpade Mohanty
  • Medicine Stories by Aurora Levins Morales
  • Reimagining Equality: Stories of Gender, Race, and Finding Home by Anita Hill
  • Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty by Jessica Yee
  • Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide by Andrea Smith

Anthologies

  • Companeras: Latina Lesbians by Juanita Ramos and the Lesbian History Project
  • Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism edited by Daisy Hernandez
  • This Bridge Called My Back edited by Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa
  • this bridge we call home: radical visions for transformation edited by Gloria Anzaldúa and AnaLouise Keating
  • Making Face, Making Soul/Haciendo Caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color edited by Gloria Anzaldúa
  • Women Writing Resistance: Essays from Latin America and the Caribbean edited by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
  • Unequal Sisters edited by Ellen DuBois and Vicki Ruiz
  • The Color of Violence: The Incite! Anthology

Essays

  • “Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence” by Adrienne Rich
  • “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color.” by Kimberle Crenshaw
  • The Combahee River Collective Statement

Other authors and poets you should know

  • Maya Angelou
  • Toni Morrison
  • Alice Walker
  • Nawaal El Sadaawi
  • Mary Crow Dog
  • Zora Neale Hurston
  • Arundhati Roy
  • Zadie Smith
  • Dorothy Roberts
  • Nikki Giovanni (submitted by my bff maskofmaterials)
  • Lucille Clifton (submitted by my bff maskofmaterials)

(via glamaphonic)

First, remember that style comes in all sizes, so the bigger you are, the more style you have. And second, draw attention to your best features by pointing at them, and conceal your flaws by sucker punching anyone who mentions them.
– Those fashion tips are courtesy of noted style icon and total badass Miss Piggy. (via albinwonderland)

(Source: timeoutnewyork, via pseudo-tsuga)

LOL @ anyone who attempts to defend something racist with, ‘It’s art.’

neverthehurricane:

An incomplete list of why that argument is flawed: 

  1. Art can be racist. We wouldn’t have a western canon, or any art canon for that matter, if we hadn’t already acknowledged that years ago. Racism doesn’t negate something from being art and art doesn’t negate something from being racist. This is not a platform worth arguing on. 
  2. Art has the power and scope to affect society in a way that nothing else does. Nothing is ever ‘just a book’ or ‘just a music video’ or ‘just a song.’ If it’s not important enough to think about, then it wasn’t important enough to be made. 
  3. Art is a decent enough gauge of what some members of society were thinking at any given time. We study art to study culture and history. Visual art in particular is not simply a presentation of one’s inner-most feelings and beliefs but a reproduction of the culture the artist lived in and, often, a reproduction of that culture’s historical viewpoints; shorthand that the artist may not have even realize they internalized. 

Also, a bonus tip! This one’s on symbolism but tune in next week for the next dumb racist thing fandom does for the next installment: 

Having darkness represent evil is lazy and trite, but generally acceptable. Having a dark person represent evil is lazy and trite but also racist. Having a non-black person dress up in blackface to represent evil is not only lazy, trite, and racist but also a direct continuation of the same destructive shorthand that cost people their lives and livelihood. The time in-between has not allowed for it to be less offensive or more ironic.

In fact, let’s take this opportunity to segue into a preemptive offense of my least favorite literary device: Irony. In order for irony to work, there must be two layers involved: the implied, often traditional, meaning and the literal one. 

Society at the time of blackface was casually and institutionally racist. The white population had unparalleled privilege over everyone else and were the ones who found any entertainment value in blackface. Society at the time of Florence + the Machine’s video is casually and institutionally racist. The white population has unparalleled privilege over everyone else and she, as a member of that population, is the one who sees any entertainment value in blackface. The only thing that is ironic about this scenario is attempting to use irony in the first place.

As for edginess, using blackface, an old racist visual tradition, in a music video in 2011 is about as edgy as pulling out the clothes that were worn during blackface’s heyday and wearing them in a music video. 

You want to get into a discussion about how edgy or culturally appropriate something is? Try Annie Leibovitz’s 1998 photos of African American comedian Chris Rock in whiteface. Using the shorthand of blackface, which exploited blackness as a source of comedy for white people, and flipping it so a black comedian was put in whiteface as a commentary on modern day comedy actually is edgy and interesting. Or, if you prefer discussions and debates about symbolism, how about Annie Leibovitz’s 1984 shot of African American comedian Whoopi Goldberg simultaneously submerged and emerging from a tub of milk (which Leibovitz specifically stated was meant to symbolize her coming out from all the whiteness in comedy)? Here, the racial overtones of color are being used intentionally and smartly. In 1984! 

Annie Leibovitz is, for anyone who might not be aware, white. 

…But oh, wait, those examples actually give the visual power to the POCs! They legitimately challenge, or document the challenging of, the status quo! I guess something is only considered edgy if it’s someone doing, or defending their right to do, the exact same thing as their ancestors! 

For anyone wondering about the context of this, it’s Florence + the Machine’s new music video No Light No Light.  And I’d say that blackface is the least of its race-related problems.  Having a dark-skinned person symbolize darkness/evil, portraying him as savage/primitive/violent, putting a bag over his head to dehumanize him and make him look scarier, portraying stereotypical voodoo/vodun as evil while Christianity is portrayed as good, having a scary half-naked black man chasing a white woman, I mean are you kidding me.  Shame, I really like FatM’s music, but this is just gross.

(via pseudo-tsuga)

“How I Stopped Hating Thanksgiving and Learned to Be Afraid”

takealookaroundus:

Although it’s well known to anyone who wants to know, let me summarize the argument against Thanksgiving: European invaders exterminated nearly the entire indigenous population to create the United States. Without that holocaust, the United States as we know it would not exist. The United States celebrates a Thanksgiving Day holiday dominated not by atonement for that horrendous crime against humanity but by a falsified account of the “encounter” between Europeans and American Indians. When confronted with this, most people in the United States (outside of indigenous communities) ignore the history or attack those who make the argument. This is intellectually dishonest, politically irresponsible, and morally bankrupt.

In left/radical circles, even though that basic critique is widely accepted, a relatively small number of people argue that we should renounce the holiday and refuse to celebrate it in any fashion. Most leftists who celebrate Thanksgiving claim that they can individually redefine the holiday in a politically progressive fashion in private, which is an illusory dodge: We don’t define holidays individually or privately — the idea of a holiday is rooted in its collective, shared meaning. When the dominant culture defines a holiday in a certain fashion, one can’t pretend to redefine it in private. To pretend we can do that also is intellectually dishonest, politically irresponsible, and morally bankrupt.”

(Source: commondreams.org, via glamaphonic)

roxanneritchi:

glitterandgrit | cheeeeeeen:

By far two of the most dangerous and harmful bills introduced today, not only to US citizens but to the entire world, are Protect-IP and SOPA, proposed censorship systems for the internet based on the interests of the entertainment industry. It sounds ridiculous, especially because you probably haven’t heard of it before, but they’re very real.

The MPAA, RIAA, Hollywood knows that they have been flying in CEOs of as many companies as possible, recruiting people to get petition signups at malls in California, and here’s the big point— they know they have gotten their message through to Congress — the worst bill in Internet history, the one where government and their corporations get unbelievable power to take down sites, threaten payment processors into stopping payment to sites on a blacklist, and throw people in jail for posting ordinary content is about to pass before the end of this year. The only thing that is going to stop Hollywood from owning the Internet and everything we do, is if there is a big surprise Internet backlash starting right now.

PROTECT IP (S. 968)/SOPA (HR. 3261) creates the first system for Internet censorship - this bill has sweeping provisions that give the government and corporations leeway and legal cover for taking down sites “by accident,” mistakenly, or for NOT doing “enough” to protect the interests of Hollywood. These bills that are moving very quickly through Congress and can pass before Christmas aim to give the US government and corporations the ability to block sites over infringing links posted by their users and give ISPs the release to take any means to block peoples’ sites, including slowing down your connection. That’s right, some say this bill is a workaround to net neutrality and is bigger than net neutrality.

boingboing.com

And this is how it will affect you:

Let’s make one thing clear from the get-go: despite all the talk about this bill being directed only toward “rogue” foreign sites, there is no question that it targets US companies as well. The bill sets up a system to punish sites allegedly “dedicated to the theft of US property.”  How do you get that label?  Doesn’t take much: Some portion of your site (even a single page) must 

  • be directed toward the US, and either
  • allegedly “engage in, enable or facilitate” infringement or
  • allegedly be taking or have taken steps to “avoid confirming a high probability” of infringement.

If an IP rightsholder (vaguely defined – could be Justin Bieber worried about his publicity rights) thinks you meet the criteria and that it is in some way harmed, it can send a notice claiming as much to the payment processors (Visa, Mastercard, Paypal etc.) and ad services you rely on.

Once they get it, they have 5 days to choke off your financial support.  Of course, the payment processors and ad networks won’t be able to fine-tune their response so that only the allegedly infringing portion of your site is affected, which means your whole site will be under assault.  And, it makes no difference that no judge has found you guilty of anything or that the DMCA safe harbors would shelter your conduct if the matter ever went to court.  Indeed, services that have been specifically found legal, like Rapidshare, could be economically strangled via SOPA. You can file a counter-notice, but you’ve only got 5 days to do it (good luck getting solid legal advice in time) and the payment processors and ad networks have no obligation to respect it in any event.  That’s because there are vigilante provisions that grant them immunity for choking off a site if they have a “reasonable belief” that some portion of the site enables infringement.

eff.org

Prime targets, eff.org says, are sites like twitter and tumblr.

But for now, we still have the power we’ve always had to stimulate change and speak up against this censorship, using exactly what these bills will try to stifle. ANYONE who uses tumblr should sign this petition and get the word out. Part of the strength of Protect-IP and SOPA is that they’re so under the radar right now. It’s our job to change this. Don’t let them pull the wool over your eyes.

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO STOP PROTECT-IP AND SOPA:

PLEASE DO EVERYTHING YOU CAN AND REBLOG THIS POST TO GET THE WORD OUT!!!

(via glamaphonic)

spacehippo:

askthestands:

Those curls aren’t natural, they’re three hours in the bathroom every morning.

I always suspected Giorno with that pose where he pulls half his shirt open.

I blame Dio, it’s no wonder the guy is in love with himself with that heritage.

All of the above = TRUE FACTS

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

it’s true.

(don’t worry ANYBODY can be fabulous too.)

God, Giorno, what is your left hand doing.

Grabbing his jacket and pulling it down; note the wrinkles on the fabric. Both his hands are gripping his jacket.

Why, what did you think he was doing? :P

IT LOOKS LIKE A ROBOT HAND, OK.

also sometimes i forget. sometimes i go long enough without exposure to giorno giovanna and i remember him as being the normal one, except no, no, there are giant ladybugs on his jacket.

THIS IS GETTING REBLOGGED SO EVERYBODY CAN READ THE LAST PARAGRAPH. I even bolded it for you guys! (and left tags intact)

My God, I love my fandom. I love it so fucking much there are no words.

The noise I made when I saw this and read the comments was somewhere between a wheeze and a shriek.

(via ryoflame)

Finish the sentence: “There have been 16 feature films with Superman or Batman but zero Wonder Woman movies and the main reason is…

The LA Times Hero Complex reported tweeted this. The main reason is….? (via georgethecat)

Good fucking question.

(via ironmanned)

(via glamaphonic)

brolinskeep:

Global petitions:

Stop ACTA (to the UN) (Petition Online)

Stop ACTA (Stop ACTA website)

Just Say ‘No’ to ACTA (Access Now)


Country restricted petitions:

Stop Canada from passing ACTA (Petition Online)

UK representatives: Stop ACTA (Official: HM Goverment)

Act against ACTA (to the U.S. Congress) (Petition Online)


Citizens of Europe: Contact your representatives!

go to http://www.europarl.org/, select your country (left colume) and then find the contacts of your representatives under “Parlament”, “Your MEPs” or something like this. AND LET THEM KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.

See also:

StopACTANowon Twitter

(via glamaphonic)

lolol seriously though, the new LJ comment pages are what finally convinced me to get a Dreamwidth account.  I’d been determinedly clinging to LJ for a while now, but this was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

The paper bag anon face makes me laugh though.

(Source: aduck8myshoes)

allthingsanonymous:

omfg scrolling your dash in public is like playing russian roulette with a gun made of gay porn

(Source: captaincoulson, via formerlyroxy)

harpy:

“Grandma’s Tattoo’s’: A Riveting Film About the Forgotten Women of Genocide

Khardalian is the director and producer of riveting new film called  “Grandma’s Tattoos” that lifts the veil of thousands of forgotten  women—survivors of the Armenian Genocide—who were forced into  prostitution and tattooed to distinguish them from the locals.
“As a child I thought these were devilish signs that came from a dark  world. They stirred fear in me. What were these tattoos? Who had done  them, and why? But the tattoos on grandma’s hands and face were a taboo.  They never spoke about it,” explains Khardalian.
“Grandma’s Tattoos” is a journey into the secrets of the family.  Eventually, the secret behind Grandma Khanoum’s blue marks are revealed.

Trailer 1, Trailer 2.
Article and image via The Armenian Weekly


As it turns out, not only are most people unaware that 1.5 million Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians were killed under Turkish rule, but also that 90,000 Armenian women and children were abducted and sold into slavery and prostitution. 90,000 women and children.

harpy:

“Grandma’s Tattoo’s’: A Riveting Film About the Forgotten Women of Genocide

Khardalian is the director and producer of riveting new film called “Grandma’s Tattoos” that lifts the veil of thousands of forgotten women—survivors of the Armenian Genocide—who were forced into prostitution and tattooed to distinguish them from the locals.

“As a child I thought these were devilish signs that came from a dark world. They stirred fear in me. What were these tattoos? Who had done them, and why? But the tattoos on grandma’s hands and face were a taboo. They never spoke about it,” explains Khardalian.

“Grandma’s Tattoos” is a journey into the secrets of the family. Eventually, the secret behind Grandma Khanoum’s blue marks are revealed.

Trailer 1, Trailer 2.

Article and image via The Armenian Weekly

As it turns out, not only are most people unaware that 1.5 million Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians were killed under Turkish rule, but also that 90,000 Armenian women and children were abducted and sold into slavery and prostitution. 90,000 women and children.

(via privatethoughtsbetweenherlegs)

likeseriouslyellie:

Hahahaha this could be me. I so know THIS moment…

I have yet to see a picture that sums up my life as accurately as this one.

likeseriouslyellie:

Hahahaha this could be me. I so know THIS moment…

I have yet to see a picture that sums up my life as accurately as this one.

It’s hard not to notice that once the right number of white folks are affected, people want to take to the street. Unemployment numbers are high? We’ve had high unemployment for years. People are living in or near the poverty line? Yeah — we know.

When minorities speak up and say there is an issue, we are told maybe we are doing something wrong. Perhaps we are targeted by the police because of what we are wearing. Perhaps we don’t look for jobs the right way. Maybe we aren’t educated enough. But now that it’s affecting other folks, now there’s a problem. Now we need to come together and fight the power. Someone tweeted at me that we need to come together and not point out silly differences like race because we’re in this together!

Ah.

Yes, we can — and have (there is support from various folks of color) — come together within this movement, but you can’t expect us to throw away “race” and ignore history. Even the violence that’s happening with the Occupiers right now is looked at differently because of race. You can’t be surprised that people have reservations about this when you look at how our issues have been dealt with before.

I’m not making an argument for ignoring the movement because a lot of the movement ignored us. But I am saying take a moment to walk away from your righteousness to understand that your newfound plight has been some people’s plight for generations.

We just didn’t have a catchy name for it.

- elon james white, Dear OWS: Welcome to Our World (via monkeyknifefight

)

(Source: squintyoureyes, via glamaphonic)

Feminist texts written by women of color

mylifeasafeminista:

This list is still a work in progress, but I really wanted to get it posted.  I have either read parts of/all of the texts below or they have been recommended to me.  Please reblog and add your own suggestions to the list.  Each time someone adds something new, I’ll go back to this original post and make sure to include them.  Thanks and enjoy!

Books

  • Women, Race, and Class by Angela Davis
  • Women Culture and Politics by Angela Davis
  • Black Feminist Thought by Patricia Hill Collins
  • Borderlands/La frontera: The New Mestiza by Gloria Anzaldua
  • Aint I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism by bell hooks
  • Feminism is for Everybody by bell hooks
  • Feminist Theory from Margin to Center by bell hooks
  • Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
  • Feminism without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity by Chandra Talpade Mohanty
  • Medicine Stories by Aurora Levins Morales
  • Reimagining Equality: Stories of Gender, Race, and Finding Home by Anita Hill
  • Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty by Jessica Yee
  • Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide by Andrea Smith

Anthologies

  • Companeras: Latina Lesbians by Juanita Ramos and the Lesbian History Project
  • Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism edited by Daisy Hernandez
  • This Bridge Called My Back edited by Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa
  • this bridge we call home: radical visions for transformation edited by Gloria Anzaldúa and AnaLouise Keating
  • Making Face, Making Soul/Haciendo Caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color edited by Gloria Anzaldúa
  • Women Writing Resistance: Essays from Latin America and the Caribbean edited by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
  • Unequal Sisters edited by Ellen DuBois and Vicki Ruiz
  • The Color of Violence: The Incite! Anthology

Essays

  • “Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence” by Adrienne Rich
  • “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color.” by Kimberle Crenshaw
  • The Combahee River Collective Statement

Other authors and poets you should know

  • Maya Angelou
  • Toni Morrison
  • Alice Walker
  • Nawaal El Sadaawi
  • Mary Crow Dog
  • Zora Neale Hurston
  • Arundhati Roy
  • Zadie Smith
  • Dorothy Roberts
  • Nikki Giovanni (submitted by my bff maskofmaterials)
  • Lucille Clifton (submitted by my bff maskofmaterials)

(via glamaphonic)

First, remember that style comes in all sizes, so the bigger you are, the more style you have. And second, draw attention to your best features by pointing at them, and conceal your flaws by sucker punching anyone who mentions them.
– Those fashion tips are courtesy of noted style icon and total badass Miss Piggy. (via albinwonderland)

(Source: timeoutnewyork, via pseudo-tsuga)

LOL @ anyone who attempts to defend something racist with, ‘It’s art.’

neverthehurricane:

An incomplete list of why that argument is flawed: 

  1. Art can be racist. We wouldn’t have a western canon, or any art canon for that matter, if we hadn’t already acknowledged that years ago. Racism doesn’t negate something from being art and art doesn’t negate something from being racist. This is not a platform worth arguing on. 
  2. Art has the power and scope to affect society in a way that nothing else does. Nothing is ever ‘just a book’ or ‘just a music video’ or ‘just a song.’ If it’s not important enough to think about, then it wasn’t important enough to be made. 
  3. Art is a decent enough gauge of what some members of society were thinking at any given time. We study art to study culture and history. Visual art in particular is not simply a presentation of one’s inner-most feelings and beliefs but a reproduction of the culture the artist lived in and, often, a reproduction of that culture’s historical viewpoints; shorthand that the artist may not have even realize they internalized. 

Also, a bonus tip! This one’s on symbolism but tune in next week for the next dumb racist thing fandom does for the next installment: 

Having darkness represent evil is lazy and trite, but generally acceptable. Having a dark person represent evil is lazy and trite but also racist. Having a non-black person dress up in blackface to represent evil is not only lazy, trite, and racist but also a direct continuation of the same destructive shorthand that cost people their lives and livelihood. The time in-between has not allowed for it to be less offensive or more ironic.

In fact, let’s take this opportunity to segue into a preemptive offense of my least favorite literary device: Irony. In order for irony to work, there must be two layers involved: the implied, often traditional, meaning and the literal one. 

Society at the time of blackface was casually and institutionally racist. The white population had unparalleled privilege over everyone else and were the ones who found any entertainment value in blackface. Society at the time of Florence + the Machine’s video is casually and institutionally racist. The white population has unparalleled privilege over everyone else and she, as a member of that population, is the one who sees any entertainment value in blackface. The only thing that is ironic about this scenario is attempting to use irony in the first place.

As for edginess, using blackface, an old racist visual tradition, in a music video in 2011 is about as edgy as pulling out the clothes that were worn during blackface’s heyday and wearing them in a music video. 

You want to get into a discussion about how edgy or culturally appropriate something is? Try Annie Leibovitz’s 1998 photos of African American comedian Chris Rock in whiteface. Using the shorthand of blackface, which exploited blackness as a source of comedy for white people, and flipping it so a black comedian was put in whiteface as a commentary on modern day comedy actually is edgy and interesting. Or, if you prefer discussions and debates about symbolism, how about Annie Leibovitz’s 1984 shot of African American comedian Whoopi Goldberg simultaneously submerged and emerging from a tub of milk (which Leibovitz specifically stated was meant to symbolize her coming out from all the whiteness in comedy)? Here, the racial overtones of color are being used intentionally and smartly. In 1984! 

Annie Leibovitz is, for anyone who might not be aware, white. 

…But oh, wait, those examples actually give the visual power to the POCs! They legitimately challenge, or document the challenging of, the status quo! I guess something is only considered edgy if it’s someone doing, or defending their right to do, the exact same thing as their ancestors! 

For anyone wondering about the context of this, it’s Florence + the Machine’s new music video No Light No Light.  And I’d say that blackface is the least of its race-related problems.  Having a dark-skinned person symbolize darkness/evil, portraying him as savage/primitive/violent, putting a bag over his head to dehumanize him and make him look scarier, portraying stereotypical voodoo/vodun as evil while Christianity is portrayed as good, having a scary half-naked black man chasing a white woman, I mean are you kidding me.  Shame, I really like FatM’s music, but this is just gross.

(via pseudo-tsuga)

“How I Stopped Hating Thanksgiving and Learned to Be Afraid”

takealookaroundus:

Although it’s well known to anyone who wants to know, let me summarize the argument against Thanksgiving: European invaders exterminated nearly the entire indigenous population to create the United States. Without that holocaust, the United States as we know it would not exist. The United States celebrates a Thanksgiving Day holiday dominated not by atonement for that horrendous crime against humanity but by a falsified account of the “encounter” between Europeans and American Indians. When confronted with this, most people in the United States (outside of indigenous communities) ignore the history or attack those who make the argument. This is intellectually dishonest, politically irresponsible, and morally bankrupt.

In left/radical circles, even though that basic critique is widely accepted, a relatively small number of people argue that we should renounce the holiday and refuse to celebrate it in any fashion. Most leftists who celebrate Thanksgiving claim that they can individually redefine the holiday in a politically progressive fashion in private, which is an illusory dodge: We don’t define holidays individually or privately — the idea of a holiday is rooted in its collective, shared meaning. When the dominant culture defines a holiday in a certain fashion, one can’t pretend to redefine it in private. To pretend we can do that also is intellectually dishonest, politically irresponsible, and morally bankrupt.”

(Source: commondreams.org, via glamaphonic)

roxanneritchi:

glitterandgrit | cheeeeeeen:

By far two of the most dangerous and harmful bills introduced today, not only to US citizens but to the entire world, are Protect-IP and SOPA, proposed censorship systems for the internet based on the interests of the entertainment industry. It sounds ridiculous, especially because you probably haven’t heard of it before, but they’re very real.

The MPAA, RIAA, Hollywood knows that they have been flying in CEOs of as many companies as possible, recruiting people to get petition signups at malls in California, and here’s the big point— they know they have gotten their message through to Congress — the worst bill in Internet history, the one where government and their corporations get unbelievable power to take down sites, threaten payment processors into stopping payment to sites on a blacklist, and throw people in jail for posting ordinary content is about to pass before the end of this year. The only thing that is going to stop Hollywood from owning the Internet and everything we do, is if there is a big surprise Internet backlash starting right now.

PROTECT IP (S. 968)/SOPA (HR. 3261) creates the first system for Internet censorship - this bill has sweeping provisions that give the government and corporations leeway and legal cover for taking down sites “by accident,” mistakenly, or for NOT doing “enough” to protect the interests of Hollywood. These bills that are moving very quickly through Congress and can pass before Christmas aim to give the US government and corporations the ability to block sites over infringing links posted by their users and give ISPs the release to take any means to block peoples’ sites, including slowing down your connection. That’s right, some say this bill is a workaround to net neutrality and is bigger than net neutrality.

boingboing.com

And this is how it will affect you:

Let’s make one thing clear from the get-go: despite all the talk about this bill being directed only toward “rogue” foreign sites, there is no question that it targets US companies as well. The bill sets up a system to punish sites allegedly “dedicated to the theft of US property.”  How do you get that label?  Doesn’t take much: Some portion of your site (even a single page) must 

  • be directed toward the US, and either
  • allegedly “engage in, enable or facilitate” infringement or
  • allegedly be taking or have taken steps to “avoid confirming a high probability” of infringement.

If an IP rightsholder (vaguely defined – could be Justin Bieber worried about his publicity rights) thinks you meet the criteria and that it is in some way harmed, it can send a notice claiming as much to the payment processors (Visa, Mastercard, Paypal etc.) and ad services you rely on.

Once they get it, they have 5 days to choke off your financial support.  Of course, the payment processors and ad networks won’t be able to fine-tune their response so that only the allegedly infringing portion of your site is affected, which means your whole site will be under assault.  And, it makes no difference that no judge has found you guilty of anything or that the DMCA safe harbors would shelter your conduct if the matter ever went to court.  Indeed, services that have been specifically found legal, like Rapidshare, could be economically strangled via SOPA. You can file a counter-notice, but you’ve only got 5 days to do it (good luck getting solid legal advice in time) and the payment processors and ad networks have no obligation to respect it in any event.  That’s because there are vigilante provisions that grant them immunity for choking off a site if they have a “reasonable belief” that some portion of the site enables infringement.

eff.org

Prime targets, eff.org says, are sites like twitter and tumblr.

But for now, we still have the power we’ve always had to stimulate change and speak up against this censorship, using exactly what these bills will try to stifle. ANYONE who uses tumblr should sign this petition and get the word out. Part of the strength of Protect-IP and SOPA is that they’re so under the radar right now. It’s our job to change this. Don’t let them pull the wool over your eyes.

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO STOP PROTECT-IP AND SOPA:

PLEASE DO EVERYTHING YOU CAN AND REBLOG THIS POST TO GET THE WORD OUT!!!

(via glamaphonic)

spacehippo:

askthestands:

Those curls aren’t natural, they’re three hours in the bathroom every morning.

I always suspected Giorno with that pose where he pulls half his shirt open.
I blame Dio, it’s no wonder the guy is in love with himself with that heritage.

All of the above = TRUE FACTS

spacehippo:

askthestands:

Those curls aren’t natural, they’re three hours in the bathroom every morning.

I always suspected Giorno with that pose where he pulls half his shirt open.

I blame Dio, it’s no wonder the guy is in love with himself with that heritage.

All of the above = TRUE FACTS

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

it’s true.
(don’t worry ANYBODY can be fabulous too.)

God, Giorno, what is your left hand doing.

Grabbing his jacket and pulling it down; note the wrinkles on the fabric. Both his hands are gripping his jacket.
Why, what did you think he was doing? :P

IT LOOKS LIKE A ROBOT HAND, OK.
also sometimes i forget. sometimes i go long enough without exposure to giorno giovanna and i remember him as being the normal one, except no, no, there are giant ladybugs on his jacket.

THIS IS GETTING REBLOGGED SO EVERYBODY CAN READ THE LAST PARAGRAPH. I even bolded it for you guys! (and left tags intact)
My God, I love my fandom. I love it so fucking much there are no words.

The noise I made when I saw this and read the comments was somewhere between a wheeze and a shriek.

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

flashandthunderfire:

silencedrowns:

it’s true.

(don’t worry ANYBODY can be fabulous too.)

God, Giorno, what is your left hand doing.

Grabbing his jacket and pulling it down; note the wrinkles on the fabric. Both his hands are gripping his jacket.

Why, what did you think he was doing? :P

IT LOOKS LIKE A ROBOT HAND, OK.

also sometimes i forget. sometimes i go long enough without exposure to giorno giovanna and i remember him as being the normal one, except no, no, there are giant ladybugs on his jacket.

THIS IS GETTING REBLOGGED SO EVERYBODY CAN READ THE LAST PARAGRAPH. I even bolded it for you guys! (and left tags intact)

My God, I love my fandom. I love it so fucking much there are no words.

The noise I made when I saw this and read the comments was somewhere between a wheeze and a shriek.

(via ryoflame)

Finish the sentence: “There have been 16 feature films with Superman or Batman but zero Wonder Woman movies and the main reason is…

The LA Times Hero Complex reported tweeted this. The main reason is….? (via georgethecat)

Good fucking question.

(via ironmanned)

(via glamaphonic)

"

It’s hard not to notice that once the right number of white folks are affected, people want to take to the street. Unemployment numbers are high? We’ve had high unemployment for years. People are living in or near the poverty line? Yeah — we know.

When minorities speak up and say there is an issue, we are told maybe we are doing something wrong. Perhaps we are targeted by the police because of what we are wearing. Perhaps we don’t look for jobs the right way. Maybe we aren’t educated enough. But now that it’s affecting other folks, now there’s a problem. Now we need to come together and fight the power. Someone tweeted at me that we need to come together and not point out silly differences like race because we’re in this together!

Ah.

Yes, we can — and have (there is support from various folks of color) — come together within this movement, but you can’t expect us to throw away “race” and ignore history. Even the violence that’s happening with the Occupiers right now is looked at differently because of race. You can’t be surprised that people have reservations about this when you look at how our issues have been dealt with before.

I’m not making an argument for ignoring the movement because a lot of the movement ignored us. But I am saying take a moment to walk away from your righteousness to understand that your newfound plight has been some people’s plight for generations.

We just didn’t have a catchy name for it.

"
Feminist texts written by women of color
"First, remember that style comes in all sizes, so the bigger you are, the more style you have. And second, draw attention to your best features by pointing at them, and conceal your flaws by sucker punching anyone who mentions them."
LOL @ anyone who attempts to defend something racist with, ‘It’s art.’
“How I Stopped Hating Thanksgiving and Learned to Be Afraid”
"Finish the sentence: “There have been 16 feature films with Superman or Batman but zero Wonder Woman movies and the main reason is…"

About:

Female, bi, cis, white, USAmerican, college student, animu/mango fangirl. Posts an odd mixture of social justice srs bizness, incoherent fandom squee, and Zero Punctuation screencaps. See also: the_sun_is_up@LJ.

Also runs fuckyeahfemslash. *self-pimp self-pimp*

Fanart credits: If an artist's name is all numbers (e.g. 186384) then that artist is on Pixiv. If an artist's name is letters and/or numbers (e.g. Gabzillaz, Nami86) then that artist is on DeviantArt.

Some of my less intuitive tags:
girls who top = femdom
lesbians! = femslash, yuri, etc
homo homo ghei ghei = slash, yaoi, boysex, etc
bizarre love triangle = OT3, threesomes, etc
PRAISE GAGA = Lady Gaga
BeaBato = Beatrice/Battler
Twilol = funny Twilight things