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blkfraps:

Nykhor Paul standing up for black models

Coping While Black: A Season Of Traumatic News Takes A Psychological Toll

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Coping While Black: A Season Of Traumatic News Takes A Psychological Toll

Allies Are Still Privileged; Don’t Forget It

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gradientlair:

Beware the privileged repackaging the words/experiences of the oppressed and being applauded for it while the oppressed are ignored, silenced or punished for speaking their lived truths. Further, those who only want to hear the messages of the oppressed from the privileged and call said action “progressive” are actually complicit in either facilitating the oppression of others (if they themselves are privileged) or have internalized the oppressors’ tactics (if they themselves are oppressed and still prefer the messages of the oppressed in a privileged mouthpiece, as if the privileged have to provide “credibility” to the message of the oppressed before it matters).

If this applies to you, question why White anti-racism advocates, male feminists, cis, heterosexual, or cishet allies to LGBTQIA people, rich people “playing poor” for a week or so on food stamps or low pay and thin allies to fat activists "move" you more than the oppressed people themselves.

This is not about allies not having a place and being important. They do and are. If you can’t see how allies are important BUT also cannot dominate the discourse or portray the oppressed as monolithic groups with monolithic thoughts, it’s time to re-evaluate your own praxis.

With any discussion of oppression, if your go-to voice is a cis, heterosexual, able-bodied, middle class White male to the point that you are willing to defend him against the actual oppressed people, you need to re-evaluate your theory and praxis. You need to re-examine the role of an ally. The role–not the goddamn pulpit, publishing house, bookshelf, classroom, board of directors, pundit TV spot etc. where the privileged thrive.

You need to question your privilege even as an ally, especially as an ally if that same privilege continues to allow your voice to be centered above those you claim to help, especially when you are making a living, financially profiting off of the oppression of other people by talking about the oppression of other people.

Most of all, stop expecting to be applauded all the damn time. Ally work can be noble when not self-centered, domineering and solely a salve for personal guilt, but no more noble than those in the trenches doing the work and living the experiences. Ally work needs to be noble without the incessant need for the praise of its nobility, otherwise it becomes about oppressed people applauding their oppressors, which is not revolutionary. 

Chat

Black People: *make fun hash tags on Twitter used to uplift community, show out unity, and literally doesn’t have to do with anyone else besides BLACK PEOPLE*

Non Black People: “MMKAY kinda racist hoe you guys didn’t include anyone else.” *copies our exact hashtag and replaces the adjective*

Black People: anyway… *creates another original hashtag*

Non Black People: *repeats same actions as before*

Black People: *stares into the camera like their in the Office*

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ghost-stpatrick:

deportallwhitepeople2k15:

yungnxtive:

lastrealindians:

Paul Castaway, Allen Locke, Navarone Woods, Myles Rough Surface, Corey Kanosh, Mahhivist Good Blanket, just a few of the Natives recently slain by police.

why so little notes?

Not very many of my followers reblogged this or other posts on the recent violent deaths by police of Native men. I have to say, I’m really disappointed in those who didn’t, and yet, not at all surprised. Most non-Natives only care about us when it comes to some fictional great great grandparent you heard was part Cherokee or when you think we get something you don’t like free education or no taxes. You assholes care more about the plaster figurine Indian on your bookshelf than you care about us as real human beings.

OR HOW ABOUT SOME OF US DIDN’T SEE IT COME ACROSS OUR DASH YET shit it takes time for things to loop damn

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odinsblog:

Sandra Bland was stopped Friday by authorities in Waller County, Texas for a traffic violation. In a video of her arrest, while being forcibly held face down, Ms. Bland can clearly be heard saying to the officer, “You just slammed my head into the ground. Do you not even care about that?” As she’s being picked up off the ground and placed into the police vehicle, Ms. Bland can be heard again, this time thanking the person recording the video, saying, “Thank you for recording.” 

Bland was arrested and booked on
“assault of a public servant” charges.

A police statement says the following Monday morning Ms. Bland was released on a $5,000 bond, and was subsequently “found dead” by a female jailer who was “worried” about her recreation time.

Waller County Sheriff Glenn Smith claims this was a case of self-inflicted asphyxiation. An autopsy performed Tuesday showed Bland’s death “has been classified as a suicide, with the cause of death (listed as) hanging,” according to Tricia Bentley, a spokeswoman for the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences in Houston.

Hanged. Suicide. A young 28-year old woman who was moving to Texas to begin working her dream job suddenly decided to commit suicide, supposedly because of a small traffic infraction? 

Ms. Bland’s friends and family feel that the police’s story doesn’t add up. For one thing, the odd quickness with which everything seemed to escalate seems off. In a matter of 72 hours Bland went from being pulled over for a minor traffic violation, to being arrested for assaulting a cop, and then to killing herself, according to the police’s story. There’s also the fact that Bland is black, and Waller county has a history of discriminatory law enforcement behavior.

The police are lying again. 

#WhatHappenedToSandyBland

#JusticeForSandy #ALLBlackLivesMatter

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ohokaybueno:

I remember spending so much time in my high school years trying to fit in with white people and adopt their musical tastes. Years of “oh my god the Beatles are the best band of all time” and “I can’t BELIEVE you never listened to Pink Floyd”. But on the same note, they never asked about what my family listened to when I was growing up. Never once wondered about what we played at BBQs and what music made my soul feel full.

This is not to say black people cant and don’t listen to these bands (and bands like theirs.) But there was such a specific feeling of erasure that I didn’t realize I was experiencing. Like my music taste wasn’t “good” because I didn’t know certain music.

I wish I could go back and tell 16 year old me that all of my feelings were valid and I didn’t have to listen to things you couldn’t sway your hips to. That I didn’t have to prove anything to anyone.

THIS.