Liberté Égalité Beyoncé

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ART + PHOTOGRAPHY
POETRY

dailytweets:

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Sounds about right

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songsaboutswords:

generic water or aesthetic water

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juststemthings:

my uterus realizing we aren’t having a baby after building up a lining for three weeks:

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Originally posted by realitytvgifs

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cryingblogger:

ignoring men is self care

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universalequalityisinevitable:

David Suzuki in this interview about facing the reality of climate change and other environmental issues from Moyers & Company.

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Asker Anonymous Asks:
what is the best way to explain to someone why all cops are bastards and not just "bad cops" or "American cops"
afroarabista afroarabista Said:

kropotkhristian-deactivated2019:

Okay, this is going to be a longer explanation.

If I’m going to be honest here, I think that anarchists often oversell this notion, mostly due to a totally legitimate emotional response to oppression that people endure at the hands of the state. This is why you’ll often find really frustrating arguments between anarchists and other people that look something like this:

Person: “Well my uncle is a cop, and he’s a nice guy, and he puts his life on the line every day so stop generalizing a whole group of people due to the few bad ones”

Anarchist: “Fuck your uncle, it’s not my fault he decided to be a pig”

Person: “Well, I never! *huffs away*”

And nobody ever gets anywhere. The problem here is that when anarchists say “All cops are bastards,” what anarchists actually mean is “the role of a cop is systemically and inherently immoral, since they violently enforce the power of the ruling class at the severe disadvantage to the poor and marginalized, sometimes including murdering the poor and marginalized with zero repercussions.” And I suppose anarchists could just say that every single time, but it is easier to just say “all cops are bastards.”

But let’s examine that second sentence for a bit. Due to a lot of popular media presentations (like Law & Order), cops are often presented as these heroic figures that do mostly good things like protect people from murderers and stop child predators. But the reality is, the vast majority of things a cop does is not like that at all. You could probably even ask a cop and they would agree with the notion that most of their job is not like that. In fact, the vast majority of things a cop does is enforcing pointless bureaucracy that only serves the ruling classes and oppresses the poor for no reason. You could even say that all a cop really is is a bureaucrat with access to military grade weaponry, and you would be pretty on the nose.

For an example, lets talk about the disparate response to two actually common occurrences that cops often are called in to help with. In one case, we have domestic violence, and in another case, we have someone who is driving a car without a license plate. Okay.

So, if somebody calls the police to help with a domestic abuse situation, often times the cops don’t show up until the domestic abuse has already gotten way out of hand. The person being abused has already been harmed to some serious degree. So the police didn’t do anything to actually prevent the abuse. Once the police do show up, sometimes the person who is being abused is disbelieved, or the police decide that both sides are to blame. Sometimes the abused person isn’t even taken out of harms way of the abuser. If the abused person is believed, then they have to file a bunch of paper work, find a shelter, occasionally pay for a hotel or some other place to go, and generally go through tons of hoops of bureaucracy in order to actually leave harms way. And the police officer is there the entire time ensuring that the proper bureaucratic steps are followed. That’s really their job. That’s their actual role in the case of a domestic abuse. They have to make sure that all of the proper paperwork is correctly filed and the steps are taken just so. This is why I said in a previous post that 24-hr women’s shelters and other forms of help against domestic abuse do far more to actually combat domestic abuse than any cop has ever done. Because they are just helping for the sake of helping rather than being the bureaucrat.

Compare this to driving without a license plate. If you drove around town in a car without a license plate, there would be a cop on your tail probably within 15-30 minutes maximum. And if you refused to do what he said, you would probably be handcuffed and whisked off to jail and you would probably be charged with multiple crimes, including possibly resisting arrest, which is a felony. All of that for just not having a license plate on your vehicle and then not doing what the cop asked. None of those things have anything to do with helping anybody. They are just bureaucratic rules put in place by the ruling class. But cops are way more likely to be found enforcing rules like that then actually helping anybody. Because that is their actual job. They are the violent arm of the bureaucratic state.

And all of this without even bringing up the fact that they also have access to military grade weaponry that they can basically use at their own discretion, for any reason, with no real risk of repercussion. And the laws and regulations of the state change all of the time - and cops are basically just told to enforce those rules, no matter what they are. So in a neoliberal capitalist state, they are bureaucrats with access to military grade weapons. But in a fascist state, they easily become concentration camp operators or SS officers. And their role never really changes. They are just the violent enforcers of the state bureaucracy.

So when you have somebody who has an uncle who is a cop, or a cousin, or a parent, or whatever - that is really neither here nor there. Your uncle might be a nice guy who wanted to be a cop to help people. I’m not saying that isn’t true. I have no way of knowing if that is true. All I’m saying is he isn’t actually helping people. That isn’t his job. His job is to enforce a bureaucracy that disproportionately benefits the ruling class and oppresses the poor and marginalized.

morpheuse:

Listen if you can’t criticise women’s actions or political alignment without reverting to absolutely misogynistic language, you can’t call yourself a feminist. Die mad about it

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1poundfashionista:

A sunny day in a suburb of North West London (Alperton) during the holy month of ramadhan in search of mangos and fabric with my mother and sister. Alperton, like Southall is home to  one of the largest South Asian diasporic communities living in London, I went to school around here. 

Earrings blue - £4, random shop accessory shop on Ealing Road

Earrings (I’m wearing) - From Sudan 

Shirt - TX Max £5.99

Socks - TX Max £5.99

Bag - Flea market in Paris, 50 cents !! 

Shoes - Uniqlo,  10 Euro (sale)

OMG 😍😍😍 why is this vogue editorial material. Who took those photos of you, Ugbad?

Where can we get this tamanu oil? Asking for a friend. And that friend is me
afroarabista afroarabista Said:

I get mine from face theory (they have a student discount!)

1poundfashionista:

Follow up to the previous post. Just in case anyone is asking, I’m wearing Tamanu oil on my face, its so moisturizing for dry skin, and it gives you a beautiful glow.

1poundfashionista:

Playing around, didn’t end up wearing this outfit in the end. My friend got me Nina Simone’s Little Girl Blue on Vinyl as a house warming gift.  <3 <3

Zebra print pencil skirt - £2 pounds, Traid 

Sheer blouse - £5.99,TX MAX 

Calvin Klein Bra - £6,TX max

Leather Earrings - £10, finery 

<3

1poundfashionista:

I was trying to look like Solange that day, photo taken at Somerset House during the 1:54 by my wonderful friend Leena.

Blouse from Rokit (top was about 6)

Vintage Levi jeans given to me by a friend 

Bomber Jacket - my sister 

Earrings H & M

Cutie 😘

qpulm:

Paris Is Burning (Jennie Livingston, 1990)

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virgoassbitch:

The best thing I ever did was stop trying to water myself down to make myself softer or less aggressive. I naturally have a strong presence & I own the space I take up in this world even if some people think I’m too much.

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