Emelia. Fire and Water every damn day. QUEER as FUCK. MéxD. Prvlged. i have FAITH in the REVOLUTION. nothing is mine unless i say so.

10th March 2013

Photo reblogged from YMC with 2,810 notes

theeseanmartin:

Hate when this happens.

theeseanmartin:

Hate when this happens.

Source: ianbrooks

10th March 2013

Photoset reblogged from white blank page with 10,408 notes

thisisthehorrorshow:

a change from all those posters you see of mlk with quotes and shit

Source: equinoctialnyt

26th February 2013

Photoset reblogged from 2headedsnake with 393 notes

funkystarfishy:

Baba z Wozem

Source: behance.net

5th January 2013

Link reblogged from Femme Dreamboat with 1,957 notes

Femme Dreamboat: Femme Privilege Does Not Exist →

femmedreamboat:

by Cyree Jarelle Johnson

I’m (not) sorry to inform you that femme privilege does not exist. Not in the queer community. Not in the world at large. Does. Not. Exist. In fact, the very idea of inherent “femme privilege” is rooted in misguided misogyny. It operates under the erroneous idea that…

22nd December 2012

Photoset reblogged from Fabian Romero with 802 notes

apihtawikosisan:

sinidentidades:

Zapatistas: “to be heard, we march in silence”


The Zapatistas are back! Flowing like the water of the river that beats the sword. And while some were anticipating the Christmas holidays, some others the end of the Maya calendar, and others still the new Communiqué from the Comandancia General of the EZLN that was announced back in November, the main cities of Chiapas woke up today with memories of 1994.

New Age freaks around the world may have been gearing up for the end of the world, but it appears that some Mayas had a very different opinion on the matter. They preferred to send us another message: that of the new world they have been building in silence for two decades now.

Since the early hours of the 21st of December 2012, thousands of Zapatistas from the Bases of Support of the EZLN — their faces covered with the legendary Zapatista pasamontañas and paliacates around their necks — started marching in silence, in perfect formation, entering the cities of San Cristóbal de las Casas, Ocosingo, Las Margaritas, Comitan, and Altamirano, and occupying their central squares.

Those were the same squares, in the same cities, they had occupied during the Zapatista uprising on the 1st of January 1994. This time, though, they marched peacefully and in silence, under the heavy rain of the Chiapaneco December and the praise of the citizens of the cities. After a silent march through the towns, the Zapatistas headed back to their communities, equally silent as they appeared.

This is the most impressive Zapatista mobilization since May 2011, when — together with the Movement for Peace, Justice, and Dignity of the poet Javier Sicilia — they gathered more than 30.000 people in the central square of San Cristóbal de las Casas in a manifestation against the “War on Drugs” of Felipe Calderon that has already cost Mexico more than 70.000 deaths.

Right now we are expecting the Communiqué of the Comandancia General of the EZLN, but what is certain is that today’s impressive silent mobilization is the Zapatistas’ response to the increasing repression their communities have been facing from the government and its paramilitaries over the past years, in combination with the return of PRI — the party against which the EZLN initially mobilized in 1994 — to government.

It is also a message to the world: that the Zapatistas are still here, in silence and with patience, like the water of the river that beats the sword…

P.S. “The Story of the Sword” is an ancient parable that demonstrates how the indigenous peoples of Mexico can finally defeat the European invader. “The tree”, says Subcomandante Marcos when narrating the story, “tried to fight the sword, but was defeated. The stone likewise.” But not the water. “It follows its own road, it wraps itself around the sword and, without doing anything, it arrives at the river that will carry it to the great water where the greatest of gods cure themselves of thirst, those gods that birthed the world, the first ones.”

I’m seeing this on twitter and wow.

Wow.

We are rising. All of us.

Source: sinidentidades

22nd December 2012

Link reblogged from Giving Lip with 772 notes

Giving Lip: I am an American Teacher. I Love My Profession. So, I Quit. →

tonygivinglip:

image

You should know about the mental and physical states, the heartsickness, the frustration, the anger, and the righteous defeat that right now so many American teachers feel.

I am a brilliant English teacher.

Here’s how you can tell, according to the bosses: my 6th grade Language Arts…

14th December 2012

Photo reblogged from vom.com with 92,014 notes

woooow

woooow

Source: fuckyeahpsychedelics

14th December 2012

Photo reblogged from 2headedsnake with 7,840 notes

Source: freakitsch

8th December 2012

Photoset reblogged from sleight of hand with 513 notes

museumuesum:

Asger Carlsen

photographs from the series Hester, 2011

archival pigment prints, 70 x 51 cm each

Source: museumuesum

8th December 2012

Photoset reblogged from I'm still here. with 607,554 notes

Source: mymodernmet.com