i would do anything to get to bed on time except go to bed on time
Writers suffer from tinker bell brain they need constant applause or they start believing everything they’ve written is horseshit
local teen tries to complete assignments, leaving 7 dead and 16 injured
the concept of being academic rivals so ardently obsessed with each others weaknesses and flaws that as soon as you’re tossed into real life you realize there is no one you can trust like each other because no one else in the world is so enamoured with you send tweet
you have to stay alive. you're going to be such a beautiful middle aged freak. young freaks will see you in the street and know that things can be okay.
george floyd is not a martyr. he is not a hero. he didn't sacrifice his life. he was murdered. stop thanking him for bursting your bubble of ignorance. stop talking about his legacy as if he chose to die. stop ignoring that police violence continues to exist and continues to murder people.
remember that black lives matter. all over the world.
i was not made to contribute to society i was made to sit in my room and knit and read and write and talk to my friends while listening to indie music
Enslaved people were actively enslaved. Please avoid the passive language of 'slaves/slavery'.
White people were not passive. They created the constructs. They established generational structures of wealth/power.
White reactionary politics has always been rooted in white supremacy. Always.
Alien pulling your sleeve to get your attention: and who is this Cunt you all serve
Dorothy Porter is known as the "Dewey Decimal Decolonizer."
Dorothy Porter was an African American librarian who worked to challenge and decolonize library systems, including the Dewey Decimal System, which traditionally marginalized non-Western perspectives and cultures. She advocated for more inclusive classification systems that better represented diverse voices and histories.
Porter's work emphasized the importance of equity and representation within library collections, aiming to create spaces that reflect the richness and complexity of human experiences. Her efforts have contributed to ongoing discussions and actions toward decolonizing library practices worldwide.
Read more about Dorothy Porter here.