pet commissions i have been working on

romaâ
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
Mike Driver
$LAYYYTER
Keni
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trying on a metaphor

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Xuebing Du
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
EXPECTATIONS
The Stonewall Inn
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

tannertan36
wallacepolsom
One Nice Bug Per Day
ojovivo
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@ditzyblue
pet commissions i have been working on

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Gouache paintings by Madeleine Bellwoar
Cloudlandia lol

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I feel stuck and alone.
What do I do with these feelings of despair that bubble up inside
Please leave me alone
6/30
Read all 30

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Here comes a new challenger: Jiang Bao!!!
Artwork by Dubelyoo
Artober day 3! One last witch for this series because my best friend @shellygurumi wanted lavender hair!
made a 3d version of @holyblush 's little apple friend drawing just for fun :â˘)
To all the people who believe property is more important than 600 hundred years of slavery and oppression of Black people. Â

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âLetâs pretend, for a moment, that you are a 22-year-old college student in Kampala, Uganda. Youâre sitting in class and discreetly scrolling through Facebook on your phone. You see that there has been another mass shooting in America, this time in a place called San Bernardino. Youâve never heard of it. Youâve never been to America. But youâve certainly heard a lot about gun violence in the U.S. It seems like a new mass shooting happens every week. You wonder if you could go there and get stricter gun legislation passed. Youâd be a hero to the American people, a problem-solver, a lifesaver. How hard could it be? Maybe thereâs a fellowship for high-minded people like you to go to America after college and train as social entrepreneurs. You could start the nonprofit organization that ends mass shootings, maybe even win a humanitarian award by the time you are 30. Sound hopelessly naĂŻve? Maybe even a little deluded? It is. And yet, itâs not much different from how too many Americans think about social change in the âGlobal South.â If you asked a 22-year-old American about gun control in this country, she would probably tell you that itâs a lot more complicated than taking some workshops on social entrepreneurship and starting a non-profit. She might tell her counterpart from Kampala about the intractable nature of our legislative branch, the long history of gun culture in this country and its passionate defenders, the complexity of mental illness and its treatment. She would perhaps mention the added complication of agitating for change as an outsider. But if you ask that same 22-year-old American about some of the most pressing problems in a place like Ugandaââârural hunger or girlâs secondary education or homophobiaâââshe might see them as solvable. Maybe even easily solvable. Iâve begun to think about this trend as the reductive seduction of other peopleâs problems. Itâs not malicious. In many ways, itâs psychologically defensible; we donât know what we donât know. If youâre young, privileged, and interested in creating a life of meaning, of course youâd be attracted to solving problems that seem urgent and readily solvable. Of course youâd want to apply for prestigious fellowships that mark you as an ambitious altruist among your peers. Of course youâd want to fly on planes to exotic locations with, importantly, exotic problems. There is a whole âindustryâ set up to nurture these desires and delusionsâââmost notably, the 1.5 million nonprofit organizations registered in the U.S., many of them focused on helping people abroad. In other words, the young American ego doesnât appear in a vacuum. Its hubris is encouraged through job and internship opportunities, conferences galore, and cultural propagandaâââencompassed so fully in the patronizing, dangerously simple phrase âsave the world.ââ
â
âThe Reductive Seduction of Other Peopleâs Problemsâ by Courtney Martin
(via
dietcokebisexual
)
Capitalism canât save the world, but it can simulate the experience and sell it to you.
(via newwavenova)
If youâve ever wondered why Egyptian mummies are so rare, itâs because wealthy Europeans ate them. Between the 12th and 17th centuries, while pilfering the continent for goods, resources, artifacts, and Africans themselves, colonizers also looted and exoticized Egyptian tombs. Mummies were ground up into medicines and consumed by the elite, believed to be a remedy for various ailments and an infusion of life-energy from the spirits of the dead. When Egyptian mummies became scarce after hundreds of years of eating them, corpses from other parts of North Africa and Guanche mummies from the Canary Islands were instead exported and sold to European apothecaries. But even as they engaged in cannibalism for their own selfish indulgences, one of the primary ways that Europeans demonized Indigenous peoples was by naming them all as savages and cannibals.
Colonizers have not limited their use of racial cannibalism to the medicinal. They have also used it punitively and vindictively. During the genocidal King Leopold IIâs occupation of the Congo (1885-1908), Belgians massacred more than 10 million Africans. Most were forced to work for the Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company, and were severely punished if they did not meet their rubber quota. In Donât Call Me Lady: The Journey of Lady Alice Seeley Harris, there is a black and white photo of a Congolese man named Nsala, seated at the edge of a porch. His eyes are fixed on the severed hand and foot of his 5 year-old daughter, Boali. The Belgian militia had cut them from her body before killing her and her mother. To further exact their cruelty, they ate Nsalaâs wife and child. They did this because he had failed to meet his rubber quota for the day.
The thing about white supremacy is that it does not merely subsist through the consumption of the Other; it whitewashes by de-emphasizing and lessening these misdeeds and others. History looks very different when white people are not the protagonists in its retelling. A significant instance: the accepted and well-known white feminist narrative about the Salem Witch Trials of the 1600s is that it was a hysteria driven by rampant misogyny and a pointed persecution of white women, the survival of which they harken to as evidence of their historical resilience. I prefer to think of it, more accurately, as a community of racist, religiously-intolerant enslavers and colonizers of stolen Native land cannibalizing itselfâand I wish it had finished its meal instead of begetting centuries of white people who would gorge on the lives and cultures of Black and Indigenous folks.
As the Donner Party traveled across the U.S. as part of a violent westward expansion in 1847, a small group that broke off from the larger party became stranded without food in a grueling wintery hellscape. So, they conspired to murder their two Native American guides, Salvador and Luis, for food. The two men ran away, but were found a few days later and were swiftly eaten, the only members of the party to be hunted and murdered before they were cannibalized. Salvador and Luis are rarely spoken of when the story is told to relay the suffering and survival of the people who ate them. In the version of the story that tells the truth about colonialism and the violence it requires, the Donner Party are the monsters, not the damsels.
The Transatlantic Slave Trade was a monstrosity of boundless proportions. Its enormity altered the world in a multitude of ways and none were/are more changed by it than Africans and their descendants. Many Africans believedâor, rather, knewâthat white people were cannibals and feared that they would be taken away and consumed, like the others who had disappeared and not returned once white people began to arrive on African shores. Fear of white cannibalism on the ships carrying Africans to other lands was indeed palpable, and often led to attempted mutiny and escape or suicide by jumping into the waters below. â Sherronda J. Brown, THE HISTORY OF CONSUMPTION AND THE CANNIBALISTIC NATURE OF WHITENESS
I grew up in school learning about how native Americans were considered âsavagesâ and being taught that African nations were somehow lesser or farther behind than white civilizations and it makes me sick to my stomach. My children will NOT be brainwashed with white supremacists wildly diluted and manipulated âversionâ of history. They WILL learn the truth.