The illustrious Lizzo and the illuminating Janelle Monae sharing the stage during Coachella.
What a picture!
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The illustrious Lizzo and the illuminating Janelle Monae sharing the stage during Coachella.
What a picture!
Source

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Thank you for the submission!
Mod Kisa.
Concert looks with my girl!
Y'all look goodt! Thank you for another beautiful submission!
Mod Kisa
There are the people who say that "skinny-shaming is the same as fat-shaming." That might seem like a fair conclusion, but here's why it just isn't true.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
If you have been watching anime since 1991 your old as fuck and need to get a job and get off tumblr.
Latinx identity in the US is complex. But it's clear that white supremacy has an influence – and here are some of the ways that might benefit you if you're perceived as white.
The histories of white supremacy are rooted in the policies and ideologies of many of these countries and in Latinidad as a whole. Ideas such as mejorar la raza – “improving the race” – have praised whiteness and light skin since colonization.
White supremacy rules racial hierarchies, both in Latin America and amongst U.S. Latinidad.
Again, this is not to say that conceptions of whiteness are the same across Latin America and the United States. Each Latin American nation has its own categorizations for race that have to do with ancestry, skin tone, and class that is different than how many of us in the U.S. think about race.
But something that is similar in all of Latinidad is this: that if you are perceived as white, you are someone who benefits the most from power structures.
As Latinxs in the United States, we carry these legacies of white supremacy with us. In my experience as a mixed Afro-Puerto Rican, I’ve seen and experienced the ways in which whiteness is upheld, both because of the way race has been constructed in Puerto Rico and in the United States.