kushancaviar:

Black Panther Party “People’s Free Food” Program

kushancaviar:

Black Panther Party “People’s Free Food” Program

ushypocrisy:

“I was sentenced to life plus 30 years by an all-white jury. What I saw in prison was wall-to-wall Black flesh in chains; Women caged in cells.. But we’re the terrorists?! It just doesn’t make sense.”- Assata Shakur

ushypocrisy:

I was sentenced to life plus 30 years by an all-white jury. What I saw in prison was wall-to-wall Black flesh in chains; Women caged in cells.. But we’re the terrorists?! It just doesn’t make sense.”
Assata Shakur

"Socialist governments which attempt to coexist with capitalist economics completely forget the economic motive of human social history. Revisionism has given birth to countless ‘socialistic’ hermaphrodites, always to the detriment of people’s power. Strained, tortured definitions of social existence and organization have trapped the people in so many contradictions that most have given up all hope of harnessing the modern industrial state or even understanding it."
— George Jackson: Blood in My Eye (via homintern-agent)
"There’s no person in the whole world like you. And I like you just the way you are."
— Fred Rogers (via williamlongfellow)
"I enjoy talking to you. Your mind appeals to me. It resembles my own mind except that you happen to be insane."
— George Orwell, 1984 (via evocativesynthesis)

Last month, a New Jersey middle school banned girls from wearing strapless dresses to prom. Administrators claimed that the dresses were “distracting” — though they refused to specify exactly how or why. Parents reacted strongly to the rule; some supported the dress code while others deemed it “slut-shaming.” On Friday, the school compromised by allowing girls to wear single-strap or see-through-strap dresses.

This is no isolated incident in the United States. Across the country, young girls are being told what not to wear because it might be a “distraction” for boys, or because adults decide it makes them look “inappropriate.” At its core, every incident has a common thread: Putting the onus on young women to prevent from being ogled or objectified, instead of teaching those responsible to learn to respect a woman’s body. Here are five other recent examples:

1. A middle school in California banned tight pants. At the beginning of last month, a middle school in Northern California began telling girls to avoid wearing pants that are “too tight” because it “distracts the boys.” At a mandatory assembly for just the female students, the middle school girls were told that they’re no longer allowed to wear leggings or yoga pants. “We didn’t think it was fair how we have all these restrictions on our clothing while boys didn’t have to sit through [the assembly] at all,” one student told local press. Some parents also complained, leading the school’s assistant principal to record a voicemail explaining the new policy. “The guiding principle in all dress codes is that the manner in which students dress does not become a distraction in the learning environment,” the message said.

2. A high school principal in Minnesota emailed parents to ask them to cover up their daughters. A principal in Minnetonka, MN recently wrote an email telling parents to stop letting their daughters wear leggings or yoga pants to school. He says the tight-fitting pants are fine with longer shirts but, when worn with a shorter top, a girl’s “backside” can be “too closely defined.” The big risk of having a defined backside, he thinks, is that it can “be highly distracting for other students.”

3. Two girls in Ohio were turned away from their prom for being “improperly dressed.” Laneisha Williams and Nyasia Mitchell were barred from prom this spring for wearing dresses that administrators considered “too revealing.” The girls say that they didn’t believe they were violating a dress code that said dresses couldn’t be too short or show too much cleavage. But one administrator told local news that the high school girls were only allowed to wear dresses that had “no curvature of their breasts showing.”

4. A kindergarten student in Georgia was forced to change her “short” skirt because it was a “distraction to other students.” It’s hard to imagine that a kindergartener’s outfit could be “a distraction to other students,” but a mother in Georgia told locals news there that her daughter had been outfitted in someone else’s pants — without parental permission — after the principal deemed the skirt the young girl was wearing too short.” The girl had apparently wore the skirt, and accompanying leggings, just one week before without incident.

5. Forty high school girls were sent home from a winter dance in California after “degrading” clothing inspections “bordering on sexual harassment.” A school board member’s daughter was among the 40 girls turned away from Capistrano Valley High’s February dance for wearing dresses that either exposed their midriffs or were cut too low. Before the dance, girls were apparently required to flap their arms up and down and turn around for male administrators’ inspection. The school issues image guidelines for appropriate dress on its website — though the images were nearly all of women, and the only male image depicted proper attire. One girl alleges that the principal told her, “Not all dresses look good on certain body shapes.” A grandmother of one of the girls who was turned away from the dance also said that a teacher remarked about her granddaughter, “What mother would allow her daughter to wear a dress like that?” Apparently the school did receive some praise, though, from the parents of two male students.

When most Americans think about “rape culture,” they may think about the Steubenville boys’ defense arguing that an unconscious girl consented to her sexual assault because she “didn’t say no,” the school administrators who choose to protect their star athletes over those boys’ rape victims, or the bullying that led multiple victims of sexual assault to take their own lives. While those incidences of victim-blaming are certainly symptoms of a deeply-rooted rape culture in this country, they’re not the only examples of this dynamic at play. Rape culture is also evident in the attitudes that lead school administrators to treat young girls’ bodies as inherently “distracting” to the boys who simply can’t control themselves. That approach to gender roles simply encourages our youth to assume that sexual crimes must have something to do with women’s “suggestive” clothes or behavior, rather than teaching them that every individual is responsible for respecting others’ bodily autonomy.

kaalashnikov:

themaus:

onediwreckingmylife:

at monash university in melbourne the women’s department had a bake sale and cupcakes were one dollar for men and eighty cents for women and seventy cents for trans* people to represent the wage gap and heaps of guys kicked off about it being sexist and that’s how i finally understood how hypocritical and ignorant men’s rights activism is 

to be fair that is pretty darn sexist… why cant stuff just be EQUAL for everyone?

image

"The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion, but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
— Samuel P. Huntington (via seinedoll)
heathyr:

think-progress:

Bet you haven’t thought about this before: How “slut-shaming” has been written into school dress codes across the country.

Oh believe me, I have thought about this before. And dress codes like these are some sexist utter bullshit. I don’t think people realize how much they unconsciously sexualize young girls to the point where we second guess our bodies so much that we are worrying more about other people perceiving us as inappropriate than what makes us comfortable or happy.
If my body is “distracting” you, then look away motherfucker.

heathyr:

think-progress:

Bet you haven’t thought about this before: How “slut-shaming” has been written into school dress codes across the country.

Oh believe me, I have thought about this before. And dress codes like these are some sexist utter bullshit. I don’t think people realize how much they unconsciously sexualize young girls to the point where we second guess our bodies so much that we are worrying more about other people perceiving us as inappropriate than what makes us comfortable or happy.

If my body is “distracting” you, then look away motherfucker.

hissthemovie:

if you have AP exams coming up, good luck!! (づ。◕‿‿◕。)づ・。*

if you have finals soon, do your best!! ~(◕✿)

if you have work or school tomorrow, have a nice day!!!  (◕ヮ◕)*:・゚✧ 

"Once you change your philosophy, you change your thought pattern. Once you change your thought pattern, you change your — your attitude. Once you change your attitude, it changes your behavior pattern and then you go on into some action."
— Malcolm X   (via thepeacefulterrorist)

s-uicidetrees:

authorsarahdessen:

elysemarshall:

your-snowflake:

cherrispryte:

Fred McFeely Rogers (March 20, 1928 – February 27, 2003)

Oh. Sobbing. Okay.

why am i actually crying at this

I will never not reblog this.

OH my goodness. *wipes tear* 

Not even sorry for color because I am sobbing oh my god

"Sometimes the people with the worst past, create the best future."
— Umar Ibn Al-Khattab radia-Allahu Anhu  (via thepeacefulterrorist)

spiritualinspiration:

“People are often unreasonable and self-centered. Forgive them anyway.
If you are kind, people may accuse you of ulterior motives. Be kind anyway.
If you are honest, people may cheat you. Be honest anyway.
If you find happiness, people may be jealous. Be happy anyway.
The good you do today may be forgotten tomorrow. Do good anyway.
Give the world the best you have and it may never be enough. Give your best anyway. For you see, in the end, it is between you and God. It was never between you and them anyway.”
― Mother Teresa

"If we’re gonna talk about Assata and say she’s a ‘cop killer‘, let’s be completely honest and put such accusations into perspective.. Everyone wants to forget that in the 60s and 70s the FBI and police declared War on the Black community and organizations that formed in the community to end oppression."

Hiphopandpolitics [x]

(via unapologeticexistence)