to anyone protesting in memphis and other US cities: good luck and stay safe!
below are some sources i’ve decided to put together that you may find helpful. feel free to read through them and reblog this for others!
• list of your rights as a protestor
• list of things you’ll want to bring
• the basics of direct action
• guide to protecting your identity during and after
• legal support resources for protestors
• how to address tear gas exposure
• tips for organizing a demonstration
• tyre nichols memorial gofundme page
stay safe, and stay strong! ✧
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Civil disobedience, act 4: art and symbols
Demonstration art could be one of the most powerful ways to convey your message. Iranians have been making art all over the cities these days.
Painting the city with blood: Putting red color in water bodies around the city. throwing red color at street signs specially those that reads Velayat (supreme leading system), hijab, and Kurdistan. putting red blood on pictures of Khamenei, Ghasem Soleimani, and police or judiciary signs. Coloring the university classes and corridors with red. One art classroom door in Alzahra university read "this classroom is covered in blood". These red colors represent the blood the regime has shed.
Pictures on the walls: Faces of our fallen martyrs. Anti regime pictures. They read: "you kill our love, you are our ISIS" "women life freedom" "women of Iran and Afghanistan against the violence of Talib and mullah" "fuck compulsory hijab" "from 2017 to 2022 this regime would fall like dominos" "ambu-lice (ambulances are being used to move policemen)". A religious figure hide behind religion playing his anti riot forces. On an alley named Azadi (freedom) someone has written "there was so much bravery hidden in this land".
(It's important to know that in Iran, mullahs don't represent religion as much as they represent the regime. For 40 years the turbans have been the heads of political powers. Most of those mullah pictures are directly targeting Khamenei the supreme leader)
Slogans on paper money: these ones say "women life freedom" "queer life freedom" "Baloch life freedom".
Khodanoor Lejei, symbol of the islamic republic cruelty: The bloody Friday in Zahedan was one of the darkest spots in Islamic republic brutal history. Opening fire on a crowd of praying Muslims before they even start protesting. Killing about 100 people of Baloch. But one picture stood out and stood as the face of inhumanity of the regime. Khodanoor Lejei was one of the victims of bloody Friday in Zahedan. An old picture of him went viral after his death. He was arrested a couple of months prior to Mahsa Amini murder and was treated with no dignity. Bound to a pole. water in front of his thirsty body but out of his reach. So in universities, sport games, streets and alleys people have been posing Khodanoor in bound to protest the cruelty. In the last two pictures, the signs read "political" (سیاسی) and "justice" (عدالت)!
Students sing revolution anthems. Artists make digital arts. Musicians make revolution songs. People dance and the security forces attack and arrest them.
There have been balloons flying over the cities with banners containing slogans on them. There have been banners on footbridges situated so that drivers would see them. People also have been writing slogans on billboards especially those that promote regime propaganda.
Azad university art students gathered in their campus, painted their palms red and raised their hands to the sky.
Meanwhile the regime forces broke into dormitories and stole students.
Some universities including mine design their campus trees and buildings with names of the murdered protesters or captured students and other revolution symbols (red tulip represents martyrs in Persian literature). The uni authorities take them down but the art students do it again.
After Kian Pirfalak, all over the country you could find paper boats and rainbows. Kian was a 10 year old boy who was murdered by the regime. There's a video of him starting with "in the name of the god of the rainbow" and continuing to explain his crafted boat. He wanted to become an engineer. Now paper boats are banned in universities.
One of the murdered protesters, Hamidreza Rouhi, loved riding motorcycles. He had a video online of him on a motorbike lip syncing to a song and pointing to the camera. A group of motorbike riders in Tehran, 7 day after his murder, gathered in front of his house, their motorbikes lined nearby, with pictures of him on each bike.
And in a recent symbolic act, a woman walked around Tehran streets as The Handmaid's Tale cosplayer. Very on point.
Don't think for a second that these civil ways of protesting are safe or easy. People have been arrested or shot in the head doing these.
People are capable of beauties but the regime can only make ugliness. That's the summary of this revolution.
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You know how in GoT and other "medieval" setting shows/movies, they always show clothes made of fur or fur cloaks, but the fur is always on the outside? It's supposed to be on the inside creating an insulating layer in your clothes and was generally a lining for a wool garment, cause wool that is processed as they did back then retains a lot of the natural oils that make it water resistant (oils or not it's also naturally fire resistant which is so cool!)
I just keep thinking about how actual medieval people would rag on them so hard and see them as unkempt. Like, the most famous case I can think of is Ragnar Lodbrok. Like, Lodbrok isn't his surname, it's a nickname that means "hairy breeches" because he had a pair of trousers with the fur on the outside and it was so notable that no one let it go to the point that it's still a thing he's known by more than a thousand years later.
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if there’s one thing i believe in to the absolute core of my being it’s that jamie tartt ruthlessly and regularly baby girlifies roy kent. he holds open doors for him, pulls out his chair at restaurants, politely but firmly deals with paparazzi, buys him bouquets of white orchids, treats him and phoebe to ice-cream, etc, etc. i mean this man had a poster of roy on his bedroom wall as a kid there’s no earthly way he wouldn’t dote all over him like it’s his full time job and rent is due !!!
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Just got told that my abusive father will be here for Christmas - and like, fine, whatever, I can't expect the family to cut him off, it is what it is - but (and here's the kicker) I was then sternly told that I will speak to him and be friendly.
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Photos © Mariam Magsi, 2023
Don’t let mainstream media deceive you. Our protests are in the thousands. The growing wave of rallies, demonstrations, and sit-ins across Canada and the USA is a prime example of why we must be critical consumers of news. Contrary to what some sources may lead you to believe, these gatherings are not limited to “hundreds” or “dozens.” We are out here in the thousands and thousands, and our message is clear: CEASEFIRE NOW!
We are raising our voices against the backdrop of personal violence, societal violence, and intergenerational traumas that have scarred our communities. These traumas are the legacy of occupations, forced migrations, displacements, violence, colonization, and war. We carry the weight of our ancestors who served in militaries and we have endured cycles of violence at home.
We recognize that we have no control over the events that shaped our history. However, we firmly believe that we can shape the now, and this present moment holds the power to create a better tomorrow. As we protest and make our voices heard, we do so with the intention of leaving behind a planet that is a gift, rather than a burden, to our descendants. We envision a future where the scars of the past can heal and where cycles of violence can be broken.
Action Items-:
Donate for urgent aid to Gaza-:
*Islamic Relief Canada (Zakat accepted)
*Palestine Children’s Relief Fund (PCRF)
*Medical Aid for Palestine (MAP)
*Toronto Palestine Film Festival has compiled a list of restaurants, shops and businesses we can support at this time: tpff.ca/resources
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Crowds of people in front of the Montgomery County Courthouse to demonstrate against police treatment of voter rights demonstrators, Montgomery, Alabama, Declan Haun, March 17, 1965
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hey isn't it funny that even if you can afford to do so, you have to actively make decisions in order to live even a decently healthy life? isn't it wild that the way we expect people to live is so unhealthy that you have to spend extra time and money in order to circumvent the inhumanity of a modern capitalist society? isn't it crazy that, barring pre-disposed health issues, a poor person's quality of life would've been higher in a pre-civilization culture because the baseline exercise and nutrition for the lifestyle our bodies were built for has been made inaccessible on purpose in order to line the pockets of a handful of bloated ticks?
i want to rip out someone's throat with my teeth.
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A barrier of fear has been broken in Iran. The regime may be at a point of no return | CNN
A barrier of fear has been broken in Iran. The regime may be at a point of no return | CNN
CNN
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A woman dressed in black raises a framed portrait of her son, Siavash Mahmoudi, in the air as she paces the sidewalk in Iran’s capital, Tehran. “I am not scared of anyone. They told me to be silent. I will not be,” the woman seen in a viral social media video yells, her voice fraught with emotion.
“I will carry my son’s picture everywhere. They killed him.”
Mahmoudi’s mother is among…
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oh boy these Brazilian elections be tense
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The problem with sentiments like “agreeing to disagree is for favorite flavors of ice cream, not human rights” is that, while it’s true, it flattens the nature of the discourse, ignoring an enormous gulf of middle ground between things that are irrelevant and things that are inarguable. There are a lot of relevant particulars as to how we make society better that reasonable people can differ with each other on in good faith and earned mutual respect.
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look, I know I've talked about this essay (?) before but like,
If you ever needed a good demonstration of the quote "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic", have I got an exercise for you.
Somebody made a small article explaining the basics of atomic theory but it's written in Anglish. Anglish is basically a made-up version of English where they remove any elements (words, prefixes, etc) that were originally borrowed from romance languages like french and latin, as well as greek and other foreign loanwords, keeping only those of germanic origin.
What happens is an english which is for the most part intelligible, but since a lot everyday english, and especially the scientific vocabulary, has has heavy latin and greek influence, they have to make up new words from the existing germanic-english vocabulary. For me it kind of reads super viking-ey.
Anyway when you read this article on atomic theory, in Anglish called Uncleftish Beholding, you get this text which kind of reads like a fantasy novel. Like in my mind it feels like it recontextualizes advanced scientific concepts to explain it to a viking audience from ancient times.
Even though you're familiar with the scientific ideas, because it bypasses the normal language we use for these concepts, you get a chance to examine these ideas as if you were a visitor from another civilization - and guess what, it does feel like it's about magic. It has a mythical quality to it, like it feels like a book about magic written during viking times. For me this has the same vibe as reading deep magic lore from a Robert Jordan book.
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Instead of making posts about what people halfway across the world should do on a dying website, I'm going to link to organizations that you can donate to that can actually help.
Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) works for the health and dignity of Palestinians living under occupation and as refugees. They provide immediate medical aid to those in great need, while also developing local capacity and skills to ensure the long-term development of the Palestinian healthcare system.
Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association is a Palestinian non-governmental civil institution that works to support Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli and Palestinian prisons.
Samidoun is an international network of organizers and activists working to build solidarity with Palestinian prisoners in their struggle for freedom.
Refuser Solidarity Network provides crucial support to Israel's military refusers in the toughest of political circumstances. They provide funds for for demonstrations outside prison, for legal fees, for media campaigns that tell conscientious objector’s stories to the general public, for education programs for Israeli and American audiences about their important resistance to the occupation.
Feel free to reblog with links to other groups and other places people can donate to.
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