If companies are allowed to sue you for losses during a strike, there is now no longer an incentive to not simply burn down your place of work.
Follow me on Twitter for more vampire nonsense
college hipster trash lesbian lena luthor au (per @fiddleabout)
Encanto's indigenous identity and why it is so important; thread
First of all, I will make it clear that I am a latino indigenous person. Afro-native brazilian tupinambá with also unknown indigenous descent on the mother's side.
And everything from this thread was used movie sources, links at the end of it.
Whenever I say that Encanto and the Madrigals are indigenous, someone always comes to say: "But it's in Colombia, they're not really indigenous, they're "mestizos".
well, yes, so what?
mixed indigenous people exists and that does not make them any less indigenous.
Or say: "oh, it's just Bruno", "it's just Alma y Pedro", "it's just Isabela" - No. It's the whole family AND the whole village.
The only ones that probably not indigenous is Agustín y Félix, and any person who came to live in Encanto, and didn't born there.
Starting with many Zenús crafts in the film, not only that, but with a Zenú artisans person himself participating and guiding designers every step of the way to create an authentic representation of Zenú crafts:
Also, the film's producers works with six different Indigenous communities across Colombia to promote the vitality of Indigenous arts including woven bags, hats, and ceramic.
And speak of bags and clothes, there all was inspired by Wayúu crafts:
Now, about the plot of the movie, the miracle has a sacred meaning. But the concept of the miracle does not come from something christian or from fairy tales.
"Magical realism does not consist of taking gratuitous magic and putting it in the context of a jungle" - Espinosa
“I don’t invent anything, I’ve seen it all or I’ve been told about it.” - also said señora Espinosa
The miracles it's not an imagined idea, it's a belief.
It came from earth, it can be given by God or Gods, but it's a natural sacred.
Also, the miracle canonically come from the river:
Now
We gonna talk about Bruno
yes, yes, YES!
"The indigenous people are there, they have been made invisible and nobody talks about them, but they are the sacred part of Colombia. It has become fundamental to understand this, and it is very well-represented in Bruno” - Espinosa
Bruno is very superstitious.
Throwing salt or sugar, not touching or stepping on cracks, knocking on wood, reciting mantras such as "sana, sana, colita de rana"
It is very common for us indigenous people to be superstitious and doing this kind of thing protects us from evil.
Second, Bruno's room inspired on the precolumbian tombs of Tierradentro.
Bruno's room it's a thing, huh?
Knows as the place where you go to see your future, it's literally a sacred tomb, with many indigenous factors, and I believe that the only place Bruno had his visions before get destroyed by Mirabel.
And speaks in visions, Bruno do a whole shamanic ritual to have his.
Making a circle of sand, protecting himself with salt and burning four piles of leaves every time before having a new vision.
It's just the traditional and the sacred of a Shaman.
Now, why?
Why all those things matter?
Why not just watch the movie?
Well, I never had indigenous latin representation before.
This is the first time i see characters who look so much like me, and I could, even that's not my country, see so much of my culture there.
And of course I am not the only one.
The Madrigals and Encanto are indigenous, and the fact there so many mixed people in the film is the best part, I love this movie beside some "low spots" they have. This still one of my best representation in media.
Sources:
They’re about to break so many laws it’s not even funny, I can feel it in my bones
Lena is somehow sent back in time and finds herself on Krypton 30 years before the planet explodes. Kara doesn’t exist yet. Krypton has no idea what’s about to happen to them.
Lena realizes that with her knowledge of what’s to come and intellect to devise a solution, she can do two things. One, she can save an entire species from near extinction. Two, she can save Kara from ever having to experience the pain of losing her family, her home, and being abandoned. Kara could live a happy life and never know the burden of Supergirl or being the last daughter of Krypton.
So instead of trying to find a way back to Earth, back to her own time, she settles into life on Krypton, becomes fluent in Kryptonese, and sets about with a spectacularly single-minded focus of changing the future - to save this dying world (and Kara).
She succeeds…mostly. They can’t fix the damage that’s already been done to the planet. Their sun will die and destroy Krypton still, but with Lena’s help they’re able to locate a barren planet in another system that has a white star. It’s brand new, strong, and will live for untold trillions of years (provided Kryptonians didn’t try to harness its power again).
They terraform the planet and create “New Krypton” using the dome concept that Zor-El invented fused with Coluan bottling technology. All Kryptonians are instantly transported to their new home that’s identical to the old one save for one difference - the white sun grants them god-like powers that are beyond what Lena ever saw Kara and Clark capable of on Earth. Kryptonians are overwhelmed en masse by these powers. Some go power mad and attempt coups and form radical sects. Others realize the gift they’ve been given and, with Lena’s guidance, Kryptonian society develops under a new mission - to travel the galaxy and offer help to all those in need. Not just offering knowledge and technology this time, but themselves with their newfound powers.
Keep reading