The 45th president of the United States just said “I love you, you’re very special” to actual fucking terrorists. Never forget this.
baby 🥺
WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH
let’s see how many transphobics we can weed out
BLACK WOMEN IN NOISE, NO WAVE, INDUSTRIAL, AVANT-GARDE, AND EXPERIMENTAL MUSIC
Dorothy Ashby
Mathilda Beauvoir
Alice Coltrane
ESG
Neneh Cherry
Jacky Blacque
Pamela Z
Jana Rush
Jlin
FKA Twigs
Moor Mother
Sofia Jernberg
Klein
Suzi Analog
Spellling
Debby Friday
HAPPY BLACK HISTORY MONTH FROM ALL OF US AT WOMEN OF NOISE.
lmao i lost at least 7 followers after reblogging that…. anyway if you exclude nonbinary people you’re ignoring the white stripe of the trans flag; aces and aros are not straight and thus lgbt+ because theyre literally not attracted to the opposite sex, trans women are real women, and physical dysphoria is not required to be considered trans
See this picture? This comes from a town in Canada where a 24 pack of water bottles is 104 dollars and formula milk for a baby is priced at 55 dollars a pack. What’s more, a pack of diapers is 95 dollars and one head of lettuce is 26 dollars. Inuit people are starving in a country known for it’s generosity.
If you don’t believe this is true, you can find more images like this here. This is the only grocery store these people have in their small towns, and many people are going hungry & elderly are dying faster.
You’ll send aid to foreign children that are starving, so why won’t you pay a little extra to feed the people in your own country who work hard & still can’t afford the prices for healthy food for their families?
Please have a heart and reblog this photo to raise awareness that even in our own countries people are starving, join the movement and show the government that we won’t sit by and watch people starve.
If you think this will make your blog ugly you’re wrong. Children in a first world country are getting sick & starving, and nobody is even aware it’s happening. You can let people know by reblogging and showing you care. People I am close to, my friends and future in-laws are going through this.
Q: Why did you subject yourself to a public apology in front of television cameras?
JOHN: If I were at the stage I was five years, I would have shouted we’d never tour again, pack myself off, and that would be the end of it. Lord knows, I don’t need the money. But the record burning, that was a real shock, the physical burning. I couldn’t go away knowing that I’d created another little pocked of hate in the world. Especially with something as uncomplicated as people listening to records, dancing, and enjoying what the Beatles are. Not when I could do something about it. If I said tomorrow I’m not going to play again, I still couldn’t live with somebody hating for something so irrational.
Q: Why don’t you tell your fans all this?
JOHN: But that’s the trouble with being truthful. You try to apply truth talk, although you have to be false sometimes because this whole thing is false in a way, like a game. But you hope that if you’re truthful with somebody, they’ll stop all the plastic reaction and be truthful back and it’ll be worth it. But everybody is playing the game and sometimes I’m left naked and truthful with everybody biting me. It’s disappointing. I can’t express myself very well, that’s my whole trouble. I was just commenting, in my illiterate way of speaking.
“Was ‘Dear Friend’ about John Lennon, and 'Let Me Roll It’ a deliberate Lennon pastiche? 'Dear Friend’ was written about John, yes. I don’t like grief and arguments, they always bug me. Life is too precious, although we often find ourselves guilty of doing it. So after John had slagged me off in public I had to think of a response, and it was either going to be to slag him off in public - and some instinct stopped me, which I’m really glad about - or do something else. So I worked on my attitude and wrote 'Dear Friend’, saying, in effect, let’s lay the guns down, let’s hang up our boxing gloves. 'Let Me Roll It’ was not really a Lennon pastiche, although my use of tape echo did sound more like John than me. But tape echo was not John’s exclusive territory! And you have to remember that, despite the myth, there was a lot of commonality between us in the way that we thought and the way that we worked.”
— The Paul McCartney Interview, Club Sandwich, 1994.