queerhairyvag:
youneverleftmymind said: All kids are cute. Black, Brown, White and any other variant inbetween. All kids irrespective of skin colour deserve to be cooed over. What happens if you fall in love with a white woman? would she have no say in this? Just curious… :)
you assume I even want to date white women though…
I’m not ruling out the possibility of it ever happening, I don’t know what I’d do in that situation, but I’d be very much about having a black child first and foremost, if I’m going to be with a white woman in a relationship or I want a kid
Nah. I could marry a white female bodied person and she would know before we got partnered that my child would be 100% black. That’s a part of the deal. You wanna be my partner, bitch I’m having the kids tho. But that’s assuming that it would happen.
dumbthingswhitepplsay:
slaughterhouse-promenade:
ricksantorum-2012:
dumbthingswhitepplsay:
- I’ve been triggered at least twice
- I wandered aimlessly around a fucking grocery for a half hour because of said triggering and haven’t eaten a damn thing.
- It’s my fault cause nigger nigger nigger.
- Stupid white people tried to play middle ground with my mental health.
- White people prove they’re white supremacists again.
- Someone mocks Trayvon Martin’s death. 8D
- The deaths of black people were compared to being second in line for Jamaican food.
- Twelve hypothetical black guys beat up a hypothetical white girl’s brother.
And who’s to blame for this? You are.
You are because you are not accepting of white people. You hate white people and blame white people for ALL your problems. You are responsible for your OWN behaviour and what you GET. No one else is.
Why does she have to accept all white people? You certainly don’t accept all black people. Leave her alone, dickwad, and stop trying to make yourself look like a hero.
so now it’s my fault because i am not accepting of white people
look i fucked a white person i am the LEAST RACIST EVER
and why the fuck is this other whoever misgendering me AGAIN
So when you don’t accept all white people (who are inherently and intrinsically racist and convinced of their own supremacy) it is okay for you to be called a nigger. It is okay to have your death mocked by an idiot fucking 15 year old white girl who is a PRIME EXAMPLE of the exact types of whiteness that we all dislike. It is okay to be triggered by other white people who are so upset that you said you don’t like them because OMG that really changes the institutional power and privilege they have as white people, but they can still turn it around and make you the guilty party when you express a hatred for the psychological affects of racism that they deal and that you have to now accept as a person of color?
I’m beginning to think that you are not altogether sane, dear person.
(Source: crackerhell, via crackerhell)
dumbthingswhitepplsay:
schim:
judgesdeepyl:
wackalope:
dumbthingswhitepplsay:
Do me a favor, crackers, and fall off the planet for the next 100,000 years.
<:|
falling off the planet is physically impossible, don’t you know anything about physics
Earth is round, motherfucker.
you into homefucks too
y’all tend to hump each other
Hey white people reblogging this. SHUT THE FUCK UP.
Thanks.
(Source: crackerhell, via crackerhell)
if one mo’ movie comes out with this storyline…
*now watching Bloomington on Netflix*
"
“It seems to me that Manago is using the definition of the oppressors—which regards manhood as one’s ability to dominate and destroy, a kind of hypermasculinity—instead of questioning whether or not it’s healthy for black men to seek that kind of ideal in the first place.
And the whole emasculation defense begins to fall apart for me once I realize that what’s being denied to black men by these white men is really an unhealthy approach to manhood. I hope black men NEVER attain the ability to be men as defined by capitalist patriarchal white supremacy. I hope that we find a MUCH healthier way of being men.”
"
— Son of Baldwin (via zorascreation)
Why do white women talk in questions?
She made a comment and I felt awkward when we were all silent because none of us were sure if we were supposed to respond.
I can’t.
With.
These.
Wimmins.
Today.
urbanafrofuturism:
adailyriot:
Rethinking Columbus: The Next 500 Years (1998) by B. Bigelow and B. Peterson
The Latino Condition: A Critical Reader (1998) by R. Delgado and J. Stefancic
Critical Race Theo…ry: An Introduction (2001) by R. Delgado and J. Stefancic
Pedagogy of the Oppressed (2000) by P. Freire
United States Government : Democracy in Action (2007) by R. C. Remy
Dictionary of Latino Civil Rights History (2006) by F. A. Rosales
Declarations of Independence: Cross-Examining American Ideology (1990)
by H. Zinn
Occupied America: A History of Chicanos (2004) by R. Acuña
The Anaya Reader (1995) by R. Anaya
The American Vision (2008) by J. Appleby et el.
Rethinking Columbus: The Next 500 Years (1998) by B. Bigelow and B. Peterson
Drink Cultura: Chicanismo (1992) by J. A. Burciaga
Message to Aztlán: Selected Writings (1997) by R. Gonzales
De Colores Means All of Us: Latina Views Multi-Colored Century (1998)
by E. S. Martínez
500 Años Del Pueblo Chicano/500 Years of Chicano History in Pictures
(1990) by E. S. Martínez
Codex Tamuanchan: On Becoming Human (1998) by R. Rodríguez
The X in La Raza II (1996) by R. Rodríguez
Dictionary of Latino Civil Rights History (2006) by F. A. Rosales
A People’s History of the United States: 1492 to Present (2003) by H. Zinn
Ten Little Indians (2004) by S. Alexie
The Fire Next Time (1990) by J. Baldwin
Loverboys (2008) by A. Castillo
Women Hollering Creek (1992) by S. Cisneros
Mexican White Boy (2008) by M. de la Pena
Drown (1997) by J. Díaz
Woodcuts of Women (2000) by D. Gilb
At the Afro-Asian Conference in Algeria (1965) by E. Guevara
Color Lines: “Does Anti-War Have to Be Anti-Racist Too?” (2003) by E. Martínez
Culture Clash: Life, Death and Revolutionary Comedy (1998) by R. Montoya et al.
Let Their Spirits Dance (2003) by S. Pope Duarte
Two Badges: The Lives of Mona Ruiz (1997) by M. Ruiz
The Tempest (1994) by W. Shakespeare
A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America (1993) by R. Takaki
The Devil’s Highway (2004) by L. A. Urrea
Puro Teatro: A Latino Anthology (1999) by A. Sandoval-Sanchez & N.
Saporta Sternbach
Twelve Impossible Things before Breakfast: Stories (1997) by J. Yolen
Voices of a People’s History of the United States (2004) by H. Zinn
Live from Death Row (1996) by J. Abu-Jamal
The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fist Fight in Heaven (1994) by S. Alexie
Zorro (2005) by I. Allende
Borderlands La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1999) by G. Anzaldua
A Place to Stand (2002), by J. S. Baca
C-Train and Thirteen Mexicans (2002), by J. S. Baca
Healing Earthquakes: Poems (2001) by J. S. Baca
Immigrants in Our Own Land and Selected Early Poems (1990) by J. S. Baca
Black Mesa Poems (1989) by J. S. Baca
Martin & Mediations on the South Valley (1987) by J. S. Baca
The Manufactured Crisis: Myths, Fraud, and the Attack on America’s
Public Schools (1995) by D. C. Berliner and B. J. Biddle
Drink Cultura: Chicanismo (1992) by J. A Burciaga
Red Hot Salsa: Bilingual Poems on Being Young and Latino in the United
States (2005) by L. Carlson & O. Hijuielos
Cool Salsa: Bilingual Poems on Growing up Latino in the United States
(1995) by L. Carlson & O. Hijuelos
So Far From God (1993) by A. Castillo
Address to the Commonwealth Club of California (1985) by C. E. Chávez
Women Hollering Creek (1992) by S. Cisneros
House on Mango Street (1991), by S. Cisneros
Drown (1997) by J. Díaz
Suffer Smoke (2001) by E. Diaz Bjorkquist
Zapata’s Discipline: Essays (1998) by M. Espada
Like Water for Chocolate (1995) by L. Esquievel
When Living was a Labor Camp (2000) by D. García
La Llorona: Our Lady of Deformities (2000), by R. Garcia
Cantos Al Sexto Sol: An Anthology of Aztlanahuac Writing (2003) by C.
García-Camarilo et al.
The Magic of Blood (1994) by D. Gilb
Message to Aztlan: Selected Writings (2001) by Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales
Saving Our Schools: The Case for Public Education, Saying No to “No
Child Left Behind” (2004) by Goodman et al.
Feminism is for Everybody (2000) by b hooks
The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child (1999) by F. Jiménez
Savage Inequalities: Children in America’s Schools (1991) by J. Kozol
Zigzagger (2003) by M. Muñoz
Infinite Divisions: An Anthology of Chicana Literature (1993) by T. D.
Rebolledo & E. S. Rivero
…y no se lo trago la tierra/And the Earth Did Not Devour Him (1995)
by T. Rivera
Always Running - La Vida Loca: Gang Days in L.A. (2005) by L. Rodriguez
Justice: A Question of Race (1997) by R. Rodríguez
The X in La Raza II (1996) by R. Rodríguez
Crisis in American Institutions (2006) by S. H. Skolnick & E. Currie
Los Tucsonenses: The Mexican Community in Tucson, 1854-1941 (1986) by T. Sheridan
Curandera (1993) by Carmen Tafolla
Mexican American Literature (1990) by C. M. Tatum
New Chicana/Chicano Writing (1993) by C. M. Tatum
Civil Disobedience (1993) by H. D. Thoreau
By the Lake of Sleeping Children (1996) by L. A. Urrea
Nobody’s Son: Notes from an American Life (2002) by L. A. Urrea
Zoot Suit and Other Plays (1992) by L. Valdez
Ocean Power: Poems from the Desert (1995) by O. Zepeda
Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya
Yo Soy Joaquin/I Am Joaquin by Rodolfo Gonzales
Into the Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
The Devil’s Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea
White supremacy alert
(Source: rematiration, via brownnipplebraggadocio)
especially the so-called liberal ones who, in a moment’s notice, can do the most racist shit ever and starting marching in the privilege tears parade when they get called out.
i tell you.
they should meet up with the Kleenex float at the end of the route and have a fucking seat.
…what makes people think their shit don’t stank?
don’t come at your fellow PoC with the same anger you have at white folk. that’s just misguided as shit. In community conversation needs to be far kinder than out community conversation.
it’s just something that’s hard for me to like be okay with. the internet distorts intention, distorts tone, distorts the way that people are able to adequately express themselves.
we also do this thing where we put people on pedestals because they like to shout people the fuck down. dazz cute. shouting white folk down. we like dat.
but shouting down other PoC who come at you with honesty, kindness, and maybe some slight confusion? Can’t cosign.
but that’s just me, i guess.
-MahoganyBlak
"Higher education is not a luxury. It’s an economic imperative that every family in America should be able to afford."
—
President Obama speaking in Michigan today about his plans to make college more affordable (via barackobama)
Here we wait for follow through.
(via ethiopienne)