soycrates:

soycrates:

Gentrification creates a stifling homogeneity in urban areas that makes it less suited for the everyday lives of the lower class and more suited towards the leisure and tourism of those with expendable income.

An old, decrepit laundromat gets replaced by an upscale bakery? And people are mad? It’s not that the poor hate organic vegan cupcakes, it’s that most of us don’t have a way to do laundry in our own home.

Run-down corner stores replaced by hand-made designer clothing boutiques? We don’t hate your eco-fabric shawl, but I can’t eat that for dinner after work like I could have a can of beans I grabbed from that corner store when I don’t have time to take the bus to the real grocery store after work.

What gentrification brings in and of itself is not typically bad, it’s that gentrification brings institutions of leisure and pleasure and makes it so that the poor have to go farther out of their way for basic necessities. It turns low-income living spaces into local tourist attractions. It can even create food deserts by putting restaurants, grocery stores, etc. in that the majority of the lower class cannot afford.

Imagine if someone totally renovated your house and turned it into a mini theme park - they took away your sleeping space, where you prepare food, where you clean yourself and get ready for your day, and replaced it with things that will please people who are visiting, who have their own homes they can go back to, who are here not for their entire life but just as a distraction from their otherwise mundane existence. It’s not that you hate theme parks, it’s not like you’ve never been to a theme park and vow to never visit one again. It’s just that you need to live! To survive! And the leisure of those who have more than you should not invalidate your existence.

I am glad this has made the rounds. Some people feel a dense misunderstanding or misinterpretation concerning gentrification, and I think it helps to hear a description/explanation of what gentrification is from those who are both affected by it and educated by the culture from which it hails. I and many others enjoy some of the delights of gentrification while simultaneously having their livelihoods threatened by it. 

(via keyzwolfe)

loverofasthetics:

An orisha (spelled òrìṣà in the Yoruba language, and orichá or orixá in Latin America) is a spirit who reflects one of the manifestations of the supreme divinity (Eledumare, Olorun, Olofi) in Yoruba religion.

(via saucerkommand)

ipreferlush:
“ipreferlush:
“ ipreferlush:
“ psy-faerie:
“The effects so far of SESTA / FOSTA
”
Some highlights of the SESTA / FOSTA bill:
It’s dubbed the “anti-trafficking” bill for the internet, but it’s really an anti-sex sledgehammer. The bill...

ipreferlush:

ipreferlush:

ipreferlush:

psy-faerie:

The effects so far of SESTA / FOSTA

Some highlights of the SESTA / FOSTA bill:

It’s dubbed the “anti-trafficking” bill for the internet, but it’s really an anti-sex sledgehammer. The bill removes protection for websites under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, and makes sites and services liable for hosting what it very, very loosely defines as sex trafficking and “prostitution” content. FOSTA-SESTA puts into law that sex work and sex trafficking are the same thing, and makes discussion and advertising part of the crime. Its blurry interpretation of sex and commerce, as well as the bill’s illogical, incorrect conflation of sex trafficking and sex work is straight out of a bad movie.

If only the politicians who voted this Morality in Media (NCOSE) mess into law had fact-checked it with Freedom Network USA, “the largest coalition of experts and advocates providing direct services to to survivors of human trafficking in the U.S.” Freedom Network unequivocally states that protecting the rights of sex workers, and not conflating them with trafficking victims, is critical to the prevention of trafficking. They also have the data to back up the fact that “more people are trafficked into labor sectors than into commercial sex.”

————————

*steps onto soapbox*

‘Sex work’ and ‘sex trafficking’

ARE 👏 NOT 👏 SYNONYMS 👏

Maybe if we weren’t completely inept in this country about issues of consent, our lawmakers could recognize the difference between legitimate business - fueled by mutual consent and structured around the principles of supply and demand - and outright exploitation. I

sn’t limiting government interference on private business supposed to be something that conservatives value?

image

Conservatives can’t in good conscience back anything that allows women autonomy over their own bodies. Silly me.

By the by:

The Technology and Marketing Law Blog wrote that there’s no mistaking that FOSTA-SESTA violates the First Amendment; it plainly stated that “this statute implicates constitutionally protected speech.”


image

Stop SESTA

(via chickadee-dee-dee)

vintagewoc:

fetishizing mixed race children will never not be weird

meraofxebel:

wonder woman #7-30 variant covers by jenny frison

(via superheroes-or-whatever)

patsywalkerbondagecover:

Love and Rockets 32, Fantagraphics Books, May 1990. Cover art by Gilbert Hernandez. “And in this corner…” by Jaime Hernandez.

😍😍😍

towritecomicsonherarms:

The first appearance of Claire Temple

Heroes for hire #2

detective-comics:
““Detective Comics #29 (1939)
art by Bob Kane
words by Bill Finger
” ”

detective-comics:

Detective Comics #29 (1939)
art by Bob Kane
words by Bill Finger

(via towritecomicsonherarms)