🖤Happy Pride!🖤

probablyasocialecologist:

“Borders being simultaneously monetized and militarized —open to capital but closed to people—are not contradictory juxtapositions. The free flow of capital requires precarious labor, which is shaped by borders through immobility. International talk of “managed migration” and a concerted shift toward “temporary labor migration” in high-income countries unambiguously proves this requirement. Insourced labor from labor migration programs and outsourced labor in free trade zones represent flip sides of the same coin. This is a bifurcation and segmentation of the global labor force, made precarious through bordering practices.”

— Harsha Walia, Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism

lesbevil:

lesbevil:

gonna be honest I’ve never understood the whole “butches mistaken for twinks” shit like me and all the butches I know are big dykes

“butches are always getting mistaken for twinks” hm sounds like a you issue tbh me and the other butches I spend time with look like this

image

gothhabiba:

gothhabiba:

the latest little comment I’ve added to my collection of Statements From People Highly Concerned About Other People’s Literary Habits runs as follows:

“go sit under a tree and read a book that wasn’t written for socially maladjusted teenagers sometime, you absolute dweebs” [this was the last sentence of a longer comment arguing against “religious conservatism” and “Orwellian self-policing”]

this one may seem unassuming but it’s actually quite juicy

  • bringing in some good old “go touch grass” equation of physical mobility and physical location in space with morality; assuming a certain suburban or white/wealthy urban area in a certain climate where trees are available to sit under. I get that the “tree” bit is meant to be read as symbolic or optional, but there’s a reason this idyllic picnic location kind of image is being used
  • “written for teenagers” is of course just the same old denigration of The Wrong Kinds of Book, borrowing from the denigration of teenagers themselves as irrational, immature, sort of pre-people. (obviously a lot of YA is ‘bad’ imo from a literary-aesthetic or a moral standpoint, but that’s not what’s at issue here—what’s at issue is that this user brought up YA in order to signify “unworthy” reading material, as though books marketed towards adults are inherently more worthy—which mobilises a preëxisting denigration of youth, and places a lot of faith in categories created for the sole purpose of marketing things)
  • I think “socially maladjusted” is a formula that I haven’t seen in this context before and I might have to think some more about what it’s doing here. of course it’s sort of a way to indicate some sort of mental 'unwellness’ without getting flak for being overtly ableist—but, combined with the “teenager” thing, sort of suggests pre-adjustment, an unfinished-ness to one’s social adjustment. when you put it that way, “social adjustment,” it really sounds coercive, like forcing you into a certain shape, but in a way that’s meant to be salutary (like a chiropractic “adjustment”). asserting that people should be or become well-adjusted to their current social reality, or abjure as fundamentally immature and behind-them a time when they were not yet socially adjusted, is pretty ironic in the context of decrying conservatism (in context it was specifically anti-LGBT sentiment). like, what kind of “social” situation are people usually “adjusted” to in our current worldstate?
  • assumption that reading (certain?) books marketed at “adults” will cause the reader to become more moral, that is, less “conservative”; an idea of reading as serving a moral function that I primarily associate with 18th and 19th-century discourses in England and the USA
  • advocating for a self-policing of reading material to make sure that it is (/that others would interpret it as) Correct, Appropriate, Edifying reading material for you—because reading Correct, Appropriate, Edifying reading material will cause you to stop advocating for self-policing. lmfao
  • maligning some imagined people on the basis of being like teenagers, but then chusing to use the register of a high school bully in a 1980s teen flick (“dweebs”). of course I think this was partly a considerate decision to avoid using a stronger insult (because I do the same thing, lol—consider different words until I find one that gets at what I want to say & isn’t just mean)—but I’m interested in the fact that, despite this user decrying conservatism and queerphobia throughout their text, what “dweeb” indexes is not bigotry but uncoolness. we can connect this back to the “socially maladjusted” thing—it’s as if the primary driver of conservatism is not being cool, not being well-adjusted, not taking part in approved activities including (the right kind of) literacy—rather than the reality, which is that instances of conservative & self-policing rhetoric are in many situations (such as when talking about reading) what’s considered “cool,” and are in fact what people are being “socially adjusted” to.
  • I really have to emphasise the “imaginary people” point. this user didn’t see someone being queerphobic and also reading YA, and respond to that conjunction; they described a line of thinking that they decried as queerphobic, and then apropos of nothing said “this is the kind of thing that YA readers do”

komsomolka:

also hot take maybe but usamericans belief that west europeans expressing any kind of negativity towards usa is unfair is based on presumed ignorance of both parties. like are we going to pretend all the shit usa pulled in post wwii europe didn’t happen?? filling west germany government with nazis/intervention in italian elections/military bases/etc. i can go on.

the-grand-author-ne:

azrakon:

image
image

gracklesong:

WASHINGTON — Officers working for Gov. Greg Abbott’s border security initiative have been ordered to push small children and nursing babies back into the Rio Grande, and have been told not to give water to asylum seekers even in extreme heat, according to an email from a Department of Public Safety trooper who described the actions as “inhumane.”

The July 3 account, reviewed by Hearst Newspapers, discloses several previously unreported incidents the trooper witnessed in Eagle Pass, where the state of Texas has strung miles of razor wire and deployed a wall of buoys in the Rio Grande.

According to the email, a pregnant woman having a miscarriage was found late last month caught in the wire, doubled over in pain. A four-year-old girl passed out from heat exhaustion after she tried to go through it and was pushed back by Texas National Guard soldiers. A teenager broke his leg trying to navigate the water around the wire and had to be carried by his father.
The email, which the trooper sent to a superior, suggests that Texas has set “traps” of razor wire-wrapped barrels in parts of the river with high water and low visibility. And it says the wire has increased the risk of drownings by forcing migrants into deeper stretches of the river.

The trooper called for a series of rigorous policy changes to improve safety for migrants, including removing the barrels and revoking the directive on withholding water.
“Due to the extreme heat, the order to not give people water needs to be immediately reversed as well,” the trooper wrote, later adding: “I believe we have stepped over a line into the inhumane.”

Department of Public Safety spokesman Travis Considine did not comment on all the contents of the trooper’s email, but said there is no policy against giving water to migrants.
Considine also provided an email from DPS Director Steven McCraw on Saturday calling for an audit to determine if more can be done to minimize the risk to migrants. McCraw wrote troopers should warn migrants not to cross the wire, redirect them to ports of entry and to closely watch for anyone who needs medical attention.

In another email, McCraw acknowledged that there has been an increase in injuries from the wire, including seven incidents reported by Border Patrol where migrants needed “elevated medical attention” from July 4 to July 13. Those were in addition to the incidents detailed by the trooper.
“The purpose of the wire is to deter smuggling between the ports of entry and not to injure migrants,” McCraw wrote. “The smugglers care not if the migrants are injured, but we do, and we must take all necessary measures to mitigate the risk to them including injuries from trying to cross over the concertina wire, drownings and dehydration.”

The incidents detailed in the email come as Abbott has stepped up efforts in recent weeks to physically bar migrants from entering the country through his Operation Lone Star initiative, escalating tensions between state and federal officials and drawing increased scrutiny from humanitarian groups who say the state is endangering asylum seekers. The most aggressive initiatives have been targeted at Eagle Pass.

The state has also now deployed a wall of floating buoys in the Rio Grande, which triggered complaints over the weekend from Mexico.

Federal Border Patrol officials have issued internal warnings that the razor wire is preventing their agents from reaching at-risk migrants and increasing the risk of drownings in the Rio Grande, Hearst Newspapers reported last week.

The DPS trooper expressed similar concerns, writing that the placement of the wire along the river “forces people to cross in other areas that are deeper and not as safe for people carrying kids and bags.”

The trooper’s email sheds new light on a series of previously reported drownings in the river during a one-week stretch earlier this month, including a mother and at least one of her two children, who federal Border Patrol agents spotted struggling to cross the Rio Grande on July 1.

According to the email, a DPS boat found the mother and one of the children, who went under the water for a minute. They were pulled from the river and given medical care before being transferred to EMS, but were later declared deceased at the hospital. The second child was never found, the email said.
The governor has said he is taking necessary steps to secure the border and accused federal officials of refusing to do so.

“Texas is deploying every tool and strategy to deter and repel illegal crossings between ports of entry as President Biden’s dangerous open border policies entice migrants from over 150 countries to risk their lives entering the country illegally,“ said Andrew Mahaleris, Abbott’s press secretary. "President Biden has unleashed a chaos on the border that’s unsustainable, and we have a constitutional duty to respond to this unprecedented crisis.”

The DPS trooper’s email details four incidents in just one day in which migrants were caught in the wire or injured trying to get around it.
On June 30, troopers found a group of people along the wire, including a 4-year-old girl who tried to cross the wire and was pressed back by Texas Guard soldiers “due to the orders given to them,” the email says. The DPS trooper wrote that the temperature was “well over 100 degrees” and the girl passed out from exhaustion.

“We provided treatment to the unresponsive patient and transferred care to EMS,” the trooper wrote. A spokesperson for the Texas National Guard did not respond to a request for comment.

In another instance, troopers found a 19-year-old woman “in obvious pain” stuck in the wire. She was cut free and given a medical assessment, which determined she was pregnant and having a miscarriage. She was then transferred to EMS.

The trooper also treated a man with a “significant laceration” in his left leg, who said he had cut it while trying to free his child who was “stuck on a trap in the water,” describing a barrel with razor wire “all over it.” And the trooper treated a 15-year-old boy who broke his right leg walking in the river because the razor wire was “laid out in a manner that it forced him into the river where it is unsafe to travel.”

In another instance, on June 25, troopers came across a group of 120 people camped out along a fence set up along the river. The group included several small children and babies who were nursing, the trooper wrote. The entire group was exhausted, hungry and tired, the trooper wrote. The shift officer in command ordered the troopers to “push the people back into the water to go to Mexico,” the email says.

The trooper wrote that the troopers decided it was not the right thing to do “with the very real potential of exhausted people drowning.” They called command again and expressed their concerns and were given the order to “tell them to go to Mexico and get into our vehicle and leave,” the trooper wrote. After they left, other troopers worked with Border Patrol to provide care to the migrants, the email said.

The trooper did not respond to a request for comment Monday. His email was shared by a confidential source with knowledge of border operations. It was unclear whether the trooper received a response from the sergeant he’d messaged.

Considine acknowledged that DPS was aware of the email and provided the additional agency emails in response. Those emails detail seven other incidents reported by federal border agents in which migrants were injured on the wires, including a child who was taken to the hospital on Thursday with cuts on his left arm, a mother and child who were taken to the hospital on Wednesday with “minor lacerations” on their “lower extremities,” and another migrant taken to San Antonio on July 4 to receive treatment for “several lacerations” that required staples.
Victor Escalon, a DPS director who oversees South Texas, wrote in an email Friday to other agency officials that troopers “may need to open the wire to aid individuals in medical distress, maintain the peace, and/or to make an arrest for criminal trespass, criminal mischief, acts of violence, or other State crimes.

“Our DPS medical unit is assigned to this operation to address medical concerns for everyone involved,” Escalon wrote. “As we enforce State law, we may need to aid those in medical distress and provide water as necessary.”

alexseanchai:

Total Cookie Protection works by creating a separate “cookie jar” for each website you visit. Instead of allowing trackers to link up your behavior on multiple sites, they just get to see behavior on individual sites. Any time a website, or third-party content embedded in a website, deposits a cookie in your browser, that cookie is confined to the cookie jar assigned to only that website. No other websites can reach into the cookie jars that don’t belong to them and find out what the other websites’ cookies know about you — giving you freedom from invasive ads and reducing the amount of information companies gather about you.

This approach strikes the balance between eliminating the worst privacy properties of third-party cookies – in particular the ability to track you – and allowing those cookies to fulfill their less invasive use cases (e.g. to provide accurate analytics). With Total Cookie Protection in Firefox, people can enjoy better privacy and have the great browsing experience they’ve come to expect.

anyway switch to Firefox

zvaigzdelasas:

In a blow to tribes, a U.S. appeals court has denied a last ditch legal effort to block construction of what’s expected to be the largest lithium mine in North America on federal land in Nevada.

In a decision Monday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the U.S. government did not violate federal environmental laws when it approved Lithium Nevada’s Thacker Pass mine in the waning days of the Trump administration.[…]

Several area tribes and environmental groups have tried to block or delay the Thacker Pass mine for more than two years. Among their arguments was that federal land managers fast tracked it without proper consultation with Indian Country.

17 Jul 23

anielka-ela:

lovingswamp:

clawfootboy:

clawfootboy:

So many notes ppl confused by corn wielding Colima dog wait until you see the dancing figures…..blow your mind. Teach you true love

image
image
image

humankind…what more can I say. I can only aspire to have such deep and rich a human connection with anyone in this life that will be as radiant as a ceramic figural pair of dancing xolos


image

They’re also at the center of a roundabout

Mexican here, fun fact! While we call them “Dancing dogs”, they’re a young pup and an old dog, and the older one is revealing wisdoms right on the pup’s ear.

You’ll recognize the older dog bc he’s got wrinkles!! It’s a wonderful scene!!

dandelion2302:

⭐️

image