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21 year old boricua grrrl looking for the Marceline to my Princess Bubblegum. My name is Melanie.
» about me

I maintain that every civil rights bill in this country was passed for white people, not for black people. For example, I am black. I know that. I also know that while I am black I am a human being. Therefore I have the right to go into any public place. White people don’t know that. Every time I tried to go into a public place they stopped me. So some boys had to write a bill to tell that white man, “He’s a human being; don’t stop him.” That bill was for the white man, not for me. I knew I could vote all the time and that it wasn’t a privilege but my right. Every time I tried I was shot, killed or jailed, beaten or economically deprived. So somebody had to write a bill to tell white people, “When a black man comes to vote, don’t bother him.” That bill was for white people.
– Stokely Carmichael (via iwasabearonce)

(via randomlancila)


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Before you speak, ask yourself: is it kind, is it necessary, is it true, does it improve on the silence?

Sai Baba (via earth-beat) (via subhanallah)

using ‘W.A.I.T’: “Why Am I Talking?”

(via tranqualizer)

(via truncatedurl)


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If you let one (truant student) run loose, what are you gonna’ do with the rest of ‘em? Let them go too?

Houston judge Lanny Moriarty • On his decision to sentence a 17-year-old honor student, who (since her parents divorced and both skipped town) has had to work both a full and a part time job just to support two siblings, to spend a day in jail, after she missed school recently. Diane Tran, who also takes dual-credit college-level courses, says that she’s often so tired that she finds it difficult to wake up for school. But that didn’t sway Moriarty, who chose to make an example of Tran. If you think this sucks, we direct you to this Change.org petition.

To the parents and judge; What The Fuck??

(via swagandpassion)

This is some pure fuck shit. You know good and damn well this was overkill. And now that is going to follow her the rest of her life. And for what? So you can feel high and mighty. 

(via inmyhead16)

(via truncatedurl)


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I was born to an undocumented Mexican mother in San José, Califaztlán. When my mother was pregnant she crossed the U.S-Mexico border ‘sin papeles’, so that I could be born a U.S citizen. After about a year, we returned to Mexicali Baja California with the rest of our family.

When I was seven years old my mom left, or I should say, escaped my dad and a life of domestic violence. She took my one-year-old sister and me to live with my grandmother, mi Nana. Then she crossed over to the U.S. again, this time legally, to find work picking strawberries in Watsonville, CA. I really missed my mom then, but really enjoyed the new freedom. After doing my homework, I would spend the rest of the evening playing soccer in the streets and jumping on the hoods of abandoned cars lining the U.S.-Mexico border. You see, my grandmother’s house was just two blocks away from the line Gloria Anzaldúa called a “1,950 mile-long open wound.” My neighborhood friends envied me because I could cross to el otro lado to eat McDonalds and buy cheap clothes at the flea market. Sometimes my friends and I would sneak across the fence through one of its many holes. As soon as we saw the border patrol come by we would rush back across. I remember bragging to my friends that I wasn’t afraid of la pinche migra because I was a U.S. citizen. I did not know then that la migra sometimes can get trigger happy and shoot at children simply for throwing rocks.

Even though I flunked second grade, mi Nana used to say that I was the smartest child she knew. She would put her hands together and say “que inteligente es mi niño.” Her tone of voice and expression somehow convinced me that I was smart. So I started doing better in school. My uncles would joke about my good grades, and warn me that the Russians would come and kidnap me so I could help them compete with the US.

When I was thirteen years old my mother finally decided it to bring us with her to the U.S. so that we could get an education. At the time she hoped that I would finish high school and maybe get an office job with air conditioning. But I came to UC Berkeley instead. And like many first generation Chicano college student, I felt lost and uprooted on this campus.

I remember, as an undergraduate, entering Doe Library for the first time. And as I descended to the lower levels of the Gardner stacks, I pictured myself as the kid in Journey to the Center of the Earth, my face filled with fear and awe. Doe library became my favorite place on campus. It was quiet, like a cathedral. I remember wanting to show my mom how amazing this place was, and then realizing that my mother could not follow me inside those walls. The university library is not a cathedral but a vault. There are bones and blood inside those walls, histories of rebellion not meant for us to know.

And now, after four years of undergraduate education, and ten years of graduate work, I have a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. I also have a wife, two beautiful children, three chickens, and a vegetable garden. I have decided to become a scholar in the field of Ethnic Studies, in great part, because of the sense of empowerment and dignity I gained while taking undergraduate Ethnic Studies courses. This is what Ethnic Studies graduates learn. We gain the tools necessary to fight for the well being of our communities, and to push for the radical transformation our society so desperately needs.

And even though the library is still my cathedral and I have made the university my territory, I must remember to see beyond these local walls. See my brown and black brothers and sisters in the streets of Richmond, Oakland, Salinas, Mexico and all of Latin America. And as the fisherman casts his net over the waters, we must now cast our nets across these borderlands. Fish our youth out of the dangerous streets and into the university. So that they too can see beyond the local walls.

I will now like to ask all the children in the audience to stand up. Children, please place your left hand on your heart, and repeat after me. ‘I promise’ ‘that I will study,’ ‘that I will dream a better world,’ ‘and that I too’ ‘will one day’ ‘go to college and graduate.’

Thank you.


Agustin Palacios PhD Graduation Speech From UC Berkeley 

via vickyinfinity

(via thinkmexican)

i was humbled to listen to this speech at the ethnic studies graduation. “I Promise” was such a heartfelt moment. 

(via desahogovoz)

(via femmenoire)


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The United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid.
– Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (via humanformat)

(Source: carnivorousdreams, via daniellemertina)


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Y’all should be grateful we’re not blowing up entire city blocks

so-treu:

liquornspice:

That’s what confuses me every time folks start complaining that Riley or so-treu or whoever, are mean assholes. 

Y’all are really mad that we called you a hoe bitch cuntface piece of shit prick who need to go die in a fire while all your family watches?

You should be happy that we are not ACTUALLY at your doorstep with flamethrowers.

I don’t think y’all can understand the depth and breadth of the rage we RIGHTFULLY feel.  Our pain, torture, and humiliation are used as THEME PARTY CELEBRATIONS.

But us calling racists who PROFIT FROM our pain and suffering and dehumanization “hoe” or “bitch” is the thing that’s perpetuating systemic oppression? Really????

i’m feeling this so hard right now


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A reporter for the Israeli daily Maariv described it as an “unbridled rampage” and explosion of “pent-up rage”. “Suddenly one of [the protesters] noticed that in one of the cars waiting for traffic to move were two young dark-skinned men, apparently foreign workers. For the hundreds of inflamed and enraged young people, that was all they needed. Within minutes, they dismantled – there is no other word to describe it – the car and its passengers. Some of them smashed the windows with their hands and rocks, others kicked the car, bent the plastic parts and tried to attack the people inside. ‘I’m not from Sudan, I’m not from Sudan,’ the driver tried to tell the assailants, but nobody was listening at that stage.”
The protest followed a claim on Sunday by the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, that “illegal infiltrators [were] flooding the country” and threatening the security and identity of the Jewish state. “This phenomenon is very grave and threatens the social fabric of society, our national security and our national identity,” he said.” (thanks Michael)

The Angry Arab News Service/وكالة أنباء العربي الغاضب (via guerrillamamamedicine)

(via guerrillamamamedicine)


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propaganda-duende:

you say something vaguely hopeful about venezuela or belarus or cuba or whatever and immediately 5 or 6 posters dogpile you shouting “but those are capitalist countries” yeah well i hope y’all have a dream about ayn rand giving you oral sex for hours while making direct eye contact

(via malheureuxmarxist)


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