Assuming people having relatively benign conversations on things you deem unimportant (like how important it wouldâve been to see Honey from the Incredibles on screen rather than as a disembodied voice) are not also doing things about âactual racismâ is lazy becauseâŚwe can multitask. In fact, Iâd argue that tiering your activism is a good idea. I should give a TED Talk.
My girl was outed to a homophobic family and was kicked out her home. Her entire family turned against her and she was forced to use her entire funds on a apartment. Week after being outed she was fired from her job bc she tried getting 2 jobs and they had a problem with her asking for a schedule change. â¨We see each other like once a year bc Iâm in jersey n was in school n sheâs in ga but Iâm permanently moving to ga to help her. When she was outed she had anxiety attacks n not having a job made it worse. Sheâs been begging for me but I was a student n from helping my mom I donât have the money to be there physically as I need to.
Last time I saw her was February. Being that Iâm out of school Iâm able to move if u guys could help I need 200 to make it to her 700 for our next monthâs rent being that she lost her job n 400 for food n electricity bill. Guys please help I need to be with my girl.
please help this wonderful couple! @pvpacito has been featured on this blog several times, please send some real support her way! even a couple dollars count, but if you really canât, reblog, reblog, reblog!!!!
The Harlem Hellfighters have taken to the spotlight in modern times thanks to the popularity of the video game âBattlefield 1âł, where the African American soldiers are featured in the very opening of the game. The US 369th Infantry Regiment was a unit of African American soldiers who served with incredible distinction during World War I. During the war many white American soldiers refused to serve with blacks, and as a result the 369th was assigned to the French Army, the French having little qualms with serving with African Americans, nor did they have a policy of segregation such as the US Army. They were even issued French weapons and wore French helmets while in combat. During their service in World War I the 369th was nicknamed by the French âThe Black Rattlersâ and âThe Hellfightersâ by the Germans because of their tenacious fighting spirit.  They never gave ground in combat, not one soldier was ever captured, and they served the longest continuous deployment of any other Allied unit during the war (191 days of continuous combat). Due to their bravery, they were also among the most decorated Allied units, with two Medals of Honor, 171 French Croix de Guerreâs, and numerous Distinguished Service Crosses.
One of the most unique features of the Harlem Hellfighterâs was their band, perhaps the only unit in the entire war to have a ragtime band. Â Unlike pretty much all other military bands which played traditional marches and martial music, the Harlem Hellfighter Band played the music they loved and could perform best, mostly American ragtime music and early forms of Jazz. Â The Harlem Hellfighter Band was directed by Lt. James Reese Europe, a man who was certainly fit for the job as he was the band leader of the Clef Club Orchestra, a band popular in New York for their ragtime and proto-jazz music.
On April 8th, 1918 French soldiers turned their heads in wonder as The Harlem Hellfighters marched toward the front to the tunes of hot ragtime and Jazz beats.Â
No one in Europe had ever heard such music, in fact Jazz was barely even heard in the United States outside of a few communities in New Orleans, Chicago, and New York.  The new music became an instant hit among both French and British soldiers, and before long the Harlem Hellfighters Band was being called to perform for French and British units all along the line, as well as villages they passed through. Soon, the Harlem Hellfighters swinging sound took Western Europe by storm, and the band was even invited to perform in Paris at the ThÊâtre des Champs-ElysĂŠes. Among the Hellfighters biggest hits was a ragtime tune called âMemphis Bluesâ.
Another popular hit was âOn Patrol in No Manâs Landâ, written by Lt. James Europe himself while recuperating after being wounded in a poison gas attack while on patrol.
And then of course the biggest crowd pleaser given the location and audience was a jazzed up version of âLe Marseillaiseâ Â
After the war the band would make a grand tour of Europe, then return home and make a grand tour of the United States. Stories of the Harlem Hellfighters unique sound had spread across America and people were demanding more. Â During their American tour, the band cut 24 records. Everywhere they went, whether in Europe or the United States, they drew huge cheering crowds, they had become the superstars of their day.Â
Unfortunately the story of the Harlem Hellfighters Band did not end well for James Europe. On the night of May 9th, 1919 Europe confronted one of his drummers over poor and unprofessional behavior. Â The drummer, known as a hothead among the band members, attacked Europe and stabbed him in the throat with a penknife. Europe bled out and died while in the hospital later that night.
âŚImagine my reaction when I opened up the trailer for On the Basis of Sex last week and saw Felicity Jones grace the screen. British Felicity Jones, with her fine features and her awkward American accent, beautiful, perfectly manicured, and erasing any trace of Ginsburgâs roots.
âŚBut I think what hurts more about watching Jones portray the first female, Jewish Supreme Court Justice is how little they physically look alike. Justice Ginsburg has strong, identifiably Ashkenazi Jewish features. She looks Jewish. Missing from Felicity Jones is any trace of RBGâs large Jewish nose. In its place is a delicate, slightly upturned nose. One that conforms more closely with White Western Christian standards of beauty. Frankly, the absence of RBGâs schnoz is bumming me out.
âŚThis issue is more than skin deep. Judaism is a huge part of Justice Ginsburgâs identity now, but it also provides another dimension to her early career. While itâs definitely true that when RBG went to law school, it was uncommon for women to attend, and when she challenged legal precedent she was a young woman disrupting what has historically been a boysâ club, it was also unusual to be a Jew in these contexts at the time.
When Ruth Bader Ginsburg entered law school, many top universities still had âJewish quotas.â Not many Jews were practicing law, and not many historically had done so. So it was not just that she was a woman disrupting these norms and defying conventions in the legal field, she was a Jewish woman in a professional field that did not have many Jews or women. She was a double anomaly. She is doubly impressive.
And yet, any trace of her Jewish identity â from her accent to her face â is erased in the casting of Felicity Jones in the role. This should be pissing people off. Prosthetic makeup is used all the time to transform actors into their roles in biopics. Prosthetics were used to make Nicole Kidman into Virginia Woolf in The Hours and Meryl Streep into Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady. So why is it missing here? Why are we allowing a key component of this iconâs identity to be erased? Why do we need a young Ruth Bader Ginsburg â who, it should be noted, was a total babe but really thatâs beside the point â to be conventionally beautiful?
The way I see it, this is really problematic for two reasons. First of all, the irony of altering the appearance of a historic figure in order to make her more conventionally attractive in a movie about her combating sexual discrimination is almost too rich to put into words.
Second of all, representation is important.
âŚRuth Bader Ginsburg grew up with identifiably Ashkenazi Jewish features at a time when it was not easy being Jewish in her professional field or in society in general. When RBGâs character is robbed of these features, the story loses something. We all lose something. Something important and integral to Ginsburgâs, and Americaâs, struggle.
And beyond the story, we lose something else. As a girl growing up with a big Jewish nose, I hated my nose because I thought that was what I was supposed to do. I thought my nose was actually incompatible with delicate femininity. How wonderful it would have been to have more examples of that in popular media, to know that it could be otherwise. And how wonderful it would be now to see the story of a young Ruth Bader Ginsburg: hard-headed, trail-blazing, beautiful, and Jewish.
if fallout 76 really is a world where âevery character is a real personâ & thereâs no NPCs im making it my civic duty to be like this lowly tavern barkeep and then once iâve established enough of a rapport iâm going to nuke all of west virginia and it will be in characterÂ
someone help whereâs the screenshot of some post somewhere about the mmo player who barkept for a longass time then fucked absolutely everyone over
God I spent countless hours as a teen playing on a heavily modded and
roleplay enforced ultima online server. I played Cedric Sartone, simple
farmer turned tavern owner who eventually turned it into THE BEST PLACE
IN TOWN. It was poppin every night, I was buddies with every
adventurer, soldier, mage, druid, and ranger that played the game. After
they went out and grinded their skills and did their quests, I was
waiting for them with a warm fire and plenty of ale. Iâd buy their
ingredients and make awesome food and booze (max level cooking!) and was
privy to all the gossip.
Little did they know I had a side hobby, I was brewing massive
amounts of the most gamebreakingly toxic poison possible. For over a
year I roleplayed with these people as a simple barman, pretended to be
their friend and confidant, and then during a harvest festival where
every player on our server was in attendance and I was payed to provide
the food and drink⌠I poisoned every last morsel of food, every drop
of drink and after the reagent delivered his speech and all of these
fools raised their goblets for the toast and took that deadly sip, I
stepped onto the stage and revealed what had happened. They where all
going to die, and die they did.
Now this was a permanent death server (hardcore rpers mind you) and
some had been playing those characters for 8 years and there they all
were, collapsed and dying. Soon they were all unconscious, as you could
only die if you went unconscious three times in one day or if a certain
psychotic bartender came and cut off your head⌠which I did to every
player in our group of 38. They were all there, and unfortunately so was
I.
Revenge against what, you ask?
So the server had a pretty strict policy regarding pvp and pk,
essentially the GMs had to determine if there was in character
justification for any instance of disputed player killing, obviously my
situation prompted a call for an investigation. I understood those rules
from the start though, and I kept a written log in the game where I
detailed my characterâs building hatred of every single other player
character in the world. He would keep track of every little thing from
petty slights, to unpaid tabs, but more importantly I adopted the little
mannerisms that people roleplayed to develop their characters into the
madness of mine.
So Elias was always whistling, well I recorded how infuriating Cedric
found it in his journal, and soon he had multiple journals packed full
of a thousand reasons an unstable maniac could use to justifiably (re:
server rules) murder anyone. The reagent who was also the server admin
had some ornate cloak with a custom texture, so I wrote like three pages
about how pompous it was, and extrapolated what kind of insufferable
prick he must have been for wearing it.
I would just write one or two things down every day for over a year,
so I had many books full for the GMs to locate in the tavern basement
and read through. The result was that they found my massacre to be in
good form and in-character, so the server was not rolled back and
instead they decided to reset and implement a new landmass they had been
working on. Some people were really pissed off, mostly a handful of the
veteran players who had been top dog for several years in their little
gladiator arena.
I only did any of it because my first character was murdered by some
overzealous asshole who just used his character to project his
inferiority complex. He killed me on my second day on the server because
I wandered into the funeral of his friend (it was taking place in the
middle of town and there was a crowd, of course I was curious) and
because I was not invited and he was a known prick it was found
justifiable for his character to kill mine because of the emotional
turmoil blah blah. So yeah I said f*ck that, and rolled a new character
who was ostensibly eager to please and non-threatening. I won.
⌠wow.
The Academy added a new film category this year to prevent a Black Panther Best Picture win from pissing off the snobs. đ