A hodgepodge of rad retweets about medicine, Anarchy, religion/mormonism, abolition, & Native stuff. My angry outlet. **Indigenous | med student | He/Him**
@violet_octopi It’s been a hot minute since I’ve thought about such jello concoctions, but I see it and know the exact taste and textures.
Was the go to for, “want something sweet but not too sweet before dessert at the ward potluck.”
Please don’t knowingly sacrifice yourself to the state.
Cover your face. Conceal your identity. Move in silence and under cover of night. Do what you need to do and disappear. No videos. No social media noise.
I’ll take 10 anarchists doing direct actions. I’ll take 1 doing what needs to be done in the most absolute of terms.
Over 10,000 liberals marching who are pro-state, pro-police, pro-corporate politician. Pro-capitalism and cannot take down a system that they themselves embody.
The Prairieland 8 are being persecuted because the state knows that direct action is the only true threat to its hegemony. The fascists are terrified of escalation against their concentration camps and so they need the anarchists to be villains, rather than the heroes they are.
🧵 This was a sham trial from the start. Mark Pittman, a Trump-appointed judge who discussed his copy of Mein Kampf during trial, blocked the defense from arguing self defense or defense of others, favoring the prosecution at every turn.
Federal terrorism convictions based on zines, wearing bloc, using Signal, attending a noise demo, amorphous "antifa" bogeyman.
This is catastrophically bad. Beyond canary in the coal mine—this is paving the way for a new front of fascistic lawfare.
https://t.co/1NqgSM8lsu
I’m sure many of you are thinking, “where can i find a book about anarchism that isn’t written by a guy who was buddies with Epstein?”
Noam problem https://t.co/MvvhXLzFCD
An elderly woman in a quiet neighborhood stepped into her yard with her personal firearm after ICE agents attempted to take workers from her yard. The agents left without making an arrest. The exchange lasted only moments, but it carried the kind of weight that rarely shows up in policy debates and often defines real power on the ground.
Incidents like this sit at the center of what the Second Amendment was written to address. It isn’t about macho posturing.
It’s about a citizen’s ability to slow the momentum of state action when that action feels unchecked.
In the United States, the line between government authority and private life has always been negotiated in small, tense encounters far from courtrooms or political statements.
She didn’t fire, and nobody got hurt. She created a boundary and the agents recognized it. The restraint on both sides mattered, and the result underscored a simple truth. Rights are only as strong as a person’s ability to assert them when the state arrives uninvited.
This was really hurts.
Growing up and being Native we didn’t have a lot of people on screen to look up to, but Graham Greene was definitely always one.
A staple in our home, we always watched everything he was in. He was basically an uncle.
God damn. Walk on.
🚨 Anonymous submission from the underground Coalition Against Apartheid at MIT: Actionists took hostage a painting of MIT founder's wife, an abhorrent slave owner. They replaced the painting with a memorial to Isabella Gibbons (an abolitionist and one of the slaves the MIT founder owned) and Yaqeen Hammad (an 11yo Palestinian girl who was murdered by the zionist entity just hours ago), in protest of MIT's collaboration with the genocidal zionist entity and US military.
"We took the enslaver off her pedestal and built a memorial to Yaqeen and Isabella as a testament to the solidarity that has long united the Palestinian and Black struggles for liberation."
"We will not forget MIT's complicit in genocide. If MIT doesn't end this, we will."
Richard Spencer disappeared for years after one very memorable moment, and the person who made it happen remains completely unknown, and free, to this day.
1/ Britain didn’t abolish slavery out of compassion—it was about profits & power. For centuries, enslaved Africans fought back, forcing Britain to spend millions on military garrisons just to suppress rebellion. The system collapsed under the weight of its own violence. 🧵