Imagine you get caught up for severe abuse of a woman, find a new woman to groom/abuse in plain sight, and then you get a couple hundred people calling her a dumb bitch FOR you.
Boy I know JM is on his burner having a good time with yall.
I wonder if Jonathan Majors, an abusive man (described in all those articles that we all read) was emphasizing that she needs to prioritize her relationship/him over everything. Can also definitely see how her being a fundie Christian married to a pastor would groom her for this.
🎸 Tuareg Blues, often referred to as Desert Blues, is a hypnotic and deeply evocative genre of music that originates from the Imazighen people of the Sahara Desert, spanning Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Burkina Faso and many other countries.
Rooted in centuries-old Imazighen traditions, it merges the haunting melodies of North African Imazighen music with the raw energy of American blues and rock.
The Imazighen, have long used music as a means of storytelling, resistance, and cultural preservation. Traditional Imazighen music was played on instruments like the teherdent (a type of lute) and the imzad (a one-stringed violin, traditionally played by women). However, in the late 20th century, as Imazighen communities faced displacement, political struggles, and exile, many young musicians turned to the electric guitar, inspired by the revolutionary sounds of Western blues, rock, and reggae.
This fusion created a distinct style-characterized by pentatonic scales, hypnotic rhythms,
call-and-response vocals, and the steady, trance-like repetition reminiscent of both Saharan folk chants and Mississippi Delta blues. The influence of artists like Ali Farka Touré, whose Malian blues style bridged African and American blues traditions, also helped shape the genre.
The music features driving guitar rhythms, often with reverb-heavy electric guitars that produce a shimmering, almost psychedelic effect. Call-and-response vocals reflect lmazighen oral traditions and communal storytelling. The lyrics are poetic and political, speaking of exile, freedom, rebellion, and the vast beauty of the desert. The hypnotic, repetitive structure of the music creates a trance-like atmosphere, deeply connected to the rhythms of nomadic life and the endless expanse of the Sahara.
by Houssaine Ousbouh
Give us electricity, no. Give us jobs, no. Make the economy better, no. Give us good infrastructure, no. Stop us from being killed in our homes at least, HELL no. Come and tax us from money you didn’t help us make in any form, I’M HERE O, SEE ME HERE. Bloody Thieves !
(some of the same people going in on that gay person's tweet about hating the south bc he associates it with homophobic experiences were calling a country man every big lipped organization wooga yes massa bumpkin last year so good luck to all involved)
@shOoObz capital, she's envious of what she could do if she could move with the privilege n ease that yas does. Imagine how dangerous Harper would be if she had a major news outlet at her disposal?! Lmaooo I could be overthinking it. Imma watch the scene again with your exploitation take
@shOoObz Sorry to come back a day later. I agree with you re: yas!! If I were being generous to the writing (I've always thought the dialogue was stilted in certain scenes), then I think Harper, as a person who is peripheral to that circle and doesn't have even that bare minimum social
I know folk don’t want to hear this because nuance & analysis of gender that isn’t misogynistic be damned but…
Maybe a woman who was post partum with an abusive husband got easily swept up in another cycle of abuse with a person exactly like him…
@LRNROSE And nobody give a fuck about the moms who also gotta deal with obstacles and keep a whole person alive singlehandedly even when there's a whole other person living life that bears half the responsibility! She doesn't get to stop having personal problems!!
we are creatures of habit. religious folks (especially abrahamic) always ask this but have you ever even bothered to try something different? ways to regulate beyond what you're used to? folks lack curiosity more than anything. there are so many tools.
“I’ve lived in this camp for 45 years.”
Accused, shunned and exiled. The women banished to 'witch camps' in Ghana's North East region https://t.co/bNL3T1UqUv
A 41 yr old Haitian asylum seeker died within 24 hrs of being taken into ICE custody in Newark & was denied medical care. Haitian migrants are subjected to some of the harshest, punitive immigration policy.
Support Jean’s family w/funeral & burial costs:
https://t.co/8SzHjfzD5b
*w both sides.....everyone's immune to propaganda but everyone is using the same talking points that have been used to manufacture consent around antiblackness and anti immigrant beliefs and policies idgi 🤷🏾♀️
@_ShamGod This is not me arguing! Im just grappling with like...how do we square the stereotypes associated with the continent, the conditions that black people experience here (US), and operate as though people from predominantly black countries are excluded from that?
@_ShamGod I didnt realize how many peoples first interactions happen that way til recently. im tryna understand how it's coming from people who say "antiblackness is global" but behave like that doesn't apply to....black countries that still live the effects of being enslaved/colonized