What stupidity, we don't hate white people. We hate how white people colonized, robbed, enslaved, raped, and murdered people of other ethnicities for years and then acted as if nothing happened.
We just hate that.
it is funny how in Craig Bond Canon he goes from being a rookie to being the past-his-time grumpy old man because they took so long to make those films. really works though.
Honoring the roots of the fight for equality by standing with those who led the way. In 1969, trans activists spearheaded the struggle for our rights, now, it is our turn to ensure we fight just as fiercely for theirs.
here are 10 key points considered:
1. Historical Recognition: The image highlights the essential role trans people played in the 1969 uprising (referencing the Stonewall Riots), acknowledging them as foundational leaders of the broader LGBTQ+ rights movement.
2. The Concept of Reciprocity: It emphasizes that the struggle for rights is a cycle of mutual support; those who benefited from early activism have a responsibility to support current activists.
3. Active Solidarity: The shift from the "brick" (symbolizing resistance) to the "flag" (symbolizing ongoing advocacy) suggests that allyship requires active, visible participation rather than passive support.
4. Intersectionality: The comic illustrates that the liberation of different groups within the queer community is deeply interconnected and interdependent.
5. Moving Beyond Awareness: It encourages shifting from simple acknowledgement of history to taking tangible action in the present day.
6. Challenging Erasure: By explicitly stating that trans people "led the fight," the comic serves as a correction to narratives that have historically sidelined trans voices within the movement.
7. Collective Responsibility: The "it’s our turn" sentiment reframes advocacy not as a favor, but as a shared communal duty.
8. Maintaining Momentum: The visual implies that the fight for human rights is continuous and requires each new generation to pick up the mantle.
9. Inclusive Allyship: It visualizes how different segments of a community can stand together on the same "branch" (the movement) to face challenges as a unified front.
9. Symbolic Continuity: The use of the chameleon motif serves as a reminder that the community is diverse in identity, yet unified in the purpose of seeking equality.
Ask white supremacists what there is to be proud of about being white and they'll point to a society whose economy was based on slavery (e.g The Roman Empire, ancient Greece, etc.)
"California is a communist hell hold".
Oh yeah, it sure is!
Single payer healthcare defeated in the legislature.
Homelessness getting worse, rent skyrocketing. No rent stabilization at all.
People can't afford groceries.
Sweetie that's not communism. That's capitalism.