"i can't believe they burned down a factory" dude, they want $26 for netflix & you have to work for an hour to buy 1 bag of chips i'm amazed more buildings aren't burning at this point
Iran shooting down all those planes that were attacking their country is probably the most fucked up thing a nation has ever done in the course of fighting a war. Does their evil know no limits?
What the US is doing to Cuba right now is a barbaric escalation of 120+ years of barbaric policy. Since 1959, all Cuba has done is give the world doctors, medicine, and solidarity; all the US has done is try to starve it, suffocate it, and subjugate it. Pure spite and barbarism.
Quand tu vois à quel point certains estiment que le concert de Bad Bunny est un geste dissident, tu comprends surtout que nos élites ont parfaitement intégrés que la représentation peut remplacer la justice par de l’émotion et de la fierté symbolique.
If you're still going around blaming all of society's problems on immigrants or trans teens playing volleyball or whatever, you're just hopeless. A completely pathetic serf who exists to be ruled over by your powerful overlords who view you as less than human
For liberals it’s easier to put the blame on leftists than it is to kill their egos and admit to themselves that they’re not what they perceive themselves to be.
They are fascism-facilitating narcissistic xenophobes who care more about themselves than about human rights.
when people say “stop being political” what they really mean is the system works fine for me and you’re ruining my vibe by reminding me it’s built on other peoples pain
'A white man celebrated in bronze, and two Lakota women silenced in death'
Jacinita Eagle Deer’s story is not a case of domestic violence—it’s a case of power & institutionalized violence.
At just fifteen years old, Jacinta reported that she had been raped at gunpoint by attorney Bill Janklow, then working for Legal Services on the Rosebud Indian Reservation. She told her school principal, was taken to the hospital in shock, and her story was documented. Yet no one prosecuted her case.
Federal and tribal jurisdictional barriers buried the truth, while the power of a white attorney outweighed the voice of a Native girl.
In 1974, Jacinta, with the help of the American Indian Movement and tribal counsel, successfully petitioned the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Court to disbar Janklow from practicing law on the reservation.
It was one of the first acts of tribal sovereignty in holding a non-Native official accountable for violence against a Native woman.
Six months later, on April 4, 1975, Jacinta was found dead on a rural Nebraska road, struck down under suspicious circumstances.
Her stepmother, Delphine Eagle Deer, continued her fight — speaking publicly, demanding justice, and naming what the courts would not.
The following year, Delphine was found beaten to death near Rosebud. Both women’s deaths remain unsolved.
Meanwhile, the man Jacinta accused — Bill Janklow — rose to power, becoming Attorney General, Governor of South Dakota, and later a U.S. Congressman.
Today, a statue of Janklow stands in Pierre, South Dakota, memorializing his career — while no monument bears the names of Jacinta or Delphine Eagle Deer.
Their memory survives only in the hearts of those who refuse to let their truth be erased.
This is what power versus vulnerability looks like in America’s story:
A white man celebrated in bronze, and two Lakota women silenced in death.
Their courage revealed a justice system that protects the powerful and punishes the powerless.
Jacinta Eagle Deer (1952 – 1975) and Delphine Eagle Deer (1948 – 1976) are not forgotten.
They were daughters, mothers, advocates, and truth-tellers—and their voices still echo across the plains, calling us to remember, to protect, and to believe Native women.
Info:Rosebud Sioux Tribe (605) 747-2291
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