Sugar cane women workers in India HAVE THEIR UTERUS REMOVED to avoid missing a single day of work.
This is where your misogyny should end and voice the inhumane working conditions of people across the world!
Two months ago, I launched my DILARANG PONTENG PARLIMEN campaign, using a rare Parliamentary Petition procedure, to hold truant Malaysian MPs accountable.
I needed 500 signatures. Together, we collected more than 1,400! Here is a BREAKDOWN of who signed the petition ๐งต
actually you know what
why the FUCK havent we made blenders quieter, we found a way to silence guns, SURELY someone can silence a blender
please
theyre so fucking loud
ptsd: something terrible happened to you.
complex ptsd: something terrible WAS your entire environment and you had to just live in it. there was no escape.
This was HEARTBREAKING
Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, who volunteered in Gaza, exposed Israel:
"I held a lifeless child in my arms. There was no equipment to save him. This is not a war; it is a massacre of the innocent."
Venice developed two simple architectural solutions to persistent urban problems, both built into the corners of its buildings.
The first addressed safety. Before street lighting existed, the sharp 90-degree corners of narrow alleys provided easy cover for attackers. The city responded by installing smooth, rounded stone blocks that protruded outward, eliminating the recesses where someone could hide.
The second addressed sanitation. Steeply angled stones were fitted at the base of corners frequently used as impromptu urinals. The incline was enough to deflect any stream directly back onto the person responsible.
Both solutions are still visible throughout the city today.
ยฉ Reddit
#drthehistories
๐ฟ๐๐๐ผ๐: ๐ฟ๐๐ง๐ ๐๐ช๐๐ก๐ ๐๐ช๐ข๐ฅ๐ช๐ง ๐ ๐ ๐๐ช๐ฃ๐๐๐ ๐๐ช๐๐ง
Terima kasih buat semua yang telah membeli tiket dari dalam & luar Johor. Terima kasih TEDUH kerana sudi meminjam ruang utk puisi, muzik, & gerak tari kami berumah. Kita jumpa sebentar lagi jam 4. Bismillah.
There's a TV show in Japan
that has run for over 30 years.
The premise: a parent sends
their two or three-year-old child
on an errand. Alone.
To the store. To buy tofu.
Across actual streets.
A camera crew follows secretly,
hidden, never helping,
as a tiny human in a backpack
completes a task most countries
wouldn't let a child attempt.
The kid cries. The kid forgets.
The kid gets distracted by a dog.
And then the kid comes home,
holding the tofu, glowing.
It's the most-watched thing
of its kind in the country.
Americans who discover it
cannot believe it's legal.
In Japan, we cannot believe
it's remarkable.