heaven holds a place for whores who pray
From the book ”Photographic atlas of the diseases of the skin“ by George Henry Fox photographed by O. G. Mason
(via androphilia)
"Nonviolence is an inherently privileged position in the modern context. Besides the fact that the typical pacifist is quite clearly white and middle class, pacifism as an ideology comes from a privileged context. It ignores that violence is already here; that violence is an unavoidable, structurally integral part of the current social hierarchy; and that it is people of color who are most affected by that violence. Pacifism assumes that white people who grew up in the suburbs with all their basic needs met can counsel oppressed people, many of whom are people of color, to suffer patiently under an inconceivably greater violence, until such time as the Great White Father is swayed by the movement’s demands or pacifists achieve that legendary “critical mass."
— Peter Gelderlos, Why Nonviolence Protects the State- Nonviolence is Racist (via fuckyeahradicalquotes)(via androphilia)
Hand of a drowned person submerged in running water for several weeks, Atlas of Legal Medicine. Dr. Eduard von Hofmann, 1898
‘Special Issue on Palestinian Struggle Against Israeli Occupation’, in ‘The Guardian - an independent radical newsweekly’, United States, 1987.
(via androphilia)
"Rap music is so diverse in its themes, its style, its content but when it becomes a vehicle to be talked about in mainstream news, the rap that gets in national news is always the rap music that perpetuates misogyny that is most obscene in its lyrics and then this comes to stand for what rap is. Really its for me the perfect paradigm of colonialism, that is to say, we think of rap music as a little third-world country, that young white consumers are able to go to and take out of it whatever they want. We would have to acknowledge that what young white consumers, primarily male, oftentimes suburban, most got energized by in rap music was misogyny, obscenity, pugilistic eroticism and therefore that form of rap began to make the largest sums of money."
— bell hooks, cultural criticism — rap: authentic expression or market construct? (via sacraments)(Source: ellesugars, via sacraments)




