why is this a problem?
The security of a bottle of Maggie in your home at all times = fanfreakingtastic.
no?
Submitted by: http://en1ightenn.tumblr.com/ ^^Follow this really cute blog.
why is this a problem?
The security of a bottle of Maggie in your home at all times = fanfreakingtastic.
no?
Submitted by: http://en1ightenn.tumblr.com/ ^^Follow this really cute blog.


| — | - ERIN GLORIA RYAN, regarding Ashton Kutcher in brownface: http://jezebel.com/5907136/ashton-kutcher-jackass-hops-on-brownface-bandwagon |

Told him the grass was greener
with an endless flood of possibilities Katrina
Watch him drown in debt
Land confiscated by the local government
So he flys high in a jet
Plane, plain clothes just exposed him
To the harsh winters of life
And his wife won’t know
Bout the sweat soaked in the bank notes
Sent home, boy getting grown, now he starts to groan
Stomachs rumbling
Hungry for a better life now he’s stumbling
Over foreign phonetics and verb tenses
laughing at his accent
It’s not an accident
That his masters in economics isn’t honored
Most economic for a father
is to hop his ass in a cab,
And never bother..
getting out that car OR his dreams
Memorize the route
and collect the fare
It isn’t fair
When they say “you don’t belong here”
With your long beard
And that towel round your head
Hear what was said?
Soak up the hate
Can you relate?
Life of an immigrant
===
http://www.thepoetproject.com

| — |
Kosha Patel (Written and Directed by: Sameer Asad Gardezi and Kosha Patel; Director of Photography by: B.T. Jackson; Edited by: Kevin Lipnos) (Source: youtube.com) |

V.Vo of Sepia mutiny kindly brings you translation for that viral shit sri lankan mothers say video:
I will helpfully subtitle this for you.
Amma: Eat eat eat eat eat eat eat eat eat EAT
Translation: I love you
Amma: [In this scenario] you will die; [in that scenario] you will die
Translation: If anything ever happened to you I don’t know what I’d do
Amma: If you wind up in hospital I’m not coming!
Translation: I would be there in a hot minute

Sunera Thobani is Associate Professor at the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of British Columbia. Since her appointment at UBC, Dr. Thobani has been committed to using an interdisciplinary approach in her teaching and research, and to maintaining her involvement in community and social justice activities. Dr. Thobani’s academic publications include articles in journals such as Canadian Woman Studies, Atlantis: A Women’s Studies Journal, Journal of Canadian Women and the Law, Refuge, Feminist Theory and Race & Class. Her research focuses on globalization, citizenship, migration and race and gender relations. Her book, Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada, was by the University of Toronto Press (2007), and her current research projects focus on Gender, Race, Globalization and Media Representations of the War on Terror.
Dr. Thobani is also past president of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC), Canada’s then largest feminist organization (1993-1996). The first woman of colour to serve in this position, Ms. Thobani’s tenure was committed to making the politics of anti-racism central to the women’s movement. In her community work she has written and spoken on many issues, including the impact of globalization on women’s citizenship; Canadian immigration and social policy; new reproductive technologies; violence against women; and women and APEC. She has been invited to help organize and give addresses at numerous international conferences, including the NGO Forum at the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China (1996), the First International Women’s Conference on APEC in Manila, Philippines (1996), and the National Association of Black, Asian and Ethnic Minority Councillors in Manchester, Britain(1998). She is also a founding member of the cross-Canada Researchers and Academics of Colour for Equity (RACE) network (2000).
“One of my major goals is to reach young women and to teach them about women’s activism, historically,” says Dr Thobani. For her, women’s empowerment is about “creating real material options for women to end poverty and violence in their lives.” As a Muslim woman and scholar, Dr. Thobani is at the forefront of educating people about Islam and its values. She challenges women to achieve more and sets the record straight on the stereotypes surrounding Muslim women.
“It is very important for young women to think critically, to feel the power that women have and to join forces with those who want a world based on justice.”
Day 12 of Racism Free Ontario’s 100 People of Colour Spotlight.
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( Videos and more @ Sunera Thobani)

YES YES YES[Image: Photographic recreation of Rosie the Riveter featuring a femme-presenting person from India. Speech bubble above reads “we can do it!” in Hindi.]
INDIAN VERSION OF “ROSIE THE RIVETER”
I have seen various photographic recreations of Rosie the Riveter - all modeled by white women. Yet I’d never seen an Indian version. And I thought to myself, “I’m gonna make one!” One of my family members, who lives in India, helped me with the translation of “We Can Do It!” in Hindi. The model is me, the photographer is me, and I wore a traditional polyester saree with a cotton choli (blouse). I modeled my look after my aunts and other working class Indian women in the home state where both my parents come from - I greatly admire them and their work ethics. I hope you guys enjoy my Indian version of Rosie the Riveter!
Please follow me on Twitter and Tumblr! Don’t forget to subscribe to The American Dream is Dead and my youtube channel!
Awesome! After I posted that embroidered image of Rosie the Riveter earlier, I was thinking about how all redesigned images using Rosie are always always white. This is so great!
LOVE




