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So on the flip side of my previous post I will tell you about the nicest most wonderful cop I’ve ever met.
A few years ago due to my partner being hospitalized/having some financial difficulties we had to move in with a friend on Bainbridge Island which is wealthy and very -very-…
Sophie Scholl (1921-1943). Anti-nazi activist, and one of the members of Die Weisse Rose (The White Rose).

(via landofwrongness)
I will keep this photo posted for 1 week.
Every time someone Reblogs this photo & Follows I will donate 10 cent to charity: water
charity: water provides clean and safe drinking water to those who most desperately need it.
After the money is donated I will post proof of donation.Show you care & Reblog.
Click the photo to donate.
$20 provides 1 Child Clean & Safe Water for 20 Years
[Description: We’ve featured this Thor-of-Color kid before, but that was prior to my knowing he had AN ADORABLE BB!BROTHER LOKI. OMG.
Loki is tuckered out and chilling in his stroller, because being Loki is fucking hard work. He’s eating a cookie as a reward for being good and not trying to take over Asgard.]
AMAZING.
I’m still mad I didn’t get a photo of the little black Capt America at my door this past Halloween. 5 years old, with a shield and a candy bucket.
So. Cute.
JP Morgan is the largest processor of food stamp benefits in the United States. JP Morgan has contracted to provide food stamp debit cards in 26 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. JP Morgan is paid for each case that it handles, so that means that the more Americans that go on food stamps, the more profits JP Morgan makes. Yes, you read that correctly. When the number of Americans on food stamps goes up, JP Morgan makes more money. In the video posted below, JP Morgan executive Christopher Paton admits that this is “a very important business to JP Morgan” and that it is doing very well. Considering the fact that the number of Americans on food stamps has exploded from 26 million in 2007 to 43 million today, one can only imagine how much JP Morgan’s profits in this area have soared. But doesn’t this give JP Morgan an incentive to keep the number of Americans enrolled in the food stamp program as high as possible?
We were talking about poverty being profitable. When you get paid for every time you handle a food stamp case and the amount of people who are on food stamps has risen from a recession/depression, which was caused in part by the same institution raking in money off of food stamps, that is the epitome of cashing in on poverty.
However you define this. I want to see the numbers, and I want to see if there’s any solidarity here, male and female, because this happens to both.
I hope no one’s too ashamed to reblog this, because you shouldn’t be ashamed. You didn’t ask for it. So you shouldn’t be the…
^
I’ve been harassed by strangers on trains and buses, told to “show my tits” by workers on construction sites, labelled as a “slut” by men I wouldn’t sleep with… the list goes on.
I’ve never been raped or physically hurt, but I feel safe in saying I’ve definitely been a victim, and I’d be very surprised if there are women out there who haven’t.
I’m not going to go into details, but yes. And I think this kind of visibility is important if people feel safe sharing.
Fairly regularly since I hit puberty, so a good 25 years of street harassment.
I remember being about 9 or 10 walking down the street with my aunt, and some guy said something to her along the lines of, “hey foxy!” It was the late 70’s, whatever. I could tell she was embarassed it happened in front of me, and I said to her, “men say that stuff to my mom too.” She looked at me and, I will never forget this, said, “I’m sure they do. They’ll do it to you too when you’re older.” Later that summer, my mom decided I was old enough to go to the store alone and the very first time I did, some guy said something to me, and I remember thinking, well, that didn’t take long. It’s been 30+ years and other than a 4 year stretch when I never went anywhere without at least one toddler, I’ve dealt with it ever since. Even visible pregnancy was not an obstacle. I will say that now that I’m over 40 it tends to be entirely verbal, and less aggressive than before.
My daughter is 10 and she doesn’t go anywhere alone yet, but I’ve already seen guys checking her out when she stands a bit apart from me. No one has spoken directly to her yet, but it’s inevitable living in NYC.
An easier question than who has been street harassed, is who hasn’t been. I find it hard to imagine a grown woman who hasn’t had the experience at least once in her life.