Tđź’‰4/3/2021 || Under 18 Do Not Follow|| 24 || Marcus || he/him || trans cisphobe || tme || white || don't call me q*eer || Icon by @threi, header by @b7te || terfs, transmeds, bootlickers, thinspo die challenge ||
You guys need some healthy dose of music guy elitism snobbery actually its so annoying seeing people in their 20s unironically calling shit like Taylor Swift ‘goth girl music’ 'weird ferals hoe scaring music’ without a hint of embarassement. Literally u deserve a bunch of rym pretentious dudebros to kidnap u to explain the difference between grindcore and powerviolence for 12hrs straight for this clownery i cant take it anymore
you know when you’re a child and you’re like what’s the big deal what’s so wrong with leaving dirty dishes in the sink and then you’re an adult and the presence of dirty dishes that the other adults in the dwelling have left in the sink makes you homicidal
Whenever I publicly talk about Land Back, someone will inevitably ask me the same question: “What does Land Back really mean?”
More
often than not, I will answer with something short like, “it means give
the land back.” As to-the-point as that answer is, I know it isn’t the
answer they are necessarily looking for. The concept of Land Back,
particularly for many non-Indigenous folks, can seem confusing and
abstract. People want to know what is being done and what they can do to
help the movement.
While
it is only in the past couple of years that Land Back has entered
national dialogues, Indigenous people have always found ways to assert
their jurisdiction despite their displacement and forced alienation from
the land. What’s more, some non-Indigenous people have acted as
accomplices in the Land Back movement – finding ways to pay reparations
and subvert the systems of oppression that have often benefited them, in
the spirit of Land Back.
This piece explores four case studies to
show concrete ways that Land Back is taking place on the ground.
Hopefully these examples can provide some clarity about what Land Back
means and looks like, perhaps functioning as a starting point for
non-Indigenous people to join the Land Back movement and begin
reconciling their relationship to these lands.