Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

vinyl-and-cassettes:

Depeche Mode - Violator.
Mute/Sire Records, 1990.

shilol:

shilol:

a few things about the pelosi graffiti incident:

- the can control skills (the writing style & the way the letters fade from top to bottom) make it clear that the writer was an experienced graffiti artist

- the phrase “we want everything” is directly lifted from a book title by the relatively obscure italian anarchist nanni balestrini and i just don’t know why a fed would do that much in-depth research on anarchism for a fake graffiti job

- it’s not implausible at all that a random anarchist would be pissed enough at nancy pelosi to tag her house

- if you spray paint toward a ledge at an angle the spray paint is going to hit the ledge and stop because that is how particles work

- what would be the point of faking a message that’s actually pretty relatable instead of something more hyperbolic and aggressive to alienate people from the cause (which is generally the point of false flag operations)?

- why do people think this one is fake but the mitch mcconnell one is not? is it the pig’s head? that was admittedly gross

- people paint circle a’s in all kinds of fucky ways i see em out in the world all the time

- why do you want it to be fake so bad…they all deserve to have their houses vandalized every day at the very least but ideally they deserve much worse than that

- politicians should feel lucky that spray paint is thus far the only consequence for their actions after what they’ve done to us and they should be appropriately concerned about the possibility of being torch-and-pitchforked

- fuck nancy pelosi

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concerned about how many people i’ve seen uncritically reblog a “there’s no paint on the bricks!!” post.

who does it serve when you spread rumors and baseless speculation? what is the benefit of saying it was a false flag op with no actual evidence?

is it because you don’t want people to think we’re angry or that we want everything? you should be angry and you should want everything for us and they should know it.

is it because you think of nancy pelosi as a lesser enemy than mitch mcconnell? she isn’t.

is it because you think we shouldn’t be vandalizing politicians’ houses at all? because we’ll never be given anything by asking nicely and vandalism is the absolute least we should be prepared to do in terms of dissent. i personally would love to see more politicians’ homes vandalized bc they still feel untouchable even after everything they’ve done to us and nothing short of direct action will make them uncomfortable enough to concede anything to us. i don’t even really care about the off-chance that it is fake because either way it sets a good example.

why do you actively want it to be fake? why would it be better if were?

why does an op seem more likely to you than legitimate anger in the wake of injustice?

did you think it through or did you see a post about it and take it at face value?

did you reblog a picture of mitch mcconnell’s address this week?

wolveswolves:

Trap camera films wolf family at Noord-Veluwe, the Netherlands

This is the first time the whole pack, consisting out of eight wolves, has been captured at the same time. Mom, dad, four pups from 2020 and two pups from 2020.

Egypt unveils ancient funerary temple south of Cairo

archaeologicalnews:

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Egypt’s former antiquities minister and noted archaeologist Zahi Hawass on Sunday revealed details of an ancient funerary temple in a vast necropolis south of Cairo.

Hawass told reporters at the Saqqara necropolis that archaeologists unearthed the temple of Queen Neit, wife of King Teti, the first king of the Sixth Dynasty that ruled Egypt from 2323 B.C. till 2150 B.C.

Archaeologists also found a 4-meter (13-foot) long papyrus that includes texts of the Book of the Dead, which is a collection of spells aimed at directing the dead through the underworld in ancient Egypt, he said.

Hawass said archaeologists also unearthed burial wells, coffins and mummies dating back to the New Kingdom that ruled Egypt between about 1570 B.C. and 1069 B.C. Read more.

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 18 January 1958, the Battle of Hayes Pond took place near Maxton, North Carolina, when Native Americans routed a rally of the Ku Klux Klan.
The Klan considered the local Lumbee tribe as a “mongrel” race of “half...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 18 January 1958, the Battle of Hayes Pond took place near Maxton, North Carolina, when Native Americans routed a rally of the Ku Klux Klan.
The Klan considered the local Lumbee tribe as a “mongrel” race of “half n-words”, were unhappy with interracial relationships occurring with white men, and thought due to their small numbers and marginalised status they would be an easy target. So they began by burning a cross on the lawn of a Lumbee woman who was dating a white man. Their activities escalated and culminated in a rally on 18 January intended at ending “race mixing” once and for all, at which they declared they would have 5,000 attendees.
On the day, they only mustered 50-100 white supremacists, while 500 Lumbee, led by World War II veterans, armed themselves with shotguns, clubs and rocks turned out to oppose them. The Native Americans opened fire and attacked, lightly wounding 4 Klansmen, who returned fire but failed to hit anyone.
The KKK were totally defeated and forced to flee, while the Lumbee took their speaking equipment and burned their Klan outfits and banners on a makeshift bonfire until police arrived and teargassed the revellers. In the wake of the incident, public sentiment swung against the KKK, and the local leader was later convicted for incitement to riot and jailed for two years.
The humiliation ended Klan activity in the local area, and the incident is celebrated each year as a Lumbee holiday.
*
Read this and hundreds of other stories in our first book, Working Class History: Everyday Acts of Resistance & Rebellion, available here- https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/products/working-class-history-everyday-acts-resistance-rebellion-book
(on our link in bio on Instagram) https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1633121413539669/?type=3

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:
“Jan. 18, 2021: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday“The security we profess to seek in foreign adventures we will lose in our decaying cities. The bombs in Vietnam [Syria, Donbass, Yemen, Afghanistan, etc.] explode at home;...

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Jan. 18, 2021: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday

“The security we profess to seek in foreign adventures we will lose in our decaying cities. The bombs in Vietnam [Syria, Donbass, Yemen, Afghanistan, etc.] explode at home; they destroy the hopes and possibilities for a decent America.” - Address to April 15 Antiwar Mobilization in NYC, April 15, 1967

“I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today, my own government.” - Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence, April 4, 1967

everythingfox:

We ride at dawn

anarchistcommunism:

King’s revolution of values was not just idealism, for in that same speech King linked the spiritual revolution he called for to an analysis of the three evils afflicting American society: “the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism.” By this time in 1967, after the legislative victories in the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act, King saw that the struggle for black liberation in the U.S. could not be confined to political struggle and divorced from other structural oppressions. Racism and white supremacy were indelibly tied to “materialism,” and “militarism,” the forces of inequality and violence that lay at the root of American society.

Indeed, against inequality King was about to launch the “Poor People’s Campaign,” a national organizing effort to address the poverty and inequality that still kept African Americans as second class citizens, even with new political rights. In the wake of legislative victories, King argued that “now we are dealing with issues that cannot be solved without the nation spending billions of dollars and undergoing a radical redistribution of economic power.” There was still an economic revolution to be won, without which the struggle for black freedom would be forever incomplete.