Radio Blue Heart is on the air!
workingclasshistory:
“Our latest podcast is out now for everyone: part 1 of a miniseries on the 43 Group of mostly Jewish ex-servicemen and women who fought Oswald Mosley’s fascists in the streets of Britain after World War II. We speak with Jules...

workingclasshistory:

Our latest podcast is out now for everyone: part 1 of a miniseries on the 43 Group of mostly Jewish ex-servicemen and women who fought Oswald Mosley’s fascists in the streets of Britain after World War II. We speak with Jules Konopinski, a former member of the group, as well as Daniel Sonabend who has spent the last 6 years researching them.
Check it out and subscribe here or on your favourite podcast app: https://workingclasshistory.com/2020/02/17/e35-37-the-43-group/ https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1364170627101417/?type=3

voodoostick:

the-last-trot:

image

Relevance Level +1000000. If Bloomberg gets the nomination I will flip every table I can find. He’s just Trump with a more normative mask.  And DO NOT WANT some rich bastard buying his way into the White House (again).

makingqueerhistory:

“As LGBT Africans, we feel the vestiges of the long European colonial presence in our continent. We feel them when other – Western, European, ‘international’ – LGBT organizations speak on our behalf and we are left unheard. Only Africans can speak for Africans.”

— Joël Gustave Nana Ngongang

Become a Patron

Donate

dkpsyhog:

Homophobes: *try to destroy rainbow statue*

Gays: “fine then we’ll make it an actual damn rainbow”

Reblog to put indestructible rainbows everywhere and kill a homophobe

chioisan:

“Bad luck isn’t brought by broken mirrors, but by broken minds.”Suspiria (1977) dir. Dario Argento

tempo-di-massacro:

365filmsbyauroranocte:

Reazione a catena (a.k.a. A Bay of Blood) (Mario Bava, 1971)

Odore di carne… e così imparano a fare i cattivi.

:

image

hexasart:

Process video for the Tangled piece is up!

npr:

For many Americans, the first moon landing remains the most memorable moment in the history of manned space travel.

It was a high-water mark in the space race, but as the United States and Soviet Union were rushing to prove their dominance, a lesser known chapter in that battle was taking place: America’s effort to send a black man into space.

Black in Space: Breaking the Color Barrier, a new documentary on the Smithsonian Channel, brings light to the groundbreaking moment that almost came to be during the heights of the civil rights movement.