RT @Brauner02@twitter.com
THEY'RE MORBING HER! AND THEN THEY'RE GONNA MORB ME! OH MY GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD!
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/Brauner02/status/1531834337318129664
RT @AfricanArchives@twitter.com
On this day in 1921, The Tulsa Race Massacre happened in the affluent black community of Greenwood in Tulsa known as the Black Wall Street.
White supremacists killed more than 300 African Americans. They looted and burned to ground black homes and businesses
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/AfricanArchives/status/1531686149827207169
RT @THR@twitter.com
The #StarTrek family is in Moses Ingram's corner http://thr.cm/baF0INE
I'm just tired.
I'm tired of seeing us create our own hell out of this site by constantly finding new people to pillory.
I'd much rather see us create a community of action, support, learning, nurturing. We can build the world we want to see, but we have to DO it.
Not everyone is going to have the same experiences or struggles that have lead some of us to our most deeply-held moral insights. We have to accept that (and them) in order to help them along the path.
No one learns well when they're feeling judged for their ignorance.
"No matter what you're looking for in people, chances are you're going to find it."
Now more than ever I think it's essential to look for the good in people, even though they're flawed or speak clumsily or have disappointing takes based on ignorance. Attack the flaw. Not people.
There are lines for me, sure. There *should* be lines. But I'm not going to bathe in my anger and hatred for these people, because that just makes ME miserable. It's not healthy for me.
Choosing to focus on what good there is, what good I can do, helps me to fight longer.
The pandemic has been an object lesson to me about just how much control I have in this world. It's NOT MUCH.
But I can control the kind of person I am within this world. And I want to be someone who will always at least TRY to accept people where they are on their journeys.
I understand why many of us feel it's way past time for that. We're exhausted. Many of us have tried being kind for so long and it's gotten us nowhere...especially with the people who abuse kindness for their own selfish gain.
It's hard, but really important to have compassion.
RT @slpng_giants@twitter.com
@elonmusk@twitter.com @PinballReed@twitter.com @crikey_news@twitter.com @ummjackson@twitter.com @cameronwilson@twitter.com ELON PLEASE USE YOUR INFINITE WISDOM TO INVENT THICKER SKIN
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/slpng_giants/status/1531651635340099586
THIS. Apathy is not positivity, and shouldn't be confused as such.
Being positive means actively supporting the things you want to see more of in the world and defending the people who are also exhausted by the mistreatment received from so many places.
RT @Sapphykinz@twitter.com
@kestenan@twitter.com @Kekeflipnote@twitter.com It's true that we need to encourage spaces to be more positive, but we need to do so while recognizing that being supportive plays a big role in getting those positive experiences. Taking a passive stance on people's struggles because it doesn't feel good will end in harm.
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/Sapphykinz/status/1531715824339365890
RT @Danny8bit@twitter.com
'80s composers kill me cause they're always just like "Oh, you need an end credits song for your kids cartoon about zany raccoons playing in the forest? Okay, bet. I'mma go way too hard on it for literally no reason."
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/Danny8bit/status/1530038851195920384
RT @ACLU@twitter.com
101 years ago, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, an armed mob attacked Greenwood, a prosperous Black community.
We spoke to Tulsa historian Hannibal Johnson about the history of the massacre and what's being done today to repair and atone.
http://www.aclu.org/tulsa-legacy-pod
I'm beginning to think I might be *really* good at talking about diversity, equity, and inclusion. AND it's something I'm really passionate about.
Could this be my personal #ikegai?
A digital jackalope living in a black man's body. Pronouns: he/him/his. I love my blackness, and yours.