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Thanks Jimmy for keeping me laughing… :-) 

ENJOY!

    • #Jimmy Fallon
    • #fake news
    • #News
    • #Late show
  • 1 year ago
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ilyasafrika:

zuleikha:

“KONY 2012 is Bullshit”

Peep this.

Damn, y’all… Just listen to this girl.

(via smallrevolutionary)

  • 1 year ago > zuleikha-deactivated20121202
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HE KEEPS A SMILE ON MY FACE :-)……. 

  • 1 year ago
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5 things to know about human trafficking

By Amanda Kloer, Special to CNN
Editor’s Note: Amanda Kloer is an editor with Change.org, where she organizes and promotes campaigns to end human trafficking. She has created numerous reports, documentaries and training materials on human trafficking in the United States and around the world.
Human trafficking might not be something we think about on a daily basis, but this crime affects the communities where we live, the products which we buy and the people who we care about. Want to learn more? Here are the five most important things to know about human trafficking:
1. Human trafficking is slavery.Human trafficking is modern-day slavery. It involves one person controlling another and exploiting him or her for work. Like historical slavery, human trafficking is a business that generates billions of dollars a year. But unlike historical slavery, human trafficking is not legal anywhere in the world. Instead of being held by law, victims are trapped physically, psychologically, financially or emotionally by their traffickers.
2. It’s happening where you live.Stories about human trafficking are often set in far-away places, like cities in Cambodia, small towns in Moldova, or rural parts of Brazil. But human trafficking happens in cities and towns all over the world, including in the United States. Enslaved farmworkers have been found harvesting tomatoes in Florida and picking strawberries in California. Young girls have been forced into prostitution in Toledo, Atlanta, Wichita, Los Angeles, and other cities and towns across America. Women have been enslaved as domestic workers in homes in Maryland and New York. And human trafficking victims have been found working in restaurants, hotels, nail salons, and shops in small towns and booming cities. Wherever you live, chances are some form of human trafficking has taken place there.
3. It’s happening to people just like you.Human trafficking doesn’t discriminate on the basis of race, age, gender, or religion. Anyone can be a victim. Most of the human trafficking victims in the world are female and under 18, but men and older adults can be trafficking victims too. While poverty, lack of education, and belonging to a marginalized group are all factors that increase risk of trafficking, victims of modern-day slavery have included children from middle-class families, women with college degrees, and people from dominant religious or ethnic groups.
4. Products you eat, wear, and use every day may have been made by human trafficking victims.Human trafficking isn’t just in your town - it’s in your home, since human trafficking victims are forced to make many of the products we use everyday, according toProductsofSlavery.org. If your kitchen is stocked with rice, chocolate, fresh produce, fish, or coffee, those edibles might have been harvested by trafficking victims. If you’re wearing gold jewelry, athletic shoes, or cotton underwear, you might be wearing something made by slaves. And if your home contains a rug, a soccer ball, fresh flowers, a cell phone, or Christmas decorations, then slavery is quite possibly in your house. Human trafficking in the production of consumer goods is so widespread, most people in America have worn, touched, or consumed a product of slavery at some point.
5. We can stop human trafficking in our lifetime.The good news is not only that we can end human trafficking around the world, we can end it within a generation. But to achieve that goal, everyone needs to work together. Already, activists around the world are launching and winning campaigns to hold governments and companies accountable for human trafficking, create better laws, and prevent trafficking in their communities. You can start a campaign on Change.org to fight trafficking in your community. You can also fight trafficking by buying from companies that have transparent and slave-free supply chains, volunteering for or donating to organizations fighting trafficking, and talking to your friends and family about the issue. Together, we can fight human trafficking … and win.
View Separately

5 things to know about human trafficking

By Amanda Kloer, Special to CNN

Editor’s Note: Amanda Kloer is an editor with Change.org, where she organizes and promotes campaigns to end human trafficking. She has created numerous reports, documentaries and training materials on human trafficking in the United States and around the world.

Human trafficking might not be something we think about on a daily basis, but this crime affects the communities where we live, the products which we buy and the people who we care about. Want to learn more? Here are the five most important things to know about human trafficking:

1. Human trafficking is slavery.
Human trafficking is modern-day slavery. It involves one person controlling another and exploiting him or her for work. Like historical slavery, human trafficking is a business that generates billions of dollars a year. But unlike historical slavery, human trafficking is not legal anywhere in the world. Instead of being held by law, victims are trapped physically, psychologically, financially or emotionally by their traffickers.

2. It’s happening where you live.
Stories about human trafficking are often set in far-away places, like cities in Cambodia, small towns in Moldova, or rural parts of Brazil. But human trafficking happens in cities and towns all over the world, including in the United States. Enslaved farmworkers have been found harvesting tomatoes in Florida and picking strawberries in California. Young girls have been forced into prostitution in Toledo, Atlanta, Wichita, Los Angeles, and other cities and towns across America. Women have been enslaved as domestic workers in homes in Maryland and New York. And human trafficking victims have been found working in restaurants, hotels, nail salons, and shops in small towns and booming cities. Wherever you live, chances are some form of human trafficking has taken place there.

3. It’s happening to people just like you.
Human trafficking doesn’t discriminate on the basis of race, age, gender, or religion. Anyone can be a victim. Most of the human trafficking victims in the world are female and under 18, but men and older adults can be trafficking victims too. While poverty, lack of education, and belonging to a marginalized group are all factors that increase risk of trafficking, victims of modern-day slavery have included children from middle-class families, women with college degrees, and people from dominant religious or ethnic groups.

4. Products you eat, wear, and use every day may have been made by human trafficking victims.
Human trafficking isn’t just in your town - it’s in your home, since human trafficking victims are forced to make many of the products we use everyday, according toProductsofSlavery.org. If your kitchen is stocked with rice, chocolate, fresh produce, fish, or coffee, those edibles might have been harvested by trafficking victims. If you’re wearing gold jewelry, athletic shoes, or cotton underwear, you might be wearing something made by slaves. And if your home contains a rug, a soccer ball, fresh flowers, a cell phone, or Christmas decorations, then slavery is quite possibly in your house. Human trafficking in the production of consumer goods is so widespread, most people in America have worn, touched, or consumed a product of slavery at some point.

5. We can stop human trafficking in our lifetime.
The good news is not only that we can end human trafficking around the world, we can end it within a generation. But to achieve that goal, everyone needs to work together. Already, activists around the world are launching and winning campaigns to hold governments and companies accountable for human trafficking, create better laws, and prevent trafficking in their communities. You can start a campaign on Change.org to fight trafficking in your community. You can also fight trafficking by buying from companies that have transparent and slave-free supply chains, volunteering for or donating to organizations fighting trafficking, and talking to your friends and family about the issue. Together, we can fight human trafficking … and win.

    • #Trafficking
    • #women
    • #sex
    • #slavery
    • #love
    • #america
    • #CNN
  • 1 year ago
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guardiancomment:

To celebrate International Women’s Day, we asked 11 women from different countries to choose one reason we should celebrate this year.

• From the US: Jessica Valenti - let’s celebrate the backlash against sexism

• From Egypt: Adhaf Souef - let’s celebrate the women of Egypt’s revolution

• From India: Mari Marcel Thekaekara - let’s celebrate Indian women being more visible than ever

• From Sudan: Lubna Hussein - let’s celebrate the women of Sudan’s Nuba mountains

• From China: Lijia Zhan - let’s celebrate China leading the world in wealthy self-made women

• From Afghanistan: Orzala Ashraf Nemat - let’s celebrate Afghanistan’s grassroots activists

• From Norway: Maria Reinertsen - let’s celebrate more dad time for kids in Norway

• From Chile: Catalina May - let’s celebrate a belated discission about women’s rights in Chile

• From the UK: Anna Bird - let’s celebrate a new energy among UK feminist activists

• From Russia: Natalia Antonova - let’s celebrate women taking on the government

• From Saudi Arabia: Eman Al Nafjan - let’s celebrate the Saudi women’s driving campaign

Photographs: Reuters; Phil Moore for the Guardian; Manish Swarup/AP; AP; Janine Wiedel/Alam; AFP/Getty Images; David Wong/AP; AP

(via smallrevolutionary)

Source: guardiancomment

  • 1 year ago > guardiancomment
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thejazzpoet:

Women of the Black Panther Party

1. Dorthory Phillips & Leslie Booker - National HQ Oakland.

2. Kathleen Cleaver - Central Committee.

3. Safiya Burhari - Harlem NY.

4. Sisters working @ People Revolutionary Conference Washington DC (1970).

5. Tarika Lewis speaking @ Bobby Hutton Day (1999).

6. Varlie Douglas - Central HQ, worked on the first Liberation school staff (1968).

7. Candie Robinson - Washington DC/National Dist.San Francisco/Central HQ Oakland.

8. Shelly Bursey/Brenda Presley National HQ Staff (1969).

9. Barbara Easley-Cox S.F., Central HQ, Philly office (1969).

10. Cookie Hite S.F.Dist. (1969).

(via smallrevolutionary)

  • 1 year ago > billiesbluesday-deactivated2012
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smallrevolutionary:

producers of STOP KONY2012
i need all of you asshats who haven’t done research about the topic to find a seat and take it.
find ALL the seats and take ALL of em.
these guys are shit. their cause is white savior war mongering shit. the money doesnt make it back to Uganda and at the end of the day its just white people making money off of Africans misery…. like i havent seen that shit before.
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smallrevolutionary:

producers of STOP KONY2012

i need all of you asshats who haven’t done research about the topic to find a seat and take it.

find ALL the seats and take ALL of em.

these guys are shit. their cause is white savior war mongering shit. the money doesnt make it back to Uganda and at the end of the day its just white people making money off of Africans misery…. like i havent seen that shit before.

  • 1 year ago > smallrevolutionary
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KONY 2012…

FIGHT FOR THE INVISIBLE CHILDREN.

BE A VOICE. BE THE VOICE…

STAND UP FOR THE CHILDREN. STAND UP FOR PEACE…..

#WORLDPEACE… 

KONY2012

    • #KONY2012
    • #PEACE
    • #INVISIBLECHILDREN
    • #CHILDREN
    • #LOVE
    • #WORLD
    • #VOICE
  • 1 year ago
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wantmoor:

l969

Oakland , California

Huey’s Trial, Opening Day

(via kaka-hodari-deactivated20130510)

  • 1 year ago > kaka-hodari-deactivated20130510
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PEACE IS NOT EASILY ACHIEVED ON EARTH; BUT CAN BE EASILY ACHIEVED IN MIND. WITH PEACE OF MIND!
original…
    • #peace
    • #love
    • #earth
    • #strength
  • 1 year ago
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The World Eye View

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Everyday is A Day of Chance in The World Eye View.
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WORLD TREASURES

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    Jimi Hendrix reading Mad Magazine while having his hair styled

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    lawofwomen:

    Faces of women struggle around the world…pictures of the decade!

    Extraordinary women.

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