FOR THE STRAIGHT FOLKS WHO DON’T MIND GAYS BUT WISH THEY WEREN’T SO BLATANT by Pat Parker

janedoe225:

You know, some people got a lot of nerve.
Sometimes I don’t believe the things I see and hear.

Have you met the woman who’s shocked by two women kissing
and in the same breath, tells you she is pregnant?
BUT gays, shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or this straight couple sits next to you in a movie and
you can’t hear the dialogue because of the sound effects.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

And the woman in your office spends an entire lunch hour
talking about her new bikini drawers and how much
her husband likes them.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or the “hip” chick in your class rattling like a mile a minute
while you’re trying to get stoned in the john, about the
camping trip she took with her musician boyfriend.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

You go in a public bathroom and all over the walls there’s John loves
Mary, Janice digs Richard, Pepe loves Delores, etc., etc.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or your go to an amusement park and there’s a tunnel of love
and pictures of straights painted on the front and grinning
couples are coming in and out.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Fact is, blatant heterosexuals are all over the place.
Supermarkets, movies, on your job, in church, in books, on television every day
day and night, every place-even- in gay bars and they want gay
men and woman to go and hide in the closet.

So to you straight folks I say, “Sure, I’ll go if you go too”
BUT I’m polite so, after you.FOR THE STRAIGHT FOLKS WHO DON’T MIND GAYS BUT WISH THEY WEREN’T SO BLATANT

You know, some people got a lot of nerve.
Sometimes I don’t believe the things I see and hear.

Have you met the woman who’s shocked by two women kissing
and in the same breath, tells you she is pregnant?
BUT gays, shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or this straight couple sits next to you in a movie and
you can’t hear the dialogue because of the sound effects.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

And the woman in your office spends an entire lunch hour
talking about her new bikini drawers and how much
her husband likes them.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or the “hip” chick in your class rattling like a mile a minute
while you’re trying to get stoned in the john, about the
camping trip she took with her musician boyfriend.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

You go in a public bathroom and all over the walls there’s John loves
Mary, Janice digs Richard, Pepe loves Delores, etc., etc.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Or your go to an amusement park and there’s a tunnel of love
and pictures of straights painted on the front and grinning
couples are coming in and out.
BUT gays shouldn’t be so blatant.

Fact is, blatant heterosexuals are all over the place.
Supermarkets, movies, on your job, in church, in books, on television every day
day and night, every place-even- in gay bars and they want gay
men and woman to go and hide in the closet.

So to you straight folks I say, “Sure, I’ll go if you go too”
BUT I’m polite so, after you.

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(via samimnot)

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cloneboy:

msstpatience:

monstreux:

ace-su:

Real-life Grave of the Fireflies: (Photo) Stoic Japanese orphan, standing at attention having brought his dead younger brother to a cremation pyre, Nagasaki, by Joe O’Donnell 1945
This photograph was taken by an American photojournalist, Joe O’Donnell, in Nagasaki in 1945.

He recently spoke to a Japanese interviewer about this picture:
“I saw a boy about ten years old walking by. He was carrying a baby on his back. In those days in Japan, we often saw children playing with their little brothers or sisters on their backs, but this boy was clearly different. I could see that he had come to this place for a serious reason. He was wearing no shoes. His face was hard. The little head was tipped back as if the baby were fast asleep.
“The boy stood there for five or ten minutes. The men in white masks walked over to him and quietly began to take off the rope that was holding the baby. That is when I saw that the baby was already dead. The men held the body by the hands and feet and placed it on the fire.
“The boy stood there straight without moving, watching the flames. He was biting his lower lip so hard that it shone with blood. The flame burned low like the sun going down. The boy turned around and walked silently away.”

saddest story/movie ever. :’(

umm… Grave of the Fireflies was an autobiography.

cloneboy:

msstpatience:

monstreux:

ace-su:

Real-life Grave of the Fireflies: (Photo) Stoic Japanese orphan, standing at attention having brought his dead younger brother to a cremation pyre, Nagasaki, by Joe O’Donnell 1945

This photograph was taken by an American photojournalist, Joe O’Donnell, in Nagasaki in 1945.

He recently spoke to a Japanese interviewer about this picture:

“I saw a boy about ten years old walking by. He was carrying a baby on his back. In those days in Japan, we often saw children playing with their little brothers or sisters on their backs, but this boy was clearly different. I could see that he had come to this place for a serious reason. He was wearing no shoes. His face was hard. The little head was tipped back as if the baby were fast asleep.

“The boy stood there for five or ten minutes. The men in white masks walked over to him and quietly began to take off the rope that was holding the baby. That is when I saw that the baby was already dead. The men held the body by the hands and feet and placed it on the fire.

“The boy stood there straight without moving, watching the flames. He was biting his lower lip so hard that it shone with blood. The flame burned low like the sun going down. The boy turned around and walked silently away.”

saddest story/movie ever. :’(

umm… Grave of the Fireflies was an autobiography.

(via freshmouthgoddess)

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110 notes

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janedoe225:

“It’s a tragedy that we live in a society that believes it can do everything, that it can go to the moon, yet it does not believe that it can cure a drug victim of a malady that society has caused.”

The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975

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afrodiaspores:

“Lynchings By States And Counties in the United States 1900-1931 (Data from Research Department, Tuskegee Institute),” 1931

From 1889 to 1918, more than 2,400 African Americans were hanged or burned at the stake. Many lynching victims were accused of little more than making “boastful remarks,” “insulting a white man,” or seeking employment “out of place”…
They were hanged from trees, bridges, and telephone poles. Victims were often tortured and mutilated before death: burned alive, castrated, and dismembered. Their teeth, fingers, ashes, clothes, and sexual organs were sold as keepsakes…
Lynching was community sanctioned. Lynchings were frequently publicized well in advance, and people dressed up and traveled long distances for the occasion. The January 26, 1921, issue of the Memphis Press contained the headline: “May Lynch 3 to 6 Negroes This Evening.” Clergymen and business leaders often participated in lynchings. Few of the people who committed lynchings were ever punished. What makes the lynchings all the more chilling is the carnival atmosphere and aura of self-righteousness that surrounded the [grisly] events.
Railroads sometimes ran special excursion trains to allow spectators to watch lynchings. Lynch mobs could swell to 15,000 people. Tickets were sold to lynchings. The mood of the white mobs was exuberant—men cheering, women preening, and children frolicking around the corpse.
Photographers recorded the scenes and sold photographic postcards of lynchings, until the Postmaster General prohibited such mail in 1908. People sent the cards with inscriptions like: “You missed a good time” or “This is the barbeque we had last night.”
Lynching received its name from Judge Charles Lynch, a Virginia farmer who punished outlaws and Tories with “rough” justice during the American Revolution. Before the 1880s, most lynchings took place in the West. But during that decade the South’s share of lynchings rose from 20 percent to nearly 90 percent. A total of 744 [B]lacks were lynched during the 1890s. The last officially recorded lynching in the United States occurred in 1968. However, many consider the 1998 death of James Byrd in Jasper, Texas, at the hands of three whites who hauled him behind their pick-up truck with a chain, a later instance.
The Census Bureau estimates that 4,742 lynchings took place between 1882 and 1968. Between 1882 and 1930, some 2,828 people were lynched in the South; 585 in the West; and 260 in the Midwest. That means that between 1880 and 1930, a [B]lack Southerner died at the hands of a white mob more than twice a week…
Apologists for lynching claimed that they were punishment for such crimes as murder and especially rape. But careful analysis has shown that a third of the victims were not even accused of rape or murder; in fact, many of the charges of rape were fabrications. Many victims had done nothing more than not step aside on a sidewalk or accidentally brush against a young girl. In many cases, a disagreement with a white storeowner or landowner triggered a lynching…

afrodiaspores:

“Lynchings By States And Counties in the United States 1900-1931 (Data from Research Department, Tuskegee Institute),” 1931

From 1889 to 1918, more than 2,400 African Americans were hanged or burned at the stake. Many lynching victims were accused of little more than making “boastful remarks,” “insulting a white man,” or seeking employment “out of place”…

They were hanged from trees, bridges, and telephone poles. Victims were often tortured and mutilated before death: burned alive, castrated, and dismembered. Their teeth, fingers, ashes, clothes, and sexual organs were sold as keepsakes…

Lynching was community sanctioned. Lynchings were frequently publicized well in advance, and people dressed up and traveled long distances for the occasion. The January 26, 1921, issue of the Memphis Press contained the headline: “May Lynch 3 to 6 Negroes This Evening.” Clergymen and business leaders often participated in lynchings. Few of the people who committed lynchings were ever punished. What makes the lynchings all the more chilling is the carnival atmosphere and aura of self-righteousness that surrounded the [grisly] events.

Railroads sometimes ran special excursion trains to allow spectators to watch lynchings. Lynch mobs could swell to 15,000 people. Tickets were sold to lynchings. The mood of the white mobs was exuberant—men cheering, women preening, and children frolicking around the corpse.

Photographers recorded the scenes and sold photographic postcards of lynchings, until the Postmaster General prohibited such mail in 1908. People sent the cards with inscriptions like: “You missed a good time” or “This is the barbeque we had last night.”

Lynching received its name from Judge Charles Lynch, a Virginia farmer who punished outlaws and Tories with “rough” justice during the American Revolution. Before the 1880s, most lynchings took place in the West. But during that decade the South’s share of lynchings rose from 20 percent to nearly 90 percent. A total of 744 [B]lacks were lynched during the 1890s. The last officially recorded lynching in the United States occurred in 1968. However, many consider the 1998 death of James Byrd in Jasper, Texas, at the hands of three whites who hauled him behind their pick-up truck with a chain, a later instance.

The Census Bureau estimates that 4,742 lynchings took place between 1882 and 1968. Between 1882 and 1930, some 2,828 people were lynched in the South; 585 in the West; and 260 in the Midwest. That means that between 1880 and 1930, a [B]lack Southerner died at the hands of a white mob more than twice a week…

Apologists for lynching claimed that they were punishment for such crimes as murder and especially rape. But careful analysis has shown that a third of the victims were not even accused of rape or murder; in fact, many of the charges of rape were fabrications. Many victims had done nothing more than not step aside on a sidewalk or accidentally brush against a young girl. In many cases, a disagreement with a white storeowner or landowner triggered a lynching…

(via green-street-politics)

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Have you registered to vote yet? Well, here is your opportunity to do so. Bring your student id, driver license( if you have one, A permit is okay), and remember your social security number (write it down somewhere, please don’t bring your card, you only need the last four digits). It is very important you register to vote. Let your voice be heard. Invite your Everglades friends.
If you have questions please email me at Evergladeshistory@gmail.com Or if you want community service for helping with this event.
                            FAQ
What do I need to bring?
Your driver’s license ( a permit is okay), your student ID, and remember the last four digits of your social security number ( in case you don’t have the proper ID)
But I’m only 16/17. Can I still vote?
Sorry, you can’t. You can, however, register to vote but not actually vote until you are 18.
If I am 15 can I vote?
Sorry, no. But still tell your Everglades friends about the event and remember to register next year!
Can I be a legal resident but not a citizen?
I’m sorry, but you have to be a citizen to vote. But still, tell your friends about the event.
How will this happen?
On Monday March 19 you will be called by classes and register in the auditorium.
How do I get community service hours?
Go on twitter/tumblr and use the tag #ehsvote and link to this post or the facebook event. Take a screen shot of that and email me that picture (evergladeshistory@gmail.com) or send me a link to your tweet/tumblr post
To take a screen shot: press ctrl, print screen on your keyboard( if you are still confused click this link). Save the picture (use Microsoft Paint, Word, Word Pad, or anything you want as long as the picture is saved) and email me.
Also, link to this post or facebook event to your wall. Again, take a screen shot.
Email your EHS friends and take a screen shot.
So you get one hour for posting on your twitter, one hour for your tumblr, one hour for posting it on your facebook and one hour for inviting people (just take a screen shot), and one hour for your email (if you know any other way to spread this event, just take a screen shot)
This part is very important. When you email me send: your name, your grade, and your student ID number. Come to room 330 after school and your community service hour sheet will be signed off.
If you have questions, please email me or comment on the facebook event.

Have you registered to vote yet? Well, here is your opportunity to do so. Bring your student id, driver license( if you have one, A permit is okay), and remember your social security number (write it down somewhere, please don’t bring your card, you only need the last four digits). It is very important you register to vote. Let your voice be heard. Invite your Everglades friends.

If you have questions please email me at Evergladeshistory@gmail.com Or if you want community service for helping with this event.

                            FAQ

  1. What do I need to bring?
  • Your driver’s license ( a permit is okay), your student ID, and remember the last four digits of your social security number ( in case you don’t have the proper ID)
  1. But I’m only 16/17. Can I still vote?
  • Sorry, you can’t. You can, however, register to vote but not actually vote until you are 18.
  1. If I am 15 can I vote?
  • Sorry, no. But still tell your Everglades friends about the event and remember to register next year!
  1. Can I be a legal resident but not a citizen?
  • I’m sorry, but you have to be a citizen to vote. But still, tell your friends about the event.
  1. How will this happen?
  • On Monday March 19 you will be called by classes and register in the auditorium.
  1. How do I get community service hours?
  • Go on twitter/tumblr and use the tag #ehsvote and link to this post or the facebook event. Take a screen shot of that and email me that picture (evergladeshistory@gmail.com) or send me a link to your tweet/tumblr post
  • To take a screen shot: press ctrl, print screen on your keyboard( if you are still confused click this link). Save the picture (use Microsoft Paint, Word, Word Pad, or anything you want as long as the picture is saved) and email me.
  • Also, link to this post or facebook event to your wall. Again, take a screen shot.
  • Email your EHS friends and take a screen shot.
  • So you get one hour for posting on your twitter, one hour for your tumblr, one hour for posting it on your facebook and one hour for inviting people (just take a screen shot), and one hour for your email (if you know any other way to spread this event, just take a screen shot)
  • This part is very important. When you email me send: your name, your grade, and your student ID number. Come to room 330 after school and your community service hour sheet will be signed off.

If you have questions, please email me or comment on the facebook event.

Comments

Second History Club Meeting, 9/19/2011

Meeting Commenced 3:01

Agenda

1. Elections Next Week

  • President
  • Vice President
  • Secretary
  • Treasurer
  • Historian

2. Hispanic/Fillipino Heritage Month

  • Las Vegas, contact Tony

3. Fundraising

  • Pops Corn
  • TerraCycle
  • Membership Drive
  • Matchmaking Activity
  • Frozen Yogurt
  • Bake Sale
  • Glow in the Dark Items
  • Henna Tattoos
  • Message in the Bottles

4. Transfer IOC Money Dues

5. Incentives

Dues are $5, with a t-shirt $10

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#meetings

#agenda

#minutes

#9/19/2011

#fund raising

Goals

 

Do

Ask to raise money in front of Wal-Mart/Target

  • T-Shirt Sales
  • Family Night at a restaurant
  • Have a car wash
  • Have a bake sale/lemonade stand
  • Transfer IOC Money
  • Give incentive to IOC
  • Matching Making Activity
  • Henna Tattoos
  • Glow in the Dark

Doing

  • Pops Corn, they want us to try samples
  • Frozen Yogurt Place
  • Pembroke Pines
  • Hispanic Heritage Month
  • Filipino Heritage Month

Done

Comments

First History Club Meeting of the Year

Brand new school year, news ideas, new room and hopefully officers to fill vacant positions.
Agenda:

  1. Officer Elections—when, where, and how they will happen
  2. Fundraising
  3. History Fair—let’s get ready
  4. Find a speaker for International Day of Peace
  5. Make a powerpoint presentation about the history of Labor day
  6. In Brazil, Independence Day is celebrated September 7, make a power point!

If you have any questions, feel free to contact me at this email, evergladeshistory@gmail.com address, or my personal email at reginajose396@gmail.com. Mr. Klasner’s
email is bruce.klasner@browardschools.com.

Regina Joseph

Saturday, August 20, 2011

National History Club, Room 330
Hope to see you there!
Note: If you didn’t get your hours from this summer/last year please come after school to have them filled out and signed. Thank you.


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