Post reblogged from The Most Unpleasant Person You Know with 6 notes
What do you mean im not doing my homework, I’m in the libary, surfing tumblr, listening to watch the throne with a few random books on my lap.
I don’t know how you can expect anything more.
Source: jaapr
Photo reblogged from Woodland Marxist with 591 notes
CAT OWLS
buh
the most noble animals
Source: facebook.com
Photo reblogged from Woodland Marxist with 32 notes
—betterbemeta submitted:
OH MY GOD
Source: thearcanetheory
Link reblogged from Queer God of the Oppressed with 19 notes
Here is some news that the conservative critics of Venezuela’s leftist government will not publicize. The Chavistas announced that a new labour law, part of which will grant recognition to non-salaried work traditionally done by women, will come into effect this week. Full-time mothers will now be able to collect a pension.
(Photo: marcossalgado.info/flickr)
While there are a number of criticisms to be made of the Venezuelan government, the genius of the Bolivarian process is that it combines numerous forms of struggle against inequality. The most obvious lies in its commitment to economic redistribution, and measured by the Gini co-efficient, Venezuela has the lowest rate of inequality in Latin America. An equally significant form of struggle against inequality, however, lies in its pursuit of gender equity.One of the major theoretical criticisms of the economic redistribution model in more general terms, often advanced by post-modern and post-developmental theorists, has been from the vantage point of questions of identity. Theorists like the anthropologist Arturo Escobar have noted that economic growth does not necessarily transform status relations such as those oriented around gender, race, ethnicity, or sexuality; therefore some have contended that attempts at social change should place primacy, or at least equal emphasis, on the politics of difference. The question of difference: how can everyone in society be able to intervene with equal capacity when there is such significant variation in the recognition that we allot to diverse identities in society? Critics of traditional development have argued that the emphasis on economic redistribution, by either advocates of the market or the state, has ignored the crucial role that identity and diversity play in society. Economic re-allocation does not end the identity hierarchies that place women at a lower rung of the status ladder than men throughout Latin America.
The political philosopher Nancy Fraser has contended that advocates of cultural diversity implicitly start with the proposition that our identity is developed in interaction with others. Our self-esteem is constructed in relation to receiving acknowledgement from others and providing recognition to them; if a group is regularly presented with negative images of themselves, their self-esteem suffers. Non-recognition produces psychological injury: one’s self-perception becomes distorted. Therefore in order for groups to achieve full recognition from others, civil society actors maintain that there is a need to establish a system in which all actors can be full partners in social life. Feminists, both inside and outside the Bolivarian process, have advocated for social policies that encourage equal participation in all social institutions.
The Venezuelan government has made many progressive gains, with the most prominent example being the explicitly anti-sexist 1999 Constitution. This set of principles was the result of co-operation amongst members of the constitutional assembly’s Committee on Family and Women, the National Women’s Council and women’s civil society organizations. The constitutional assembly’s committee consulted women from every type of political campaign: legal rights, international agencies, academics, labour unions and small business leaders. The Constitution guaranteed women’s right to work, to health services, to social security and pensions. Most innovatively it recognized the monetary value of housework by, in principle, supporting housewives’ right to pensions. This week that principle has become a reality. Progressives around the world looking for ways to advance gender rights still have much to learn from Venezuela’s continuing social revolution.
Source: delarealidadd
Photo reblogged from The Most Unpleasant Person You Know with 13 notes
(via phantomjustice, jeffreymax)
TURN TO PAGE 15 TO KILL THE FUCK OUT OF THEM GODDAMNED JETS
Source: jeffreymax
Post reblogged from Queer God of the Oppressed with 10 notes
“Good news: Bragging about buying pornography with Bitcoins in order to unconvincingly win an Internet argument about the legitimacy of Bitcoins is now bannable. Also, you seriously just boasted about being able to use imaginary money in order to get some ugly butts markered with your user name in order to prove how much better you were than other people with Bitcoins. Christ.”— bitcoins (via teruprince)
Source: teruprince
Photo reblogged from A Good Cartoon with 5 notes
The Benghazi Paradox holds that the Republican statement “this scandal grows now” can be neither true nor false, because the scandal continues to grow despite the fact that there is no coverup to point to, yet the scandal continues to grow because the media “isn’t reporting” on the coverup that doesn’t exist, and so on ad infinitum. A good cartoon.
Post reblogged from Misanthropy Zone with 25 notes
You want to Kill All Men? Okay.
How about this… why don’t you go back in time and kill your father before he sired you into this world. This way he won’t have violated your mother with his evil penis, and you get the satisfaction of killing a male.
Deal?
“#kill all men #our lady of misandry #u mad radfems #u mad sis #trolling radfems #fedora revolution #anti-misandry #men’s rights #i need men’s rights because #why i need men’s rights #mra #mras”
omg
someone is really upset about not receiving the sex they believe they are entitled to
Source: lejacquelope
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