1. (Source: redpillnow)

     
  2. (Source: redpillnow)

     
  3. redpillnow:

    The media is bought and paid for by the big pharmaceutical companies. This is why they push pro-vaccine propaganda with no views presented from the “other side” despite the studies that show vaccines negatively impact neurological development. And the media NEVER mentions that the vaccine inserts say they have not been evaluated for carcinogenic or mutagenic potential, or impairment of fertility. Here are just a few of the thousands of headlines that push for unquestioning loyalty to vaccine manufacturers.

     

  4. "Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil."
    — Ephesians 6:11 (via redpillnow)
     
  5. kafkasgirlfriend:

    dopegirlfresh:

    darksilenceinsuburbia:

    Alice Smeets: The Ghetto Tarot

    Welcome to the Ghetto Tarot, a project from award-winning documentary photographer Alice Smeets and a group of Haitian artists known as Atis Rezistans. The idea was to take the classic Rider-Waite tarot deck of 78 cards and create a photographic version of each card using settings and objects in the vibrant ghetto of Haiti.

    As Smeets says, “The spirit of the Ghetto Tarot project is the inspiration to turn negative into positive while playing. The group of artists ‘Atiz Rezistans’ use trash to create art with their own visions that are a reflection of the beauty they see hidden within the waste. They are claiming the word ‘Ghetto,’ thus freeing themselves of its depreciating undertone and turning it into something beautiful.”

    website

    this is everything.

    @lostboylibrarian

    (via spiritpsyche)

     

  6. misandry-mermaid:

    I rarely see this mentioned so I wonder if people just don’t realize what a national travesty Mt. Rushmore is.

    The Black Hills is sacred land to the Oglala Lakota tribe.  The Oglala Lakota used to own that land through a treaty with the U.S.  I mean, it was their land pre-white-colonization, but then the US started to colonize it and later gave the Black Hills back to them through the Treaty of 1868.  Once gold was found on the land, however, prospectors migrated and set up shop in the 1870s. The government took back the Black Hills land, because of the gold. In 1927, Mount Rushmore was constructed into the hills.

    In simple terms: the colonizers stole the Oglala Lakota’s land, “gave” it back, found out it had capitalistic value, took it again, and then carved their own leader’s crinkley-ass white fucking faces into the mountains that were considered to be sacred, like do you realize how fucking MONSTROUS that is????

    (via kakalotl)

     
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  8. embodyilluminati:

    In the Orient, knowledge has always been related to the sacred and to spiritual perfection. To know has meant ultimately to be transformed by the very process of knowing… The Oriental sage has always embodied spiritual perfection; intelligence has been seen ultimately as a sacrament, and knowledge has been irrevocably related to the sacred and its actualization in the being of the knower. And this relation continues wherever and whenever tradition still survives despite all the vicissitudes of the modern world.

    - Seyyed Hossein Nasr, “Knowledge and The Sacred: The Gifford Lectures 1981”

    (via child-of-the-universe)

     

  9. (Source: priceofliberty)

     
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  11. On Dreamcatchers//

    thecuriousviolet:

    First of all, for those of you who are reading this and don’t know me, hi hello my name is Violet, I am a Muscogee Creek Native American.

    Second, I have been asked about dream catchers by many friends and strangers, so I am writing this post with my personal findings and opinions on the subject.

    Origin//
    •The dreamcatcher comes from the Ojibwe and Chippewa people. Traditionally, it is made from bent wood, sinew and one or two feathers. The sinew is weaved to mimick a spider’s web. In many native religions, including my own, Grandmother Spider played a huge role in the placement of the sun in the sky. Dreamcatchers were traditionally hung over children’s beds to trap their nightmares.

    Expansion//
    •During the 60s and 70s, the making of dreamcatchers became popular with other Native tribes, such as the Pueblo, Navajo, Lakota and Cherokee peoples. But as far as I’ve seen, the Ojibwe are the only traditional creators before the ‘pan-indian’ movement.

    Symbolism//
    •Dreamcatchers are a very popular gift among native peoples. They symbolize peace, the unity of all Natives and are often considered sweet gifts given out of love.

    Modernization//
    •Nowadays you’ll often find them with beads, colored leather, and multiple feathers hanging from the frame. Every Native Reservation produces and sells dreamcatchers, it seems. You can buy them at almost every powwow.
    •While traditionally hung above a bed frame, now they can be found as home decor and even on rear view mirror of cars. Some Natives view the dreamcatcher as the Christian equivalent of cheap plastic crosses sold at malls.
    •Sadly, outside of certified Native-made stores and powwows, dreamcatchers are often made and mass produced by underpaid workers who are not Native and do not practice Medicine in Asian sweatshops. These are cheap imitations and are insulting to our history and beliefs.

    How it works//
    •Every Native has the Medicine. It lives and comes from our Puyvfekcv, the fire within. There are specific people in each tribe, clan, and village who devote their lives to the practice and preservation of the Medicine. In my tribe, they are called the Heleshayv, the healers.
    •When a Native weaves a dreamcatcher, they are honoring Grandmother Spider and requesting her aid in the banishment of unpleasant dreams. I guess one could say that it is a form of prayer, and a request for blessing. The Native uses Medicine when they create, and so too is true with the dream catcher.
    •Plastic, cheap, non-native made reproductions of dreamcatchers, in my extensive experience, do not work.
    •A dreamcatcher should, in my experience, be cleansed in smoke and prayer every once in a while, because the dreamcatchers duty is to trap nightmares. So when too many accumulate, where are they supposed to go? They will often escape through the center and return from whence they came.

    Appropriation//
    •I do not recommend non-Natives owning a dreamcatcher, do to the religious and ceremonial ties to Native history that they carry. Much like frybread and spirit animals/totems, they have become a universally Native entity, carrying the spirit of Union amongst our people, and peace.
    •Also, if you are not Native, regularly cleansing a dreamcatcher can be difficult, as Grandmother Spider is part of our closed traditions, as is the sacred practice of Smudging, which is often used to cleanse it.
    •If you absolutely MUST have a piece of our culture, you must buy Native, or receive it from a Native as a gift. It will have no Medicine and will not work if you buy that cheap mass produced reproduction you see in gift shops. Don’t do it.
    •Respect the Spirit of the Dreamcatcher. •Respect Native culture.
    •Respect our wishes.
    •Respect us.

    Thank you for reading! Mvto!

    (via fatesruin)

     

  12. priceofliberty:

    We have no reason to believe that the TPP has improved much at all from the last leaked version released in August, and we won’t know until the U.S. Trade Representative releases the text. So as long as it contains a retroactive 20-year copyright term extension, bans on circumventing DRM, massively disproportionate punishments for copyright infringement, and rules that criminalize investigative journalists and whistleblowers, we have to do everything we can to stop this agreement from getting signed, ratified, and put into force.

    (via priceofliberty)

     
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  15. Fun fact

    bambina-theenative:

    fatbodypolitics:

    giizhigaate:

    the-yaadihla-girls:

    istamaza:

    thecuriousviolet:

    Native Americans weren’t allowed US citizenship until 1924.

    Let that sink in. We lived here first…for thousands of years. And less than a hundred years ago we were finally given citizenship.

    We also fought in WWI despite not being US citizens.

    In Arizona, natives weren’t granted the right to vote until 1948. Think how that type of neglect ties into resource colonization as infrastructure was developed within years prior. 

    In addition: the indigenous peoples of Canada were not recognized as Human Beings until the year 1960.
    Now let that shit sink in.

    In the US it wasn’t until 1968 that the Indian Civil Rights Act was passed and allowed for the right to freedom of speech / assembly / press, a jury trial, the right to an attorney etc. It’s so fucking frustrating.

    Native Americans still have to fight for our lands to this day. That’s that fucking bullshit.

    (via ollin-atl-deactivated20170303)