ataxiwardance:

Five Things You Should Know About Fred Shuttlesworth

When legendary civil rights activist Reverend Fred L. Shuttlesworth died today, many Americans had no idea who he was or what he’d accomplished in his 89 years on earth. It’s an unfortunate reality that people often think Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X were the beginning and end of black activism in the Civil Rights era. In fact, nothing could be more wrong. From the 1950s onward, Shuttlesworth was a major factor in ending Jim Crow laws in the South, and many other oppressive forces throughout the United States. Here are the top five things you should know about him.

1. From the start of his career, Shuttlesworth, who was raised poor in Alabama, was fiery and obstinate. After Alabama officially banned the NAACP from operating within the state in 1956, Shuttlesworth, then a pastor, founded the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights. The ACMHR’s first major order of business was a Birmingham bus sit-in, during which Shuttlesworth and others boarded city buses and sat in the “whites only” sections. The ACMHR would eventually become charter member organization in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

2. He lived nearly nine decades, but many people tried to kill Shuttlesworth much earlier for his outspokenness. He was the target of two bomb attacks, one on his home and one on his church. And when Shuttlesworth tried to enroll his daughters in an all-white Birmingham school in 1957, an armed mob attacked him, beating him unconscious and stabbing his wife. The couple survived, and when a doctor remarked that Shuttlesworth was lucky to have avoided a concussion,Shuttlesworth said, “Doctor, the Lord knew I lived in a hard town, so he gave me a hard head.”

3. Though he worked closely with King, Shuttlesworth’s style was decidedly different. “Among the youthful ‘elders’ of the movement,” historian Diane McWhorter told The New York Times, “he was Martin Luther King’s most effective and insistent foil: blunt where King was soothing, driven where King was leisurely, and most important, confrontational where King was conciliatory—meaning, critically, that he was more upsetting than King in the eyes of the white public.” Despite their differences, King once called Shuttlesworth ”the most courageous civil rights fighter in the South.”

4. Shuttlesworth’s fiercest enemy in Birmingham was infamous public safety commissioner Bull Connor. Connor’s violent responses—attack dogs, fire hoses, billy clubs—to Shuttlesworth’s peaceful demonstrations were integral in changing America’s attitude about Jim Crow. “The televised images of Connor directing handlers of police dogs to attack unarmed demonstrators and firefighters’ using hoses to knock down children had a profound effect on American citizens’ view of the civil rights struggle,” says the Shuttlesworth Foundation’s website.

5. After his actions helped spawn the passage of the federal Civil Rights Act in 1964, Shuttlesworth continued fighting for justice in realms both racial and economic. In 1988 he founded the Shuttlesworth Housing Foundation to help low-income families own their own homes, and in 2004 he became president of the SCLC. A firebrand to the end, he resigned from the SCLC within months, saying “deceit, mistrust and a lack of spiritual discipline and truth have eaten at the core of this once-hallowed organization.” Three years ago, the city of Birmingham named its airport after Shuttlesworth. There are still no monuments named after Bull Connor.


Tags:

#Fred Shuttlesworth   #Civil Rights   #History   #Racism

Back To The Motor League: I am going to try to best explain what I witnessed at lunch today.

panasonicyouth:

I work in downtown San Francisco, in an area called South of Market (SoMa) that is literally that. It’s south of Market Street. I have a love-hate relationship with this part of the bay (which I elaborate on in an upcoming American Gods post) and lunchtime in downtown is a good example of that. I…

That…that…ahahahhaha…


Tags:

#I left two–TWO–Post It notes on your desk asking you what tie I should wear tomorrow AND YOU STILL HAVE NOT CIRCLED THE ANSWER AND RETURNE   #WHY DID YOU NOT REPLY TO MY EMAIL FORWARD I SENT YOU YESTERDAY. IT WAS FULL OF WONDERFUL POLITICAL INNUENDOS   #i almost want to write a fic about these two men and the absurdity that Angry Man always brings to the office   #san francisco   #what did i just witness   #tags original

We Are Magneton: js-ashby: Ugh, Ikr? I was SO CLOSE to coming out as nonbinary…

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wearemagneton:

brin-bellway:

More or less. It rather depends on how you define “furry”, but last I heard it was the word he’s using.

Mind you, he’s never mentioned it offline in front of me. (But then, he’s never mentioned that he smokes in front of me, either. He’s secretive like that, I guess.) I know because Mom leaves her email inbox open. While I was using her computer, I noticed a pseudonym in the “From” section with email titles of things Dad would talk about. I vaguely remembered hearing Dad had a Livejournal, so I put the name plus .livejournal.com into a browser and there it was. I remember my first thought was “I guess it runs in the family.”

It was because of him I first heard the term “otherkin”. Either he or someone in his commentariat linked to WikiFur. A bit of poking led me to the page on otherkin. (I don’t remember if there was as much focus on controversy at the time as there is now.) I didn’t think it fit at first: the people in the pages linked off the wiki entry talked about past lives and phantom limbs and other stuff I didn’t have. It took me a few years.

That’s pretty cool, actually.

Guh. I’m kind of envious of you—not having to deal with phantom limbs. For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been really hyper aware of Extra Parts—wings, mostly.

Also, what does it say about me that I’m more surprised your dad has an LJ than anything else? XD Far as I know, my parents stay away from internet communities. (And as bad as the Mom-Found-Your-Tumblr conversation would be, the Dad-I-Found-Your-LJ conversation seems like it’d be just as awkward.)
—PM

The latest conversation of [insert one of the forums Mom’s on] is a regular topic at our dinner table. When we can’t think of what to say next, “So Mom, what did you read online today?” (It’s best to have an interesting thing you read online of your own ready to share, in case she turns the question back on you.)

I was reading his LJ for months and months before telling him (technically I told Mom, but the two of them were keeping each other updated).

Mom’s reaction was, “We know. Didn’t he say something along the lines of ‘My daughter’s been reading this’ on his blog a couple months back?”

“No*.”

Turns out she was referring to the time he wondered if I would ever send him a non-private version of my diary for him to use as a source for his travelogue. He concluded probably not, but the wondering reminded me and it arrived in his inbox the next day. They did not know I’d been reading it since December (this was the following autumn). I don’t know if he ever figured out I read through the whole archive. (Way back in the archive, I found him talking about an ultrasound Mom had when pregnant with me. (Long after the fact. The archives don’t go that far back.) He answered “Do you want a boy or girl?” with “Human”, and the rest of the story was written as if he had been successful in this. Oh, how I laughed. (Okay, technically he was right. He said he had “a human baby”. He did. It just didn’t stay human.))

I can kind of imagine Mom’s thought process upon finding my Tumblr. Something along the lines of Doctor Who, Doctor Who, Doctor Who, right up there with the DS9 geeks in terms of utterly harmless things to get up to on the Internet. Wait, she’s talking about what it’s like to be otherkin?

No wonder when I sent her that feminist piece she replied with a complaint about its human-centric language**. I guess it runs in the family.

 

*So first I knew, then he knew I knew, then I knew he knew I knew. I think I just figured out where my tendency to keep secrets merely for the sake of keeping secrets came from.

**

You are not the authority on what “real” human beings are, and who qualifies as “real” and on what basis.  All human beings are real.

Yes, I know you’re tired of feeling disenfranchised.  It is a tiresome and loathsome thing to be and to feel.  But the tit-for-tat disenfranchisement of others is not going to solve that problem.  Solidarity has to start somewhere and it might as well be with you and me.

From Hanne Blank’s “Real Women”.

My response was “What about otherkin? She’s using ‘human being’ like that’s as wide a group as she needs, like it’s as wide as ‘person’. So much for not disenfranchising anyone.” She was surprised I’d thought of it. It was another one of those tempting moments. (“That’s me! That’s me she’s excluding, when she claims to be including everyone! I notice because it’s me!”)

(Hmm, that probably could be made into a Hammerhead/Octopus with a bit of condensing.)


Tags:

#Generic Rambling   #Otherkin   #reply via reblog

We Are Magneton: js-ashby: Ugh, Ikr? I was SO CLOSE to coming out as nonbinary…

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wearemagneton:

brin-bellway:

Ah, one of those moments.

Trivia question on pre-movie theatre screen: Who said this, “Sometimes, I just don’t understand human behaviour.”

Me: Every non-human ever.

Friend: Some humans too. Haven’t you ever felt like that?

Me: Uh…

*tempted to say “Like I said. Every non-human ever.”*

(bear in mind that basically everyone I know IRL is in this movie theatre with me)

(also at least two of them (including the “Haven’t you ever felt like that?” one) are against gay marriage and I can’t possibly expect them to be open-minded enough to take it well immediately or even at all)

(and I’m terrible at vocal word-wrangling, so I can’t really explain anything well out loud)

Me: …all the time.

(It was attributed to C-3PO, if you were wondering.)

(Parents first, if anyone. What with Dad’s furriness they’ll probably need less explanation and I can accuse them of double standards if they take it badly.)

(I like parentheticals.)

Oh my god PLEASE tell me your dad’s a furry. Because then he wins the Awesome Dad Award. XD

Also, yeah, I get that… my friends are pretty open-minded, but telling them about my multiplicity/nonbinarity*/being nonhuman in-world would make them look at me like I’d grown a second head before they ran for the hills. XD

*I just made that word up.

(I like parentheticals too. Also XD faces.)
—PM

More or less. It rather depends on how you define “furry”, but last I heard it was the word he’s using.

Mind you, he’s never mentioned it offline in front of me. (But then, he’s never mentioned that he smokes in front of me, either. He’s secretive like that, I guess.) I know because Mom leaves her email inbox open. While I was using her computer, I noticed a pseudonym in the “From” section with email titles of things Dad would talk about. I vaguely remembered hearing Dad had a Livejournal, so I put the name plus .livejournal.com into a browser and there it was. I remember my first thought was “I guess it runs in the family.”

It was because of him I first heard the term “otherkin”. Either he or someone in his commentariat linked to WikiFur. A bit of poking led me to the page on otherkin. (I don’t remember if there was as much focus on controversy at the time as there is now.) I didn’t think it fit at first: the people in the pages linked off the wiki entry talked about past lives and phantom limbs and other stuff I didn’t have. It took me a few years.


Tags:

#Otherkin   #coming out   #reply via reblog


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We Are Magneton: js-ashby: Ugh, Ikr? I was SO CLOSE to coming out as nonbinary…

js-ashby:

Ugh, Ikr? I was SO CLOSE to coming out as nonbinary today.

And I wussed out.
—PM

What, to everyone? I actually had a comment about Ace’s transness on one of my statuses (like I said something about how I’m not sure how I feel about my new therapist because she’s very…

Ah, one of those moments.

Trivia question on pre-movie theatre screen: Who said this, “Sometimes, I just don’t understand human behaviour.”

Me: Every non-human ever.

Friend: Some humans too. Haven’t you ever felt like that?

Me: Uh…

*tempted to say “Like I said. Every non-human ever.”*

(bear in mind that basically everyone I know IRL is in this movie theatre with me)

(also at least two of them (including the “Haven’t you ever felt like that?” one) are against gay marriage and I can’t possibly expect them to be open-minded enough to take it well immediately or even at all)

(and I’m terrible at vocal word-wrangling, so I can’t really explain anything well out loud)

Me: …all the time.

(It was attributed to C-3PO, if you were wondering.)

(Parents first, if anyone. What with Dad’s furriness they’ll probably need less explanation and I can accuse them of double standards if they take it badly.)

(I like parentheticals.)


Tags:

#angst   #otherkin   #coming out   #reply via reblog


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mooseings:

“Your Queen is your only legal move. Except you’ve already moved it twelve times which means there’s over four million volts running through it. That’s why they call it Live Chess.”


Tags:

#Doctor Who   #Eleven   #Eleventh Doctor   #I LOVE this concept   #Live Chess   #Mark Gatiss   #Matt Smith   #The Wedding Of River Song   #wedding of river song