I think I'm going to wait a good while before I put any more music out.
Like, a "decent amount of time between albums" while, unlike the gap between Nostalgia and w/e (read: six months).
w/e is legit my best work and in order to really give it a good successor I'm going to need to take my time and maybe learn the quirks of some new genres (I really wanna try out d'n'b but I feel like it's gonna take a bit to come up with anything truly badass on my own with it).
hey friends just popping in to say a lil hint again to please fucking stop with the orientalist anti-dprk propaganda and alarming unquestioning belief in sources from the country’s political enemies
I DID IT
I FOUND WHAT MAY BE THE MOST WHACK SJW POST OF ALL TIME
More people have said that and been killed than there are thorium decay products.
DPRK is North Korea and that blogger probably means they believe North Korea is made to look bad by its political enemies (i.e. South Korea and the United States), and that the image presented by their government-censored propaganda of a happy, functioning nation is accurate.
>Brutal black-on-black slavery was common in Africa for thousands of years
Much less known fact: although records of African culture at that time are scarce in comparison to those of European culture, we do know that Mvemba a Nzinga, known to Europeans by his conversion name as Alfonso I of the Kongo Empire, wrote a series of letters to Kings Manuel I and João III of Portugal, in which he complained that Portuguese sailors were buying free people from brigands and enslaving them.
Eventually, an agreement was reached and Alfonso agreed to regulate the trade within Kongo. Slavery existed there, but not nearly on the scale of the Atlantic slave trade.
>Brutal black-on-black slavery was common in Africa for thousands of years
Much less known fact: although records of African culture at that time are scarce in comparison to those of European culture, we do know that Mvemba a Nzinga, known to Europeans by his conversion name as Alfonso I of the Kongo Empire, wrote a series of letters to Kings Manuel I and João III of Portugal, in which he complained that Portuguese sailors were buying free people from brigands and enslaving them.
Eventually, an agreement was reached and Alfonso agreed to regulate the trade within Kongo. Slavery existed there, but not nearly on the scale of the Atlantic slave trade.
pieces of those letters were in one of my history books. prrrrrobably the most depressing thing in them
I am no expert, but I am given to understand that slavery's been all over the place forever
Doesn't make it any better
It has been. Its role in Ancient Greece and Rome is well-known.
But the sheer scale of the Atlantic slave trade was unprecedented. That obviously doesn't make the earlier instances of slavery not a major human rights atrocity, but ime racists who wish to downplay the brutality of the Europeans' enslavement of Africans, or to suggest that the issues of slavery and racism are somehow separate, like to equate the Atlantic slave trade with earlier forms of slavery in a way that is incredibly misleading.
"Black people can be terrible too?" Yeah, people tend to be terrible. If only there was a part of the government that wrote laws to keep people from being terrible. Oh, but there was. But they didn't. Because they were racist.
I tried like eight times to make high-larious recording of me jumping on Sociopathic Squid's head while I have "Tolerated" by Freeway play in the background, but every time I try to do it with a different program some particular part fails to take.
So y'know, fuck it. I'm not gonna do it.
Enjoy this secondhand description of a video that would've been mildly funny at best.
Comments
why is sacbee reporting about a texas state senate race
also TX-SD18 remains in Team Red control; does not go to runoff
i had not heard about this before
spoilers: a minute or two in, you will actually get to see what happened to the bridge, and it is pretty astonishing
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
I DID IT
I FOUND WHAT MAY BE THE MOST WHACK SJW POST OF ALL TIME
no tumblr
this is not a blog that i would like
please stop
...I forget what the solution is
Two shows down, one to go.
for your own sake
Much less known fact: although records of African culture at that time are scarce in comparison to those of European culture, we do know that Mvemba a Nzinga, known to Europeans by his conversion name as Alfonso I of the Kongo Empire, wrote a series of letters to Kings Manuel I and João III of Portugal, in which he complained that Portuguese sailors were buying free people from brigands and enslaving them.
Eventually, an agreement was reached and Alfonso agreed to regulate the trade within Kongo. Slavery existed there, but not nearly on the scale of the Atlantic slave trade.
Doesn't make it any better
It has been. Its role in Ancient Greece and Rome is well-known.
But the sheer scale of the Atlantic slave trade was unprecedented. That obviously doesn't make the earlier instances of slavery not a major human rights atrocity, but ime racists who wish to downplay the brutality of the Europeans' enslavement of Africans, or to suggest that the issues of slavery and racism are somehow separate, like to equate the Atlantic slave trade with earlier forms of slavery in a way that is incredibly misleading.
he's even meaner than Tails
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
it can be done, though