a lot of people i’ve interacted with still think the whole chiquita death squads thing was only a rumor so I wanted to point out that they owned up to it and got fined.
so a corporation literally funded right wing terrorists to kill innocent people and only got fined. $25 million. chiquita has annual revenues of $3 billion. that should really have been a wake up call to anyone thinking corporations are treated unfairly, but it wasn’t. this is capitalism.
Pepsi is also directly responsible for the coup of Allende. Allende was actually supposed to win the 1963 election, but was unable to bc corporations like Pepsi poured millions into his opponent’s campaign. In return, his opponent promised to protect their investments. In 1970, when Allende finally won, the CEO of PepsiCo explicitly demanded President Nixon stage a coup against Allende bc as a socialist, he would threaten Pepsi’s and other foreign investments. Pressured by these corporations, Nixon eventually took action https://www.theguardian.com/business/1998/nov/08/observerbusiness.theobserver
speaking, uh, as a formerly-trafficked sex worker, it’s extremely difficult to come forward as a trafficking victim in countries where sex work is criminalized; you just… get criminalized under those same anti-prostitution laws. of course reported trafficking would increase when the sole fact of coming forward as a sex worker at all no longer endangers you.
This line of argument is the same one that you see with conservatives who point to the increase in divorce rates as proof that making divorce safer is endangering marriage, while ignoring the massive drops in domestic abuse, murder, and suicide.
It’s a shot argument with them, and it’s a shot argument here.
In WWI, when they introduced helmets, they saw a sudden spike in head injuries.
What the casual observer may miss was that they were seeing the increase because of a dramatic decrease in deaths from head wounds.
@seananmcguire and everyone else reblogging this: if you care about us at all, i’m fucking begging you, you need to stand for us. there are 22 thousand notes on this right now. there were maybe 90 people at the int’l whore’s day protest in my city this year and that was a much higher-than-expected turnout.
we’re dying. i cannot stress this enough. we are being killed, we are being attacked, we are being raped, and the same is for trafficking victims, trafficking survivors, and wholly “consensual” sex workers. and as much as i see posts like this go viral, at the same time i don’t see allyship. nobody’s standing with us. half the notes on this are “lol op’s a terf”, half the comments are about autism or divorce, and all i see is more people who don’t find us worthwhile on our own.
here’s a fact about criminalization: when you’ve got a prostitution rap—which, to reiterate, you’ll get whether or not you’re “consensually” in the field, and often even if you’re a minor—you’re “tainted”. you’re damaged goods. you might be on a sex offender registry by default.
good luck getting an apartment. good luck getting an above-board job. criminalization is a vicious cycle that more often than not keeps us in sex work, whether or not we wanted to be here in the first place and whether or not we want to be here now.
we don’t have other options. the government is the most efficient pimp there is.
so, please, i’m literally begging you, if you care about us at all. if you think my life has any value at all, if you think my siblings’ lives have any value at all. fight for us. show up for us. call your local politicians. support local organizations fighting for sex workers and trafficking victims. volunteer in harm reduction campaigns. attend protests and sit-ins. there’s a bunch.
the international day to end violence against sex workers is december 17; i hope to run into some of you there, if i’m alive to make it.
you can usually find a capital at the beginning of a sentence (Le train entre en gare) and of a proper noun (first name, city, country, planet…)
II. at the beginning of sentences :
you capitalise a/ the first letter of the first mot of a sentence, b/ the first word after an hyphen (un trait d’union -) or a colon (un deux-points 🙂 that expressed direct speech (ex : Elle m’a répondu : “ Je ne viendrai pas. “, c/ at the beginning of verses in classic poetry (ex : Maître Corbeau, sur un arbre perché…)
III. at the beginning of proper nouns :
you capitalise a/ the first letter of a first name or last name (Marianne Dumaret), nb : the preposition in compound names and the article in compound surnames don’t take a capital, ex : Jean de La Fontaine, Pierrot le Fou, b/ the first letter of titles (Madame la Comtesse, Votre Altesse), c/ the first letter of the names of locations, historical monuments or political institutions (la Loire, la Bastille, l’Assemblée nationale), nb : when a location has a compound noun, nouns take a capital but articles or prepositions don’t (Trouville-sur-Mer), d/ the first letter of the nouns of social and cultural institutions (la Sécurité sociale, l’Académie française), e/ the first letter of nouns expressing historical periods (les guerres de Religion, la Libération, la Renaissance)…
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Experimental Saturday
I don’t know what to say. I cooked everything in the house. I guess I’m compensating for the past few (well, more than few) weekends I spent working. 🤗