
my favorite photo in 2017 at Women’s March 🚺
spot the difference
they didn’t even censor her nipples
[Sign 1: Pull up
the people
Pull up
the poor][Sign 2: a rainbow flag which reads:
Who thrives?
Who dies?
Whose body matters?
Whose history survives?
Who gets policed?
Who is safe?
Who is missing?]
#DiversifyAgentCarter in pictures | my twitter
The “Women Guerrillas” corps trains in Manila, Philippines in 1941. #DiversifyAgentCarter pic.twitter.com/7zia1Rr2vW
— Jennifer de Guzman (@Jennifer_deG) May 9, 2015
My grandfather was an Air Force instructor to Tuskeegee Airmen before & during WWII. #DiversifyAgentCarter pic.twitter.com/3QoURyx2pf
— Starfishncoffee (@starfishncoffee) May 9, 2015
#DiversifyAgentCarter MT @womenshistory: Maggie Gee, 1 of only 2 Chinese-Am women to serve in the WASP during WWII. pic.twitter.com/1kMwd0SQKG
— Helen Shin (@H_X_S) May 9, 2015
1928 pilot license photo of Ms. Pancho Barnes, who broke Amelia Earhart’s air speed record. http://t.co/ov1rzvi9b3 pic.twitter.com/WYUewz0fuo
— Saladin Ahmed (@saladinahmed) May 9, 2015
1940s superspy Senorita Rio, the first Latina lead character in US comics. #DiversifyAgentCarter pic.twitter.com/xsQQX5lb1G
— Saladin Ahmed (@saladinahmed) May 9, 2015
#DiversifyAgentCarter because Katherine Sui Fun Cheung was the first Asian Am woman to get a pilots license in 1932! pic.twitter.com/PnMRJCwe3I
— UbeEmpress (@ubeempress) May 8, 2015
My Arab great-grandma, a detective & civil defense director in 1950s NYC. These women existed. #DiversifyAgentCarter pic.twitter.com/YGVcadaadT
— Saladin Ahmed (@saladinahmed) May 9, 2015
#DiversifyAgentCarter because of this book on my Amazon wish list about the history of gay men and women during WWII. http://t.co/UFD1DIdvsd
— Jennifer Matarese (@trollprincess) May 9, 2015
I’m at the women of color call to action summit right now and this is pretty much the dealie.
feminists really need to be better about access tbh
- At your supposedly radical events is there wheelchair access? that includes lifts and ample floor space as well as ramps. Is there a sensory room? Are there interpreters? Have you ensured there are no flashing lights? Is there a qualified first aider?
- If you’re printing leaflets is the text readable? Is it in a dyslexic-friendly font? Is there any braille option?
- On your websites do you provide image descriptions? Do your videos have subtitles? And a transcript?
- Do you summarise your theory and essays? Or just expect everyone to read your 5k jargon-filled discussion?
and this isn’t an exhaustive list or even going into attitudinal barriers like please stop and think about your disabled sisters and how you are actively excluding us from your movements and what you can do to change that