Wasn’t meant to be, just informative.
Have you watched Ana e Vitoria on Netflix? The film about the brazilian duo?
Hmm, no, I’ve never even heard of it before this ask, anon. Let me jot it down. So this is a scripted movie based on them, where they play themselves? Huh. Interesting. Thanks for the rec!
Juliantina kissed in a pool and we drown in that pool forever
Aww, anon, so dramatic! But yeah, that pool really holds a special place in Juliantina history, huh.
Has you ever watched La luciérnaga? (the firefly)? Is a Colombian movie. Is very interesting and wlw with a “happy ending”.
I…have heard of it. It’s on my list, for sure! But I haven’t watched it, no.
Just want to raise awareness for the Chicago Torture Justice Center, the first and only organization in the US providing trauma recovery services for survivors of police violence. You can donate here.
Public Health Experts Say the Pandemic Is Exactly Why Protests Must Continue
Public Health Experts Say the Pandemic Is Exactly Why Protests Must Continue
“It’s not a coincidence that we’re seeing protests against racism during a pandemic. Racism is dangerous to public health because black people experience disproportionate effects of the coronavirus, as Craven has documented extensively. Race can affect how difficult it is to get a test, whether drugs and vaccines are designed to work for you, whether health professionals believe and listen to you. Incarceration rates are higher for black people—the virus thrives in prison—as are rates for diseases that in turn exacerbate COVID-19. “The reason why we have such high levels of diabetes, hypertension, and asthma is directly linked to structural racism,” physician Uché Blackstock told Craven in March. “We’re already very vulnerable.””