(Source: jalwhite, via xxqueerxedgexx)
People of color, women, and gays — who now have greater access to the centers of influence that ever before — are under pressure to be well-behaved when talking about their struggles. There is an expectation that we can talk about sins but no one must be identified as a sinner: newspapers love to describe words or deeds as “racially charged” even in those cases when it would be more honest to say “racist”; we agree that there is rampant misogyny, but misogynists are nowhere to be found; homophobia is a problem but no one is homophobic. One cumulative effect of this policed language is that when someone dares to point out something as obvious as white privilege, it is seen as unduly provocative. Marginalized voices in America have fewer and fewer avenues to speak plainly about what they suffer; the effect of this enforced civility is that those voices are falsified or blocked entirely from the discourse.
— Excerpt from Teju Cole’s essay “The White Savior Industrial Complex” (via xxqueerxedgexx)
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Lady Blah-Zay!
Blyss Blaze turnt @ Glitoris
Those Actual Pain leggings were a birthday gift from yours truly.
Fierce!
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Hurrah……I can finally be a fan now the creature has won the Race
Oh yes i knew the antichrist before she was a superstar
So excited that this CD came in the mail today - ‘Voguing and the House Ballroom Scene of New York City 1989-92’! I came across the book a few months ago and then saw that there was a CD release as well. It comes as a limited edition 3CD pack that includes a bonus Junior Vasquez mix CD. There are also six postcards by photographer Chantal Regnault.
Oh, and yes, we just went from Witches, Arvo Part, Alchemy, and now to Voguing. For me they’re all part of the same tapestry. Get into it!


