Ok so it actually worked cause we got served with an eviction and owe $1739 and we have like 1300 and my moms friend said hes gonna pau the rest that we owe and take us out to dinner
I’m gonna reblog this every time I see it because never forget.
This hurts my heart
This has just finished me
Rest in Power young soldier
i think as a tumblr citizen i have to reblog this..and as a tumblr community we all should no matter how dope ur blog is..this cannot be forgotten. only we can keep this alive..cuz u no dam well the news wont and ppl will soon rarely talk about it.
If you are like me, feeling very stuck on the East Coast while you hear about the atrocities that the protectors are facing as they fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline, here are a few helpful links:
If you feel as though you can not contribute in a monetary fashion, you can always sign a petition like this one or call these numbers and denounce their activities at Standing Rock and discuss your opposition to the pipeline:
North Dakota Gov. Jack Dalrymple, 701-328-2200
The White House, 202-456-1111
Energy Transfer Partners, the pipeline owner: Lee Hanse,
executive vice president, 210-403-6455 Glenn Emery, vice president,
210-403-6762 Michael (Cliff) Waters, lead analyst, 713-989-2404
Army Corps of Engineers, which issued the permit allowing
construction of the pipeline, even though it would cross under the
Missouri River within a half-mile of the Sioux reservation boundary,
202-761-5903
(most links were taken fromthis article) (hyperlinks are bolded)
Kendrick Eagle, a young Indigenous man, met President Obama in 2014 and was inspired by him. Now he wants the president to come through with his promise to the people at Standing Rock.
Let’s make sure POTUS sees this.
President Obama, you met Kendrick Eagle in 2014 & promised you’d have his back.
Fidel Castro, the harbinger of the 20th century Latin American communist wave and leader of the Cuban revolution, died overnight Friday, the Associated Press reported. He was 90.
Castro, who stepped down from power in 2008 permanently after nearly five decades as prime minister and president of the island, had made few public appearances in recent months.
Castro’s sightings were increasingly bookended by rumors of his death, which often set social media abuzz for hours. One of his last appearances was in April, meeting a group of Venezuelan visitors to Cuba, shortly before his brother, Raul, sat down with US President Obama to discuss the thawing of relations between the two countries, the first meeting of its kind since 1956.