Ministry of Doubleplusgood Dope 2️⃣➕😊 – Telegram
Ministry of Doubleplusgood Dope 2️⃣😊
129 subscribers
4.66K photos
634 videos
9 files
5.62K links
Politics and Music...and Memes

Part of The Alembic Collective ⚗️ (@Alembic)
Download Telegram
Forwarded from Propaganda Posters
‘Their Super Race Idea Killed 25 Million – We Are in Danger So Long As That Idea Remains’, US poster, 1944.
https://redd.it/1g3aook
@r_propagandaposters
Forwarded from Klima-Kanal Campax
Die Demokratieinitiative braucht Deine Unterstützung! 🔥

Die Demokratie-Initiative ist im Schlussspurt 🏃🏽‍♂️
Es ist die erste VolksInitiative in der Schweiz, die eine visionäre Änderung für das reale Migrationsland Schweiz einfordert: *Einbürgerung ab 5 Jahren mit realistischen Integrationskriterien!* Ohne Hilfe von den grossen Parteien habe Freiwillige unermüdlich gesammelt!

👉 Es braucht nun noch 5‘000 Unterschriften bis am 31. Oktober
Hilf bitte mit, jede Stimme zählt🙏🏾

Bestelle Dir den Bogen 📝 und sammle Unterschriften in deiner WG, bei der Arbeit, bei Freund*innen und in deiner Familie

👉 Hier die A4-Bogen zum ausdrucken

👉Und hier kannst du vorfrankierte Unterschriftenbogen per Mail bestellen.
Forwarded from Radical Graffiti
"Do you believe in life after work?"
Seen in Marathon, Greece
Forwarded from Working Class History
Media
On this day, 15 October 1966, in Oakland, California, Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton met and set up the Black Panther Party for Self Defence. The Party would exist, despite heavy repression, until 1982 and ran a variety of programmes from free breakfasts for school children and community health clinics to armed citizen patrols and monitoring of the police. The group advocated for revolutionary socialism, and for the liberation of Black and all other oppressed peoples. Another little-mention fact about the group is that in the 1970s a majority of its membership were women and girls. It was eventually broken by violent state repression, including being targeted by the FBI's COINTELPRO operation, with many of its members killed or imprisoned. Learn more about the Panthers in these books by former members: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/collections/books/black-panthersTo access this link, click our link in bio # 1 then click this image
Forwarded from Ministry of good ideas
Good Idea: Start seeing the network

https://www.strangeloopcanon.com/p/seeing-like-a-network

As our connections with each other get tighter and information flows faster, our culture is changing fast. Back when information moved slower and was mainly controlled by sources like newspapers and TV, people got news in a more gradual, controlled way.
Now, with the internet and social media, information spreads almost instantly, leading to a more uniform culture and a quick shift to whatever the "current thing" is. This has some big side effects: we’re more polarized, traditional media doesn’t hold as much power, and people often feel overwhelmed by the constant flood of information.
This setup makes it easy for misinformation and outrage to go viral since only the most eye-catching stories get attention. So, even though we have more access to information than ever, our culture sometimes feels like it's on repeat, jumping from trend to trend, often fueled by frustration and outrage.

Seeing the world as a network, makes us realize how deeply interconnected we’ve become—both a powerful asset and a complex challenge. It means recognizing that ideas, trends, and emotions travel fast, impacting people across cultures almost instantly. This networked view also shows that our actions, opinions, and media consumption affect not just our close circles but resonate outward, shaping the larger cultural pulse. Embracing this perspective encourages us to interact more mindfully, choosing how and what we share or consume, knowing it all contributes to the broader social fabric.
In a country called Africa they know Christoph Blocher, the former right-wing justice minister of Switzerland. Surprisingly, his image isn't the best there. /sarcasm
Forwarded from Working Class History
Media
On this day, 16 October 1968, Black sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised their gloved fists in a Black power salute during the playing of the US national anthem as they were awarded gold and bronze medals at the Olympics. Smith would later clarify: “I wore a black glove to represent social power or Black power; I wore socks, not shoes, to represent poverty; I wore a black scarf around my neck to symbolise the lynching, the hangings that Black folks went through while building this country.” Following the protest, they were largely ostracised by the US sporting establishment. While Time magazine now considers their picture of the event as the most iconic photograph of all time, back then they wrote: "'Faster, Higher, Stronger' is the motto of the Olympic Games. 'Angrier, nastier, uglier' better describes the scene in Mexico City last week." Back home, both Smith and Carlos were subject to abuse and they and their families received death threats. The Australian athlete Peter Norman, the other man on the podium, also showed solidarity with the protest wearing an 'Olympic Project for Human Rights' badge in protest of his government's 'White Australia' policy. He too would also be reprimanded by his nation's Olympic authorities and was not picked for the following Olympic games — although it is disputed whether this was as a consequence of his stand in Mexico. After Norman’s sudden death in 2006, Smith and Carlos helped carry his coffin and delivered eulogies at his funeral.This story and hundreds of others are featured in our book, Working Class History: Everyday Acts of Resistance & Rebellion, available with global shipping in our online store: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/products/working-class-history-everyday-acts-resistance-rebellion-bookTo access this link, click our link in bio # 1 then click this image