June 2013
5 posts
May 2013
6 posts
Long story short, I’ve been watching a LOT of television shows.
The most recent of which is Suits. If you haven’t watched it, you should watch it. Unless you’re not into witty, character driven, and thought provoking tv shows… at which point you should just go read Lindsay Lohan’s twitter feed or buy Snooki’s most recent book.
While watching the show for 5 hours straight, I came to see a lot of similarities between the story and my life. Yes, humans are inherently programmed to find patterns and commonality and truth be told, that’s probably what makes this show hit me so hard. My mind WANTS to relate to the show. Mike Ross and Harvey Specter live a life that I’ve always seen myself fulfilling. Not specifically in a law firm in New York, but the lifestyle they live, the way they talk, the way they assert themselves, the luxuries that they enjoy, the glamour, the obstacles they face, and the solutions they create…. I just want it.
It hits me hard because I watch all of this from a dinky home, in a low to medium income neighborhood, whilst attending a state university paid for by grants, without a car, without a job, and just dreaming of the day I one day make it. I know I’m not close and that is what makes watching this show so daunting.
But not to worry - If I’ve felt anything while watching Suits, it’s that I fucking want “success” and I want it bad. Luckily for me, I already know where to start and I’ve already started on my journey. Suits has served as an inspiration to me and it has shown me the life I can enjoy when i finally get there.
The struggle is only starting, I’m going to get to the top.
This is a random ass fcking post with lots of random tangents
First original post in a LOOONNGG time
I feel inspired
Life is what you make of it… and it’s going to be my bitch.
Fuck… I feel like I have ADHD, my mind keeps jumping.
This is probably a good place to end.
Royce D.
5.29.13
April 2013
7 posts
White privilege is knowing that even if the Boston Marathon bomber turns out to be white, his or her identity will not result in white folks generally being singled out for suspicion by law enforcement, or the TSA, or the FBI.White privilege is knowing that even if the bomber turns out to be white, no one will call for whites to be profiled as terrorists as a result, subjected to special screening, or threatened with deportation.
White privilege is knowing that if the bomber turns out to be white, he or she will be viewed as an exception to an otherwise non-white rule, an aberration, an anomaly, and that he or she will be able to join the ranks of Tim McVeigh and Terry Nichols and Ted Kaczynski and Eric Rudolph and Joe Stack and George Metesky and Byron De La Beckwith and Bobby Frank Cherry and Thomas Blanton and Herman Frank Cash and Robert Chambliss and James von Brunn and Robert Mathews and David_Lane and Michael F. Griffin and Paul Hill and John Salvi and James Kopp and Luke Helder and James David Adkisson and Scott Roeder and Shelley Shannon and Wade Michael Page and Byron Williams and Kevin Harpham and William Krar and Judith Bruey and Edward Feltus and Raymond Kirk Dillard and Adam Lynn Cunningham and Bonnell Hughes and Randall Garrett Cole and James Ray McElroy and Michael Gorbey and Daniel Cowart and Paul Schlesselman and Frederick Thomas and Paul Ross Evans and Matt Goldsby and Jimmy Simmons and Kathy Simmons and Kaye Wiggins and Patricia Hughes and Jeremy Dunahoe and David McMenemy and Bobby Joe Rogers and Francis Grady and Demetrius Van Crocker and Floyd Raymond Looker, among the pantheon of white people who engage in politically motivated violence meant to terrorize and kill, but whose actions result in the assumption of absolutely nothing about white people generally, or white Christians in particular.
And white privilege is being able to know nothing about the crimes committed by most of the terrorists listed above — indeed, never to have so much as heard most of their names — let alone to make assumptions about the role that their racial or ethnic identity may have played in their crimes.
White privilege is knowing that if the Boston bomber turns out to be white, we will not be asked to denounce him or her, so as to prove our own loyalties to the common national good. It is knowing that the next time a cop sees one of us standing on the sidewalk cheering on runners in a marathon, that cop will say exactly nothing to us as a result.
White privilege is knowing that if you are a white student from Nebraska — as opposed to, say, a student from Saudi Arabia — that no one, and I mean no one would think it important to detain and question you in the wake of a bombing such as the one at the Boston Marathon.
And white privilege is knowing that if this bomber turns out to be white, the United States government will not bomb whatever corn field or mountain town or stale suburb from which said bomber came, just to ensure that others like him or her don’t get any ideas. And if he turns out to be a member of the Irish Republican Army we won’t bomb Dublin. And if he’s an Italian American Catholic we won’t bomb the Vatican.
In short, white privilege is the thing that allows you (if you’re white) — and me — to view tragic events like this as merely horrific, and from the perspective of pure and innocent victims, rather than having to wonder, and to look over one’s shoulder, and to ask even if only in hushed tones, whether those we pass on the street might think that somehow we were involved.
” —Tim Wise (via callingoutbigotry)If our love is tragedy, why are you my remedy?
If our love’s insanity, why are you my clarity?
Yup.
March 2013
3 posts
Just a new project I’m working on. (: I think you guys will enjoy it. <3
JUST A DEMO BY THE WAY. NOT FINALIZED AT ALL.
