¿Con qué pasos restauramos la independencia económica, el privilegio de los medios y la autoridad profesional para los sobrevivientes de discapacidad severa, violencia y tráfico sexual?
Durch welche Schritte stellen wir die wirtschaftliche Unabhängigkeit, das Medienprivileg und die berufliche Autorität von Überlebenden schwerer Behinderung, Gewalt und Sexhandel wieder her?
Par quelles étapes restaurons-nous l'indépendance économique, le privilège des médias et l'autorité professionnelle aux survivants de handicaps graves, de violence et de trafic sexuel?
Trwy ba gamau ydyn ni'n adfer annibyniaeth economaidd, braint cyfryngau, ac awdurdod proffesiynol i oroeswyr anabledd difrifol, trais a masnachu rhyw?
Forwarded from 🔊 Intuitive Social Diaspora • Emergent Community Judaism • Ancient Hebrew, Our Yiddishes, & Languages of Lineage • IPR •••
Pocket Casts
“It’s The Little Things” - Awake with Rabbi Lauren Holtzblatt
I noticed the other day, we have a yellow rose bush on our front lawn that blooms every year. As I was out with my son yesterday smelling the roses, I saw something...
Vesper Moore's post, including this article by Stefanie Lyn Kaufman-Mthimkhulu vehemently supported by community members:
' We need more peer support and community response networks. We need to put power back into the hands of the people. We need the people most impacted to not only give input but to run and be responsible for the inception of all system services. We need those who are marginalized to take the lead in each community not out of expectation or tokenization but humanization.
“Replace the cops with mental health workers!” is a really well-intentioned statement, but the current mental health system is also a white-dominated, violent, coercive, and unaccountable structure that disproportionately harms people of color.” — Morgan M. Page '
https://medium.com/@stefkaufman/we-dont-need-cops-to-become-social-workers-we-need-peer-support-b8e6c4ffe87a
https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2667570800186841&id=100008018411161
' We need more peer support and community response networks. We need to put power back into the hands of the people. We need the people most impacted to not only give input but to run and be responsible for the inception of all system services. We need those who are marginalized to take the lead in each community not out of expectation or tokenization but humanization.
“Replace the cops with mental health workers!” is a really well-intentioned statement, but the current mental health system is also a white-dominated, violent, coercive, and unaccountable structure that disproportionately harms people of color.” — Morgan M. Page '
https://medium.com/@stefkaufman/we-dont-need-cops-to-become-social-workers-we-need-peer-support-b8e6c4ffe87a
https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2667570800186841&id=100008018411161
Medium
We Don’t Need Cops to Become Social Workers: We Need Peer Support + Community Response Networks
Social workers and psychiatric institutions complicit with the carceral state.
Forwarded from 🔊 Intuitive Social Welsh • @IntuitiveSocialLanguage • @IntuitiveEmergent Eisteddfodau • IPR •••
' Cymraeg, or Welsh as its known in English, is, according to the last count, spoken by 23% of the population. Up until 1850, 90% of the population spoke Welsh, but it has since faced a great many challenges which at times almost led to its extinction.
Potentially up to 4,000 years old, Welsh is one of the oldest living languages in Europe. Welsh originates from the Celtic language spoken by the ancient Britons. Before the Roman invasion Celtic languages were spoken across Europe as far as Turkey. Celtic language came to Britain around 600BC, with one version evolving into Brythonic which formed the basis of Welsh, Cornish and Breton.
When the Anglo-Saxons colonised Britain, Brythonic speakers were split up into those in northern England speaking Cumbric, those in the south-west speaking an early version of Cornish, and those speaking primitive Welsh. The Welsh spoken in the 12th to 14th centuries, or Middle Welsh, is what the earliest surviving manuscripts of the Mabinogion, its famous literary collection, are written in, and it is a Welsh which speakers today can more or less understand. '
https://theculturetrip.com/europe/united-kingdom/wales/articles/a-brief-history-of-the-welsh-language/
Potentially up to 4,000 years old, Welsh is one of the oldest living languages in Europe. Welsh originates from the Celtic language spoken by the ancient Britons. Before the Roman invasion Celtic languages were spoken across Europe as far as Turkey. Celtic language came to Britain around 600BC, with one version evolving into Brythonic which formed the basis of Welsh, Cornish and Breton.
When the Anglo-Saxons colonised Britain, Brythonic speakers were split up into those in northern England speaking Cumbric, those in the south-west speaking an early version of Cornish, and those speaking primitive Welsh. The Welsh spoken in the 12th to 14th centuries, or Middle Welsh, is what the earliest surviving manuscripts of the Mabinogion, its famous literary collection, are written in, and it is a Welsh which speakers today can more or less understand. '
https://theculturetrip.com/europe/united-kingdom/wales/articles/a-brief-history-of-the-welsh-language/
Culture Trip
A Brief History of the Welsh Language
Read all about the fascinating history of the very old language of Welsh, still an official language of Wales to this day.
' Would you be surprised if I told you that, far from being a land of monoglots, there are ten indigenous languages spoken today in the British Isles? Yet we are very quick to tell ourselves that we're rubbish at languages. We are linguistically isolated monoglots, marooned on a cluster of islands on the edge of the Atlantic. If we were in the mix of mainland Europe, we tell ourselves, we'd be blethering away in at least two languages.
Except, as you read this, people the length of these islands are using indigenous languages other than English to communicate with friends, family, teachers, colleagues and public services. That they are in the minority doesn't meant that they don't exist. In fact, the numbers of primary school-age speakers are growing; almost a quarter of school pupils in Wales are educated through the medium of Welsh, Northern Ireland is home to 30 Irish-medium schools, Scotland's capital has just opened a new, dedicated Gaelic school due to increasing demand, and the Isle of Man has a Manx-medium school.
All of these children are also fluent in English; indeed, in the case of Gaelic-medium pupils, they outperform their English-educated counterparts in English tests. Their bilingualism bucks the monoglot trend of the majority. '
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2013/oct/29/dont-neglect-uks-indigenous-languages?CMP=share_btn_fb
Except, as you read this, people the length of these islands are using indigenous languages other than English to communicate with friends, family, teachers, colleagues and public services. That they are in the minority doesn't meant that they don't exist. In fact, the numbers of primary school-age speakers are growing; almost a quarter of school pupils in Wales are educated through the medium of Welsh, Northern Ireland is home to 30 Irish-medium schools, Scotland's capital has just opened a new, dedicated Gaelic school due to increasing demand, and the Isle of Man has a Manx-medium school.
All of these children are also fluent in English; indeed, in the case of Gaelic-medium pupils, they outperform their English-educated counterparts in English tests. Their bilingualism bucks the monoglot trend of the majority. '
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2013/oct/29/dont-neglect-uks-indigenous-languages?CMP=share_btn_fb
the Guardian
Don't neglect the UK's indigenous languages
Why the UK can, and should, make space for our indigenous minority languages
Forwarded from 🔊 Intuitive Social Welsh • @IntuitiveSocialLanguage • @IntuitiveEmergent Eisteddfodau • IPR •••
Pocket Casts
Faith and Farming - All Things Considered
Mary Stallard hears how faith can be a resource to the farming community during Covid-19
Forwarded from 🔊 @IntuitiveEmergent • Live Collaborative Emergent Media • Intuitive Public Radio • IPR •••
The Mythic Masculine
#7 | Thriving Life & A Prayer for All Men - Pat McCabe (Woman Stands Shining) — The Mythic Masculine
Today I’m happy to share my interview with Pat McCabe , an indigenous grandmother, activist, artist, and ceremonial leader. She is an international voice for global peace, and someone I seem to continually cross paths with at new paradigm gatherings around…
Forwarded from 🔊 @IntuitiveAI • Helpful, Loving AI • Artifice, Intelligence; Artful Intel • Intuitive Public Radio • IPR •••
Though EFC and we surely have our differences, his recent astrological piece describes the oft-invisible violence of traumatic robotization, highly relevant to recent network discussions.
' Mars Conjunct Chiron: The Initiation
We are about to experience the first Mars conjunction to Chiron in Aries. The most recent conjunction of Mars to Chiron occurred in late Pisces on Dec. 29, 2018, during Chiron's transition from Pisces to Aries. Mars and Chiron are conjunct about every two years, following the cycle of Mars.
I could say a lot about this aspect -- it's one of my favorites of the lot, inviting the full activation of Chiron by Mars. However, in Aries, this aspect has special meaning. That's because I consider Aries to be the scene of the crime where electrical technology has turned people into a swarm of tribal robots.
This aspect, exact July 14, can have a few possible manifestations. Under the best circumstances (balanced person, communicative environment), it's about the healthy and bold expression of individuality. Chiron's mission is to turn injuries and wounds into healing gifts. This happens over time, with experience and maturity.
Under less ideal circumstances, this aspect could provoke a deep feeling of injury, related to the sensation of loss of identity. As the McLuhans have noted, violence is an attempt to find one's identity. Total immersion in electrical technology, particularly digital technology, has gone a long way to deplete people's sense of being.
So this could also result in the eruption of aggression and conflict as associated with being clueless about one's actual reality -- which would be a misplaced attempt to "find oneself." I guess we have to resort to desperate measures after living online for 20 years -- that makes anything and everything in the physical world too dangerous to even consider.
In the end, that is what we're experiencing with this whole virus thingie: the reason it's the result of digital consciousness is not just that it's been amplified and distorted by social media and 24-hour news feeds, which make it impossible to tell which way is up, unless you work with a research team.
The real crisis is that from the cool, clean, and most of all disembodied standpoint of the digital universe, anything pertaining to the body is diseased and disgusting. And that has taken us a long way from home. '
http://planetwaves.net/astrologynews/1746688953.html
' Mars Conjunct Chiron: The Initiation
We are about to experience the first Mars conjunction to Chiron in Aries. The most recent conjunction of Mars to Chiron occurred in late Pisces on Dec. 29, 2018, during Chiron's transition from Pisces to Aries. Mars and Chiron are conjunct about every two years, following the cycle of Mars.
I could say a lot about this aspect -- it's one of my favorites of the lot, inviting the full activation of Chiron by Mars. However, in Aries, this aspect has special meaning. That's because I consider Aries to be the scene of the crime where electrical technology has turned people into a swarm of tribal robots.
This aspect, exact July 14, can have a few possible manifestations. Under the best circumstances (balanced person, communicative environment), it's about the healthy and bold expression of individuality. Chiron's mission is to turn injuries and wounds into healing gifts. This happens over time, with experience and maturity.
Under less ideal circumstances, this aspect could provoke a deep feeling of injury, related to the sensation of loss of identity. As the McLuhans have noted, violence is an attempt to find one's identity. Total immersion in electrical technology, particularly digital technology, has gone a long way to deplete people's sense of being.
So this could also result in the eruption of aggression and conflict as associated with being clueless about one's actual reality -- which would be a misplaced attempt to "find oneself." I guess we have to resort to desperate measures after living online for 20 years -- that makes anything and everything in the physical world too dangerous to even consider.
In the end, that is what we're experiencing with this whole virus thingie: the reason it's the result of digital consciousness is not just that it's been amplified and distorted by social media and 24-hour news feeds, which make it impossible to tell which way is up, unless you work with a research team.
The real crisis is that from the cool, clean, and most of all disembodied standpoint of the digital universe, anything pertaining to the body is diseased and disgusting. And that has taken us a long way from home. '
http://planetwaves.net/astrologynews/1746688953.html
planetwaves.net
Planet Waves :: Mercury Direct, Mars Conjunct Chiron, Schedule Notes
Mercury has been retrograde in Cancer since June 18, during the long-forgotten solstice cluster. We are now in range of Mercury stationing direct, which occurs at 4:26 am EDT on Sunday, July 12.
Forwarded from 🔊 @IntuitiveAI • Helpful, Loving AI • Artifice, Intelligence; Artful Intel • Intuitive Public Radio • IPR •••
“At electric speeds, we, not messages, are sent. It is an old observation that on the phone or on the air you are in more than one place at a time, minus the physical body that you once used to define identity. The cybernaut abandons his body and physical identity and self (including gender) whenever he embarks on each trek into cyberspace. The conditions for disorientation are complete: out of body, out of time, out of space.”
-- Eric McLuhan
https://www.facebook.com/630978909/posts/10158753323483910/
-- Eric McLuhan
https://www.facebook.com/630978909/posts/10158753323483910/
' Congratulations HELISET TŦE SḰÁL – ‘Let the Languages Live’ – International Conference on Indigenous Languages was awarded the Best Conference in Canada by the Canadian Special Events Magazine at the Canadian Event Awards. We are so thrilled to see Connect Seven Group recognized for their hard work and achievements organizing this incredible event.
We hope that this national acknowledgement will bring increased awareness of Indigenous language revitalization and strengthen support for more events like this in the future. '
https://www.facebook.com/groups/languagerights.derechoslinguisticos/permalink/2702956506608283/
We hope that this national acknowledgement will bring increased awareness of Indigenous language revitalization and strengthen support for more events like this in the future. '
https://www.facebook.com/groups/languagerights.derechoslinguisticos/permalink/2702956506608283/
Watch this profound healing resource:
' How does your story go on?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwTFV3XFRb4&t=382s&fbclid=IwAR0Hr5w4FD-bno_EjkIFvc7f4RwXdSs-Z30AD9ThGBDUMe-pYmHl_tGFBf8 '
https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=604414203536387&id=217484825562662 🌈
' How does your story go on?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwTFV3XFRb4&t=382s&fbclid=IwAR0Hr5w4FD-bno_EjkIFvc7f4RwXdSs-Z30AD9ThGBDUMe-pYmHl_tGFBf8 '
https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=604414203536387&id=217484825562662 🌈
YouTube
Earth Talk - Tatterhood, a story told by Martin Shaw
As part of his Earth Talk "Entering The Bone House - The Skill of Making a Home for Story" at Schumacher College, Martin Shaw tells the story of "Tatterhood".
About Martin Shaw
Martin is author of “Snowy Tower: Parzival and the Wet, Black Branch of Language”…
About Martin Shaw
Martin is author of “Snowy Tower: Parzival and the Wet, Black Branch of Language”…