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@KeraSauR

🌈 Kāi Tahu Storyteller » Recovering Med student » Climate Justice » Indigenous & Disability Rights » Protect Papatūānuku🌿 » »

Tāmaki Makaurau, Aotearoa (NZ)
Vrijeme pridruživanja: listopad 2011.
Rođen/a 05. travnja

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  1. Prikvačeni tweet

    So I just ran into Greta Thunberg and I have some thoughts ...

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  2. On the way up to listening to podcast on green imperialism & indigenous rights. White supremacy and western imperialism ARE climate change. Dismantling these systems are the ONLY way we can prevent more .

    Selfie of Kera in the car - she is wearing glasses, pounamu earrings and a white activist t-shirt. She  looks unimpressed.
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  3. proslijedio/la je Tweet

    BREAKING Indigenous youth and allies have peacefully occupied Minister Dan Vandal’s office on Treaty 1 territory in solidarity with land defenders resisting RCMP and violence

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  4. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    5. sij

    Hereditary Chiefs Evict from Territory

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  5. proslijedio/la je Tweet

    Imagine the trauma caused by a lifetime of suppressing your own essence and replacing it with a consciously-generated persona that takes 100% of your brain's power to support, just because your natural way of being is not understood or valued by the majority of people.

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  6. proslijedio/la je Tweet

    Can we stop congratulating Pākehā doing the bare minimum.

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  7. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    prije 17 sati

    But there's this other thing where I just can't cognitively keep in touch or reach out the way I used to. Most emails sit in my inbox at least a week before I have the juice to respond. It regularly takes me a few days to process text messages. Unplanned calls are draining. 3/

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  8. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    prije 17 sati

    Because it's one thing to talk about how other people don't always know how to show up for us. That's real and painful and adjecent to what I'm talking about. And there are the boundaries that I need to enforce now to stay on an even keel. They put up more distance, fine. 2/

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  9. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    prije 17 sati

    I would love it if we could talk more about how chronic illness makes it hard to show up for other people. I am not the kind of friend I used to be and whenever I really think about that I feel sad and guilty. 1/

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  10. If you’re producing media, especially about marginalised communities, your participants deserve to understand what your project is actually about so they can give informed consent. So no, if you’re going to be evasive about details, I’m not going to be in your film, Janice. 🤯

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  11. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    4. velj

    I get confused by statements like this one. What did we expect the United States to be when it was a state built on indigenous genocides then slavery, then institutionalized racism and exploitation of labor What else can this country produce if it's not imperialism?

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  12. I use sarcasm a lot online, so going to try to do better with this:

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  13. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    4. velj

    Imperialism / Colonisation took our language away from us. Don’t place this blame on anyone of us. Even if you dislike a person you attack their kaupapa if it’s not legit. Please break this cycle of laughing at our whānau expense and feelings.

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  14. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    4. velj

    Ok I’m just going to remind you something. Having a laugh at a māori mans pronouciation of Te reo is not only detrimental to that person but also the people who see your comments. That makes people feel more whakamā about the fact they don’t know their own language.

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  15. 4. velj
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  16. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    4. velj
    Odgovor korisniku/ci

    Yep. Every public servant makes a personal commitment to te tiriti when they sign an employment contract but 99% of them are never held accountable to that commitment and most of them don’t even understand what it means.

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  17. proslijedio/la je Tweet
    4. velj

    It has become ever more evident in my observation of Government departments that many do not understand Te Tiriti o Waitangi. If you ask “do you honour Te Tiriti?” Automatic answer is yes. But then you ask them to explain how and suddenly they’re silent and can’t answer.

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  18. 4. velj

    Ka nui tērā! Check out this fantastic and thoughtful thread about representation within te ao Māori 🙌🏽

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  19. 4. velj
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  20. 4. velj

    It’s great that lots of businesses & organisations want to “do their bit” for . However, times have changed. Turning off lights & recycling is not enough anymore (if it ever was) If you’re not talking structural change you’re not “doing your bit”.

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  21. 4. velj

    I think the context in Aotearoa is a bit different - if you have whakapapa no matter how far back, and you identify then cool as, but I think this raises a really important concern as I see *so many* ppl passing off being indigenous and skirting around the issue for “woke points”

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