"A-Z of Hope: People-Powered Solutions to the Cost of Living Climate Crisis"

"A-Z of Hope: People-Powered Solutions to the Cost of Living Climate Crisis"

"A-Z of Hope: People-Powered Solutions to the Cost of Living Climate Crisis"

"A-Z of Hope: People-Powered Solutions to the Cost of Living Climate Crisis" A ‘powerful’ (‘50501’) A–Z guide with real-world solutions

The Sequential Artists Workshop (SAW) has worked with young Iranian comics creators to put together a book of comics called _Young in Iran_. This project is about giving young artists living under an authoritarian regime a voice. The kickstarter campaign had successfully raised double their goal, but was recently canceled because, well, Iran. So they're restarting their fundraising efforts, this time from the SAW website. Please support this amazing project by preordering a copy so these young Iranian artists can be heard!

From the SAW website:
"NOTE: NO MONEY HAS OR WILL EVER CHANGE HANDS BETWEEN SAW AND ANY ENTITIES IN IRAN, so long as international sanctions are in effect."

SAW has always been committed to supporting marginalized voices, and this is no different. The book is finished - it just needs to be printed and shipped to you. Order yours now. Thanks for reading, and please share!

https://www.sequentialartistsworkshop.org/blog/2026/2/20/young-in-iran-relisting

#comics #IndyComics #MarginalizedVoices #GenZ #fundraiser

[PREVIEW IMAGE DESCRIPTION: A panel showing birds flying across a young woman's face. Her dark hair is long and uncovered. The words Young in Iran are written above and below the panel, which is superimposed over a drawing of a woman covered entirely except for her face. Surrounding the woman is a field of reddish eyes on a blue background.]

God I Feel Like I’m Choking: Relisting Young In Iran — Sequential Artists Workshop

The facts: Kickstarter suspended our campaign for Young in Iran , on Feb 18, 2026, a few days before it’s completion, and after it was more than 200% funded. We respect their decision. You can order here, now.

Sequential Artists Workshop
Double Consciousness #duet #marginalizedvoices #blackpeople #perspective #survival #unique #safety

YouTube

When Bullies Punch Down, I Punch Back (and Why I’m Done Being Quiet)

I hate bullies. I hate them with a passion. Not in a casual, eye-roll way. I mean a deep, lived-in dislike that comes from decades of being on the receiving end of their cruelty.

I was born with a lazy eye, clinically known as strabismus. It is part of my body. It is part of my face. It is something I did not choose and cannot control. And for as long as I can remember, it has been an open invitation for strangers, classmates, and now internet randos to say something slick, “funny,” or outright cruel.

If you have ever been bullied for your appearance, your body, your condition, your disability, your neurodivergence, your accent, or simply for existing a little outside the norm, you already know this story. It starts young. It hurts deeply. And at first, it makes you cry.

I cried. A lot.

But at some point, crying stopped working.

The moment anger replaced shame

There was a turning point in my childhood where sadness hardened into anger. Not the kind of anger that destroys you from the inside, but the kind that wakes you up. The kind that says, “No. I am not the problem here.”

Bullies taught me several things, whether they meant to or not.

They taught me that bullies are scared human beings.
They taught me that bullies suffer deeply.
They taught me that bullies will grab onto anything they perceive as smaller, different, or vulnerable so they can punch down and feel powerful for five fleeting seconds.

I am not offering some groundbreaking psychological insight here. We have all heard it before. Hurt people hurt people.

But here is where I draw the line.

I refuse to be hurt by hurt people.

Once I understood how deeply insecure bullies actually are, something shifted in me. I stopped internalizing their words. I stopped assuming they were right. And I started talking back.

Why I stopped being polite about my pain

When someone is bold enough to comment on my body, my eye, or my condition, something I cannot change, then they have forfeited my politeness.

That realization is how I survived that part of my childhood.

I matched their energy.
I named their behavior.
I made it clear I was not ashamed.

Was it always graceful? No.
Was it effective? Absolutely.

Because bullies rely on silence. They rely on you shrinking. They rely on shame doing their work for them.

When you speak up, when you push back, when you show them that their words do not own you, their power evaporates. They are suddenly exposed for what they are: insecure people flailing for control.

Screenshot 1

Online bullies are not different. They are louder.

Fast forward to adulthood, and the setting has changed, but the behavior has not. The playground is now a comment section. The whispers are now public replies. The cruelty is now dressed up as “jokes.”

Recently, I received a comment on one of my videos that leaned on an old, lazy, ableist joke about my eye. The kind of joke that bullies think is clever because they have heard it echoed a thousand times before.

I responded.

Not because I needed validation.
Not because I was hurt.
But because I refuse to be silent.

Online or offline, I will call out nasty behavior when I see it. I will point to it directly and say, “This is what you are doing, and it is not cute.”

This blog post is part of that same refusal.

Where my confidence really came from

I need to say this clearly: I did not get here alone.

I was fortunate. Deeply fortunate.

My grandmother raised me to know there was nothing wrong with me. She did not minimize my pain, but she never let me believe the cruelty I faced was deserved. She taught me that the problem was never my face, my eye, or my existence. The problem was always the people who felt entitled to comment on it.

That foundation matters.

Because when you grow up being told you are whole, you are far less likely to believe people who try to tear you apart.

Thanks to her, I learned how to stand up for myself. I learned how to take up space. I learned how to speak without apologizing for my body.

Screenshot

The truth bullies do not want you to see

Here is the part that makes bullies uncomfortable.

The joke is never really about you.

The joke is about their emptiness.

People who know and love themselves do not need to mock someone else’s body to feel joy. People who are secure do not punch down. People who are at peace do not need to humiliate others for entertainment.

Ableist jokes are not humor. They are confessions.

They confess fear.
They confess self-loathing.
They confess a desperate need to feel above someone, anyone, for a brief moment.

That is why I can say, without hesitation, that the joke is on him. I know myself. I love myself. And I do not need to tear someone else apart to feel worthy.

Bullies cannot say the same.

If you are being bullied, read this slowly

If you are reading this and you are being bullied right now, I want you to hear this clearly.

The problem is not you existing.

The problem is not your body.

The problem is not your condition.


The problem is not your disability.


The problem is not your difference.

The problem is the bully who cannot stand to see you exist because your existence reminds them of the hatred they carry toward themselves.

You do not owe anyone silence.
You do not owe anyone softness.
You do not owe anyone understanding at the expense of your dignity.

Whether you choose to clap back, block, educate, or walk away, the choice is yours. Power looks different for everyone. What matters is that you do not internalize their cruelty as truth.

You are not too much.
You are not broken.
You are not wrong for taking up space.

And if no one has told you this lately, let me say it plainly.

You deserve to exist loudly, confidently, and unapologetically.

Even when bullies wish you would disappear.

Especially then.

#ableism #bodyShaming #callingOutHarm #ConfidenceBuilding #disabilityAdvocacy #disabilityVisibility #LatinaWriterPerspective #livedExperience #marginalizedVoices #onlineBullying #OnlineHarassment #PersonalEssay #Resilience #selfLove #selfWorth #standingUpForYourself #strabismusAwareness #traumaAndHealing

Look - I've only been on Mastodon/Fediverse since 2022. I'm a non-techy person who has been perpetually online since early 90s. There's never been a fully safe space for an outspoken, disabled POC person like me - in any online community. Even going back to Usenet days - I was a minority. Every single SM I've been on has been majority white folks. Same with the Fedi. We need more diversity everywhere - online & offline.

I'm not leaving this platform due to being a minority. I'm staying & will fight for my presence & for fellow marginalized POC presences. I have always had to fight, almost my entire life - for space & to be included as a visibly disabled POC woman who is loud as heck with issues close to my heart & soul.

I can't remember when I didn't have to fight for that. My experiences here now are vastly different than in 2022. I still get some racist jerks who do their cowardly racist shit. I'm not letting those racist fuckers run me off here. FUCK THEM. I'm staying & they can go fuck off.

#POCVoices #PeopleWithDisabilities #MarginalizedVoices #WomenOfTheResistance #POCWomen #FuckRacism #NotLeaving

Wenn Menschen wie ich politisch Stellung beziehen, kommt sofort der immer gleiche alte ableistische Reflex: Wir seien "missbraucht", "vorgeschoben" oder "manipuliert". Dahinter steckt kein Zufall, es ist eine Strategie.⬇️

#DisabilityJustice #NothingAboutUsWithoutUs #Disability #IntersectionalFeminism #QueerAndDisabled #AntiAbleism #Ableism #AntiRacism #QueerResistance #DisabledAndProud #Solidarity #Solidarität #Inklusion #SolidarityIsPower #MarginalizedVoices #Behinderung #FaceSMA

Hype for the Future 15A: Why Amherst, Northampton, and Hadley?

The Five Colleges region of Western Massachusetts is highly notable for sharing novaTop views on anarchism, decoloniality, intersectional feminism, post-Marxism, degrowth, and ecologism. Each of the six listed concepts is highly celebrated within the region, particularly out of a deep understanding that capitalism creates dystopia and harms the entire population in devastating ways across the board without escape.

https://novatopflex.wordpress.com/2025/11/15/hype-for-the-future-15a-why-amherst-northampton-and-hadley/

Hype for the Future 15A: Why Amherst, Northampton, and Hadley?

The Five Colleges region of Western Massachusetts is highly notable for sharing novaTop views on anarchism, decoloniality, intersectional feminism, post-Marxism, degrowth, and ecologism. Each of th…

novaTopFlex

𝟯 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗱 𝗥𝗲𝘃𝗶𝗲𝘄: “𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗳𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗠𝘆𝘁𝗵𝘀” 𝗯𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝗯𝗶𝗵 𝗔𝗹𝗮𝗺𝗲𝗱𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗲 -

Two essays which move reader into discomfiture: how much of what we read and how we think about it is selected to assuage, to cater even to liberal sense of "comfort"?

#bookreviews #literature #books #bookworm #book #read #readreadread #3words #rabihalameddine #comfortingmyths #nonfiction #reading #publishing #marginalizedvoices #translation #politics #art