From Kerri Kelly (CTZNWELL) <[email protected]>
Subject They're coming for you too
Date February 24, 2022 1:12 AM
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First, we’ve got a special Community Meet Up TOMORROW [[link removed]](7EST) featuring Octavia Raheem, author of Pause. Rest. Be. [[link removed]] who will be leading a radical practice of rest. Join us!
Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse…Texas is literally waging a war on trans kids. [[link removed]]
Gov Greg Abbott has officially directed Family and Protective Services to begin investigating all trans children in Texas and prosecuting their parents as child abusers. He has also instructed all teachers, doctors, and caregivers to begin reporting any trans students they see.
These attacks on trans people are happening alongside abortion bans, voter suppression legislation, don’t say gay bills, anti-mask panic, and absurd restrictions of books, history and words in the classroom.
In a recent episode of Movement Memos, Kelly Hayes noted “The public’s creeping tolerance for the dehumanization of targeted communities is ultimately what enables atrocity. When dehumanization is codified, and that goes unchallenged, we are always looking at a cycle of escalation.” [[link removed]]
It reminds me of what Resmaa and Rev angel were preaching in last week’s Embodying Social Justice Summit [[link removed]]. “They’re coming for you too”, they said, referring to how, despite the false assumption of security, white supremacy is coming for white people too. White supremacy was always designed to protect power at all costs. And if white people don’t start to take the threat seriously and get some skin in the game, we won’t ever defeat white supremacy.
Kerri (she/her)
Art by @ctznwell
As liberation movements bloomed, they offered a vision of reproductive justice that was about equality, not just “choice.” How Black Feminists Defined Abortion Rights. [[link removed]] [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
@mskellymhayes and @chasestrangio talk about the avalanche of anti-trans legislation [[link removed]]Republicans have been generating, the role of fascist politics in this onslaught, and the scarcity of solidarity. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
The dirty secret of inflation: corporations are jacking up prices and profits. [[link removed]]And if Democrats fail to speak to the realities of the economic moment, it could cost them in the midterms. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Stop covering elections as if white women are the only voters that matter. [[link removed]]When there is too much focus on white women it is to the detriment of women of color and women’s collective political power. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Paul Farmer remodeled the field of global health to make it more human [[link removed]] - an approach based on what people need, not on the limits of what wealthy nations will give them. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Black Climate Week [[link removed]] honors the innovative climate solutions and environmental justice work that Black folks have been leading for years, while simultaneously calling in philanthropy & the media to do a better job centering Black voices from the ground up and the top down. To create equitable climate solutions that honor the leadership, voices, and stories of Black communities, philanthropy MUST dismantle historical barriers & move forward with transparency, accountability & solidarity. Here is five Black-led environmental organizations you should learn about and amplify today:
New Alpha CDC [[link removed]]
PS Equity [[link removed]]
RootspringsMN [[link removed]]
Soulardarity [[link removed]]
UrbanTilth [[link removed]]
And check out this essential reading list! [[link removed]]
Art by @100isnow with permission
As we are trying to live into a culture of accountability, we believe in learning in public. And so we want to share a bit about how we messed up, what we are learning and how we are committed to doing better. It was brought to our attention last week that it is not enough to source and attribute art in WELLREAD but to go further - to ask for permission, build relationships and offer to pay for usage when requested. This feels particularly important at a time when dominant systems fail to value and compensate artists for their work (hi spotify). We regret not doing more due diligence to build relationships with the artists we feature here and are committed to doing better to uplift and support the people who make this newsletter possible. We are sharing this with the hopes that you will learn with us and maybe do more/different in in how you source, credit, compensate and uplift artists in your work.
Art by @ctznwell
What does your activism look like?
Art by @ryanlemere with permission Words by Katie Lonke
CTZNWELL is community powered and crowd-sourced. That’s how we keep it real. Please consider joining us on Patreon [[link removed]] for as little as $2/month so that we can keep doing the work of creating content that matters for CTZNs who care.

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