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When, if ever, is violence acceptable?
From The Editor, Black Lives Matter, free palestine, Collective Liberation Samanta Krishnapillai (she/her) From The Editor, Black Lives Matter, free palestine, Collective Liberation Samanta Krishnapillai (she/her)

When, if ever, is violence acceptable?

Malcolm X's stance on violence, framed by his iconic declaration "by any means necessary," underscores his nuanced and deeply pragmatic perspective. Notably, his unapologetic refusal to cater to whiteness, prioritizing Black liberation. This phrase encapsulates his belief in the right of oppressed individuals to defend themselves, highlighting a commitment to securing freedom, justice, and human dignity.

Malcolm X argued that in the face of systemic oppression and violence, communities must be prepared to protect themselves and assert their often violated human rights through whatever methods were effective and necessary. His perspective was not an endorsement of violence for its own sake but a recognition of the right to self-defence in the context of a society/peoples that were often left no other viable path to change.

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Let’s talk about what happened to Jaahnavi Kandula
Collective Liberation, Black Lives Matter, Diaspora, not your model minority Samanta Krishnapillai (she/her) Collective Liberation, Black Lives Matter, Diaspora, not your model minority Samanta Krishnapillai (she/her)

Let’s talk about what happened to Jaahnavi Kandula

Our timelines are covered with people— largely South Asians — who don’t usually talk about police violence, amplifying what happened to Jaahnavi Kandula.

If you’re talking about police violence for the first time, thank you. Thank you for engaging in a discourse that is often incorrectly labeled as ‘too political.’ It’s always scary the first time you do something new, so we want to thank you for taking this first step.

Our invitation to you is to take another step, and another after that. Because this may be your first time, but this has been a conversation that Black and Indigenous people have been leading for decades.

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Today is Mullivaikal Remembrance Day or Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day
Diaspora, Collective Liberation On Canada Project Diaspora, Collective Liberation On Canada Project

Today is Mullivaikal Remembrance Day or Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day

May 18 commemorates the 2009 genocide of Tamils by the government of Sri Lanka, and the global failure to intervene on behalf of human rights, yet again.

If you don't know what we're talking about, it is because, like nearly all stories of human rights violations against BIPOC (in Canada and around the world), this story didn't get the news coverage it deserved until the Tamil community in Canada took their cry for help to the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto.

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