Lily’s Reviews > Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine and the Foundations of a Movement > Status Update
Lily
is on page 74 of 158
“And then I realized it wasn’t about me at all; it wasn’t about the individual at all. It was about sending a message to large numbers of people whom they thought they could discourage from involvement in the freedom struggles at that time.”
— Mar 03, 2026 07:48PM
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Lily’s Previous Updates
Lily
is on page 117 of 158
“Racial segregation was instituted in the aftermath of slavery, in the aftermath of the black radical reconstruction, in an attempt to manage free black people.”
— 10 hours, 14 min ago
Lily
is on page 111 of 158
The personal is political. What happens in our public lives is reflected in our private. There’s alot of injustice in the worlds and a lot of exploitation. We have to be brave to stand up against injustice. Because there’s a lot occurring to keep us subdued and passive and unable to change the injustices occurring in the world.
— Mar 04, 2026 07:23PM
Lily
is on page 107 of 158
“Prisons are racism incarnate. As Michelle Alexander point out, they constitute the new Jim Crow. But also much more, as the lynchpins of the prison-industrial complex, they represent the increasing profitability of punishment. They represent the increasing global strategy of dealing with populations of people of colour and immigrant populations from the countries of the global south….”
— Mar 04, 2026 07:15PM
Lily
is on page 105 of 158
It’s important to look at things from an intersectional lens, or when assessing something to look at it from different or all-encompassing angles. For ex. The treatment of incarcerated women reveals a lot about the overarching system Vs. Just looking at it from the treatment of incarcerated men, but also women of colour in prison, men of colour in prison and intersections of gender and sexuality.
— Mar 04, 2026 02:30PM
Lily
is on page 100 of 158
Author encourages people “to think and act and struggle against that which is ideologically constituted as normal.” Because prisons are considered normal and it takes a lot to persuade people to think otherwise.
— Mar 04, 2026 02:28PM

