Obe-Ron & Princess Rhia's Resistance

Obe-Ron & Princess Rhia's Resistance We are Pagans acting as a support and resource for those who wish to have a voice or who need support during the current changes in the U.S.

SURJ, a great activism group, has put out another spreadsheet for actions.  Please go to the link and follow instruction...
08/21/2025

SURJ, a great activism group, has put out another spreadsheet for actions. Please go to the link and follow instructions to easily let your voice be heard! Its not just about housing either...

Urge Congress to Invest in Affordable Homes in Fiscal Year 2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1E9AB2umcp/?mibextid=wwXIfr
08/19/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1E9AB2umcp/?mibextid=wwXIfr

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins announced plans to rescind the U.S. Forest Service’s 2001 Roadless Rule - putting over 150,000 acres of Western North Carolina's forests at risk. These are forests we all use for hiking, biking, birdwatching, etc.

Contact your representatives today and urge them to support the Roadless Area Conservation Act (RACA):

https://act.sierraclub.org/actions/National?actionId=AR0569577

Photo: Rob Campbell

https://www.facebook.com/share/1PLQXHnCzT/?mibextid=wwXIfr
08/11/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/1PLQXHnCzT/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Far to the south, in the river of grass the people call the Everglades, our Miccosukee relatives stand watch. This land is not just earth and water — it is a living relative, a protector, a keeper of memory. In the long-ago days, when the Seminole Wars came, these wetlands opened their arms to shelter the people. They still stand ready to do so again, if kept whole.

When builders came without respect, without the ceremony of asking, without speaking to the people or listening to the land, many hearts grew heavy. But the people did not stand in silence. The Miccosukee, joined by allies, took their voices to the courts and to the world. They reminded all who would hear: these waters are life, these rights are written in the old agreements and in the Creator’s law, and no one has the right to erase them.

And now — even if for a short time — the great machines have gone quiet. The judge has said, stop. This pause is a breath, a moment for the people and the land to gather strength together. In our way, we know even the smallest pause can turn the course of a river.

I see hope in this. I see the ancestors walking beside our relatives there, as they did when the great airport was stopped long ago. I see the spirits of the birds, the alligators, the plants, whispering encouragement to those who defend their home.

The lesson for us all is this: the circle is strong when we rise for one another. What happens in the Everglades matters here in Pimicikamak, and what happens here echoes there.

Stand with them in spirit, offer your prayers, speak their names in your lodges. For when we walk together — north and south, east and west — no wall, no fence, no false claim can stand for long. The land will remember us as those who came when she called.

This is how we win — by remembering we are never alone.

—Kanipawit Maskwa
John Gonzalez







Charlie Chaplin was considered a great silent, film actor speech, which was his first time using his voice in film, may ...
08/05/2025

Charlie Chaplin was considered a great silent, film actor speech, which was his first time using his voice in film, may have been his greatest, and is even more relevant to go than when he gave it

I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be an emperor. That’s not my business. I don’t want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone - if possible...

Marjorie Taylor Greene has introduced a bill criminalizing gender-affirming care for those under 18. Looking at the text...
07/25/2025

Marjorie Taylor Greene has introduced a bill criminalizing gender-affirming care for those under 18. Looking at the text, which includes some procedures which might be medically necessary for illnesses (such as cancer), could force a choice between being healthy or going to jail for 10 years. Write tour representatives , and get them to vote NO on this bill!

Text for H.R.1399 - 118th Congress (2023-2024): Protect Children’s Innocence Act

Which side do you choose?
07/17/2025

Which side do you choose?

https://act.aclu.org/a/july-action-callHelp stop attack on religious freedom and train rights! The ACLU  is having an ac...
07/17/2025

https://act.aclu.org/a/july-action-call

Help stop attack on religious freedom and train rights! The ACLU is having an action call on July 24! Come join in and see what you can do! 

I'm attending this event - sign up now to join me!

DO NOT READ THIS POST UNLESS YOU ARE FEELING STRONG. We do not post this against any group of people, but because of com...
07/16/2025

DO NOT READ THIS POST UNLESS YOU ARE FEELING STRONG. We do not post this against any group of people, but because of compassion and love for our fellow humans asking for suggestions or action to make this better.

This was sent to me by a friend who has been there…

 I swear to you. Before God. Before this wretched century. Before whatever last flicker of humanity may still remain in me, what I saw today was not life.

It was the collapse of everything that ever claimed to be sacred.

Once, Fridays in Gaza were holy.
Not because of tradition, but because they were tender.

A father would come home with fish, or perhaps a piece of chicken, and for one hour, we would eat like people.

We were poor, but not degraded.
We would smile across the table, thank God for a small plate of meat, and feel alive. We felt worthy of breath.

Even the poorest among us knew this dignity.
They saved all week. They endured hunger not out of habit, but for hope.
For that one day.
That one meal.
That illusion of a normal life.
But now?

Today is Friday.

And I walked through the streets of Gaza, not to celebrate, not even to feed, but to hunt for rice.

Rotten rice.
Gray grains that stick to your fingers and taste like nothing.
Anything. Anything at all to fool the stomach into silence.

My brother searched one market. I searched another.
We returned with crumbs.
We paid with the last coins we had.
They ask for gold in exchange for ash.
And we pay it, because the children must eat, and because we no longer dare to say what is fair.

But I have not come to speak about rice.
I have come to confess what I saw.
A truck passed by.
It was empty.
Its floor was covered in a thin layer of flour dust.
Just dust.
Not bags. Not bread. Only the trace of something that might once have saved a child.

And then I saw them.
Not rebels. Not criminals.
Children.

They ran, ran like hunted things, toward that truck. They climbed it with hands that have never held toys.
They fell to their knees as if before an altar.
And they began to scrape.

One had a broken lid.
Another, a piece of cardboard.
But the rest, the rest used their hands.
Their tongues.

They licked it.

Do you hear me?

They licked flour dust from rusted steel. From dirt. From the back of a truck that had already driven away.

One boy was laughing.
Not because he was happy, but because the body goes mad when it is starving.

Another was crying, quietly, like someone who no longer believes anyone is listening.

And I stood there.
With all my shame.
With my hands in my pockets, like a man waiting for a bus.
Like I wasn't watching the end of the world.

I wanted to scream.
But what scream can reach Heaven, when Heaven itself is deaf?

What words can I offer?
What words can explain the sound of a child's tongue scraping against rust for a taste of flour?

There are no metaphors left.
There is no beauty in this.
Only sin.
Only crime.
And we are all guilty.

You. Me.
The ones who sent the truck.
The ones who sent the planes.

And God?
If You are watching, then cry with us.
And if You are silent, then we are alone in this hell.

This is the twenty-first century.
But history has not moved forward.
It has swallowed its own children and called it progress.

I don't want to write this.
I want to unsee it.
I want to forget the boy who licked the floor.

But I can't.

Because I saw him.
Because he is real.
Because he is more real than all the words l've written.

And because if I forget him, then I am no longer human.

- Dr. Ezzideen from Gaza

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Candler, NC
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