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The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt

The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt

The homelessness crisis has a clear connection to climate. As natural disasters increase in frequency and intensity, more people will have their housing destroyed. And for those who are already unhoused, extreme weather adds to the The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt in contrast I will get this dangers they face. Along with their organizing work around L.A.’s homelessness, Orozco currently serves as a youth board member on the Future Coalition’s Youth Direct Action Fund, where they help redistribute funds to those in need. “It’s really accessible for on-the-ground resource redistribution,” says Orozco. “There’s been requests for research, mutual aid, and for art materials for marches or strikes.” They also recently participated in the Redwood Forest Defense, taking actions to protect redwood trees—such as organizing educational hikes and protesting clear-cutting logging sites—and are involved in LA Youth Uprising. “It’s a plan for youth development resources, as an alternative to the incarceration of youth and the juvenile system in L.A.,” says Orozco. “It reallocates funds from probation to this youth development department, then supports community-based organizations to connect with youth.”


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Official The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt

This weekend, Orozco will also be helping organize a Farce of July event in L.A., which helps honor the The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt in contrast I will get this history of Native people. “It’s an all-nations community concert gathering with speakers, vendors, and mutual aid,” says Orozco. No matter the work they’re doing, Orozco sees the efforts of young people at the core of making communities a better place. “It’s been amazing to see,” says Orozco. “All our worlds are connected in some way.” Danielle Rey Frank understood from a young age that her community’s water flow was important. It’s her culture’s lifeline. “The Trinity River runs through the heart of the Hoopa Indian Reservation, and our home is beautiful—it’s built around the river,” says Frank. She grew up fishing for salmon on the river and doing her Hoopa culture’s boat dance ceremonies, where “we perform our boat dances on top of the river in canoes dressed in regalia,” says Frank. “It’s a world-renewing ceremony. It’s meant to balance the good and the bad in the world.”


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Top The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt

The homelessness crisis has a clear connection to climate. As natural disasters increase in frequency and intensity, more people will have their housing destroyed. And for those who are already unhoused, extreme weather adds to the The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt in contrast I will get this dangers they face. Along with their organizing work around L.A.’s homelessness, Orozco currently serves as a youth board member on the Future Coalition’s Youth Direct Action Fund, where they help redistribute funds to those in need. “It’s really accessible for on-the-ground resource redistribution,” says Orozco. “There’s been requests for research, mutual aid, and for art materials for marches or strikes.” They also recently participated in the Redwood Forest Defense, taking actions to protect redwood trees—such as organizing educational hikes and protesting clear-cutting logging sites—and are involved in LA Youth Uprising. “It’s a plan for youth development resources, as an alternative to the incarceration of youth and the juvenile system in L.A.,” says Orozco. “It reallocates funds from probation to this youth development department, then supports community-based organizations to connect with youth.”


This weekend, Orozco will also be helping organize a Farce of July event in L.A., which helps honor the The Jim.my Fund K Cancer Shirt in contrast I will get this history of Native people. “It’s an all-nations community concert gathering with speakers, vendors, and mutual aid,” says Orozco. No matter the work they’re doing, Orozco sees the efforts of young people at the core of making communities a better place. “It’s been amazing to see,” says Orozco. “All our worlds are connected in some way.” Danielle Rey Frank understood from a young age that her community’s water flow was important. It’s her culture’s lifeline. “The Trinity River runs through the heart of the Hoopa Indian Reservation, and our home is beautiful—it’s built around the river,” says Frank. She grew up fishing for salmon on the river and doing her Hoopa culture’s boat dance ceremonies, where “we perform our boat dances on top of the river in canoes dressed in regalia,” says Frank. “It’s a world-renewing ceremony. It’s meant to balance the good and the bad in the world.”

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