“We are the granddaughters of the witches you weren't able to burn.”
― Tish Thawer, The Witches of BlackBrook
It figures that any story like her’s could only be a fairytale, but Saint Marie? She means so much more to us. She is the personification of all my goals. The pinnacle of success in my eyes. She lived out her days as a false saint, worshiped by the women sent to beat her down, all because one of them couldn't hide their true nature for long. Talk about reparations. They say the devil in her radiated, that these false seraphim burned around her and turned to dust for their sins. They’ll say what she had was a devil, but I know better. She was a holy messenger, she …show more content…
That we cannot be women without being subservient? That anything less than white is inherently dirty when witness was the original mutation? Why should my brethren regard them higher than God, when Jesus sat with society’s exiled, bringing them his miracles first? Or is that what they are so afraid of, that those they’ve stomped so far down into a hole that they convinced themselves that our light is really darkness will rise and they will no longer be able to deceive the world any longer.
From the Uplifted to their devils:
They say you picked my people for their strength, and then proceeded to beat it out of them in fear of rebellion. They say you couldn't wash your ass properly so you nearly wiped out the Native American population with your diseases. The legacy of your people is tyranny. Death, destruction, and cruelty follow you wherever you go and you fancy yourselves God’s people?
We are God’s people. We will not let our light, our truth, be twisted any longer. This is a call to the disrespected, disgraced, disapproved masses I just want to say: we don't have to take this anymore. There has been reckoning coming for a very long time, and the whole world could feel it, but you knew the truth didn’t you? It is us. We are rising, we are shining brighter than you can hide, and we are taking our planet