Haroon

22.5K posts

Haroon

Haroon

@harooncreates

Poet | Playwright | Musician | Podcast Host | Actually Autistic | ADHD

United Kingdom Katılım Kasım 2007
3.8K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
Haroon retweetledi
Sam
Sam@SamCKx·
I can no longer hold my tongue seeing the utter lies being spread about Britain, our history of migration, and how this country was built into what it is today. For those so deeply buried in fake news, manufactured outrage and billionaire‑funded propaganda, I’m going to lay out the truth – and exactly why you’re being fed all this poison. Britain was never a sealed white island. From Roman times there were African soldiers stationed on Hadrian’s Wall and living in British towns, people from across the empire walking these roads nearly 2,000 years ago. Through the Middle Ages and Tudor England you still find Black people in the records – sailors, craftsmen, servants, musicians – even Black musicians at the royal court and Africans being baptised, marrying and being buried in English parishes like anyone else. This isn’t some modern experiment; it’s older than half the castles people visit on their bank‑holiday tours. As Britain went out into the world, the world came here. Sailors and traders from India, Yemen and beyond were arriving in British ports from the 1600s. Some of those men were practising a new faith to most Britons at the time, praying quietly in boarding houses near the docks while they worked brutal shifts in the engine rooms of British ships. Over the centuries, more people from North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia passed through and settled, bringing their languages, foods and beliefs into port cities that were far more mixed than today’s nostalgia merchants like to admit. After two world wars, the truth is simple: this country asked the Commonwealth to come and rebuild it. People from the Caribbean, Africa and South Asia didn’t sneak in; they were recruited. They came to drive buses and trains, staff the NHS, work in mills and foundries, clean offices, run corner shops, open takeaways and small businesses, and yes, build prayer spaces and community centres alongside churches and temples in the neighbourhoods everyone now pretends were always “traditional” and “unchanged”. They did the work that kept Britain going while being told to go home, refused housing, and treated as permanent outsiders. And what have they been paid back with? Scandals where people who’ve lived, worked and paid taxes here for decades get told they don’t belong. Policies designed to make life so hostile that some give up and leave. A media that uses their names, accents, clothes or places of worship as props in endless scare stories. The message is always the same: you might toil for this country, but you will never fully be of it. So when you hear that “Britain was white until recently” or that the country has been “overrun”, understand that you don’t arrive at that belief by accident. You get there because your history has been deliberately ripped out and replaced with a comforting myth: that “real” Britain is white, homogenous, and constantly under siege from people who look, speak or pray differently. Now look at when this myth has been turned up to max volume. Wages frozen. Housing a sick joke. Energy and food prices out of control. Public services hacked to pieces. At the same time, the number of people hoarding unimaginable wealth at the top has exploded. Funny, isn’t it, how every front page is about boats and “swarms” and “our culture”, and almost never about the landlords, hedge funds, private equity and offshore trusts quietly buying up your city and your future. That’s because this isn’t just prejudice; it’s a strategy. If you’re sitting on a mountain of wealth, the last thing you want is ordinary people – of every colour and background – realising they have the same problems and the same enemy. Much safer if the factory worker is furious at the new family down the road. Much safer if the person who can’t see a doctor blames the nurse with an accent instead of the minister who cut the funding. Much safer if a man who can’t afford his rent spends his rage on the woman in a headscarf at the bus stop instead of the billionaire who owns half his city. Racist rhetoric, religious dog‑whistling, all of it, exists to break solidarity. It turns neighbours into enemies and stops people seeing that Black, brown and white working‑class communities have far more in common with each other than any of them will ever have with the people flying in on private jets. It keeps you so busy policing skin colour, passports and prayer mats that you never get round to asking why your kids can’t afford a home, why your parents can’t get a hospital bed, why you’re working harder and standing still. The real story of Britain is this: a crossroads, not a fortress. Africans on Hadrian’s Wall. Black people in Tudor courts and city streets. Sailors, traders and workers from South Asia, the Middle East and beyond in the ports. Caribbean, African and Asian workers rebuilding the country after the war, staffing surgeries and hospitals, driving cabs, running shops, cooking food, teaching kids. Today’s multi‑ethnic, multi‑faith working class is not a glitch; it is Britain. It built this place and it keeps it running. If you’re genuinely angry about what’s happening to this country, good. You should be. But aim it where it belongs. Britain was never pure, never untouched, never “theirs” to take back. The people ruining your standard of living are not the ones risking their lives to get here, or the ones whose names you struggle to pronounce. They’re the ones buying politicians, owning media outlets, writing the story of this country so you never learn your own – and never realise who is standing beside you.
Sam tweet media
English
1.2K
1.7K
3.9K
264.2K
Haroon retweetledi
Sam Parr
Sam Parr@thesamparr·
A book tech twitter hasn’t read but is a great biz book Ruthless, the story of Eazy E and Ruthless Records: - eazy e was a 21 year old drug dealer - saved up 200k from selling drugs - used it to start a record label called Ruthless - put together NWA with Dr Dre and Ice Cube. Becomes biggest band in the world right away. - within 5 years the label was making 10m a month (remember when cds cost $19?!) - died when he was only ~31 from aids - the offspring/inspiration from eazy e and ruthless was Tupac, Dre and many more. One of the most impactful people on modern hip hop. One of my fav books. The big takeaway for me: the “why not me” oozed outta eazy. A nobody black kid from Compton became one of the most successful guys in music in his 20s. He lived fast and died hard. Pretty good rock n roll book.
Sam Parr tweet mediaSam Parr tweet media
English
18
8
142
9.1K
Haroon retweetledi
Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
Everyone needs to hear this... Michael Caine on his defining philosophy for life: Use the Difficulty As a young actor, he was rehearsing a play when a chair got stuck in the door and blocked his path. He told the other actor he couldn't get by the chair to enter the scene. The actor's response: "Use the difficulty...if it's a comedy, fall over it, if it's a drama, pick it up and smash it." This idea became a defining mantra for his life. "There's never anything so bad that you cannot use that difficulty...if you can use it a quarter of one percent to your advantage, you're ahead, you didn't let it get you down." I can't stop thinking about this... How can you use the difficulty you're currently facing? How can you embrace the struggle? How can you find flow through the friction? As with everything in life, control the controllable: The difficulty is already there. You can't control it. But you can control how you react to it. You can control your response to it. You can control your attitude towards it. Lesson: Difficulty is inevitable. Use it.
English
124
928
4.4K
261.7K
Haroon retweetledi
Cinema Tweets
Cinema Tweets@CinemaTweets1·
Two decades before Michael B. Jordan won an #Oscar for Best Actor, he was part of one of TV’s greatest achievements. Before he was Smoke & Stack -he was Wallace. This is what it looks like to witness a child actor evolve into a bonafide movie star. How are you not inspired?
English
117
841
6.5K
477.1K
Haroon retweetledi
Steez⁴⁷
Steez⁴⁷@Steez_47·
Since today is the anniversary of Madvillainy I just want to remind everyone that Madlib and MF DOOM made one of the best closings to an album ever with this song
English
38
899
3.7K
64.3K
Haroon retweetledi
Natural Philosophy
Natural Philosophy@Naturalphilosy·
Bradbury on Reading
English
20
339
1.2K
82K
Haroon retweetledi
Andrew Barber
Andrew Barber@fakeshoredrive·
10 years ago today, we lost Phife Dawg Rest In Peace 🕊️ 🙏 November 20, 1970 - March 22, 2016
English
3
199
784
32.3K
Haroon retweetledi
Tetragrammaton
Tetragrammaton@tetranow·
Adam Neumann on the quiet revolution: “Young people are interested in going to church. For years and years and years, the people who went to church were getting older and older, and the amount of people was declining, declining, declining, declining. And something happened, in the last few years, where young people are interested in going to church. More Bibles are being sold. Something’s happening. 100%. It's everywhere you go. People are more open. People are ready for it. It's natural. As technology is going to make us more and more digitally connected. We are going to feel more and more disconnected. The more disconnected that we feel, the more we’re going to crave a real connection. A real connection will never come by buying another car or buying another house, or owning another material. A real connection comes from the inside. A person who has unity from the inside, has unity to the outside.”
Tetragrammaton@tetranow

Adam Neumann sits down with Rick Rubin to discuss community, beliefs, failure, and the idea that everything can still go right after his time at WeWork: 0:00 Adam Neumann 7:16 Early Failures, Community, and the Search for Purpose 14:58 GreenDesk, Traction, and the First Signs of Success 18:16 Kibbutz Roots and the Idea of Belonging 24:22 Rebekah, Spiritual Awakening, and Kabbalah 32:06 The Power of Pause and Inner Work 38:03 Building the Vision for WeWork 44:13 Faith, Surrender, and Defining Belief 48:49 Launching WeWork and Early Constraints 55:39 Scaling Fast and What Drove Growth 59:46 SoftBank, Masa, and Hypergrowth 1:07:30 Scaling Pressure and Expanding the Vision 1:15:53 Looking Back on Investors and Decisions 1:23:32 The $20 Billion Deal That Didn’t Happen 1:27:38 The Moment Everything Changed 1:36:30 Leadership, Identity, and Letting Go 1:51:53 Stepping Down and Losing Control 2:02:00 The Fallout and Public Unraveling 2:11:57 Litigation and Total Powerlessness 2:18:30 Reflection, Meditation, and Rebuilding 2:26:33 The Seed of Flow 2:36:00 Designing a New Kind of Living 2:48:21 What If It All Goes Right 2:48:58 Flow and What Comes Next

English
77
209
1.9K
446.3K
Haroon retweetledi
Jermaine Watkins
Jermaine Watkins@JermaineWatkins·
George Benson. The Greatest Love of All
English
8
104
354
6.7K
Haroon retweetledi
SoulFood66
SoulFood66@BlackAndNative1·
Faze-O - Riding High (1977)
English
11
153
478
10.1K
Haroon retweetledi
Pamela Hensley🇺🇸
Pamela Hensley🇺🇸@PamelaHensley22·
This scene in Miami Vice where "In the Air Tonight" by Phil Collins plays stands as one of TV's all time greatest cinematic sequences. It effortlessly establishes the mood and highlights just how far today's television industry has fallen. This authentic soul is gone.
English
1K
5K
34.5K
1.6M
Haroon retweetledi
Keith Murphy
Keith Murphy@murphdogg29·
"I want people to remember me as an engineer, producer, mixer and all-around nice guy..." My latest for @RollingStone. Bob Power's final interview-Golden Age hip-hop's and '90s soul's most vital studio sound man. rollingstone.com/music/music-fe…
English
5
75
201
6.6K
Haroon retweetledi
cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
Happy 69th Birthday, Spike Lee!
English
21
502
3.4K
68.3K
Haroon retweetledi
Historic Hub
Historic Hub@HistoricHub·
This song was written in 20 minutes of pure rage after hearing how a senator got his son out of the draft for Vietnam...
English
314
9.1K
69K
2.4M
Haroon retweetledi
Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Jimmy Carr’s favorite question right now cuts straight through the fear: “What would you do if you couldn’t fail?” He says if you answer that honestly, it becomes your compass. “The biggest addiction in America isn’t opioids… it’s a monthly salary. Getting out from under that and doing something on your own is hard, but fucking give it a go.” 43-second gut-check — Carr daring you to name the dream you’ve buried under “security.” So… what would YOU do if failure wasn’t even on the table? Drop your one honest answer below — no hedging, no “realistic” version. Just the raw dream. (And if the answer scares you… that’s probably the right one.)
English
7
31
334
35.4K
Haroon retweetledi
Hits Junkie
Hits Junkie@hitsjunkie·
They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.) - Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth (1992) 🔥🔥 Produced by Pete Rock & CL Smooth Classic 💯
English
24
530
1.5K
27.9K
Haroon retweetledi
Melodies & Masterpieces
Melodies & Masterpieces@SVG__Collection·
Warning: high levels of funk detected. Commodores with “Machine Gun”
English
77
491
2.6K
86.1K