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#MunJi
jayperior · 4 months
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Made a test shirt featuring my little criminal~
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dailykitteh · 2 years
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jointenterprise · 5 months
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Keanu Rushh and Munji
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selfie-style · 6 months
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Munji
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menextra · 6 months
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Keanu Rushh and Munji
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kamekomikan · 2 years
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still Appledash. Witches AU by @dusty-munji
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mercuryferns · 7 months
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Little traditional art referencing @dusty-munji but with my own take on how I interpret AJ and RD :)
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elijaheldridge · 2 months
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[MLP OC REMAKE] Eillie Madaline
(My Little Pony Version Vibe Style)
@balileart @mlp-merch @nutsack90 @mlpfimscreencaps @lound @dusty-munji @dusty-munji-original @raystarkitty @captainzigo @lycantrin @rexlottie @glowfangs
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jayperior · 1 year
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munji pic pls? 🤲 (hope you're doing well jay!)
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Doing great! Thanks for asking! Here is an old pic of Munji in loaf mode.
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blktop9 · 1 year
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Munji
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The Lady Munji
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mt-nynj-queer · 8 months
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Munji
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b1anketplask · 5 months
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Munji...(It means 'Dust' in korean) My precious little son
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booskwan · 5 months
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knowing two languages has rotted my brain i went to search for dust in spotify and typed in munji. not dust. not 먼지. but munji
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bountylight · 1 year
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kickstarter
The Kickstarter campaign for my next graphic novel Bounty Light Vol. 2 is LIVE!! Check out the trailer, a free 10 page preview, our cool rewards, and Munji cameo!!
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scotianostra · 9 months
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Angus McMillan a Scottish-born explorer, and pioneer was born on August 14th 1810 at Glen Brittle.
Sometimes difficult posts come up that I dislike, this is one such case. Angus McMillan was once revered as a pioneering hero. Today his reputation is in tatters, just one of many that orchestrated atrocities during the Empire building era in our history.
Born at Glen Brittle, Isle of Skye, fourth son of Ewen McMillan, sheep farmer, and his wife Marion, Angus received his education at home before the family moved to a larger property on the island of Barra. Against a backdrop of economic hardship, he chose to find his future in the colonies, arriving in New South Wales in January 1838 on the Minerva. His explorations led to the opening of the Gippsland region for pastoralism, displacing the Gunai Aboriginal people who were the traditional owners of the land.
Employed by Lachlan Macalister as an overseer, he moved first to the Clifton station near Camden and then further south to Currawang on the Monaro. In 1839, Macalister instructed McMillan to set up a cattle station at Numbla Munjie, near what is now Omeo, where McMillan was involved in massacres of the Aborigines in retaliation for their herding of cattle.
Around this time McMillan and five other men set out on an expedition to find grazing land and a harbour on the Gippsland coast. They explored many of the rivers and lakes, but were forced to return to Numbla Munjie when they ran short of food.
During 1840, McMillan set up another cattle station for Macalister near the mouth of the Avon River, and also his own station, Bushy Park, further upstream. From here, McMillan made two unsuccessful attempts to reach the coast at Corner Inlet. On his third attempt, in February 1841, he finally reached the coast, near where the Albert River flows into the inlet.
In July 1843 at Warrigal Creek, McMillan and his Highland Brigade surrounded a large group of Gunaikurnai people and mercilessly shot between 60 and 150 men, women and children.
The killings were a reprisal for the murder of his bosses nephew, Ronald Macalister, who was ambushed by a group of Gunaikurnai men he had chased out of his shop hours earlier. McMillan led five more massacres after that, at Nuntin, Boney Point, Maffra, Skull Creek and Butchers Creek.
The Australian author P. D. Gardner investigated the massacres and wrote” Our Founding Murdering Father: Angus Mc Millian And The Kurnai Tribe Of Gippsland” exposing the true story of McMillands deeds.
Over a period of 15 years the indigenous population of the Kurnai people of Gippsland fell from 2,000 to just 216.
Over the last few years some have fought to try and restore McMillan’s name to some extent, but no matter how you look at it seems undeniable that McMillan was involved in the deaths of some Aborigines, that for me personally is enough to justify his disgrace, and the title that has become synonymous with him, “the butcher of Gippsland”.
Another book that told McMillan’s story, Thicker than Water, was written by McMillan’s great-great-niece, Cal Flyn. You can read more from him on the following link to the article “My relative was a mass murderer of Australia's Gunai people. Can I make amends?”
https://www.theguardian.com/.../aboriginal-sorry-day...
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