Beatrice Tulagan
beatricetulagan.bsky.social
Beatrice Tulagan
@beatricetulagan.bsky.social
Filipina writer & organizer. Adores / curates / designs / strategizes climate justice gatherings + trainings + network spaces where we get to be very tender with each other as we resist the end of the world. 🦋
I’ve been very ill lately — as in typing this from the hospital — and so reflecting on how to update downsized online accounts to capture the many ways I’m me, honoring how I am frail yet fighting still.

How might we lean into our full selves as a way to resist capitalist notions of who matters?
January 25, 2025 at 7:35 AM
Reposted by Beatrice Tulagan
Yay Prof. Adelle Chua, former student and my Manila Standard editor whose writing style I have always wanted to emulate, and climate justice comrades Bea Talusan and Pecier Decierdo. Thanks for coming to the book launch of #RansomedByLove.
January 6, 2025 at 6:03 AM
Doechii and Brittany Howard got me through (are getting me through) some pretty dark times this year. I hold out hope for this feeling as I recover: “And how did I feel? I felt this immense sense that my life was never going to be the same again.”

www.rollingstone.com/music/music-...
Doechii and Brittany Howard: 'It's a Great Time for Women' in Music
Doechii and Brittany Howard met up for a conversation at the Apollo Theater for Rolling Stone's Musicians on Musicians series
www.rollingstone.com
December 15, 2024 at 5:58 PM
Reposted by Beatrice Tulagan
INTERVIEW: André 3000 tells Rolling Stone “I’d rather go amateur interesting than master boring.”

The endlessly creative artist on his Grammy-nominated solo album, the future of OutKast, and why he’s thinking about moving to Japan.
www.rollingstone.com/music/music-...
André 3000: 'I'd Rather Go Amateur Interesting Than Master Boring'
Andre 3000 is feeling inspired. He tells us about his Grammy-nominated solo album, the future of OutKast, and why he‘s thinking of moving to Japan
www.rollingstone.com
December 12, 2024 at 7:00 PM
Hanif Abdurraqib, one of my favorite writers ever, on 2024 Kendrick: “GNX feels, to me, like a portrait of someone standing in the aftermath of a needed destruction, deciding what to rebuild and what to leave decimated.”
Even in its brightest moments, Kendrick Lamar’s new album feels like the work of an artist still very much wrapped up in the spectacle of the past year, Hanif Abdurraqib writes.
Kendrick Lamar’s Year on Top
What has made Lamar both fascinating and a bit dangerous, for those, such as Drake, who chose to cross him this year, is the fact that he doesn’t seem to desire anything that his peers have.
www.newyorker.com
December 15, 2024 at 5:54 PM
Reposted by Beatrice Tulagan
The small nation of Vanuatu put the entire industrialized world on trial this month in The Hague. The case is about climate change. Do countries have a legal as well as a moral obligation to prevent a planetary disaster?
The International Court of Justice Takes On Climate Change
Thanks to the maneuverings of the tiny nation of Vanuatu, the entire industrialized world is effectively on trial in The Hague.
www.newyorker.com
December 14, 2024 at 5:19 PM
Reposted by Beatrice Tulagan
From our team on the ground:
November 21, 2024 at 7:12 AM
Hi! I’m Beatrice. I’m a 🇵🇭 writer & climate justice organizer.

What gives me joy: working on people-powered campaigns for energy justice, building gatherings for activists, and leaning into solidarity, care & joy as we resist & rebuild.

This can’t be it. A better world is possible ♥️
November 18, 2024 at 9:48 AM