• Exploring the world, experiencing cultures and sharing the treasures of traveling with you through photos!
  • Exploring the world and experiencing the countless treasures that travel allows! From the treasures of experiencing new sights and sounds, to tasting new food, hearing new music, viewing beautiful landscapes, learning new languages, witnessing passionate dancing and seeing talented artisans making their splendid crafts with their own hands; traveling gives you a multitude of treasured memories to keep for a lifetime! Come along for the journey and experience the treasures of the world through traveling!ords.
  • My name is Luke Keeler and I grew up in the beautiful state of North Carolina in the United States of America! I love to travel and experience new cultures and see the absolute stunning beauty of this world! My love for travel started when I was a child and my parents took me to visit my family that lives in England. From the first time hearing accents to seeing the beautiful centuries old structures of individual homes and buildings mixed in with the modern architecture of today, I was fascinated with traveling and the differences between cultures.ords.
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  • Please feel free to get in touch with me if you have any questions regarding the travel information you see on this website or if you have questions about destinations you may want to travel to yourself! I would also love any advice you may have for me regarding this website. I will do my best to answer as many questions as I can, as this is just my hobby! I look forward to hearing from you so please complete the form below or you can email me.

Monday, June 29, 2020

End Racism Now!


The mural "End Racism Now" painted in yellow, along W Martin Street in downtown Raleigh.  Photo by Luke Keeler
The mural "End Racism Now" painted in yellow, along W Martin Street in downtown Raleigh.  Photo by Luke Keeler

Ending Racism in Raleigh, North Carolina, the United States and the World!

We must end racism and be anti racist! So many people think we ended racism during the civil rights movement, but that’s not true. We still have a lot of systemic racism built into so many of society's institutions. We have a lot of work to do to turn these injustices around. If you are white, it’s imperative you have conversations with other white people! They might be difficult conversations to have, especially if the other person has a different viewpoint, but we all have to do something. Whether it’s a face to face conversation or just on social media, dialogue must continue to occur. Everybody needs to vote for candidates that will help change laws that will help benefit everyone and not just a select few. We need politicians to help change laws so there can be true equality because Black Lives Matter

I wrote the following in response to a long back and forth discussion to an individual on Facebook about their beliefs of the confederate monuments and flag and police reform in our country and how their talking points of all lives matter and black on black crime just deflect the underlying issue.

To read the response, please visit the End Racism Now post on Treasures of Traveling website

-- Luke Keeler


Friday, June 12, 2020

End Racism Now!


End Racism Now painted to road on W Martin Street in downtown Raleigh. Photo by Luke Keeler.
The mural "End Racism Now" painted in yellow, along W Martin Street in downtown Raleigh. Photo by Luke Keeler.

I wrote this in response to a long back and forth discussion to an individual on Facebook about their beliefs of the confederate monuments and flag and police reform in our country and how their talking points of all lives matter and black on black crime just deflect the underlying issue.

By bringing up the whole concept of black on black crime, you are deflecting again from the baseline issue. It's the same thing when you say all lives matter, as you are deflecting from the issues being raised around the Black Lives Matter protests, but when it comes to the history of the civil war and slavery, we have to agree that slavery and the reasoning of the confederates fighting against the United States is evil. The confederates stated, "the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition." This statement is inherently evil and nothing that should ever be celebrated. The hundreds of confederate flags, statues, monuments and memorials symbolize this hatred and have been used to keep blacks oppressed and used as a reminder of white supremacy. I understand that you want to remember the soldiers, but there are many other ways you can celebrate and remember their lives, whether through a local or national cemetery like Arlington, but we can not celebrate those men or the ideals and values they stood for, especially in a public space. It is extremely important that we truly listen to other people when they speak, especially now with the Black community. When was the last time you spoke to a black person and asked them what the flags, statues and monuments mean to them and what they feel these monuments represent? We aren't able to speak to individuals who were slaves and hear their viewpoints today, but we can speak with black people who have lived through segregation and we can learn from their experiences. Sometimes we think segregation was forever ago, but in reality it was less than a generation ago so we have the opportunity to speak with individuals who lived through that awful experience of separate, but equal. We can all say we aren't racist, but we live in a society that systematically suppresses other races within our own government systems. It will take us all working together to change that and it starts by understanding our white privilege. Institutional racism has been written into the backbone of this country by the existence of institutional systemic policies, practices, laws and economic and political structures which place minority racial and ethnic groups at a disadvantage. That's why these protests will continue and we will continue having these discussions over and over again until there is change. I encourage you to watch "13th" the documentary on Netflix regarding the 13th amendment and systemic racism. 

Read more about this on the Treasures of Traveling website!

-- Luke Keeler