Beauty for a Price

alwaysthreeoclock:

can you imagine how amazing and mindblowing it would be to meet people who’ve lived for generations on a continent you didn’t know existed, full of food you’ve never tasted and weather you’ve never experienced, and who have languages and religions and cultures that aren’t in any way influenced by yours

that would be completely unbelievable and valuable beyond words

or, you know, you could kill them all and build colonies

(Source: celeryandhummus, via spiritfall-commune)

spiritfall-commune:

americanfascism:


vomitocracy:


valariedickey:


shortbreadsh:


theafterswarm:


 
“The canning and drying movement has brought back to thousands of American households an art almost forgotten since our grandmothers’ days.”


“It seemed so cliched that if Nat hadn’t seen it, she never would have believed it.”
I didn’t pick a book with a character with my name on purpose it’s not even my book


“In 2008, with the U.S. financial system in tatters and the economy undergoing a wrenching transformation, we needed a vision for what kind of financial markets and economy we wanted to emerge from the crisis.” -Freefall, Stiglitz


“There is no such position where a film is being shot.”


“Further, corresponding to Marx’s description of the”becoming” of an organic system as consisting “precisely in subordinating all elements of society to itself, or in creating out of the organs which it still lacks,” Kornai argued that the process of becoming Real Socialism was one in which “specific forms and institutions grow organically within the system.”that doesn’t help much


“The tough Americans go ahead and get the job done, like in cowboy movies.”too bad I’m from Croatia…we don’t have cowboys over here…oh, Chomsky, you have failed me yet again :D

“We must seek the sea,” said Mother Mole, and her followers turned east.

spiritfall-commune:

americanfascism:

vomitocracy:

valariedickey:

shortbreadsh:

theafterswarm:

 

“The canning and drying movement has brought back to thousands of American households an art almost forgotten since our grandmothers’ days.”

“It seemed so cliched that if Nat hadn’t seen it, she never would have believed it.”

I didn’t pick a book with a character with my name on purpose it’s not even my book

“In 2008, with the U.S. financial system in tatters and the economy undergoing a wrenching transformation, we needed a vision for what kind of financial markets and economy we wanted to emerge from the crisis.” -Freefall, Stiglitz

“There is no such position where a film is being shot.”

“Further, corresponding to Marx’s description of the”becoming” of an organic system as consisting “precisely in subordinating all elements of society to itself, or in creating out of the organs which it still lacks,” Kornai argued that the process of becoming Real Socialism was one in which “specific forms and institutions grow organically within the system.”

that doesn’t help much

“The tough Americans go ahead and get the job done, like in cowboy movies.”

too bad I’m from Croatia…we don’t have cowboys over here…oh, Chomsky, you have failed me yet again :D

“We must seek the sea,” said Mother Mole, and her followers turned east.

unhistorical:

May 4, 1970: The Kent State shootings take place.

The shooting of unarmed students by members of the Ohio National Guard at Kent State University, was one of the most notorious domestic events of the Vietnam War Era. It took place in the midst of a protest which itself was a reaction against government policy; antiwar sentiment was widespread throughout the nation, particularly among young people, so when President Nixon announced in late April that the U.S. military was to conduct military operations in Cambodia in pursuit of the PAVN and Viet Cong forces (which seemed to contradict his policy of Vietnamization and détente), student-organized protests on university campuses across the country erupted. These student strikes eventually involved at least 400 campuses, although the National Guard was deployed to only twenty-one of them, one of which was Kent State University in Ohio.

The Kent State demonstration began on May 1; the National Guard was called to the campus on May 2 by Governor James Rhodes, who denounced the student protesters and claimed that they were ”the worst type of people that we harbor in America”, comparing them to Nazi brownshirts and the Ku Klux Klan. Many in Kent and across the nation agreed with the governor’s condemnation of student protests, but just as many disagreed, to varying degrees. When the shooting and killing of Kent State students made national headlines, the issue remained just as divisive, with many believing that the students had brought the violence upon themselves. On May 4, the tensions between the guardsmen and students heightened. Tear gas was used in the guardsmens’ attempts to disperse the crowd, and at some point in the confusion, for some still unknown reason, a little under half of the 77 guardsmen present began to fire into the crowd of students. The guardsmen later claimed that they had been shot by a sniper and were firing in self-defense; this claim was denied vehemently by the students, who admitted to throwing rocks, and also by the New York Times reporter who had been on the scene. The reporter also wrote:

As the guardsmen, moving up the hill in single file, reached the crest, they suddenly turned, forming a skirmish line and opening fire.

The crackle of the rifle volley cut the suddenly still air. It appeared to go on, as a solid volley, for perhaps a full minute or a little longer.

Some of the students dived to the ground, crawling on the grass in terror. Others stood shocked or half crouched, apparently believing the troops were firing into the air. Some of the rifle barrels were pointed upward.

Near the top of the hill at the corner of Taylor Hall, a student crumpled over, spun sideways and fell to the ground, shot in the head.

When the firing stopped, a slim girl, wearing a cowboy shirt and faded jeans, was lying face down on the road at the edge of the parking lot, blood pouring out onto the macadam, about 10 feet from this reporter.

Four students were killed, and nine were wounded (one was permanently paralyzed from chest down). Of the four killed by rifle fire, two had not been participants in the protest. According to eyewitness accounts, the students were shocked at the fact that the guardsmen had fired upon them and even more shocked that they had fired live ammunition instead of blanks. John Filo, the photographer who captured the Pulitzer Prize-winning image of Mary Ann Vecchio and Jeffrey Miller (pictured above), also believed at first that the guardsmen were firing blanks. President Nixon expressed regret for the killings, although he suggested that the students’ disruptive activities had “[invited] tragedy”, and, according to a Gallup poll, the public agreed - according to the survey, only 11 percent placed blame on the National Guard, while 58 percent blamed the students. Eleven days later, two black students were killed at Jackson State University during an antiwar protest, though these events failed to capture national attention as the Kent State shootings did.  

An insensitive, yet interesting fact I learned in journalism school: in the first picture, a fence pole was photoshopped out of the top center because it looked like it was coming out of the mourning girl’s head.

(via spiritfall-commune)

so-treu:

nezua:

note-a-bear:

brooklynmutt:

Wow. I didn’t think it was possible but Trump actually trumped his own idiocy with this. 



Donald Trump, warning all women of the world to avoid alone time with him.

^^^

so-treu:

nezua:

note-a-bear:

brooklynmutt:

Wow. I didn’t think it was possible but Trump actually trumped his own idiocy with this. 

image

Donald Trump, warning all women of the world to avoid alone time with him.

^^^

(via spiritfall-commune)

(Source: dqdbpb, via out-gayed-myself)

world-shaker:

A teacher hugs a child at Briarwood Elementary school after a tornado destroyed the school in south Oklahoma City, Monday, May 20, 2013. A monstrous tornado roared through the Oklahoma City suburbs, flattening entire neighborhoods with winds up to 200 mph, setting buildings on fire and landing a direct blow on an elementary school. 
(AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Paul Hellstern)

world-shaker:

A teacher hugs a child at Briarwood Elementary school after a tornado destroyed the school in south Oklahoma City, Monday, May 20, 2013. A monstrous tornado roared through the Oklahoma City suburbs, flattening entire neighborhoods with winds up to 200 mph, setting buildings on fire and landing a direct blow on an elementary school.

(AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Paul Hellstern)

(Source: journaltimes.com)

terrysdiary:

My favorite flowers are Peonies #4

terrysdiary:

My favorite flowers are Peonies #4