Peter Solarz
đȘŒ
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
AnasAbdin
Jules of Nature

blake kathryn

titsay
Monterey Bay Aquarium
we're not kids anymore.
trying on a metaphor
noise dept.

No title available
I'd rather be in outer space đž
i don't do bad sauce passes

#extradirty
h

romaâ
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

seen from Spain

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seen from TĂŒrkiye

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seen from United States
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@analgesicsleep
source
Ron Mueck
MASS
polyester resin, fiberglass
2017
National Gallery Victoria Triennial, December 2017 - April 2018
â ⊠an installation of 100 individual human skull forms piled up on the gallery floor, each which engage with the architecture of the site. a somber study of mortality ⊠In MASS Mueck celebrates the form that links all humanity, and pays homage to a symbol that has stood within the art of essentially all cultures and religion.â
images by Sean Fennessey & Tom Ross forÂ
 https://www.designboom.com Â
The Good War:Â How Americaâs infatuation with World War II has eroded our conscience
by Mike Dawson and Chris Hayes
(Continue Reading)
I think whatâs also important to note is that WWII was not fought on US shores, allowing it to be romanticised. The war isnât glamourised in Europe the way it is in the States. Pearl Harbor isnât viewed as a huge tragedy, but rather one of the final acts of a far more brutal conflict. And, with the exception of the UK joining in the âwar on terrorâ, Europe by and large hasnât had another major war, so shaken were we by WWII.
When I was in 6th grade I had a teacher who would play the âProud to be an Americanâ song and video every day after the pledge and make us all sing it and do a little dance to it. Every. Single. Day.Â
After the last 40 years of the 1% getting almost all of the monetary benefits of the government, it is long past time to consider joining and participating in a union where you work
A historic evening for Northern Ireland. As of midnight tonight, after twenty-five years, the IRA have called a ceasefire. In a statement released earlier this evening they said âthere would be a complete cessation of all military operationsâ.
31st August 1994
TODAY IN HISTORY: Soviet space dogs Belka and Strelka became the first canines to fly in space and return safely to Earth, August 19, 1960.
I donât care if itâs still August, Iâm already making plans for autumn.Â
On this day in music history: August 4, 1992 - âNew Miserable Experienceâ, the second album by Gin Blossoms is released. Produced by John Hampton and Gin Blossoms, it is recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis, TN from February - March 1992. Formed in Tempe, AZ in 1987, the Gin Blossoms emerge out of the same music scene that also produces The Refreshments, The Sidewinders and The Meat Puppets. They take their name after a quote in a book found under a photo of W.C. Fields, with the caption reading, âW.C. Fields with gin blossomsâ, describing the comedic actorâs red bulbous nose and face, a result of years of heavy drinking. Featuring band members Doug Hopkins (lead and rhythm guitar), Bill Leen (bass), Jesse Valenzuela (rhythm and lead guitar, backing vocals) and Robin Wilson (lead vocals, harmonica, guitar, percussion). They record their first album âDustedâ for San Jacinto Records in 1989. It features early versions several songs that they revisit later. The Gin Blossoms are signed by A&M Records in 1990, and release a five track EP titled âUp And Crumblingâ. Originally intended to be their full length major label debut, they experience a creative dry spell and are not able to come up with more new material. The band return to the studio with John Hampton (The Replacements) at the Memphis studio famous for artists as diverse as Sam & Dave and The Staple Singers, to Led Zeppelin, ZZ Top and Big Star recording there. Doug Hopkins escalating alcoholism and depression lead to him being fired by A&M before recording wraps. Then Hopkins is asked to sign over his song publishing rights before being paid money ($15,000) he was previously owed. He reluctantly agrees to the terms and leaves the band, being replaced by Scott Johnson. When âExperienceâ is released, it is to little fanfare and meager sales. It languishes for several months before the release of âHey Jealousyâ (#25 Pop, #4 Mainstream Rock) in June of 1993. It becomes a huge radio hit, opening the floodgates to the albumâs success. A&M repackages it with new cover artwork and refocuses its promotional efforts. It is followed by âUntil I Fall Awayâ (#13 Modern Rock), âFound Out About Youâ (#51 Pop, #1 Modern Rock) and âAllison Roadâ (#20 Mainstream Rock, #39 Modern Rock). However this success is dampened by the suicide death of Doug Hopkins on December 5, 1993, despondent over his ouster from the band. The Gin Blossomsâ debut is later remastered and reissued as a two deluxe edition in 2002, with the second disc including tracks from their first album, EP releases, B-sides and live recordings. Originally released on CD and cassette only, the album receives its first vinyl release in 2017, pressed on clear, rusty brown (double vinyl) and blue smoke vinyl (single LP) to commemorate its twenty fifth anniversary. New Miserable Experience" peaks at number thirty on the Billboard Top 200, and is certified 4x Platinum in the US by the RIAA.
@cielo-e-voragine
a golden goddess
A Tour of Paris â US Edition
Liberté, égalité, femme-presenting titté
What does water symbolize? Water is the element of change. In literature and film it often represents transformation-both metaphorical and physical. Water is both the source of life and a powerful destructive force. Â
âWater does not resist.Water flows.When you plunge your hand into it, all you feel is a caress.Water is not a solid wall, it will not stop you.But water always goes where it wants to go,and nothing in the end can stand against it.Water is patient.Dripping water wears away a stone.Remember that, my child.Remember you are half water.If you canât go through an obstacle, go around it.Water does.âÂ
-Margaret Atwood
its a national holiday
Celebrating someoneâs death seems like a really macabre thing to do. Like I get that people donât like him because of how his administration dealt with the AIDS epidemic, but promoting someoneâs death as a good thing doesnât sit well with me.
during his administration, we had a problem with abuse of patients in mental healthcare facilities (asylums, but donât call them that), and his response to it was just to shut down the entire system. he closed all public mental healthcare facilities because a few of them were mistreating patients, and all those mentally ill people suddenly found themselves homeless without the skills necessary to survive in the general populous. heâs the reason why our healthcare system is so terrible, and heâs to blame for the homelessness epidemic (iâll get into the next reason why heâs responsible for our high homeless population in a sec). millions of people lost everything because of reagan. thousands died.
he also completely restructured our economy. from 1776 until he became president, we had an economic system like no other (look up the American School), but he removed most of the rules and regulations we had to keep the system in place because our system at the time limited accumulation of wealth. we had a built-in buffer that kept most people middle class. when he restructured our economy so he and his friends could get richer, reagan removed the safeguards that kept us out of poverty (most of the time), so now the lower echelons of society were in freefall towards homelessness. people lost their homes and businesses because the rich could do basically whatever they wanted now. superstores like wal-mart rose to prominence and pushed out small businesses because of this. our government also greatly reduced its expenditure on infrastructure. ronald reaganâs greed is why we donât have enough trains and all our roads are falling apart.
he also expanded our already bloated military while in power. one of his slogans was âpeace in strength.â his goal for our country was to get an iron grip around the rest of the world and impose our own agendas on other countries at gunpoint.
One of the first things reagan did when he came to power was to ignore the supreme courtâs earlier ruling, ignore the constitution, and try to enforce a mandatory daily christian prayer time in all schools. when government workers went on strike against him and his policies, he fired 11,345 people. he put 11,345 people out of a job because they didnât like him.
he lowered taxes for the rich, but increased taxes on the poor, contributing to the aforementioned lack of infrastructure and homelessness crisis. he also began privatising the government, which put thousands of jobs at risk and made wealthy capitalists the men who run our country. reagan is responsible for trickle down economics.
after the great depression, our government put in social programs to help people stay afloat, like universal healthcare for the elderly and disabled, basic income (the government paid people to dig ditches if they couldnât find any other jobs. the ditches didnât serve any purpose, but those people needed money and the government was willing to give money to anyone who worked), and food stamps. ronald reagan slashed all these programs and more, like the EPA, which made sure we were a âgreenâ country.
as a result of these slashes, people who had been secure on government assistance programs were now having to take out loans and get into debt, which jeopardised our economy. we had a stock market crash because people were becoming too poor to buy stocks, and our national debt increased by 3 times. we went from $997 billion in debt to $2.85 trillion in 1987.
he also pushed us further into the cold war. previously, our relations with russia were cooling down a bit, but during reaganâs second term, he began actively threatening russia again. ronald reagan brought us to the brink of a nuclear war that would have killed all humans on earth.
Ronald Reagan and Maggie Thatcher, the most hated prime minister in UK history, were close friends. he was also personal friends with Donald Trump.
Under reagan, we resumed a history of violent military imperialism in foreign countries, most notably lebanon, afghanistan, and pakistan. In lebanon, we tried to stop a revolution against an oppressive regime, and in afghanistan and pakistan, reagan ordered the CIA to train civilians and create a military force to fight russia for us. Reagan created the taliban, a militant group that even today publicly dismembers people for playing games in public. they cut off childrenâs hands. He also began dealing weapons with China, betraying our longstanding ally, Taiwan, destabilising politics in the pacific. Under his orders, we secretly aided african and south american military dictatorships in crushing their opposition. He assisted Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of Iran who started the 1979 revolution, in purging political opposition from the government. in 1988 our military shot down an iranian commercial flight, killing 290 civilians.
Reagan was a Nazi sympathiser and referred to slain SS officers as âvictimsâ of the war. just to make sure you read that right: Ronald Reagan supported the Nazis.
He declared the war on drugs, a movement that has greatly increased the disproportionate incarceration rates of african american and latino men in this country.
During Reaganâs second term, 115,000 people were diagnosed with AIDS and 70,000 died of it. Reagan did nothing to curb the spread, despite knowing that the AIDS epidemic almost exclusively affected black people and the LGBT community. when he learned how many people were dying and who they were, he laughed. he laughed at our suffering while we were dropping dead.
In short, Ronald Reagan was a wealthy, selfish, greedy, capitalistic, imperialist, racist, ableist, homophobic, genocidal, antisemitic, warmongering, backstabbing murderer. Ronald Reagan was a monster.
Wow and this didnât even cover the crack epidemic
It doesnât cover the crack epidemic, or the various wars in South America, that resulted in the refugees immigrant crisis now.