
No title available

Origami Around

titsay

tannertan36
Peter Solarz
Game of Thrones Daily
i don't do bad sauce passes
AnasAbdin

Love Begins
cherry valley forever

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
NASA
No title available
todays bird
Not today Justin
we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
DEAR READER

Andulka
Mike Driver
seen from Canada

seen from Spain
seen from Belgium
seen from Egypt
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Cambodia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Germany
seen from France
seen from Canada
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Belgium

seen from Netherlands

seen from United Kingdom
@ashleighdotcom
The boy who enjoyed fallout as a kid, still enjoys it as a woman.
and if Yuji's story in modulo ends the way I think it will, I hope to see a cardigan edit to really drive in the bittersweet pain 🙂↕️
Don't ask me why I hate myself As I'm circling the drain 'Cause death, it takes too long And I can't wait
togachako + EEAAO
Ash remains
“Can’t two people of the same gender just be friends?”
Not on my watch they can’t.
Good morning to them ☺️
I see you
that feral nobamaki chapter cover but make it post-manga
(i do like nobara's epilogue design a lot... also, a print for AX)
Someone said something stupid (theyre gonna gossip about it later)
está soñando con los angelitos
oh miss ivy 🥀
DESTROY EVERYTHING
Remnants of the British Black Panther’s Lost Legacy
Britain’s black power movement is at risk of being forgotten, say historians
The Cambridge academic Robin Bunce said: “There is a fundamental danger of erasing the very notion of a struggle at all. I’ve been researching this for four and a half years and there have been so many occasions when people have said to me: ‘There was no black struggle in Britain. You’re thinking of South Africa or America.’“
The narrative that feeds it is the one that Britain is the utopia of fair play. We have such a commitment to individual rights, we have such a commitment to common sense and decency that there is no systematic racism in Britain.”…
Bunce said it was not just politicians, but wider British society that would rather not dwell on the less palatable.