Are clowns patriotic
are you?
I’m asking the questions here. Would a clown die for its country
everyone who has ever died for their country was a clown
this is the most powerful post I’ve ever seen

Product Placement
styofa doing anything

Kaledo Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Today's Document

Discoholic 🪩

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
NASA
Claire Keane
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almost home
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Mike Driver
DEAR READER
Xuebing Du

izzy's playlists!
Keni
tumblr dot com
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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@bitchnialll
Are clowns patriotic
are you?
I’m asking the questions here. Would a clown die for its country
everyone who has ever died for their country was a clown
this is the most powerful post I’ve ever seen
I am not ready for the mood guys
source
Character development
the story
The heteros are at it again…
I’m just… THEY DIE.
why does everyone keep forgetting that????????
This is environmental racism
The implosion of an old coal plant in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood has sparked new controversy and also plans for a lawsuit.
Coal plant developer acknowledged not following demolition plan, Chicago's mayor says.
im screaming once I was just staring at myself for 5 minutes convincing myself that i wasnt that drunk then i threw up and was like must of been the food i ate
ME LMAO
tony + remembering little things about the people he cares about
#i’ve been thinking about this a lot lately
TIME MAGAZINE HAS NAMED BEYONCÉ AS ONE OF THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN OF THE PAST CENTURY
“When Beyoncé Knowles-Carter debuted as a member of Destiny’s Child in the ‘90s, no one could foresee that she would one day be the self-proclaimed “King Bey,” as big as Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, or Prince. By the time she released her first solo album in 2003, her star power was clear, but in the music industry, shooting stars often fizzle. Beyoncé treated each album like an opportunity to build. Her work ethic is rivaled only by her supreme ability to keep us out of her business. When she dropped her eponymous fifth album near midnight in December 2013, with no indication that was coming, her legend status was clear. Beyoncé was a visual album with sick beats and her signature girl-power anthems. But with “Flawless,” she went a step further, sampling a Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie speech and explicitly claiming feminism for herself. Could a pop star really be down with smashing the patriarchy? Her performance in front of the word FEMINIST at the 2014 MTV Music Awards was a helluva way to punctuate a point.
“A few years later, her explosive “Formation” let us know she was back, pro-black, and unapologetic. The Lemonade album’s overtures to Black Lives Matter insisted that she may be pop, but she also is political. It was a hat tip to her haters and a nod to her serious critics. She’s a woman of few words, but she’s listening. It’s this call-and-response between Beyoncé, the Bey-hivers and the Bey-haters that makes her a singular performer. Haters may hate, but she just gets better.”
F I N A L L Y