taken at 1:30am, 2005
RMH

@theartofmadeline
will byers stan first human second

shark vs the universe

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Not today Justin

tannertan36

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JBB: An Artblog!

Discoholic 🪩
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almost home
hello vonnie

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dirt enthusiast
noise dept.
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#extradirty
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@blarrggh
taken at 1:30am, 2005
(chinese guy thinking in centuries) and then in the 21st let's have really weak consumer demand and high local debt
i feel like if you make a post this good you shouldn't be allowed to delete your blog
Not enough people talking about how well broccoli holds a sauce
Lost in the Mountains by Sergey Kuznetsov
email used to mean something
Drawings of overhead trolley bus wires
by Martial Richoz (Swiss, b.1963)
massively expanding the concept of "god of the gaps" to include everything i don't immediately apprehend or understand. dark matter is god. chinese is the language of god. a car with tinted windows is being driven by god
(Pouring love into your glass) say when
they should make a social interaction that doesnt leave you wondering if somethings wrong with you
is it normal to want to cry at this image
I can't remember where I read it last week, but the person discussed how when we think of chattel slavery in the US, we tend to think of massive plantations of cotton or tobacco, with one very rich white master or mistress with lots of land and lots of enslaved people. But we very rarely think of the many families that had just one or two slaves, in smaller homes.
Because it's not like you had to pay them, so once your family owned someone, they owned them and their descendants indefinitely. Could you pay and eventually free em- sure! You could also send them anywhere you want for any labor you want, could have an enslaved woman bred for more children, or maybe save up and buy new slaves and sell the old. Like cattle (thus, chattel slavery).
So it's interesting that many people go "oh well it's not like my family owned slaves!" Because like, one, how do you know that? Have you ever actually asked your grandmas about their grandmas? How many of your family members grew up with mammies? Have you ever asked? I wonder how many people have actually done the digging for the truth (or was it easier to just benefit). Because I've talked to my grandma, who picked cotton in the sea islands. She had to have been doing that for someone in the 1930s and 40s!
And two, it's easy to think that because your family (or someone else's) didn't own sprawling stolen land and generational blood money like a plantation owner, that it wasn't as important. But... It was. That was still someone's entire life. That was a person, whose labor benefitted and saved a family money that could be used in other ventures. How often do we think of them?
i think there should be two nighttimes. one for sleeping and a second one for being awake but at night. and then only one daytime because daytime doesn’t matter as much except for the birds
“nobody is making you do this” i am driven by unnatural forces you will never even begin to comprehend
St Ives, Cornwall