I have never made a love potion that didn’t blow up,
but your mouth is the sexiest beaker.
Bend me over your periodic table
then try to tell me we don’t have chemistry.

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
🪼

⁂
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Stranger Things
i don't do bad sauce passes
we're not kids anymore.

roma★
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Not today Justin
Jules of Nature
will byers stan first human second
Three Goblin Art

titsay
Peter Solarz
hello vonnie
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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@dashibid-blog
I have never made a love potion that didn’t blow up,
but your mouth is the sexiest beaker.
Bend me over your periodic table
then try to tell me we don’t have chemistry.
Countries With Similar US State Prison Populations
Casey Legler is a woman working as a male model. She looks wonderfully comfortable shrugging into tailored suits and chomping on cigars. But assigning words to the experience isn’t as easy. In an interview in her New York City studio, Legler steers around phrases like “gender identity” and “gender expression” in favor of having a conversation about freedom.
The latest interview with one of fashions many androgynous models, with video. :)
The Christian narrative gave them a sense of their place in time and history and told them that they were so much more than mere flesh and blood and that there was much more to their existence than all that which they could merely touch, see and hear. This told them that tyrants, despots and juntas would never enslave them or possess them. Socialism gave them an opportunity to carry the teachings of their saviour into the secular marketplace where charity, compassion, equality and the dignity of work similarly underpinned the trade union movement and the Labour party.
Kevin McKenna reflects on the changing attitudes of religion toward socialism and socialism toward religion.
Damn
Kate Winslet (in Alexander McQueen) with her CBE, for services to drama, awarded to her by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, November 21st
Everything about this is fierce/flawless
After surviving a Supreme Court decision and a presidential election, the Obama administration’s health-care law faces another challenge: a public largely unaware of major changes that will roll out in the coming months. States are rushing to decide whether to build their own health exchanges and the administration is readying final regulations, but a growing body of research suggests that most low-income Americans who will become eligible for subsidized insurance have no idea what is coming…Low enrollment could lead to higher premiums, health policy experts say. Hospitals worry that, without widespread participation, they will continue getting stuck with patients’ unpaid medical bills.
preexisting conditions, tax burdens, wellness programs and exchanges -- wonkblog has a roundup of good ACA (Obamacare) details.
Awesomeness.
"Why unacceptable for someone like me to wear women’s clothes? Modelling for the store is helping my granddaughter and I have nothing to lose. We were very happy on the day of the shooting. I’m very old and all that I care about is to be happy."
hat-tip- The Dish
organizing wal-mart
(a nice overview and reminder before next friday)
Hang-gliding is quite the purest form of flying. Sailplanes insulate the pilot too much from the passage of air. Motorised aircraft dull the senses with noise and vibration, and isolate the pilot still further from his surroundings. Helicopters move with all the grace of a washing machine. Hot-air balloons and para-gliders are exemplary. But to lie prone in a hang-glider harness, exposed to the elements and using only body motions to control the lift and direction of flight, is at once to fulfil man’s oldest of dreams and to experience the nearest thing to bird flight.
~who knows why this is in the Economist, but I approve :)
the intertwined histories of war and prosthetics
Not a bad night
4 for 4 on marriage
3 for 4 on ending prohibition
Sharrod
Tammy
Todd legitimately shut down
Yes, this is important! According to the Citizen Media Law Project:
If you want to take photographs or shoot video inside your polling place, you must be cautious to avoid violating the law. Election laws are serious business – you could be removed from the polling place and even subject to criminal penalties. Some states like Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, and Texas expressly prohibit the use of photographic and recording equipment inside polling places. In addition, a majority of states have laws prohibiting the disclosure of your own marked ballot, although the details of these laws vary significantly.
We’ll be honest: This is an awesome/scary new-media problem that we, as journalists, didn’t anticipate before today and haven’t tracked in all 50 states.
CMLP has a handy chart that documents the laws in each state. Check these AND double-check with your state elections board to find out specific laws in your state, but err on the side of caution — a misstep could get your ballot challenged, and could lead to civil and criminal penalties.
Obviously, this is an interesting conflict of rights: Our right to free speech versus the long-held American ideal of a truly secret balloting system. As this story develops, we’ll have more.
The third option
by Me. Recently published in the CW newsletter of my house.
If you want to start a passionate debate at a dinner party this fall, forget about religion or sports, just mention that you won’t be voting for either Obama or Romney this fall. Better yet, say that you don’t vote in any presidential election.
The duty and power of voting is a deeply entrenched American value. We have learned all our lives that it is the right way to participate, to “make your voice heard.” Yet, as defensive as Americans get about our duty to vote, few people seem to actually support the candidate or even to believe that the president actually has much power. John Howard Yoder describes this culture around voting as perpetuating the “mythology of the nation-state as savior” and calls voting a “confession of faith” in the system. Indeed, the ritual of voting is deeply ingrained in our psyche. So when someone actively chooses not to cooperate with this narrative, the reaction is strong.
Catholic Workers, Pentecostals, Quakers, Jehovah’s Witness and others, though, have a long history of resisting the accepted narrative, including the “duty” to vote. The biblical, moral and personal reasons for this are too complex to adequately describe here, but the action of voting is certainly worth some serious discernment, discernment that includes options beyond red and blue, so I’ll try to mention a few basics to get your thoughts flowing.
Non-cooperation with the state was theologically important to early Christians and has been continued by the peace churches and Christian anarchists in the US for centuries. As Christians, we are first and foremost called to obey God and to build God’s kingdom on earth; how then can we simultaneously pledge allegiance to a government that so often directly violates the commandments of that God? Non-cooperation can mean many things, for some it can start with not reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, for others it means tax resistance or conscientious objection in times of war, for some it can also mean the active decision not to vote. Most basically, the logic is this: if I vote and pay for a government which kills and oppresses millions, am I not cooperating in those actions? Have I not put obedience to the systems of government above my obedience to the laws of God?
Active noncooperation, however, should not be confused with silence. I cannot simply not vote, or not file taxes, or not go to war. I must make this decision an active statement in itself and an invitation to conscience-forming debate with other thoughtful citizens. Ammon Hennacy, a friend of Dorothy Day and one of my favorite CWers, never paid taxes or voted but every tax day he stood in the town square with a sign, talking to people about his decision not to let his money pay for bombs. He used his noncooperation as an opening for conversation, participating much more directly and actively in civil issues than had he simply cast a vote for a third party or settled for a candidate who advocated fewer bombs.
One might say that voting itself can silence us and lull us into complacency with the government, handing over our power and responsibility to the “savior state.” Christian anarchism and personalism are central to the history of the Catholic Worker. These philosophies believe in the power and responsibility of the individual, not the government. When my neighbor asks for food and I have extra, it is my duty to share with her. It should also be my goal, though, to strive for self sufficiency so that I will not have to rely on others to feed me. Ideally, the government has no place in these relationships. For this reason, you might see anarchists gardening and sharing open meals but you probably will not see them voting for or against federal food stamp programs. Advocating government safety nets hands over our power and responsibility to a third party and takes the personal out of it. It can lull us into reliance on the government and make us feel excused from our biblical duty to “feed the hungry.”
Voting is a right, and it is a right that should be extended to all, but it is also a decision that we should approach thoughtfully and critically. There are many who have been denied even this small form of political legitimacy throughout our history and plenty continue to face disenfranchisement; new voter ID laws and bans against those with felony record are added in many states this year. I am not trying to minimize their struggle for the important symbol of legitimacy that voting represents in our culture. But when we have the right, it is our duty not to let it be used against us. The idea that voting is voice and the state is savior can easily be used to lull us into silence; it is up to us to make sure that it doesn’t.
The most effective forms of social change are not those that fit neatly into the acceptable realm of voting. When we start to believe that voting is voice, we silence ourselves. When we vote for the “least bad” and hope he remembers us next year, we risk handing over our power. When we pledge allegiance to Caesar even in opposition to the radical call of the Gospel, we miss the opportunity to live more justly. Every day, it is up to us to struggle with the balance between the two authorities under which we live and to decide how we will engage with each; that is as true this November as ever.
Further reading:
Lewis, Ted. Electing Not To Vote: Christian Reflections on Reasons for Not Voting
Hennacy, Ammon. The Book of Ammon
Zwick, Mark and Louise. The Catholic Worker Movement: Intellectual and Spiritual Origins
The Economist resigns itself to endorsing Obama
At least Mr Obama, although he distanced himself from Bowles-Simpson, has made it clear that any long-term solution has to involve both entitlement reform and tax rises. Mr Romney is still in the cloud-cuckoo-land of thinking you can do it entirely through spending cuts: the Republican even rejected a ratio of ten parts spending cuts to one part tax rises. Backing business is important, but getting the macroeconomics right matters far more.
and wishes the Republicans had tried harder
Mr Obama’s shortcomings have left ample room for a pragmatic Republican, especially one who could balance the books and overhaul government. Such a candidate briefly flickered across television screens in the first presidential debate. This newspaper would vote for that Mitt Romney, just as it would for the Romney who ran Democratic Massachusetts in a bipartisan way (even pioneering the blueprint for Obamacare). The problem is that there are a lot of Romneys and they have committed themselves to a lot of dangerous things.
Jessica Brown-Findlay and Mary Charteris photographed by Alex Sainsbury for Dominic Jones Jewelry, Fall/Winter 2012
This looks like the cover of a lesbian vampire novel THAT I TOTALLY WANNA READ! Oh and the blonde lovely that Lady Sybil has just turned into a fellow creature of the night is Daphne Guiness’ niece (as if this could get any more fabulous!)
Happy Halloween
I tried it; it's true
Google's Bisexual Problem: pretending Bi's don't exist