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Not today Justin
Mike Driver
tumblr dot com
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Game of Thrones Daily
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor

pixel skylines

JVL
Cosimo Galluzzi

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
styofa doing anything

shark vs the universe

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One Nice Bug Per Day

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Janaina Medeiros
sheepfilms

titsay

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seen from Türkiye

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Yahya Jammeh, the president of Gambia, has been defeated in his bid for re-election, according to results made public on Friday. It is a stunning turn for a nation that has lived for more than two decades under what human rights groups have described as a repressive regime.
Adama Barrow, a real estate company owner, was declared the winner a day after voters cast ballots, in an upset victory that astonished observers.
In a concession speech broadcast on state television on Friday night, Mr. Jammeh, one of Africa’s most eccentric leaders, calmly accepted his loss.
“I told you, Gambians, that I will not question the outcome of the results and will accept it,” he said. “I did not wish to contest or find out why they did not vote for me. I leave that with God.”
After more than 24 hours of an internet and phone blackout, networks lit up Friday morning in the nation, which has a population just under two million, as the news that Mr. Jammeh was trailing in the vote count began to trickle out. On the streets in Gambia, men took off their shirts in celebration, pounding on passing cars. One yelled repeatedly, “Today we are free!”
Mr. Jammeh seized power in a coup in 1994, and he has become known for eccentric behavior that included claiming to be able to cure AIDS with herbs, prayer and a banana. He has been denounced by human rights groups for threatening to behead gay people, ordering so-called sorcerers to be hunted and killed, and arresting and prosecuting journalists and supporters of the opposition.
“It is the birth of a new Gambia where we can together as people raise our fists to the sky and say ‘never again shall we experience dictatorship,’” said Sheriff Bojang Jr., a Gambian journalist who has lived in exile in Dakar, Senegal, for 15 years.
Mr. Barrow, a real estate agent and former security guard at a London department store, is an accidental presidential candidate. He was thrust into the position after members of his party were either arrested or died in prison this year. Supporters describe him as an unassuming businessman.
Yet he managed to do what no other opposition candidate has done in recent elections: bring various groups together to support him. His coalition of opposition groups jelled in the final days of the campaign as enthusiasm swept the streets of Banjul, the capital. People gathered by the hundreds for peaceful protests, crying out for the end to what they said was an oppressive government.
holy fuck
I’M DEAD
Why is no one talking about how Lapras is no longer endangered?!
Finally, some good news.
Being a millennial is like inheriting a burning house only to be told it’s our fault we can’t handle the heat.
Fidel Castro plays baseball in Havana, 1959.
Artist Dan Piraro
My favorite ever pronoun story has to be one of my German professor’s. He fondly remembers being mugged by a gang of teenagers in Dresden, who used Sie (formal you) the entire time.
HAND OVER THE WALLET MY GOOD SIR
The Rolling Stones, American Tour, 1972. John Pasche. Paper, Sunday Promotions Inc.
*slams fist on desk* NOW THIS IS WHAT I LIKE TO SEE
Its more beautiful than you could ever imagine
#why is putin the referee
YES
A photo of the red Dust storm that took place in Sydney in 2009 photographed by Mezza
Where is the lie