Yuck - southern skies
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Origami Around
hello vonnie
wallacepolsom
we're not kids anymore.

ellievsbear
Show & Tell

⁂
Xuebing Du

roma★
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Product Placement

Kaledo Art

tannertan36
Today's Document
NASA
Three Goblin Art
Sweet Seals For You, Always

#extradirty
Stranger Things

seen from Malaysia
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seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

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@indywasthedog
Yuck - southern skies
This is the cutest thing i have ever seen
Oregon judge strikes down ban on same-sex marriages
A federal judge struck down Oregon’s ban on same-sex marriage on Monday, clearing the way for couples to tie the knot immediately.
US district court judge Michael McShane wrote:
Because Oregon’s marriage laws discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation, the laws violate the Equal Protection Clause of the fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution.
Full story here.
Vegan Vegetable Korma
Waddle’s Coffee Shop, 1946 by Bart King on Flickr.
Chilean activist destroys student debt papers worth $500 million May 19, 2014
An activist in Chile has burnt documents representing $500 million (£300 million) worth of student debt during a protest at Universidad del Mar.
Francisco Tapia, who is also known as “Papas Fritas”, claimed that he had “freed” the students by setting fire to the debt papers or “pagarés”.
Mr Tapia has justified his actions in a video he posted on YouTube on Monday 12 May, which has since gone viral and garnered over 55,000 views.
In the five-minute video the artist and activist, translated by the Chilean news site Santiago Times, he passionately says: “You don’t have to pay another peso [of your student loan debt]. We have to lose our fear, our fear of being thought of as criminals because we’re poor. I am just like you, living a s**tty life, and I live it day by day — this is my act of love for you.”
He confessed he destroyed the papers without the knowledge of the students during a takeover at the university demanding free higher education.
According to the video’s description, Mr Tapia was at the protests when he hatched the plan to wipe the student debt by stealing the papers. It goes on to say that he wanted to create a work of art to reflect the problem of student debt plaguing the nation.
While his act of defiance will have brought smile to those now debt-free students, it will be difficult for the university to recoup the losses and the higher institution may have to individually sue students to get the get the debt repaid.
There have been protests in Chile since 2011 calling for reform of the university system and for free high-quality education. It was hoped the newly-elected president, Michelle Bachelet, would be bring reform, after a campaign promising drastic change to the education system.
However, two months on, tens of thousands of students have taken again to the street calling again for changes promised.
Last week there were clashes on the street of the Chilean capital, Santiago, as demonstrations turned violent.
Source
Public school enrollment disparities exist 60 years after historic desegregation ruling
Racism is far more than old white men using the N-word
Gary Younge: Why is there outrage only when epithets are caught on tape? Discrimination is in reality carried out by well-mannered people (via guardian)
So incredibly happy.
Sometimes the real works of pop art are in the museum café. http://instagram.com/p/n09RstAp2E/
Rare, ugly goblin shark caught in the Gulf of Mexico
If you don’t already have a fear of the ocean, you’re about to
"The Good Boys" [x]/[x]
Americans Are Going to Juarez for Cheap Dental Care
Every workday, Dr. Jessica Nitardy leaves her home near El Paso, Texas and drives for more than an hour to the Mexican border. She crosses immigration and heads to her dental practice in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, which until recently was considered one of the most dangerous cities in the world.
But the patients she sees aren’t Mexican—almost all are American.
“I can count my Mexican patients on my fingers,” she told me in a phone interview. “No, they all come from Austin, Houston, even Florida, Colorado, Alaska … ”
Read more. [Image: Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters]
Series by Erik Kwakkel: The Beauty of the Injured Book, from medieval manuscripts in the Leiden, Universiteitsbibliotheek collection:
Bad Back: 15th century
Sliced: c. 1100
Scar Tissue: c. 1000
Touched by a Human: 12th century
Mouldy skin: 11th century