Considered by experts one of the best pictures ever made of a lightning strike 1984 by Johnny Autery of Dixons Mills, Alabama
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tits mcgrits, that’s an eerie shot.

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Considered by experts one of the best pictures ever made of a lightning strike 1984 by Johnny Autery of Dixons Mills, Alabama
jesusfuckingchrist
tits mcgrits, that’s an eerie shot.
Mikhail Dorokhov — Space Composition [gouache, paper, on fibreboard, 1962]
Ken Gun Min (Korean, 1976) - Queen of the Night (Koreatown) (2023)
Sharon Ellis, “Mojave Night” (detail), 2022, alkyd on paper.
Happy Birthday Trayvon Martin
Rest in Power
February 5, 1995 - February 26, 2012
[Image Description: photo of Trayvon Martin, a smiling Black teenager with short cropped hair. End I.D]
Rest in power, Trayvon. You deserved so much more and I sincerely hope your family gets peace.
Wheelz of Steel – OutKast
“Pluto at Perihelion,” by Don Dixon
Don't sabotage your identity trying to name it. Let it be undefined, permeable, mixed, peculiar, unapologetically authentic. Be in peace with being unprecedented, with not fitting anywhere, with being adrift. Before flight, there's a free fall.
Opeyemi Olukotun.
Opeyemi Olukotun (Nigerian, 1989), The Weight They Cannot See, 2024. Acrylic on canvas, 60 x 48 in.
Julian Bond in 1968; co-founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center
Plants can grow near electrical outlets when seeds and moisture collect inside wall gaps.
The public is being shown just enough to know the truth, and to understand that nothing is going to happen.
Do Y’all remember the Pentagon Papers? When Daniel Ellsberg leaked them in 1971, the government panicked precisely because they all came out at once. The documents landed as a single, overwhelming moral event. They collapsed official narratives about Vietnam in one blow and ignited public outrage that couldn’t be staggered or softened. The lesson power learned from that moment was not “don’t lie,” but “never let the truth arrive whole again.” Since then, exposure has been redesigned to arrive in pieces that are manageable, deniable, and endlessly debatable. Do Y’all remember MKUltra? When details of the CIA’s human experimentation program began leaking in the 1970s, they didn’t surface as a single reckoning. They emerged through hearings, partial disclosures, missing files, and official shrugs. By the time the public understood the scale, which involved drugging civilians, experimenting on prisoners, and destroying records, the moment for accountability had already passed. The psychological effect was profound because people learned that even when the state admits to grotesque abuse, nothing necessarily follows. Remember Edward Snowden and the NSA surveillance revelations? This is one of the clearest modern parallels to the Epstein files debacle. At first, the disclosures were shocking. We saw mass data collection, warrantless surveillance, and the scope of the security state laid bare. But instead of a single, sustained confrontation, the information also arrived in waves. Each revelation triggered a brief spike of concern then followed by normalization. Over time, the public absorbed the idea that privacy was already gone and resistance was futile. Surveillance didn’t end. Folks simply adapted their expectations downward. The system didn’t change, but the public psyche did. You can also look at how the Catholic Church handled its abuse revelations. For decades, cases surfaced one diocese at a time, one report at a time, and one country at a time. The incremental exposure delayed full institutional reckoning and allowed the Church to posture as “addressing the issue” while continuing to protect itself. By the time the pattern was undeniable, many people were already exhausted, cynical, or resigned. Again, horror became procedural. What all these cases share is the same psychological outcome. When wrongdoing is revealed slowly, the public never experiences a unified moral demand moment. Instead, people are trained to live alongside the knowledge. To scroll past it. To argue about details. To accept that “this is just how it is” and nothing happens to powerful rich men.
20 December 2025
do it for the faggots who never got to btw
The Quiet In Late January, Before The World Wakes Up