The cutest niece ever!

oozey mess
art blog(derogatory)
Not today Justin
untitled
No title available
Noah Kahan

titsay

izzy's playlists!

if i look back, i am lost
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

gracie abrams

No title available
Stranger Things
sheepfilms
Sweet Seals For You, Always
h

Product Placement

pixel skylines
Cosimo Galluzzi
Today's Document
seen from Australia

seen from Norway

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from TĂĽrkiye

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from Norway

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from TĂĽrkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from United States
@moonpuppyspeaks
The cutest niece ever!
Two weeks ago, courtesy of the investigative work of Nafeez Ahmed whose deep dig through a recently declassified and formertly Pentagon documents...
Sources: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Follow Ultrafacts for more facts
Sudden urge to visit norway
Sudden urge to move to Norway
Off to Norway!
The fact that I have to find a way to live with my mental illness gets to me every day. It’s going to be with me for the rest of my life, and I don’t really want to live with it, if that’s what it’s going to be.
Re-Fucking-Tweet
We’re not sure exactly where she was born, or when she was born, but we know that Mary Harris was from somewhere in Cork County, Ireland, and immigrated to North America with her family as a child to escape the Irish famine. In her early twenties, she moved to Chicago, where she worked as a dressmaker, and then to Memphis, Tennessee, where she met and married George Jones, a skilled iron molder and staunch unionist. The couple had four children.  Then tragedy struck: a yellow fever epidemic in 1867 took the lives of Mary’s husband and all four children. Mary Harris Jones returned to Chicago where she continued to sew, becoming a dressmaker for the wealthy. “I would look out of the plate glass windows and see the poor, shivering wretches, jobless and hungry, walking alongside the frozen lake front,” she said. “The tropical contrast of their condition with that of the tropical comfort of the people for whom I sewed was painful to me. My employers seemed neither to notice nor to care.” Then came the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. Mary once again lost everything.
After the fire, Mary began to travel across the country. The nation was undergoing dramatic change, and industrialization was changing the nature of work. She worked with the Knights of Labor, often giving speeches to inspire the workers during strikes. She organized assistance for workers’ strikes, and prepared for workers’ marches. In June 1897, after Mary addressed the railway union convention, she began to be referred to as “Mother” by the men of the union. The name stuck. That summer, when the 9,000-member Mine Workers called a nationwide strike of bituminous (soft coal) miners and tens of thousands of miners laid down their tools, Mary arrived in Pittsburgh to assist them. She became “Mother Jones” to millions of working men and women across the country for her efforts on behalf of the miners. Mother Jones was so effective the union would send her into mines, to help miners to join unions. In addition to miners, Mother Jones also was very concerned about child workers. To attract attention to the cause of abolishing child labor, in 1903, she led a children’s march of 100 children from the textile mills of Philadelphia to New York City “to show the New York millionaires our grievances.” She led the children all the way to President Theodore Roosevelt’s Long Island home.
A political progressive, she was a founder of the Social Democratic Party in 1898. Mother Jones also helped establish the Industrial Workers of the World in 1905. For all of her social reform and labor activities, she was considered by the authorities to be one of the most dangerous women in America. In 1912, Mother Jones was even charged with a capital offense by a military tribunal in West Virginia and held under house arrest for weeks until popular outrage and national attention forced the governor to release her. In her eighties, Mother Jones settled down near Washington, D.C., in 1921 but continued to travel across the country. She died, possibly aged 100, in 1930. Â Her final request was to be buried in the Miners Cemetery in Mt. Olive, Illinois, where you can visit her grave today.
we joke about procrastination but nothing is worse than the nauseating feeling of having every intention of doing something but physically not being capable of doing it and then feeling like you want to throw up because the deadline is just getting closer and closer.
I read somewhere that this campaign lowered local rape statistics by 11%.
Keep reblogging this. Everyone.
YES YES YES YES YES YES
Please, please reblog this far and wide. We need more posters that remind people that they are in charge of their own actions and that means they can decide not to rape.
my dad had a skype interview today so he was sitting in the living room looking all professional in his suit and tie and everything while he’s talking to the people who are interviewing him. and OF COURSE my cat decided that she NEEDED to speak at that moment so she just starts meowing left and right and talking crazy talk to the point where the interviewers just start laughing because she just will NOT shut up. so my dad just kind of sighs, looks at the camera, and goes, “i’m so sorry. i have to ask my cat to leave.” and then he looks over at victoria and very calmly and professionally goes, “victoria, i’m afraid you’re being too loud, and i’m going to have to ask you to leave.”
and she did. she fucking turned and walked out of the living room.
hire the man cats obey.
Kumail Nanjiani
Recording now with Producer Ann Marie Baldonado!Â
I can’t wait for this!!! -Emily
In Search of the Enemy of Man Our enemies are not man, but intolerance, fanaticism, dictatorship, cupidity, hatred and discrimination which lie within the heart of man. I believe with all my being that the struggle for equality and freedom you lead in Birmingham, Alabama… is not aimed at the whites but only at intolerance, hatred and discrimination. These are real enemies of man — not man himself. In our unfortunate fatherland we are trying to yield desperately: do not kill man, even in man’s name. Please kill the real enemies of man which are present everywhere, in our very hearts and minds. - Thich Nhat Hanh photo and words via plumvillage Man is never the enemy, ideology is the enemy - Thich Nhat Hanh
A rainbow today over Dublin after the Republic of Ireland voted yes for marriage equality.
If I string the night between two fence posts, one side heaven and one side hell, if I stand in the middle of the field with a bottle of wine, human and raging…
Stevie Edwards, from “Humanly” (via notebookings)
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/1Fgns1r BTS w/ Blaine from Cut: http://bit.ly/1H4oqKZ If you had a crystal ball and could gaze into the future, how would you feel s...