Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
todays bird
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almost home

Discoholic 🪩

Kaledo Art

Origami Around
d e v o n
art blog(derogatory)
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

roma★

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Today's Document

shark vs the universe
dirt enthusiast
styofa doing anything
Claire Keane
Sade Olutola
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@oneirishbear
John Waters photographed by Christopher Myers in Baltimore Magazine for his 80th birthday, 22 April 2026.
Reblog daily for health and prosperity.
Wearing the necktie cape and hat together for the first time. I wish it had been a sunny day! I may not have time to duplicate this in the sun before I have to wear it the first weekend of May.
Video of my Boyfriend wearing the Tie Cape and hat that he made from over 100 ties.
Trump will back down. He always does. Stop thinking he is tough. He is a wimp. #TACO
Nazi propaganda and Trump propaganda are the same thing. Republicans are too busy licking boots to say anything.
FASCISM
My Senators never respond to the question
Wow, this is quite the perspective. So many reasons to loathe him and his policies, but this ...
with musk and trump gunning for social security, now seems like a good time to remind everyone that social security isn’t like government charity or something. it’s fully paid for. always has been. corporate media loves to parrot the conservative lie that social security is running out of money without ever mentioning why: congress stole the money. they literally robbed from peter to pay paul.
the whole idea of social security was always that you pay into it your whole life, and then when you retire the government gives you that money back. it’s your money. always has been. like sure technically the money being paid by working age people now is going to the people who are retired now. but social security was started in the 30’s, the people who are collecting benefits now paid into it their whole lives. the idea was to be a retirement savings account that the government keeps safe for you because it’s almost impossible for working class people to save for retirement under capitalism.
the problem is that congress looked at all that money just sitting there and decided to use it as a slush fund. and never paid it back. because it’s easier to steal that money than it is to raise taxes for new spending. so yeah, it’s a problem now that there are more old people retiring than there are young people working, but only because congress stole the money it was supposed to be saving for the people now retiring. all those savings could have actually earned money for the people who can’t pay in due to disability etc by being used as a massive investment fund. instead it’s the classic austerity misdirection: sabotage a useful functional government program, then claim that it doesn’t work and is too expensive. and the media never talks about it.
This is one of the reasons why the Comptroller General of the US has not signed off on a budget in decades — both parties keep illegally pretending Social Security is part of the federal budget and were the Comptroller to sign off on the budget, as is supposedly required by law, they would be liable for fraud because of it.
Sounds like a degree from Columbia, something students pay to attain, is not the long-term guarantee it was once thought to be. Sounds like a good reason to transfer out, not apply there, and never plan to attend. If they can just take your degree away after you've already earned it, what good is it?
And to be clear: this isn't a thing. Serial killers don't get their degrees revoked. War criminals don't get their degrees revoked. This is straight up fascist nonsense that makes a degree from this institution categorically a bad investment.
The consequences of shutting down the Institute of Museum and Library Services would be particularly dire for smaller museums and rural muse