These dresses are soooooooooooo adorable!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
d e v o n
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

blake kathryn
RMH
trying on a metaphor

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styofa doing anything
Misplaced Lens Cap
tumblr dot com
Monterey Bay Aquarium
KIROKAZE
Mike Driver
dirt enthusiast

shark vs the universe

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titsay
NASA
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@sequinsnpearls
These dresses are soooooooooooo adorable!
OLIVIA PALERMO, o cĂłmo hacer de los broches tu mejor aliado â¤đ #editorial #netaporter #fashion #it_girls #oliviapalermo #streetstyle #knitwear #styles #iconstyle
DIY 4 Ingredient Flourless Chocolate Mug Cake
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sew-much-to-do: a visual collection of sewing tutorials/patterns, knitting, diy, crafts, recipes, etc.
25 Mug Cakes from Will Cook for Smiles.Â
There are so many different types of quick and easy mug cakes in this roundup like:
Red Velvet Mug Cake
One Minute Chocolate Peanut Butter Mug Cake
Nutella Mug CakeÂ
Ondria Hardin by Nathaniel Goldberg | Vogue China, December 2015
Anabel Krasnotsvetova by Venetia Scott for Vogue China Collections October 2015
âNew Minimalismâ Lina Zhang by Julia Hetta for Vogue China October 2012
Les Beehive â Vogue China by Mario Testino, September 2015
http://million-dollar-goals.tumblr.com/
DIY Jeweled Shoes from Honestly WTF.
Using costume jewelry, easily update and restyle your flats or heels into something special and one of a kind.
Top Photo: DIY Jeweled Heels here.
Bottom Photo: DIY Jeweled Shoe Clips here.
Merry Christmas wherever you are! â¤ď¸â¤ď¸ by robertcavalli
#tbt #christmas
She is a gem
Welll shit
Just a black mama I swear. âGon be wit ha denâ đ
Mamaaaa
Black mamas gon always be black mamas
That shit had me fucking dead
Shit had ME feeling like I was a child again being scolded lol
đ
Rolling into 2016 thinking back to this year being filled with highs and lows. Adele said hello, Bieber said sorry. The world struggles, groups like ISIS gain more power, people like Donald Trump get to run for president, Syria civil wars, Chinaâs stock market tumbles, Bill Cosby is called out, Black lives matter more than ever and climate change is more noticeable than ever- we know that we have to rise to counter the negative with some positive, no matter how big or small. Thank you for listening to our voice, supporting our designs and giving us all your feedback so that we can serve you better. Wishing you all a beautiful entry into the New Year!
On March 5th, 1945, Lena Baker, a maid, mother of three and former cotton-picker, was the first woman to be executed in the state of Georgia. She was wrongly convicted for killing her white employer, Ernest Knight, after he held her captive for days and threatened to kill her if she went back home to her family. Knight promised to kill Lena Baker with an iron bar. She took his gun in self defense and shot Knight. She immediately reported the incident to the authorities and told them exactly what happened and how she shot him in self defense. She was charged with Capital Murder at trial by an all-white male jury. Baker was the only woman executed by electrocution in Georgia. 60 years later in 2005, Baker was granted an unconditional pardon by the state of Georgia.Â
Donât forget Lena Baker!! Sheâs just like all of the innocent black lives lost today and desired to be forgotten and thrown away.
Mary Ellen Pleasant: 1st Black Millionaire in the U.S. & known as âThe Mother of Human Rights in Californiaâ
Unfortunately, some accomplishments are overlooked in history, example: Madam CJ Walker is referred to as the first black millionaire in this country. That information is false, that distinction belongs to Mary Ellen Pleasant.
 She used her fortune to further the abolitionist movement. She worked on the underground railroad across many states and then brought it to California during the Gold Rush Era.
After the Civil War, Mary took her battles to the courts in the 1860s and won several Civil Rights victories, one of which was cited and upheld in the 1980s and resulted in her being called âThe Mother of Human Rights in Californiaâ.
Valaida Snow was detained in a Nazi Concentration Camp For 2 Years. Snow was the top female trumpet player in the U.S. and Europe, she was on top of the world until the Naziâs captured her after a performance in Germany.
According to Louis Armstrong: âValaida Snow is the worldâs second best jazz trumpet player, besides me.â
After her release, she was never the same and sunk into oblivion. Itâs rumored that she got on drugs to ease the traumatic pain before her death.
The fate of black people from 1933 to 1945 in Nazi Germany and in German-occupied territories ranged from isolation to persecution, sterilization, medical experimentation, incarceration, brutality, and murder. However, there was no systematic program for their elimination as there was for Jews and other groups.
After World War I, the Allies stripped Germany of its African colonies. The German military stationed in Africa (Schutztruppen), as well as missionaries, colonial bureaucrats, and settlers, returned to Germany and took with them their racist attitudes. Separation of whites and blacks was mandated by the Reichstag (German parliament), which enacted a law against mixed marriages in the African colonies.
Following World War I and the Treaty of Versailles (1919), the victorious Allies occupied the Rhineland in western Germany. The use of French colonial troops, some of whom were black, in these occupation forces exacerbated anti-black racism in Germany. Racist propaganda against black soldiers depicted them as rapists of German women and carriers of venereal and other diseases. The children of black soldiers and German women were called âRhineland Bastards.â
The Nazis, at the time a small political movement, viewed them as a threat to the purity of the Germanic race. In Mein Kampf (My Struggle), Hitler charged that âthe Jews had brought the Negroes into the Rhineland with the clear aim of ruining the hated white race by the necessarily-resulting bastardization.â
African German mulatto children were marginalized in German society, isolated socially and economically, and not allowed to attend university. Racial discrimination prohibited them from seeking most jobs, including service in the military. With the Nazi rise to power they became a target of racial and population policy. By 1937, the Gestapo (German secret state police) had secretly rounded up and forcibly sterilized many of them. Some were subjected to medical experiments; others mysteriously âdisappeared.â
The racist nature of Adolf Hitlerâs regime was disguised briefly during the Olympic Games in Berlin in August 1936, when Hitler allowed 18 African American athletes to compete for the U.S. team. However, permission to compete was granted by the International Olympic Committee and not by the host country.
Adult African Germans were also victims. Both before and after World War I, many Africans came to Germany as students, artisans, entertainers, former soldiers, or low-level colonial officials, such as tax collectors, who had worked for the imperial colonial government.Â
Some African Americans, caught in German-occupied Europe during World War II, also became victims of the Nazi regime. Many, like female jazz artist Valaida Snow, were imprisoned in Axis internment camps for alien nationals. The artist Josef Nassy, living in Belgium, was arrested as an enemy alien and held for seven months in the Beverloo transit camp in German-occupied Belgium. He was later transferred to Germany, where he spent the rest of the war in the Laufen internment camp and its subcamp, Tittmoning, both in Upper Bavaria.
European and American blacks were also interned in the Nazi concentration camp system.
Vivian Malone Jones is one of two black students whose effort to enroll at the University of Alabama led to George Wallaceâs infamous âstand in the schoolhouse doorâ in 1963. Jones eventually became the schoolâs first black graduate.