
tannertan36
Jules of Nature
Keni

Discoholic 🪩

Kiana Khansmith
No title available
$LAYYYTER
Game of Thrones Daily
NASA
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
ojovivo
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Peter Solarz
Not today Justin
Misplaced Lens Cap
YOU ARE THE REASON

★

blake kathryn

Product Placement

Origami Around

seen from Singapore

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@tastemaerainbow
Looking for more relatable & inspiring? Click here.
who said?
You’re like death, you take everything.
Milan Kundera (via larmoyante)
"Africa"
[ Ride high.. // #vsco #commuter #levis ]
On the go..
http://rogwalker.vsco.co
VIA THE SMITHS X CHARLIE BROWN TUMBLR
•the hippie homeland•
Annie Clavel
im lonely :( looking for a tumblr gf any takers? ♡
indieee
this makes me depressed, not even the world would last forever, not even humanity itself. :-(
indie, roma, boho ☯
On Afro-American History (1965) is a speech on black history that Malcolm X gave in Harlem a month before he was killed.
The heart of the book is a speech that Malcolm gave less than a month before his death. His point is that Black people have to become aware of their true accomplishments in the past in order to change the world in the present and future. By looking at ancient African civilizations, West African kingdoms, the rise of imperialism and the history of slavery in America, Malcolm shows that Black people have played a huge role in shaping human history.