
Janaina Medeiros
ojovivo
wallacepolsom
Mike Driver

roma★
Keni
RMH
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

No title available
Jules of Nature

PR's Tumblrdome
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Today's Document
occasionally subtle
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Sade Olutola
Show & Tell
d e v o n
seen from United States
seen from Venezuela

seen from Italy

seen from Belarus

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

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

seen from Netherlands
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from South Korea
@un-earth-ing
Georges Braque
L'aquarium bleu, 1960–1962
Oil on canvas on cardboard
Ocula
Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan-Bouveret (1852-1929) — Wedding in the Photographer's Studio [oil on canvas, 1879]
Thriller: A Cruel Picture aka They Call Her One Eye (1973)
by Alex Fridolinski aka Bo Arne Vibenius
Michelangelo Lovelace
Gifts From Abroad, 1996
Acrylic on Textured Canvas
60 x 53 inches
Fort Gansevoort
The Devil Rides In: Spellbinding Satanic Magick & The Rockult 1967-1974 | Various Artists 3CD Box Set
The Smiths & Morrissey (albums, singles and interviews), 1995
Custom tape collection. Printed on yellow card, the cover images are hand coloured photocopies related to Andy Warhol and his films. In addition to the collection there are related bonus tracks, including cover versions from Sandie Shaw, Kirsty MacColl, Act and Bryan Ferry’s The Right Stuff
Moondial, 1988
The Modern Jazz Quartet - The Sheriff, 1964
Artwork by Stanislaw Zagorski
Taken from Petticoat, 20 March 1971
Artwork by Leslie Chapman
Slow Water - Yoko Kanno Napple Tale: Arsia in Daydream (Sega Dreamcast, 2000)
I encourage anyone who wonders things like "Why does the DPRK hate the United States so much?" or "Why would the United States lie about North Korea?" to, well, first of all, cultivate a sense of empowered investigative curiosity about the world around them, but secondly, to just go to the wikipedia page for The Korean War and check under the "civilian casualties" section.
actually here I'll just drop a screenshot
I want you try to envision that number. The population of the DPRK in 1954 is cited by various Western sources as being between 7.7 million - 10.2 million, however more contemporary sources seem to lean towards the larger number (7.7 million was estimated by the CIA in 1954)
If we say 10 million people, with 1.5 million casualties. That's 15% of the post-war population. 15%. That's a little more frequent than 1 in 7. Imagine one out of every 7 people you know being killed. This study estimates that the median individual has a social network of about 470 people. Rounding down, 15% of that is 70 people. Imagine 70 people out of everyone you know personally being killed. 15% is massive. It's a genuinely sickening and horrific figure.
In comparison, in WWII, according to Wikipedia the UK had a casualty rate of .94% of their 1939 population, and the USSR had a casualty rate closer with 13.7% of their 1940 population.
The United States is a hulking behemoth of death and cruelty and genocide. It is a machine dedicated to one thing, which is the extraction of power and profit at the cost of any amount of human life. Like all bourgeois imperialist powers, it is a mechanism for the transmutation of innocent human life directly into political-economic power.
Moreover, The United States of America must be destroyed.
By Jeffrey S. Kaye
No matter how much you hate the US it can never be enough
this is also why you keep seeing those meme pictures of South Korean grandmas going "there are no good U.S. presidents." A lot of younger chuds might salivate at the thought of being a USA colony and a lot of rightoid establishment might sell out the South Korean public to line their pockets but do not get it twisted; there is a sizeable intergenerational movement to get these fuckers out of the country, regardless of how pie-in-the-sky that goal is.
I'm once again making myself quietly grateful for the sweet, mellow, nutty flavor of this delightful Sartori favorite.
Gee, if only Tom Cruise and Steven Spielberg had made a blockbuster movie about how this was a bad idea.
The Chicago PD made a “heat list” to predict people involved with violent crimes — and instead, it caused them.
Guy gets placed on a list that says he will be "party to gun violence." It doesn't predict whether he will be a shooter or a victim, just that he will be involved.
Police ramp up surveillance around him, follow him, park outside his home. His entire community gets spooked.
People are then convinced he's a snitch working for the police. He gets shot twice.
The algorithm "worked."