@ayishat_akanbi

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ellievsbear
Three Goblin Art
will byers stan first human second

@theartofmadeline
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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todays bird
noise dept.
taylor price
Sade Olutola

pixel skylines

tannertan36
KIROKAZE
$LAYYYTER
hello vonnie
almost home
NASA

seen from United States

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seen from Uruguay

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seen from Malaysia
@xponury-blog
@ayishat_akanbi
Alain Mikli NOW
Hakuchi
Najdziwniejsze auto z transaxlem. Volvo 340 GL
that is adorable :3
Vampire Corpse by Jason Horley
A ver que onda esta noche
"The Pugly Truth"
A peckish pug can be doggedly single-minded.
FOR SALE as a toddler tee and baby onesie at Threadless.com.
Shop/Vote on Threadless.
My Shop on Society6.
Washed, clay-barred, and waxed me Volvo last weekend…took a long time but I gotta keep that mustard tangy :B
4 Kasia :)
by Urs Fisher
Karol Rudyk, awesome polish painter
Miu Miu
TRENDS REPORT BY ALEXVI | GQ STYLE CHINA SPRING/SUMMER 2013
In Poland, the Bras d’honneur became known as “Kozakiewicz’s gesture” (gest Kozakiewicza). Kozakiewicz made the gesture on 30 July 1980 to Russian spectators in the stadium during the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. The crowd supporting Soviet jumper Konstantin Volkov booed, hissed, jeered, and whistled during Kozakiewicz’s spectacular performance. Having just secured his gold medal position, Kozakiewicz made the gesture in defiance to the Soviet crowd. He later confirmed his dominance over the competition by breaking the world record, clearing at 5.78 meters.
The photos of this incident circled the globe, with the exception of the Soviet Union and its satellites. While international observers varied in their reaction to the incident, Kozakiewicz’s act received much support in Polish society, which resented Soviet control over Eastern Europe (Poland was in the midst of labor strikes that led to the creation of the labor union Solidarity less than two months later). After the 1980 Olympics ended, the Soviet ambassador to Poland demanded that Kozakiewicz be stripped of his medal over his “insult to the Soviet people”.The official response of the Polish government was that Kozakiewicz’s arm gesture had been an involuntary muscle spasm caused by his exertion.