I'M AN EXTRAORDINARY MACHINE.

I would love a nap right now please and thank you.

(Source: weasleychild)

inherhipstheresrevolutions:

wesmonster:

thedeeface:

Get on my body. That bow-tie, too.

This is gorgeous. I have always wanted a lithe frame like that, too.

#Masculine physique problems

Oh helll I would wear this.

Taken on the whole, I would believe that Gandhi’s views were the most enlightened of all the political men of our time. We should strive to do things in his spirit: not to use violence for fighting for our cause, but by non-participation of anything you believe is evil.

Albert Einstein, in a United Nations radio interview recorded in Einstein’s study, Princeton, New Jersey, (1950)

transitorystory:

pinkpandapants:

castleoflions:

danforth:

This is fun. Try it in fullscreen. Extra points if you tilt your head. You’re only human.

Gotta go fullscreen on this one.

THIS. IS. AWESOME.

yes! yes yes yes!!!! that was so much fun!!! i vant to ride it again i vant to ride it again! (this comment awkwardly sounds like i just had sex) whateva!

Life has been so calm since then.

fuckyeahtattoos:

from the poem Invictus

twelfthmoon:

lake snyder (by Drew Point 0)

(Source: uglyplanet)

You will always be fond of me. I represent to you all the sins you never had the courage to commit.

The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde (via tenderskin)

notangryenough:

Chilean student leader Camila Vallejo sits among a peace sign created from empty teargas canisters used by police against protesters. Photograph: Roberto Candia/AP

Not since the days of Zapatistas’ Subcomandante Marcos has Latin America been so charmed by a rebel leader. This time, there is no ski mask, no pipe and no gun, just a silver nose ring.

Meet Commander Camila, a student leader in Chile who has become the face of a populist uprising that some analysts are calling the Chilean winter. Her press conferences can lead to the sacking of a minister. The street marches she leads shut down sections of the Chilean capital. She has the government on the run, and now even has police protection after receiving death threats.

Wednesday saw the start of a two-day nationwide shutdown, as transport workers and other public-sector employees joined the burgeoning student movement in protest.

“There are huge levels of discontent,” said Vallejo in a recent interview. “It is always the youth that make the first move … we don’t have family commitments, this allows us to be freer. We took the first step, but we are no longer alone, the older generations are now joining this fight.”

“We do not want to improve the actual system; we want a profound change – to stop seeing education as a consumer good, to see education as a right where the state provides a guarantee.

“Why do we need education? To make profits. To make a business? Or to develop the country and have social integration and development? Those are the issues in dispute.”

Excerpts from the article on The Guardian Website.

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