I want boba.

Someone come with me. Preferably someone with a car :)

Kim Schmitz has NOT been sentenced yet.
He is still in custody in New Zealand, and is in the process of extradition to the United States. He was arrested 6 days ago, there’s no way they’re going to sentence him that fast.
tl;dr, the picture is inflammatory bullshit that someone made up in order to get attention.

Kim Schmitz has NOT been sentenced yet.

He is still in custody in New Zealand, and is in the process of extradition to the United States. He was arrested 6 days ago, there’s no way they’re going to sentence him that fast.

tl;dr, the picture is inflammatory bullshit that someone made up in order to get attention.

(via screamgloria)

thedailywhat:

Purrfect Prank of the Day: Redditor frackyou’s little cousin posted his phone number to Facebook along with a status update informing everyone that he was bored.
Cat Facts to the rescue.
[reddit.]

LOL

thedailywhat:

Purrfect Prank of the Day: Redditor frackyou’s little cousin posted his phone number to Facebook along with a status update informing everyone that he was bored.

Cat Facts to the rescue.

[reddit.]

LOL

(via selenovechka)

What’s seriously mind-baffling

cliffordthecorrupt:

aynrandcommune:

logicallypositive:

is how nobody seems to question the fact that the United States, which is by far the most militarily aggressive nation in contemporary international affairs, has nuclear weapons. No seriously the fact that the US has nukes scares me far more than Iran having nukes.

since ww2 it just became a complete trope that the united states HAD to have nuclear weapons as the protector and arbiter of western civilisation. but the fact that the paranoia and scaremongering succeeded to the point where nobody seemed to advocate getting rid of them once the soviet union fell is sick

Justin you’re not the only one on that thought. I’ve been completely terrified of nuclear weapons since I got into politics (although that was only like 5 years ago), it’s always been terrifying to think that we have them and never talk about them but are so quick to condemn other countries that even think about nuclear power.

I hear somebody needed a hug. This will have to do for now.

I hear somebody needed a hug. This will have to do for now.

The war on democracy

Since the Second World War, the United States has:

1) Attempted to overthrow more than 50 governments, most of them democratically elected.
2) Attempted to suppress a populist or national movement in 20 countries.
3) Grossly interfered in democratic elections in at least 30 countries.
4) Dropped bombs on the people of more than 30 countries.
5) Attempted to assassinate more than 50 foreign leaders.

In total, the United States has carried out one or more of these actions in 69 countries. In almost all cases, Britain has been a collaborator. The “enemy” changes in name - from communism to Islamism - but mostly it is the rise of democracy independent of western power, or a society occupying strategically useful territory and deemed expendable, like the Chagos Islands.

The sheer scale of suffering, let alone criminality, is little known in the west, despite the presence of the world’s most advanced communications, nominally freest journalism and most admired academy. That the most numerous victims of terrorism - western terrorism - are Muslims is unsayable, if it is known. That half a million Iraqi infants died in the 1990s as a result of the embargo imposed by Britain and America is of no interest. That extreme jihadism, which led to the 11 September 2001 attacks, was nurtured as a weapon of western policy (in “Operation Cyclone”) is known to specialists, but otherwise suppressed.

While popular culture in Britain and America immerses the Second World War in an ethical bath for the victors, the holocausts arising from Anglo-American dominance of resource-rich regions are consigned to oblivion. Under the Indonesian tyrant Suharto, anointed “our man” by Margaret Thatcher, more than a million people were slaughtered in what the CIA described as “the worst mass murder of the second half of the 20th century”. This estimate does not include the third of the population of East Timor who were starved or murdered with western connivance, British fighter-bombers and machine-guns.

These true stories are told in declassified files in the Public Record Office, yet represent an entire dimension of politics and the exercise of power excluded from public consideration. This has been achieved by a regime of uncoercive information control, from the evangelical mantra of advertising to soundbites on BBC news and now the ephemera of social media.

It is as if writers as watchdogs are extinct, or in thrall to a sociopathic zeitgeist, convinced they are too clever to be duped. Witness the stampede of sycophants eager to deify Christopher Hitchens, a war lover who longed to be allowed to justify the crimes of rapacious power. “For almost the first time in two centuries,” wrote Terry Eagleton, “there is no eminent British poet, playwright or novelist prepared to question the foundations of the western way of life.” No Orwell warns that we do not need to live in a totalitarian society to be corrupted by totalitarianism. No Shelley speaks for the poor, no Blake proffers a vision, no Wilde reminds us that “disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man’s original virtue”. And grievously no Pinter rages at the war machine, as in “American Football”:

(via mediaofthemovement)