morvidra:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

cerulean-warbler:

johnskylar:

lisa-maxwell:

kyrafic:

“Never did like that much,” is a baller and superb way to express your irritation with the way the patriarchy refuses to acknowledge how badass you are.

Word.

Before World War I, she shot a cigarette out of the mouth of the Kaiser of Germany at his request.

After the war started she sent him a letter asking for another chance, as she was afraid her aim might’ve been a little off.

Annie Fucking Oakley everyone

A LEGEND

joons:

ectoviolet:

maxiesatanofficial:

memeufacturing:

did the aliens from star wars just enjoy that band in the cantina playing the exact same fucking song over and over again or was it a situation like that diner with Whats New Pussycat on repeat

considering that han solo was in that cantina, I think we all know the answer

and then when i was about to request the song for the seventh time, my buddy chewbacca, genius that he is, stopped me and said “rrrRrrrghghghhHh”. and that is when the afternoon went from good to great.

and we’re staring at this one guy–greedo–and he’s like staring at his caf cup like this, and he’s been onto us since the beginning, and he’s sitting there and his hand is shaking, and he had this look on his face like oh, like he had just gotten his thirty-day chip from anger management, and he’s staring like this, and the fourth song fades out, it’s dead quiet, then–and i don’t know if you know this, but the song begins very quietlyDAH duh DAH duh DADADAAAAA–and he goes “goddammit!” and pulls out a blaster

fantastic-artemis:

castielslostwings:

cezarywho:

thatpettyblackgirl:

Philando Castile was gunned down when he was legally carrying a firearm…

How is that story real?! Bringing guns to school?!

If you can afford to be silent about this, you have white privilege too. If you don’t call this racist bs out, you’re condoning it. PUBLICALLY condemn this girl and the inherent racism of this act.

ACTUALLY I’M GONNA REBLOG THIS A SECOND TIME because this is Kent State, guys. Kent State. The school where four students were shot to death in the 70′s for protesting war. 

That Kent State. 

This is unbelievable. 

lesbianorbits:

plum-soup:

closet-keys:

closet-keys:

this comic by Matt Lubchansky pretty much summarizes my feelings about companies that try to sell products using oppressed groups’ mass deaths as a marketing technique 

also FYI, yes this is based on an actual thing Nike did 

It looks like this:

image

and ACT UP was quoted saying in response: 

“We deserve better [than] to have our work be exploited by corporations that profiteer off grassroots resistance imagery” 

So yeah, Nike has been doing this shit. 

ok but did anybody in boardroom REALLY experience a pang of conscience? its just not realistik

Hot Topic is doing this too lmao

bitchesgetriches:

I would NEVER recommend something so legally ambiguous and clearly unethical. Which is why I’m sharing this widely. So you guys all know to never do such a thing. Ever. Because it would be bad. Make sure to reblog so others know not to ever do this very wrong thing. And definitely make sure you know what color the parking tickets in your city are. Maybe hold onto one for reference in case you ever worry that you might accidentally do this. Keep it in your car so you can look at it sometimes and say “It would be wrong to use this as a fake ticket to prevent getting a real ticket.” 

marmarinos:

Detail of an ancient Roman statue of a woman in the pudicitia pose, with pudicitia being loosely translated into English as “modesty” or “chastity.” Pudicitia is a Latin word that stems from pudor, another Latin word meaning “shame” or the “sense of shame” that compelled Roman men and women to behave in socially acceptable ways.

The pudicitia scheme or style, as it is called by scholars today, was commonly used to depict ancient Greek and Roman women in art. The pose is characterized by the woman’s head covering and the bending of both her arms, with one bent up to her face and the other crossed over her torso. That her arms are covered by her mantle is also characteristic of the pudicitia style.

Currently located in the Vatican Museums, this statue is a Flavian-era (69-96 CE) Roman copy of a Hellenistic Greek original (323 BCE-30 CE). Photo taken by Egisto Sani on Flickr

The information on the pudicitia style comes from Portrait of a Lady:
A New Statue at the Yale University Art Gallery
by Lisa R. Brody (2008).