unwise love is the truest love

woman disobey, when little men believe

that you, my love, are rebellion

mubanga.18. raising 2.5 plants

"There is magic in decay.
A dance to be done
For the rotting,"
Dan Chelotti, from “Compost,” Poetry (June 2014)

virgin-martyr:

“Saints have no moderation, nor do poets, just exuberance.”

— Anne Sexton, excerpt from “The Saints Come Marching In,” from The Awful Rowing Towards God
(via virgin-martyr)

blomkvis:

Chadwick Boseman for Numéro Homme Berlin 2017 photographed by Ronald Dick

mazzystardust:

Eartha Kitt and Hubert de Givenchy adjusts her dress during a fitting, Paris, France, 1961

mabellonghetti:

Jane Seymour, c.1975

communicants:

kitduckworth:

men reviewing a male filmmaker’s movie: if you can’t understand the poeticism of this movie’s slow pacing, then maybe you are not ready to understand cinema!

men reviewing a female filmmaker’s movie: not a lot happened. 0/10 wack

Men reviewing men: “A deeply moving, personal journey.”

Men reviewing women: “Too personal.”

the-eternal-moonshine:

Andy Warhol, Lips, 1986.

"She burns with a nervous brightness that at times is unbearable to watch."
Alexander Walker, on Vivien Leigh’s character in A Streetcar Named Desire.
(via xshayarsha)
"My mystery is a simple one:

I do not know what being alive is."
Clarice Lispector, from “An Apprenticeship, or, The Book of Delights,
(via violentwavesofemotion)
"Why can I not stop talking to you? In my head?"
Katherine Mansfield, from a letter to J.M. Murry written c. January 1921
(via violentwavesofemotion)

femoids:

‘Developing’ countries are still ‘developing’ because they are exploited by multinational corporations from rich 'developed’ countries.

Globalized capitalism paints a gruesome picture of the appalling, deadly practices these corporations engage in to use cheap labor and suppress any opposition through force.

The outsourcing of jobs from developed countries occurred when workers won their rights: protection from unsafe working conditions and products, a guaranteed wage, abolition of child labor, et cetera.

The fact that multinational corporations outsourced jobs to vulnerable developing countries where they can neglect basic human rights proves that capitalism is built on the backs of the poor, who suffer and starve despite resources being abundant.

Neoliberalism has identified exploited countries as 'developing’ to shift the blame and promote a disastrous agenda.

Arguments defending this exploitation usually are along the lines of “well, you can’t expect corporations to protect these people, it’s always the government who is at fault”. Those arguments prove that neoliberals have succeeded in their agenda.

Globalization, under capitalism, has not created a world government, but rather a connection between the ruling class worldwide, allowing for legal agreements that promote their interests above all.

Capitalism kills millions, regularly. Globalization has not only made that easier, it has legalized and normalized it.

anti-social-tree:

2pride2prejudice:

gina rodriguez and john mulaney went to the same high school and overlapped two years wow

so are you inplying that she may have also attended jake mcnamara’s house party

O