1. 23:34 24th May 2013

    Notes: 1366

    Reblogged from notdavestrider

    Tags: thankhomestuck

    uncle-eridan:

    p2iicon:

    uncle-eridan:

    Can we all take a moment to remember that Feferi is not that nice and Vriska is not that mean?

    image

    image

    image

    image

    image

    image

    image

    She also was pretty damn mean to Jade. I mean she called her a retard. Feferi really isn’t as nice as everyone thinks she is…

    ^

     
  2. 23:31

    Notes: 2064

    Reblogged from notdavestrider

    Tags: hussieogog

    image: Download

    youunderestimatemetyler:

in case you couldnt make it to the con you can photoshop yourself in

    youunderestimatemetyler:

    in case you couldnt make it to the con you can photoshop yourself in

    (Source: everythingipostiscanon)

     
  3. 23:27

    Notes: 7353

    Reblogged from das-nawt-bene

    Tags: babyhomestucksollux

    latulapyrope:

    image

    image

    DO YOU EVER JUST LAUGH BECAUSE WHEN WE WERE FIRST INTRODUCED TO SOLLUX HE JUST ARGUED WITH HIMSELF FOR ABOUT TWO PARAGRAPHS AND THEN TOLD US TO GO AWAY

     
  4. image: Download

    thelilnan:



These are terrible instructions.

    thelilnan:

    image

    These are terrible instructions.

    (Source: sincerelyjoanna)

     
  5. genitally:

    daftyank replied to your photo: motherfucker

    Oh hey, that was you? Huh. Okay. Cool.

    isn’t that post how we started following each other? Or am i remembering wrong? the original lives here: http://genitally.tumblr.com/post/42846178057/if-you-watch-les-mis-backwards-its-a-movie-about

    It’s possible, but seems unlikely. While your assessment is undeniably amusing, I’m not really a Les Misérables fan - in fact, I don’t believe I’ve ever even watched it - so I’d be surprised if that was what caused me to follow you.

     
  6. 23:15

    Notes: 17

    Reblogged from asya-yay

    Tags: historyphotography

    image: Download

    chingizhobbes:

Austro-Hungarian POWs in Russia, 1915. Photo by Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii.

    chingizhobbes:

    Austro-Hungarian POWs in Russia, 1915. Photo by Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii.

    (Source: wikimedia)

     
  7. toomanyforgottendreams:

    kerilu:

    mtnduh:

    Coca-Cola’s long experimented with its vending machines, trying to make them more technologically advanced than the average soda-spitter-outer.

    In the past, they’ve been known to give you a beverage only if you give them a hug, or if you dance or sing in front of them. Now, the beverage giant is attempting a much loftier goal: world peace.

    Behind Coke’s Attempt to Unite Indians and Pakistanis with Vending Machines

    this video is tears — like cryingidon’tcareitmustnotbecapitalismihopeit’sreal tears it’s so stunning

    wah cool!

    This video is so beautiful. I don’t think a commercial has ever made me cry before…

     
  8. eunnieboo:

    trying to figure out headcanon faces for some of the trolls!

     
  9. Plays: 76

    notmydate:

    Martin Freeman reads from Douglas Adams’ So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.  In which Arthur Dent calls the pub to try to retrieve his winning raffle ticket upon which he had written Fenchurch’s phone number, and we are introduced to a man named John Watson who has suffered a terrible loss.

     
  10. 22:54

    Notes: 88266

    Reblogged from doigiavidai

    Tags: ducks

    image: Download

    doigiavidai:

221cbakerstreet:

teenytigress:

DUCK UPDATE: IT HAS IMPRINTED AND THINKS THIS BOY IS IT’S MOMMY. OMG

IT GOT SO BIG

Má chắc đến chết vì con vịt này quá =)))))))))))))

    doigiavidai:

    221cbakerstreet:

    teenytigress:

    DUCK UPDATE: IT HAS IMPRINTED AND THINKS THIS BOY IS IT’S MOMMY. OMG

    IT GOT SO BIG

    Má chắc đến chết vì con vịt này quá =)))))))))))))

     
  11. 22:48

    Notes: 64521

    Reblogged from jinglybutts

    Tags: not sure how to tag

    comedy-con-couture:

    WHY DON’T HUMANS HAVE A MATING CALL THIS FLIRTING THING IS SO FUCKIN TIRESOME

    What about wolf whistling?

    (Source: territorialcreep)

     
  12. 22:46

    Notes: 928

    Reblogged from thepioden

    Tags: dickish moveReligion

    image: Download

    thepioden:

bramblepatch:

oncelers-eyelashes:

devildart:

rubycosmos:

sparky-sparkerson:

creaseintime:

foodnun:

annabellalovesyou:

whoa see no that’s not okayIt’s NOT COOL TO CALL PEOPLE’S RELIGIOUS TEXTS FICTION like if they believe in that stuff let em believe in ityou don’t have to but DON’T CALL IT FICTION PLS

I DONT LIKE THIS AT ALL

oh wow hahaha are they even serious

well that’s an incredibly jerkish move

Not how you win hearts and minds, guys.

hey if they call greek mythos fiction im allowed to call christian mythos fiction as well. its only fair.

this.
Also just because something is fictional doesn’t mean there aren’t life lessons and words to live by. Religious text being fictional will vary depending on what you believe and who you ask but I don’t really think it’s necessarily rude to call it fictional.
Unless of course you’re in someone’s face telling them their faith is a lie because that’s just plain rude.
Besides, fiction or not religion is a very important part of people’s lives. (also if you’re strong in your faith, someone referring to it as fictional shouldn’t bother you)

The thing is that I’d hesitate to call greek mythology fictional, let alone the religious texts of more widely practiced contemporary religions* - at least in the sense that these people clearly mean “fictional” - and not because I hold any belief in the literal truth of that pantheon or those stories. “Myth” and “Fiction” have some overlap, but they’re not synonymous. And while there are aspects of most relgious texts that fulfill the same role as a novel - storytelling is an important tool, and if you have not read the Book of Esther you are missing out on a great story - but would you necessarily describe a self-help book as “fiction”? A code of law? A song book? A collection of primary sources on life as a religious minority in the middle east in the first century AD? The Christian Bible contains all of these.
I’m not as familiar with the holy texts of other religions, but I would hazard to guess that the same applies in most other cases. The sum of All Human Knowledge And Culture isn’t divided neatly into “hard scientific inquiry” and “fake pretendytime stories,” and pretending that it is mostly just makes a person look like a petulant child.
*And I have met pagans who believe in and worship one or more of the classical Greek gods, so let’s be careful with the assumption that “dead” religions are safe targets.

I would like to know why their symbol is an interrobang.

    thepioden:

    bramblepatch:

    oncelers-eyelashes:

    devildart:

    rubycosmos:

    sparky-sparkerson:

    creaseintime:

    foodnun:

    annabellalovesyou:

    whoa see no that’s not okay
    It’s NOT COOL TO CALL PEOPLE’S RELIGIOUS TEXTS FICTION like if they believe in that stuff let em believe in it
    you don’t have to but DON’T CALL IT FICTION PLS

    I DONT LIKE THIS AT ALL

    oh wow hahaha are they even serious

    well that’s an incredibly jerkish move

    Not how you win hearts and minds, guys.

    hey if they call greek mythos fiction im allowed to call christian mythos fiction as well. its only fair.

    this.

    Also just because something is fictional doesn’t mean there aren’t life lessons and words to live by. Religious text being fictional will vary depending on what you believe and who you ask but I don’t really think it’s necessarily rude to call it fictional.

    Unless of course you’re in someone’s face telling them their faith is a lie because that’s just plain rude.

    Besides, fiction or not religion is a very important part of people’s lives. (also if you’re strong in your faith, someone referring to it as fictional shouldn’t bother you)

    The thing is that I’d hesitate to call greek mythology fictional, let alone the religious texts of more widely practiced contemporary religions* - at least in the sense that these people clearly mean “fictional” - and not because I hold any belief in the literal truth of that pantheon or those stories. “Myth” and “Fiction” have some overlap, but they’re not synonymous. And while there are aspects of most relgious texts that fulfill the same role as a novel - storytelling is an important tool, and if you have not read the Book of Esther you are missing out on a great story - but would you necessarily describe a self-help book as “fiction”? A code of law? A song book? A collection of primary sources on life as a religious minority in the middle east in the first century AD? The Christian Bible contains all of these.

    I’m not as familiar with the holy texts of other religions, but I would hazard to guess that the same applies in most other cases. The sum of All Human Knowledge And Culture isn’t divided neatly into “hard scientific inquiry” and “fake pretendytime stories,” and pretending that it is mostly just makes a person look like a petulant child.

    *And I have met pagans who believe in and worship one or more of the classical Greek gods, so let’s be careful with the assumption that “dead” religions are safe targets.

    I would like to know why their symbol is an interrobang.

    (Source: ihateallyourgods)

     
  13. zachariebutts:

arseniks:

Im not sorry

what is happening

Nice moves.

    zachariebutts:

    arseniks:

    Im not sorry

    what is happening

    Nice moves.

     
  14. 22:41

    Notes: 21796

    Reblogged from suojure

    Tags: doctor who

    yearningacrossdimensions:

    what the hell am i doing with my life

    (Source: amysdead)

     
  15. 22:40

    Notes: 25

    Reblogged from lord-kitschener

    Tags: historyphotography

    image: Download

    asya-yay:

Austro-Hungarian soldier with little girl. 
I am unsure of the date, likely early war. Possibly used in a propaganda sort of way. 
from http://nagyhaboru.blog.hu/ 

    asya-yay:

    Austro-Hungarian soldier with little girl. 

    I am unsure of the date, likely early war. Possibly used in a propaganda sort of way. 

    from http://nagyhaboru.blog.hu/