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mfjr:

  1. Delta Region, Netherlands 
  2. unknown by nzafro
  3. “Undo” by Rob Hogeslag
  4. unknown by Nasrah Omar, Model: Janelle Vladimir
8 years ago @ 09:12 with 9,509 notes   (FROM, )
8 years ago @ 09:10 with 97,513 notes   (FROM, )
vvni:
“ Contraste Sorriso by Oseias Evangelista
”

vvni:

Contraste Sorriso by Oseias Evangelista

8 years ago @ 09:08 with 36,017 notes   (FROM, )

8 years ago @ 10:17 with 13,106 notes   (FROM, )
eliesvr:
“ sunlight in the bathroom, spring 2013
”

eliesvr:

sunlight in the bathroom, spring 2013

8 years ago @ 10:17 with 204,844 notes   (FROM, )

durgapolashi:

“This is the privilege of whiteness: While a terrorist may be white, his violence is never based in his whiteness. A white terrorist has unique, complicated motives that we will never comprehend. He can be a disturbed loner or a monster. He is either mentally ill or pure evil. The white terrorist exists solely as a dyad of extremes: Either he is humanized to the point of sympathy or he is so monstrous that he almost becomes mythological. Either way, he is never indicative of anything larger about whiteness, nor is he ever a garden-variety racist. He represents nothing but himself. A white terrorist is anything that frames him as an anomaly and separates him from the long, storied history of white terrorism.

I’m always struck by this hesitance not only to name white terrorism but to name whiteness itself during acts of racial violence. In a recent New York Times article on the history of lynching, the victims are repeatedly described as black. Not once, however, are the violent actors described as they are: white. Instead, the white lynch mobs are simply described as “a group of men” or “a mob.” In an article about racial violence, this erasure of whiteness is absurd. The race of the victims is relevant, but somehow the race of the killers is incidental. If we’re willing to admit that race is a reason blacks were lynched, why are we unwilling to admit that race is a reason whites lynched them? In his remarks following the Charleston shooting, President Obama mentioned whiteness only once — in a quotation from the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. intended to encourage interracial harmony. Obama vaguely acknowledged that “this is not the first time that black churches have been attacked” but declined to state who has attacked these churches. His passive language echoes this strange vagueness, a reluctance to even name white terrorism, as if black churches have been attacked by some disembodied force, not real people motivated by a racist ideology whose roots stretch past the founding of this country.”

White Terrorism Is as Old as America by BRIT BENNETT

8 years ago @ 02:18 with 2,484 notes   (FROM, )

alionundermyskin:

Wanda Koop. 

8 years ago @ 02:03 with 126,697 notes   (FROM, )
motschoisis:
“We go to the gallery, Miriam Elia.
http://wegotothegallery.com/
”

motschoisis:

We go to the gallery, Miriam Elia.

http://wegotothegallery.com/

8 years ago @ 02:14 with 874 notes   (FROM, )

8 years ago @ 13:04 with 223,661 notes   (FROM, ORIG.)

sweet-bitsy:

ithelpstodream:

Jim Carrey Celeb Impressions From 1992

#the man gifted by god with a face made of rubber

8 years ago @ 12:58 with 369,315 notes   (FROM, )