quixon:

str8nochaser:

nitanahkohe:

around this time last year people finally started taking notice of the food-related issues in the upper northern reaches of Canada; consider this your reminder that even since then, juice is still $26 in Pangnirtung, Nunavut, and that the predominately indigenous communities in Canada’s North are forced to pay extraordinarily exorbitant prices for basic groceries due to structural inequity and the contemporary effects of ongoing settler occupation.

This is RIDICULOUS. $26 for juice? And its not even real juice. Its flavored water, additives and a perfunctory amount of fruit solids

OHHHHHH CAAAAAAAAAN AHDAAAAAAAAAA LOL

(via kingjaffejoffer)

lulz-time:

My lovely followers, please follow this blog immediately!

marfmellow:

when older people tell you you’ll ~get over~ not wanting to have children

image

(via jcoleknowsbest)

"I’m like that. Either I forget right away or I never forget."

Samuel Beckett; “Waiting for Godot” (via ghostbeing)

(Source: sturmdrang, via tropsickle)

mindyourbidness:

basedgodniall:

*calls family member by mom’s request*

*silently prays it goes to voicemail*

ME.

(Source: nointerrruption, via perfectfiasco)

akilivumbi:

if I ever get married our first dance in gone be to rkelly feelin on your booty

(Source: stay-human, via black-culture)

mcqueenofmyheart:

Alexander McQueen Fall 2010 

(via super1eklectic)

Filmmaker Brings Attention To A Latina Soldier Who Fought In The U.S. Civil War

fylatinamericanhistory:

nbclatino:

image

The U.S. military may have recently lifted the ban on women in combat, but Loreta Velazquez, a wealthy Cuban planter’s daughter who immigrated to New Orleans in 1849, secretly fought in the U.S. Civil War 150 years ago — first as a soldier in the Confederate Army, and later as a Union Army spy.

Read More

I wrote a post about this woman last year! PBS will be airing a documentary on her life today (May 24).

(via reagan-was-a-horrible-president)