Photoset reblogged from I'm kidding. We are vegetarians. with 5,589 notes
Princess Kida: Cookies are sweet, but yours is not. Sweet is kindly, but that is not his name. Audrey is sweet, but she is not your doctor. And the little digging animal called Mole, he is your pet?
Milo: Close enough.
Source: all4movie
Post reblogged from Demanding The Impossible with 5,081 notes
zuky:
they need to be defeated.
Source: zuky
Photo reblogged from Stars Are My Muse with 6,110 notes
Here’s what Pangea looks like mapped with modern political borders
Source: the-star-stuff-blog
Photo reblogged from #mediumformat with 12 notes
A201304BORACAYHS500CMKODAKE100VS by PrancoNoVision on Flickr.
Quote reblogged from Lost Woods with 21 notes
Virtually all the Utopias, theories and revolutionary programs of the early nineteenth century were faced with problems of necessity—of how to allocate labor and material goods at a relatively low level of technological development. These problems permeated revolutionary thought in a way comparable only to the impact of original sin on Christian theology. The fact that men would have to devote a substantial portion of their time to toil, for which they would get scant returns, formed a major premise of all socialist ideology—authoritarian and libertarian, Utopian and scientific, Marxist and anarchist. Implicit in the Marxist notion of a planned economy was the fact, incontestably clear in Marx’s day, that socialism would still be burdened by relatively scarce resources. Men would have to plan—in effect, to restrict—the distribution of goods and would have to rationalize—in effect, to intensify—the use of labor.
Photo reblogged from 😙👌 with 1,320 notes
New York City, 1944. © Andreas Feininger.
Source: fuckyeahvintage-retro
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