Photo reblogged from Laughing Squid Links with 419 notes
Message in a Bottle from 1915 Discovered off Harsens Island Near Detroit, Michigan
Photo reblogged from Well ain't she a fine looking Dame? with 307 notes
Barbra Streisand
Source: aladyloves
Photoset reblogged from Hi with 100,915 notes
I AM SORRY BUT THIS IS WHY I AM EMBARRASSED TO BE AN AMERICAN. IF A HIJAB THAT DORNS THE AMERICAN FLAG PATTERN IS NOT ACCEPTABLE BUT SKIMPY ASS BIKINIS OR WEARING THE FUCKING ACTUAL FLAG IS ACCEPTABLE, JUST BECAUSE THE PERSON IS WHITE, I WANT TO FUCKING THROW UP.
(I don’t have a thing against Audrey Kitching, she was just merely and example).
But this fucking disgusts me right here. It makes me want to say, fuck this country and its racism and double standards.
White people can be absolute savages
Wow. It disgusting how disrespectful and hypocritical people are in this world.
I hate being an American sometimes. A lot of people give us a bad reputation. There is nothing wrong with what she is wearing. For all we know, she could have been BORN IN America & is legally considered an American but still follows her cultures traditions, giving her every right to wear an American flag. The ignorance of Americans is sickening and I hope everyone who said those things about her have those things happen to themselves.
Source: diemeowderkatze
Photo reblogged from Well ain't she a fine looking Dame? with 609 notes
the front page of New York’s Daily News, from 1937, with a headline about the death the previous day of starlet Jean Harlow. Harlow was world famous, and her passing, which came suddenly, or at least seemed to, triggered wild speculation in the tabloid press because of confusion over what had killed her. Left to fill the fact vacuum, the tabs claimed she had died variously of alcoholism, complications from an abortion, over-dieting, sunstroke, poisoning due to her platinum hair dye, and VD. Eventually doctors realized she had died of kidney failure, and had actually been ill for a long time. She had been fatigued for weeks, and the previous year had suffered a bout of septicemia and sustained a bad sunburn—both indicators of kidney dysfunction. But a correct early diagnosis probably would have made little difference, since there was no treatment for kidney related illnesses in 1937—penicillin wasn’t in commercial usage yet, and dialysis was a decade away. Harlow was twenty-six when she died.
Source: pulpinternational.com
Quote reblogged from vulpes vulpes with 10,222 notes
Don’t mistake my kindness for weakness. I am kind to everyone, but when someone is unkind to me, weak is not what you are going to remember about me.
Source: mrcheyl
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