Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

Jul 30

[video]

arcusxx:
“art by Władysław Podkowiński ( my edits )
”

arcusxx:

art by Władysław Podkowiński ( my edits )

ultrafacts:
“ Source: [x]
Follow Ultrafacts for more facts! ”

ultrafacts:

Source: [x]

Follow Ultrafacts for more facts!

(via ultrafacts)

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Plastics Or People? At Least 1 Of Them Has To Change To Clean Up Our Mess -

(Source: NPR, via npr)

thattinycookiemonster:

smeliots:

tsrabbits:

mad-hare:

atlas-prime:

kittyeet:

Goblins at the club

PLEASE unmute

Oh my god. Unmute this.

those guys from men in black who hang out drinking coffee and partying

why they so long

(via oneflewoverthecrissysnest)

honestlydeepesttidalwave:
“ KONGA #5, Steve Ditko art, Charlton Comics - 1962
”

honestlydeepesttidalwave:

KONGA #5, Steve Ditko art, Charlton Comics - 1962

(via honestlydeepesttidalwave)

[video]

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 11 July 1945, anti-fascist Spanish civil war fighter Agustín Soler, who had been jailed in an internment camp alongside Nazis in Britain, killed himself in protest. Scores of Spanish anti-fascist exiles, many of...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 11 July 1945, anti-fascist Spanish civil war fighter Agustín Soler, who had been jailed in an internment camp alongside Nazis in Britain, killed himself in protest. Scores of Spanish anti-fascist exiles, many of whom later fought in the French resistance, were detained by Allied forces after the defeat of the Axis and thrown into British prison camps alongside their former fascist enemies by the Conservative government. Upon its election, the Labour government continued the detention of Spanish anti-fascists, and defended it in parliament, claiming that they were “serving members of an enemy paramilitary organisation”. More info here: https://libcom.org/history/spanish-anti-fascist-prisoners-war-lancashire-1944-46
Pictured: some of the prisoners https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1164666523718496/?type=3

(via )

“On the day when crime dons the apparel of innocence — through a curious transposition peculiar to our times — it is innocence that is called upon to justify itself.” — Albert Camus, The Rebel (via philosophybits)

(via philosophybits)