The FBI spent years investigating an anti-goth cult that didn’t even exist.
After a worried goth contacted the FBI about the ‘Church of the Hammer’ and their Yahoo group ‘GodHatesGoths,’ concerns grew and the Bureau launched an official investigation.
It continued for over 2 years before they realized the entire thing was completely fake and intended to be a joke - which had been written as a disclaimer on the website all along.
Iconic
Hm, reminds me of the time that they thought that there was an elusive LGBTQ activist that was roaming America “sowing discord“, because evidently they heard a bunch of folks using the euphemism “friends of Dorothy“ and assumed it was an actual person and not… y’know… a Wizard of Oz reference.
But you know what, good on who ever staryed the investigation for being that concerned for the well-being of goths.
I honestlyl was surprised the FBI would even care for a subculture commonly seen as “threatening”
Vincent van Gogh: A Gallery of 30 Paintings
In this gallery, we showcase 30 paintings by Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), the Dutch post-impressionist painter whose use of form and colour changed the world of art forever. The selection here is presented in chronological sequence to show the artist’s progression in style from his early interest in capturing humble peasant life to his spell in Paris and on to the iconic works he produced in the unique light of southern France. The gallery shows van Gogh’s most celebrated works, the friends he made, his various haunts in Arles, and his love of painting still life and landscapes in a way that nobody had ever quite done before.
Hunter S. Thompson
“Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming “Wow! What a Ride!”
― Hunter S. Thompson
unscheduled-excursion-0000000:
you could shop at five or six sites… or just one
Serb football fans raise banner listing U.S./NATO military interventions around the world
BELGRADE- A fan group of the Serbian football club Red Star in a game on Thursday used banners to show U.S.-led NATO interventions around the world in the past decades.
During the halftime of the game at the Rajko Mitic stadium here, the Serbian fans raised huge banners listing U.S.-led NATO interventions in the past decades, one of which wrote of Beatles songwriter John Lennon’s anti-war song: “All we are saying is give peace a chance.”
The banners showed the NATO interventions in such countries and regions as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Cuba, Vietnam, Panama, Iraq, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Syria and so on.
In 1999, the U.S.-led NATO forces carried out continuous airstrikes for 78 days against Yugoslavia, leaving more than 8,000 civilians dead or injured and nearly 1 million displaced.








