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link 13-Year-Old Girl Commits Suicide After Classmates Spread Nude Photos

livesoundz:

thatissodawn:

starrystairs:

robot-heart-politics:

napturality:thecurvature:

“And while everyone sure as hell seems to be worried about What! We’re! Teaching! Our! Girls! that they send the photographs, no one seems to be saying a goddamn peep about what we’re teaching our boys when they think that non-consensual sexual conduct is okay. Yet again, apparently consensual female sexuality is seen as a bigger threat to society — and to girls themselves — than non-consensual male sexual behavior perpetrated against them.”

my god. everyone should take the time to read this. our culture is too busy teaching boys to be “boys” and girls to be “girls” that we forget to be human. what a shame.

1 week ago

December 2, 2009
reblogged via livesoundz
photo eet =)

eet =)

2 months ago

October 12, 2009
link Google Moon

Apollo Series These six missions of the Apollo Program,
which lasted from 1963 to 1972, were the
first and last times that Mankind has set
foot on another world.

2 months ago

October 9, 2009
photo When asked are you a Hindu, his answer was:
“Yes I am. I am also a Christian, a Muslim, a Buddhist and a Jew.”
- Mahatma Gandhi
(2 October 1869 – 30 January 1948)
Thank You and Happy Birthday =D

When asked are you a Hindu, his answer was:

“Yes I am. I am also a Christian, a Muslim, a Buddhist and a Jew.”

- Mahatma Gandhi

(2 October 1869 – 30 January 1948)

Thank You and Happy Birthday =D

2 months ago

October 2, 2009
text

Philippines flood hero saves more than 30

livesoundz:

By AFP on Monday, September 28, 2009

Muelmar Magallanes braved rampaging floods to save more than 30 people, but ended up sacrificing his life in a last trip to rescue a baby girl who was being swept away on a styrofoam box.

Family members and people who Magallenes saved hailed the 18-year-old construction worker on Monday a hero, as his body lay in a coffin at a makeshift evacuation centre near their destroyed Manila riverside village.

“I am going to be forever grateful to Muelmar. He gave his life for my baby. I will never forget his sacrifice,” said Menchie Penalosa, the mother of the six-month-old girl whom he carried to safety before being swept away himself.

Magallanes was at home on Saturday with his family when tropical storm Ketsana unleashed the heaviest rains in more than 40 years on the Philippine capital and surrounding areas.

At first the family, long used to heavy rains, paid little attention to the storm.

But Magallanes and his father quickly decided to evacuate the family once they realised the river 800 metres away had burst its banks.

With the help of an older brother, Magallanes tied a string around his waist and attached it one-by-one to his three younger siblings, whom he took to higher ground. Then he came back for his parents.

But Magallanes, a strong swimmer, decided to go back for neighbours trapped on rooftops.

He ended up making many trips, and eventually saved more than 30 people from drowning, witnesses and survivors said.

Tired and shivering, Magallanes was back on higher ground with his family when he heard Penalosa screaming as she and her baby were being swept away on the polystyrene box they were using in an attempt to cross the swift currents.

He dived back in after the mother and daughter, who were already a few metres away and bobbing precariously among the debris floating on the brown water.

“I didn’t know that the current was so strong. In an instant, I was under water. We were going to die,” said Penalosa, her eyes welling with tears and voice choking with emotion.

“Then this man came from nowhere and grabbed us. He took us to where the other neighbours were, and then he was gone,” Penalosa said.

Penalosa and other witnesses said an exhausted Magallanes was simply washed away amid the torrent of water.

Neighbours found his body on Sunday, along with 28 others who perished amid Manila’s epic flooding. The official death toll stands at 86 but that excludes those recovered in Magallanes’ village, called Bagong Silangan.

Standing next to his coffin, Magallanes’ parents paid tribute to their son.

“He always had a good heart,” said his father, Samuel.

“We had already been saved. But he decided to go back one last time for the girl.”

His mother, Maria Luz, wept as she described her son as incredibly brave.

“He saved so many people, but ended up not being able to save himself.”

2 months ago

September 28, 2009
reblogged via livesoundz
photo (more terrible flood news)
By CARLOS H. CONDE  Published: September 27, 2009
MANILA — At least 83 people were killed and dozens of others were missing after a tropical storm swept through the northern Philippines over the weekend, with Manila experiencing its worst flooding in nearly half a century, officials said Sunday…
Metro Manila is a city of more than 12 million people. It has been having trouble coping with a  sewage system that is perennially choked with garbage. Many parts of the city are often flooded by the slightest downpour.
The storm “submerged up to 80 percent of the city, and covered areas that never experienced flooding before, stranding people on rooftops and bringing death and misery to rich and poor alike,” according to Greenpeace.
“It was terrifying to see the water rising, especially because there were live electrical wires around us,” said Diverson Bloso Jr., a waiter at a restaurant in Quezon City that was one of many flooded establishments. “There were trash and rats and cockroaches all around us,” Mr. Bloso said as he cleaned the restaurant’s soaked wooden tables.

(more terrible flood news)

By CARLOS H. CONDE Published: September 27, 2009

MANILA — At least 83 people were killed and dozens of others were missing after a tropical storm swept through the northern Philippines over the weekend, with Manila experiencing its worst flooding in nearly half a century, officials said Sunday…

Metro Manila is a city of more than 12 million people. It has been having trouble coping with a sewage system that is perennially choked with garbage. Many parts of the city are often flooded by the slightest downpour.

The storm “submerged up to 80 percent of the city, and covered areas that never experienced flooding before, stranding people on rooftops and bringing death and misery to rich and poor alike,” according to Greenpeace.

“It was terrifying to see the water rising, especially because there were live electrical wires around us,” said Diverson Bloso Jr., a waiter at a restaurant in Quezon City that was one of many flooded establishments. “There were trash and rats and cockroaches all around us,” Mr. Bloso said as he cleaned the restaurant’s soaked wooden tables.

2 months ago

September 27, 2009
video

Wet Ones Commercial (FIRE!!!)

(via tsibugan)

2 months ago

September 27, 2009
audio
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
Plays: 102

ralphabetsoup:

So long sweet summer

Dashboard <3

2 months ago

September 24, 2009
reblogged via ralphabetsoup