he just accepts it, not even surprised by it. must happen all the time
OH MY GOD. THE KITTY IS LIKE, “LET ME LOVE YOUUUUUU!” AND THE DOG IS LIKE, “MEH.”
This is pretty much how you say “I love you” in Tired Dog. Yes, you may maul me. Yes, you may turn me into a cuddle pile. Look, I’m not getting up and walking away. We’re cuddling. You can do all the effort. No, I don’t mind the teeth and the claws. I accept your enthusiastic devotion.
THE KITTY’S LOVE IS REQUITED PRAISE THE LORD
(via selfharmonise)
This post is just so.. yes.. just yes.
(Source: the-catcher-in-the-stars, via stopcallingmepastries)
- Fall Out Boy: New song in celebration of our album!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because it's 12am!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because of the new tour!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because we ate bagels!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because we saw a pigeon!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because we heard you guys are sad!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because Andy got a haircut!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because Patrick got a new hat!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because Joe is feeling extra sassy!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because Pete's in charge of the computer today!
- Fall Out Boy: New song because we fucking can!
all of the characters in the yugioh intro look like their parents told them to do something they dont want to do
“take out the trash”
“do the dishes”
“clean your room”
“do your homework”
(via curryuku)
One of Pixar’s ideas to show the public how animation works was to build a zoetrope, much like the one Studio Ghibli had made previously. However, instead of drawings, 18 different sculptures were made, and a strobe light was used as they spun around. This made each of the images freeze in space, creating the illusion of animation. [video]
(via chelle-x)
(via lnfamy)
“What are all these?” Clary asked.
“Vials of holy water, blessed knives, steel and silver blades,” Jace said, piling the weapons on the floor beside him, “electrum wire - not much use at the moment but it’s always good to have spares - silver bullets, charms of protetion, crucifixes, stars of David-“
”Jesus,” said Clary
”I doubt he’d fit.”
“Jace.” Clary was appalled.”
(Source: jacemorgenstern, via sweetavalanche)
Martin Luther King: Science Advocate
As a young atheist, I was fascinated by religious philosophy that attempted to square the circle that is modern science. And although my personal atheism hasn’t softened over the years, I have grown to understand that science and faith aren’t mutually exclusive. Which is why, when I first encountered the following quote by Dr. Martin Luther King, I don’t think it resonated for me quite the same way it does today:
“Science investigates; religion interprets. Science gives man knowledge which is power; religion gives man wisdom which is control. Science deals mainly with facts; religion deals mainly with values. The two are not rivals. They are complementary. Science keeps religion from sinking into the valley of crippling irrationalism and paralyzing obscurantism. Religion prevents science from falling into the marsh of obsolete materialism and moral nihilism.”
And although I disagree that without religion, human beings are condemned to an amoral existence, I don’t believe that this was the point of Dr. King’s words. He didn’t say that religion prevents people from moral nihilism, he said that religion prevents science from such a fate. This is an important distinction. Science is the investigation of the natural world, and it often involves a manipulation of nature and development of new technologies. Both efforts have the potential to be beautifully informative, creative, and inspirational. But, unchecked, the potential for destruction and detriment cannot be ignored.
Martin Luther King understood this concept fully, and he cautioned against the frighteningly awesome power that new technologies were bringing to the hands of men, especially in the wake of the Vietnam War:
“Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.”
Science is an interesting paradox, because it is, fundamentally, thought to be devoid of outside influence. Science is the investigation of nature. And as we all know, nature just is. But, science is a verb, an activity. Being so, it is carried out by people. It does not—it cannot—exist in a vacuum. And hard as we may try, human beings are simply incapable of any behavior that carries no bias, no moral or political persuasion.
In the early sixties, Martin Luther King knew that the fearful men in power—the amoral majority—were bending “scientific findings” to suit their political ideologies. He was a champion of skeptical thought, and cautioned the public at large to be wary of such claims:
“So men conveniently twisted the insights of religion, science, and philosophy to give sanction to the doctrine of white supremacy…they will even argue that God was the first segregationist. ‘Red birds and blue birds don’t fly together,’ they contend…they turn to some pseudo-scientific writing and argue that the Negro’s brain is smaller than the white man’s brain. They do not know, or they refuse to know, that the idea of an inferior or superior race has been refuted by the best evidence of the science of anthropology. Great anthropologists, like Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, and Melville J. Herskovits agree that although there may be inferior and superior individuals within all races, there is no superior or inferior race. And segregationists refuse to acknowledge that there are four types of blood, and these four types are found within every racial group.”
He further writes that:
“Slavery in America was perpetuated not merely by human badness but also by human blindness…Men convinced themselves that a system that was so economically profitable must be morally justifiable…Science was commandeered to prove the biological inferiority of the Negro. Even philosophical logic was manipulated [exemplified by] an Aristotelian syllogism: ‘All men are made in the image of God. God, as everyone knows, is not a Negro. Therefore, the Negro is not a man.’”
Similar to sentiments communicated by Charlie Chaplin, when he mocked Adolf Hitler in The Great Dictator, Dr. Martin Luther King taught us that the power of humanity lies not only in its scientific capabilities, but in its moral sensibilities:
“Through our scientific and technological genius we’ve made of this world a neighborhood. And now through our moral and ethical commitment we must make of it a brotherhood. We must all learn to live together as brothers—or we will all perish together as fools. This is the great issue facing us today. No individual can live alone; no nation can live alone. We are tied together.”
I believe that Dr. King would be inspired by the ever growing collection of modern scientific studies evidencing our singular human ancestry. We are all children of Africa. In his honor, today, let us celebrate brotherhood, sisterhood—humanhood—and the scientific spirit that allows us to learn about the wonders of the universe as one unified people. — Cara Santa Maria
(via literati-immortalis)
no matter what you’re good at there will be a 7 year old chinese kid who’s better
(via partiallypuzzled)
The problem with school is that it’s forced.
I’m thirsty for knowledge when I have the freedom to seek it myself.
I cannot express this enough.
(via ne-seri-vise)
dinosaurs-daleks-and-detectives:
I put the laughter in manslaughter
How’d the Sherlock fandom get here so fast
We have really good taxi drivers.
Best part about our taxi drivers?
there’s-
and THAT’S how the Sherlock Fandom takes over a post!
(via suspendersturnmeon)
#These men are entrusted with the fate of the world on a DAILY BASIS
(Source: sheldony, via suspendersturnmeon)
February 13, 2013 - the day Canada’s Parliament debated the zombie apocalypse. (x)
(via suspendersturnmeon)






