lainexvx:

heartofgoldxvx:

xjoshxkowalskix:

doctorholmesofhogwarts:

rainflaaash:

districtnineand-three-quarters:

accio—loki:

valkyriesmith:

solveitwithchocolate:

iou-a-fall-smeagol:

eleanull:

thechimeraresistance:

tltty:

if this eggplant gets less than 5 million notes i’m going to be so upset

Reblogging because eggplant

Fewer than 5 million notes. Fewer. Not less. 

I believe that it is called an  aubergine. 

IN AMERICA WE LET EGGS BE PLANTS BECAUSE FREEDOM


In Britain we let those AUBERGINES live once we heal them with our FREE HEALTH CARE

NOBODY CARES, ENGLAND

image

at least America came up with their own word and didn’t steal ours

you used the wrong flag France

This is gold.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

bahahahahahahaha

manchannel:

James Franco.

(Source: wanderring)

exhale-dust:

kateordie:

New Comic Day! I said I was too busy, which of course meant I made one 16 hours later.

etsy - facebook - topatoco - site

probably the best comeback ever. to anything. 

thescienceofreality:


Super Moon? How About a Super Sun!

“On May 5, 2012, while everyone else was waiting for the “Super Moon” astrophotographer Alan Friedman was out capturing this super image of a super Sun from his back yard in Buffalo, NY!

Taken with a specialized telescope that can image the Sun in hydrogen alpha light, Alan’s photo shows the intricate detail of our home star’s chromosphere — the layer just above its “surface”, or photosphere.

Prominences can be seen rising up from the Sun’s limb in several places, and long filaments — magnetically-suspended lines of plasma — arch across its face. The “fuzzy” texture is caused by smaller features called spicules and fibrils, which are short-lived spikes of magnetic fields that rapidly rise up from the surface of the Sun.

On the left side it appears that a prominence may have had just detached from the Sun’s limb, as there’s a faint cloud of material suspended there.”


thescienceofreality:

Watch a sun get destroyed by a black hole. 

This is a NASA simulation  of star similar to our sun, being torn apart by a black hole [represented by the blue dot] that weighs millions times more than the star itself. A very striking image, that shows the breathtaking influence of black holes on imaginably small mass found commonly through out the universe.

You get to watch as “some of the stellar debris falls into the black hole and some of it is ejected into space at high speeds.” The scariest bit is that by the end, there’s no more sun — an event NASA describes as “stellar homicide.”’ [x]

You can read more about the actual ‘Stellar Homocide’ on NASA’s site here.

(Source: dirtyratlover)

mirandaadria:

escapistinwonderland:

checkdatprivilege:

K: and people who are actually in the LGBTQ community argue that trans* people don’t completely need and deserve the support of the rest of the LGBTQ community more than any other part of it?

(via here and here)

This is horrible…….. : (

Signal boost. Wake up, world. Stop erasing trans* people.

Take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.

Elie Wiesel (via officialteamgreen)

(Source: angusschipp)

(Source: larazard)

exhale-dust:

lovebeautyscience:

I can has bunny nao? :)

pleeeeeeez.

(Source: lovelylops)

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