((°}

malina {una typa qualunque} [/ma'lina/ /pa'rɛntezi/]
Lettering is Not Type | Clear Definitions for Commonly Abused Terms http://www.fontbureau.com/blog...
[Grazie, Maurizio! - Prendete e leggetene tutti] Elenco di idee che ho cambiato in Iran http://maurizionasi.it/elenco-...
a parte arrossire, se qualcuno ha intenzione di andarci mi contatti pure e gli do qualche dritta :) - maurizio (videogioco)
[vanity sizing] ho trovato un vestitino di mia madre con l'indicazione della taglia (di solito glieli faceva la sarta, questo è di provenienza inglese): UK 12 (IT 44). credo sia del 1964, non è elastico, le stava ampio. il punto vita misura CINQUANTAQUATTRO cm.
oggi una 12 ha un punto vita di 73 cm. - ((°}
io non ho mai potuto mettere le gonne di mia madre. nemmeno a 14 anni. aveva il punti vita largo come il mio polso - tostoini
ma questi fav del pleistocene da dove spuntano? - ((°}
capisco la fìciur, ma questa è roba di sei anni fa. SEI. - ((°}
[poi dicono perché non sono mai stata solidale coi lavoratori alcoa, carbosulcis &Co.] La Stampa - Lo strano caso del pensionato che non ha mai lavorato Cagliari, minatore confessa: ho inventato malattie per una vita. E anche grazie alla cassa integrazione ho maturato l’assegno Inps - http://www.lastampa.it/2014...
"La claustrofobia, almeno per un minatore, dovrebbe la essere causa principale di «non idoneità al servizio». E Carlo Cani, in fondo, lo sapeva bene, ancor prima di essere assunto alla Carbosulcis. Ma lui il terrore di vivere rinchiuso in una galleria semibuia, a centinaia di metri sotto terra, l’ha sfruttato per anni. A suo favore. Ha accumulato giorni e giorni di malattia e così non si è mai presentato al lavoro. Con la complicità del certificato medico, e sfruttando lunghi periodi di cassa integrazione, ha raggiunto un obiettivo doppio: trascorrere pochissimi giorni in miniera e maturare ugualmente il diritto alla pensione.    Raggiunto il traguardo, si dedica a tempo pieno al jazz e racconta la verità: «Mi inventavo di tutto: amnesie, dolori, emorroidi, camminavo sbandando come fossi ubriaco. Mi capitava di urtare la parete con un pollice e lavorare con un dito gonfio ovviamente era impossibile. Altre volte mi finiva la polvere in un occhio. E poi il collo, mesi passati con il collare per tenere a bada una maledettissima cervicale. Ma la verità è che non ce la facevo, la miniera non era roba per me». In tempi di disoccupazione record la confessione del sessantenne di Santadi ha scatenato subito polemiche violente. Terrorizzato, ora non risponde più al telefono. Ma sui social è bersagliato di insulti, soprattutto dai giovani che un lavoro lo sognano da anni e che la pensione rischiano di non riscuoterla mai.     Per chiedere di non fermare l’attività estrattiva, i minatori di Nuaxi Figus hanno organizzato cortei, occupazioni e proteste di ogni genere. In gruppo, nel 2012, si sono persino asserragliati a quattrocento metri di profondità, mentre il loro ex collega di Santadi (piccolo paese della provincia Carbonia-Iglesias) ha giocato d’anticipo. Ha sfruttato lo “scivolo” del prepensionamento e ha dimenticato per sempre la polvere di carbone sugli occhi. Tra malattie di ogni genere, riabilitazioni, riposi accumulati e ammortizzatori sociali Carlo Cani ha maturato 35 anni di servizio, 26 dei quali proprio negli organici della Carbosulcis. Tutto regolare, certificato dell’Inps, che dal 2006 gli versa regolarmente l’assegno mensile. «Ho maturato l’anzianità necessaria ma praticamente non ho lavorato mai - racconta - Là sotto stavo troppo male. Sin dall’inizio, io e il carbone non abbiamo legato».     Quando l’hanno assunto in miniera Carlo Cani non ha fatto salti di gioia. Il primo della lista dell’ufficio di collocamento ha rinunciato, mentre lui ha accettato subito. E dai primi giorni ha iniziato a studiare la strategia per faticare il meno possibile. «Era il 1980 e al mio paese, Santadi, spettava un’assunzione in Carbosulcis. Quando mi hanno contattato non ero entusiasta, ma l’orgoglio di famiglia mi ha spinto ad accettare. Mio padre Luigi, che ha 95 anni, era minatore alla vecchia Carbosarda. Minatore vero, come quelli dei suoi tempi».     Fatto il corso di avviamento, Carlo Cani ha iniziato a fare i conti con il nemico numero uno: la galleria. «All’inizio sembrava un gioco: il casco, l’attrezzatura, tutto era divertente. Il brutto è venuto dopo. In mezzo, anche qualche momento drammatico: un collega di 28 anni schiacciato da un masso lo prese tra la testa e il collo. Lo tirammo fuori che era già morto. Io ci ho sempre riso su perché sono un minatore per caso, ma quel momento mi è rimasto stampato nella mente. La mia è stata una storia strana ma laggiù, sotto terra, c’è gente che si è spaccata la schiena per anni e anni, gente che il salario se l’è guadagnato col sudore. Io li rispetto ma sono diverso sono un minatore-jazz»." - ((°}
quel "minatore-jazz" dice tutto e fa venire tanta voglia di violenza fisica e verbale. - tostoini
soprattutto fisica, o almeno prima sicuramente fisica - ((°}
ci pigliano per il culo pure dalla perfida albione (e fanno bene) http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news... - ((°}
briffare, deliverare, zippare. ma "sbéggiare" per "passare il badge" voi l'avevate mai sentita?
no - Peppǝ
(mi fate sentire fortunata) - ((°}
[help] il vecchio Ulcera s'è resettato da solo durante la notte e domanda a gran voce il pensionamento. Premesso che trovo immorale spendere soldi in telefonini e che i suddetti devono durarmi quei quattro anni, cosa mi consigliate? (no one+one, non mi piace cyano)(fotocamera fondamentale: possessori di motog2 pregasi allegare fototestimonianze)
Budget 250 leuri o poco più - ((°}
Posso postarle in settimana quando mi arriva 😉 comunque dalle recensioni e commenti sparsi ne parlano molto bene. 8mpx per la versione 16gb e 13mpx per quello da 32gb. Ma pare che la lente da 8 sia migliore - Ginux
Most Airbnb rentals in New York City are illegal, says state attorney general | Technology | theguardian.com - http://www.theguardian.com/technol...
"The New York state attorney general has issued the latest salvo in an ongoing battle between home-rental site Airbnb and regulators in its largest market, releasing a report in which he argues Airbnb has created a new kind of New York City real estate mogul – the commercial host. Some of the company’s top hosts make millions each year booking between dozens and hundreds of individual apartment units, taking them off the market for regular New Yorkers, the attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, argued in a report released on Thursday. The report “raises serious concerns about the proliferation of illegal hotels”, Schneiderman said in a statement. “We must ensure that, as online marketplaces revolutionise the way we live, laws designed to promote safety and quality-of-life are not forsaken under the pretext of innovation.” The attorney general’s report lays out an argument for why some of the site’s top hosts are gentrifying New York neighbourhoods, running illegal hotels, potentially avoiding millions in taxes and disturbing residential buildings. The attorney general also announced a joint enforcement committee, to find and shut down illegal hotels in the five boroughs. Schneiderman’s office analysed data subpoenaed from Airbnb in May, containing the anonymised transactions of 16,000 city hosts from 2010 through the first five months of 2014. Schneiderman’s office also obtained personal information about 100-plus hosts. The office found that the top host rented 272 unique units for revenue of more than $6.8m. Over those four years, the top 12 hosts made more than $24m combined. Around 40% of revenue, $187m, came from the Lower East Side and Chinatown, Chelsea and Hell’s Kitchen, and the Greenwich Village-SoHo areas. Many of those neighbourhoods had increasing numbers of units dedicated exclusively to short-term rentals. In Brooklyn, the trendy Williamsburg and Greenpoint neighbourhoods scooped up 10% of citywide revenue, generating $39m for hosts. Schneiderman’s report says as much as 72% of the site’s private listings, those rented while an occupant is gone, could be illegal, skirting as much as $33m in required hotel taxes. This is just the latest public relations move against Airbnb by Schneiderman. The two parties hashed out an agreement on the subpoena in a Manhattan trial-level court in May, but a fight for the hearts and minds of New Yorkers appears far from over. Over the summer, Airbnb plastered subways stations with ads. “New Yorkers agree: Airbnb is great for New York City,” the ads read. That assertion, however, appears far from universal. The ads were widely vandalised (as many in the city are), and a number of community groups have mounted an opposition to the company, saying that buildings are less safe and affordable when hordes of out-of-towners traipse through. Airbnb, however, maintains it’s just a proponent of the sharing economy that helps New Yorkers afford the city, providing an option to rent apartments while they’re not in use. The service has grown fantastically over the past four years – it now does tenfold the business it did in 2010, according to Schneiderman’s report. Hosts and Airbnb together are expected to rake in $282m this year. “We need to move forward,” spokesman Nick Papas said in an email to the Guardian. “We should not deny thousands of New Yorkers the chance to share their homes, pay their bills and stay in the city they love. We need to work together on some sensible rules that stop bad actors and protect regular people who simply want to share the home in which they live.” Before handing data over to Schneiderman’s office, the company removed some 2,000 New York City listings from its site, calling them “bad actors”. Schneiderman’s analysis of Airbnb’s data didn’t take into account these removed listings, Airbnb said. While Airbnb dukes out its right to rent in New York, it’s scoring high-profile victories elsewhere: the San Francisco board of supervisors recently legalised short-term rentals." - ((°}
M&tB, infatti, la disparità di... 'trattamento' è interessante // N, vaglielo a spiegare ai tassisti italiani. però mi sono sempre chiesta come possa essere legale, con le leggi italiane, affitare casa/stanza con airbnb - ((°}
per celebrare il compleanno di hannah arendt la foniatra mi ha appena regalato la prescrizione per un bel ciclo di logopedia \m/
figo, si celebra il compleanno della arendt da quelle parti? MI TRASFERISCO - PepperFriendFindForever
hannahmo bene - ((°}
How Photos Were Edited in the Darkroom Days | Fstoppers - https://fstoppers.com/post-pr...
Cotroneo is not happy. - dario
idiozia cotroneica a parte, mi piace ripensare al fatto che la fotografia fatta dai grandi non è solo frutto di genio solitario, ma anzi è per molti versi un lavoro di équipe - ((°}
Domani metto una foto con appunti che mi piace un zacco - Cesare Pyno Gattini
(prendendo spunto dai commenti a http://friendfeed.com/fotogra...) Dominique Granier, stampatore di Salgado - ((°}
tepe', questo è sicuro, se non altro per l'opera incredibile di ricerca, sistematizzazione e divulgazione di adams - ((°}
esiste una versione con cioccolato serio del ritter rum trauben nuss ?
Non lo so, ma se esistesse non sarebbe legale. - Valentina Quepasa
(è che la versione uvetta ammollata nel rum, nocciole e cioccolato è già porchissima col cioccolato scrausetto ritter, se ci fosse con un cioccolato di qualità medioalta come dice giustamente valentina sarebbe di sicuro illegale) - ((°}
sto uozzappando col mio BFF che è insonne a san francisco e mi ha appena rivelato che un comune amico (peraltro appartenente a SEL) gli ha proposto di entrare nella gran loggia d'italia. credo di aver esaurito la scorta di WTF sino al 2020
[affrontu leggiu] cioè, addirittura peggio del goi - ((°}
lol, e fai bene! - ((°}
Matteo Renzi Struggling to Solve Italian Economic Crisis - SPIEGEL ONLINE - http://www.spiegel.de/interna...
"Mirko Lami, a portly 50-year-old, has demonstrated, gone on strike, and quarreled with people on TV talk shows and in marketplaces. He's even gone on a seven-day hunger strike. Anything to save his job. ANZEIGE He still has a "solidarity contract" -- a fixture in Italy designed to avoid full redundency -- which provides him with €950 in exchange for a few days of work per month. But that will be over soon too, and then he will face unemployment, as do his 2,000 co-workers at La Lucchini in Piombino. The Tuscan town of 34,500 has a port from which tens of thousands of tourists head to the islands of Elba or Sardinia annually. It also has an ironworks plant with a gray and rusting coking plant, a relic from the industrial Stone Age. Now an Indian steel baron intends to take over the plant, but only wants to retain 700 of the employees. Another thousand jobs among the companies that supply the plant are also in jeopardy, and there are already "for sale" or "for rent" signs on almost 100 businesses in Piombino. The crisis looms over the city. And it's not just Piombino. Stores are closing, tradespeople are being let go and manufacturing is collapsing all over Italy, especially in the south. Many young academics are leaving the country. While productivity elsewhere has climbed over the past two decades, it has stagnated in the Italian manufacturing industry. There has been hardly any growth for at least as long. The crisis has struck an economy that was already ailing: Since the summer of 2007, Italy's overall level of industrial production has declined by a quarter. Italy's managers and company-owning families, meanwhile, have padded their wallets, both legally and illegally. Fired Ferrari head Luca di Montezemolo was given a €27 million farewell. Managers and the "brokers" of an oil deal with Nigeria reportedly stashed away €200 million. Prominent business figures are facing embezzlement charges everywhere. Many ownership families have preferred to take money out of their companies instead of reinvesting. "Not even Superman," says economic expert Salvatore Bragantini about Telecom Italia, could ever save that company from the "hole in which Telecom stakeholders have thrown it." Deep Systemic Problems After Berlusconi was sidelined and the boring Enrico Letta was replaced by the sympathetic and purposeful 39-year-old Matteo Renzi as the head of government, many thought that Italy was finally on the right track. But it's not. On the contrary: The land is stuck in a recession. Its levels of sovereign debt, the number of bankruptcies and the rate of unemployment are perpetually setting new records. As a result, some Italian political leaders have long sought a multi-billion euro growth stimulus program -- a call that new European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker is likely to heed. The magnitude and form of such a program, however, still needs to be determined so that it at least maintains the illusion of conforming with the Stability and Growth Pact. But without many other changes in Italy, including its grasp on reality, simply injecting money isn't likely to change much. "For 20 years," economic expert Daniel Gros told La Repubblica newspaper recently, Italy has been claiming that others need to "give it another year, then you will see our wonderful reforms." And even Mario Draghi -- the Italian president of the European Central Bank, which has been flooding the continent with cheap money, especially in crisis flashpoints like Italy -- bluntly admonished the country in August for failing to implement substantive structural reforms But it's not that Italy is even lacking in money. The assets of Italian banks and insurance companies have risen by over €1.2 trillion since 2008. But manufacturing asset bases have, by contrast, fallen by €200 million. It's a grim distribution: the one sector doesn't seem to want to invest, while the other is unable. Italians themselves face a similar situation. On average, every Italian has about €4,000 more in net assets than the average German, but wealth is even less evenly distributed in Italy than it is in Germany, weakening domestic demand: The rich have everything, the poor can't afford anything. Overly High Taxes Many of Italy's current problems stem from pre-crisis times: Taxation on business income, for example. The World Bank ("Paying Taxes 2014") estimates Italian companies' tax burden at 65.8 percent. Only France (64.7) and Spain (58.6) approach those drastic levels, and they face similar problems. The European average is dramatically lower, at 41.1 percent, while Italy's neighbors, Switzerland and Croatia, have extremely low rates of 29.1 and 19.8 percent respectably. Given that, who would want to invest in Italy? "Having Europe's highest business taxes is ruining us," Massimo Giuliani, 55, the mayor of Piombino, agrees. Ha also argues that energy costs are much too high and that infrastructure is shoddy. But the mayor is convinced that now everything is going to be much better. The port is currently being dredged, and soon giant freighters with six or seven-times the current permissable capacity will be able enter and exit while carrying, for example, steel from La Lucchini. The government wants to spend €50 million to modernize the steelmaking plant, and a new power plant is supposed to provide cheap electricity. In short, Giuliano says, there is "no better place in Italy for steel production." But he may occasionally want to look at the large, colorful map that hangs on the wall of his office. It stems from his predecessor and portrays the "City of the Future 2015," as carefully conceived by architects. In it, the highly modern-looking Lucchini site is surrounded by a technology park, an iron and steel museum, music and dance stages, energy-saving houses, parking spots and green areas. Everything is wonderfully designed, a communal dream on 2,500 acres. The dream stems from the year 2008 -- its fulfillment was to cost €50 million. Over the course of three years, the project was advised, conceived, discussed, but then it became clear: There is not and will not be any money for it. Basta. And that too is typical of Italy. Wasted Money In Italy, projects are endlessly planned, designed and then cancelled -- sometimes before, sometimes after construction. Several billion euros have been invested in half-finished hospitals, sports facilities, theaters, bridges and highway sections that are now slowly falling apart. EU money -- with which things could be built, researched, taught -- is not accessed because the national, provincial, communal, environmental, economic and social authorities often cannot agree who is to do what where and how with the money. As a result, Pompeii, a designated World Heritage Site, is crumbling even though Brussels had declared itself willing to provide about €80 million for its upkeep. And when EU money does flow, things often take a strange course. Take for example the €7 billion training project, half financed by Brussels' social fund, that was meant to help young Italians find jobs. A study found that, although several thousand courses were taught, only 233 people ultimately found a job as a result. This means that every job cost about €30 million. In the Mezzogiorno, the country's impoverished south -- which has seen an influx of €4,000 from Brussels per person over the past seven years -- EU money is trickling away almost without a trace. Adriano Giannola, the president of an organization for economic development, sees the "prettying up of a square here, a restauration there, usually of poor quality." People are using the money only to provide a bit of work to their voters, their friends, their business partners. He says he has not seen any projects that truly foster growth. The state in Italy is not the solution, but part of the problem. Because the state doesn't work very well, work is becoming an increasingly rare commodity. Why does a civil or business lawsuit take an average of 2,992 days in Italy, while 900 days suffice in Germany? Why do private citizens and entrepreneurs need to deal with about one hundred new tax laws every year -- the statistical equivalent of two new laws per week? Why is the state refusing to pay the over €75 billion in outstanding bills from deliverers and contractors, thus pushing many people into ruin? Why are 16,000 administrators and 12,000 inspectors receiving regal salaries to lead thousands of publically-owned companies, most of which have nothing to do with public services and only create deficits? Italy's manufacturers' association has calculated that €13 billion could be saved in the public sector alone. One egregious example stems from the national tourism agency, which commissioned a project to globally showcase Italy's beauty by displaying seven photos around the world. After one and a half years, the seven photos were complete but because there wasn't enough money left for the planned TV and online ads or posters, no potential tourist ever saw them: The budget of €5 million had been entirely used to pay the salaries of the people involved. Renzi Faces Obstacles To end, abolish, change all that -- that's what Prime Minister Renzi said he intended to do when he took power. He intended to "scrap" the old guard that controlled the state, remove the old cliques and fundamentally change the country from the ground up. He started off forcefully, sending to the parliament a new election law and a constitutional amendment that would abolish the provinces and the second chambers of parliament. And a tax cut on top of that. He has charged his ministers with elaborating reforms in the education and health sectors, a modernization of labor law, the dismantling of bureaucracy and much more. Every month a reform, the slogan went. A few months ago. But of this, little has been implemented. Most of it is stuck in parliament, in the cabinet or in party disputes. The Italians are used to it: About 250 bylaws of the Mario Monti government (November 2011 to April 2013) still haven't come into effect. But Renzi wanted to do everything differently, quickly and immediately. That's why he replaced his lame predecessor and fellow party member, Letta. But he has begun talking about needing "one thousand days" for his work. The majority of Italians still support him, but his approval rating is rapidly crumbling from 69 percent in June to 54 in September. The philosopher and former mayor of Venice, Massimo Cacciari, is already talking about a disease that has afflicted Renzi: "Proclamationitis."" - ((°}
The people of Sagada follow a unique burial ritual. The elderly carve their own coffins out of hollowed logs. If they are too weak or ill, their families prepare their coffins instead. The dead are placed inside their coffins (sometimes breaking their bones in the process of fitting them in), and the coffins are brought to a cave for burial. Instead of being placed into the ground, the coffins are hung either inside the caves or on the face of the cliffs, near the hanging coffins of their ancestors. The Sagada people have been practicing such burials for over 2000 years, and some of the coffins are well over a century old. Eventually the coffins deteriorate and fall from their precarious positions. Many of the locations of the coffins are difficult to reach (and obviously should be left alone out of respect) but can be appreciated from afar. Do not touch or walk under the coffins. Bring binoculars or a telephoto camera to view these remarkable coffins from a respectful distance. - ((°}
Chewbacca bento (via 20 opere d’arte fatte di cibo | Prince List) - http://miss-malina.tumblr.com/post...
Se si domanda a Tizio, che non ha mai studiato il cinese e conosce bene solo il dialetto della sua provincia, di tradurre un brano di cinese, egli molto ragionevolmente si meraviglierà, prenderà la domanda in ischerzo e, se si insiste, crederà di essere canzonato, si offenderà e farà ai pugni. Eppure lo stesso Tizio, senza essere neanche... - http://miss-malina.tumblr.com/post...
ma parliamo di cose importanti: chi farà il laivblogghin del matrimonio di clunii? (astenersi giummi con benafflecnudo)
chi si sposa ? - Pluto in USA
ovcorz, che non si dica che non ci teniamo alle tradizioni! - ((°}
Sardinian town finds novel way to cut unemployment: pay people to leave | World news | The Guardian - http://www.theguardian.com/world...
"Governments across Europe dream of finding a magic solution to rising unemployment. But in the hardest-hit parts of the EU, joblessness rates continue to creep up and the rhetoric does little to shorten the dole queue. Now, in a struggling corner of Italy, one mayor thinks he has found an answer to his town’s chronic lack of work – although, rather than a solution, it appears to some to be more of an admission of defeat. Valter Piscedda, the centre-left mayor of Elmas, a small town near Sardinia’s capital, Cagliari, wants to pay residents to leave. The council will pay for 10 unemployed locals to take intensive English lessons, board a cheap flight and look for jobs elsewhere in Europe. “This is above all an idea born of common sense and experience,” he told the Guardian. “Over the past year and a half – especially in the past few months – I have been receiving young people almost every day who are despairing about their search for work. Some are looking here, and ask for a hand in finding it here. Others have tried everything and are so discouraged that they no longer want to stay and wait. And they want to go and gain [work] experience abroad, life experience too. “So, my reasoning was this: put everything in place that the council administration can put in place so that those who want to gain experience abroad are able to,” he said. As the national economy continues to falter, Sardinia, along with much of southern and central Italy, is grappling with high unemployment, with the overall joblessness rate at 17.7% in the second quarter of this year, according to the national statistics institute, Istat. More than 54% of people under 25 are out of work. For the Adesso Parto (Now I’m leaving) programme, Elmas’s council has allocated €12,000 (£9,500) on a first-come, first-served basis to applicants aged between 18 and 50. As long as they are out of work and have lived in the town for three years, they are eligible. They do not have to be university educated, and their annual income must be no more than €15,000. The idea of encouraging people to up sticks is sensitive at a time when floods of Italians – many of them bright young graduates – are leaving their country every year. But Piscedda, who belongs to the Democratic party of the prime minister, Matteo Renzi, denies he is facilitating a brain drain and believes that the people he is sending away may well return “and give me back 100 times what they were given”. More importantly, he wants the scheme to give a leg up to those most in need. “It’s a programme for those with no other resource; it’s the last-chance saloon. It’s about allowing them the dignity of not having to ask a friend for money or place burdens on families that cannot do it,” he said. Several months ago, he added, the council launched a scheme whereby businesses were given financial incentives to hire young workers from Elmas. “We advertised 20 of these positions,” he said. “We got 120 applications.” In Elmas, the scheme has provoked mixed reactions. “The reality is that there is little work here,” said Alessandro Macis. “The opportunity to go abroad to learn about the workplace and experience other cultures can be very worthwhile. The son of a friend of mine who didn’t study much has ended up in London and he’s really finding his way. He started as a waiter, now he’s a cook and he’s learning English.” Others were perplexed. “I heard about it but I thought it was strange. If you have that money to pay for people to go away, why don’t you use that money to keep them here?” said Consuelo Melis, working behind the bar in a local cafe. On Twitter, one of many reactions was disbelief. “The state’s admission of defeat,” commented Marco Patavino. “Institutions are raising the white flag,” remarked Carlo Mazzaggio. Piscedda, however, is undeterred, remarking of his online critics: “Probably they are people that aren’t in need ... Every day I deal with people’s problems and I have to do something to try to solve them. These people, if they had an alternative, they wouldn’t be asking [for help]. “The work I can create [as mayor] is temporary. I can have a piazza cleaned. I can have it cleaned again. I can have the streets cleaned. But these are all temporary things that give nothing beyond that little bit of money for a few months. I want to go beyond that.”" - ((°}
anch'io ho il medesimo dubbio, però mi sembra che alla base ci sia qualcosa di simile agli altri ragionamenti impotenti della politica in questi tempi di crisi, ad es.: "non ce la facciamo a farci valere in Europa, usciamo"; "andiamo di autarchia", ecc. E quello fatico ad accettarlo. - Haukr
I own it | I had it [#celolunghismi #gearporn]
[momento WTF][momento facepalm][momento napalm sul designer] la squadra di ciclismo femminile della Colombia e il raffinatissimo accostamento colori della divisa
Zisho, quello delle secchiate è stato già punito dal Fato: http://au.ibtimes.com/article... - Fabs
Klaer lightende Spiegel der Verfkonst… Tot Delft, gedaen en beschreeven dour A. Boogert, 1692. (Manoscritto olandese proto-Pantone) [http://www.e-corpus.org/ita...] - http://miss-malina.tumblr.com/post...
Mary Sean Young Blade Runner Polaroids (see complete album here) - http://miss-malina.tumblr.com/post...
[and now for something completely different: proto-droni] Des pigeons photographes pour la reconnaissance aérienne - http://www.laboiteverte.fr/pigeon-...
"Cette technique de photographie aérienne a été inventée par l’apothicaire Allemand Julius Neubronner en 1907. La photographie aérienne existait déjà depuis 1858 grâce à Nadar qui avait pris des photos à partir d’un ballon et les pigeons étaient déjà largement utilisés par l’armée depuis plusieurs siècles. Il eu alors l’idée de combiner les deux en attachant aux pigeons un harnais en aluminium supportant un appareil photo miniature pesant 30 à 70 grammes réglé pour prendre des photos à intervalle régulier. Son idée était de se servir de ce système pour suivre les trajets que ses pigeons faisaient. Il déposa un brevet en 1908 après quelques péripéties et entreprit de rentabiliser son invention, notamment en la présentant dans des salons où les spectateurs assistaient à l’arrivée des pigeons, il vendant ensuite les photos prises sous forme de carte postales. Au cours des années il perfectionna son invention et conçut 5 appareils photos différents. La première guerre mondiale éclata quelques années après et l’armée récupéra son idée pour réaliser des prises de vues de reconnaissance aérienne. L’Allemagne utilisa ce procédé mais abandonna l’idée à la fin de la guerre, elle fut alors testée par les militaires Suisses, Français et par la CIA à des fins d’espionnage." - ((°}
[selfies ai tempi di blade runner] Blade Runner Polaroids - http://www.laboiteverte.fr/blade-r...
L’actrice Sean Young qui joue le rôle de Rachael dans le film Blade Runner vient de mettre en ligne des Polaroids qu’elle avait pris sur le tournage" - ((°}
La construction de Brasilia par Marcel Gautherot - http://www.laboiteverte.fr/la-cons...
"Le photographe français Marcel Gautherot a réalisé ces images noir et blanc de la construction de la ville nouvelle de Brasilia conçue par Oscar Niemeyer pour remplacer Rio de Janeiro comme capitale du Brésil dans les années 50." - ((°}
"do you know marco scudeletti on twitter?" @#!*#§
dungue. - Gommapiuma
digevamo - chamberlainn
@#!*##$$#P#C!DD@@@ - ((°}
ma questa catzo di idea che hanno le femmine, che pretendono che gli altri leggano loro nel pensiero, c'è qualcuno che sa con certezza dove e quando ha avuto origine?
il 6 marzo 1839 - miki
i porcotutto ecumenici - ((°}
A plan used to be simple: you would agree to meet someone at a certain time and place and then you would meet them there and then. Now, a plan is subject to all sorts of revisions because "cellphones make people flaky as #%@*" http://www.youtube.com/watch...
The Comment Section For Every Article About Bikini Waxing Ever - http://the-toast.net/2013...
"1. It makes me feel cleaner. 2. Are you saying I’m dirtier than you are, because my vagina has naturally occurring hair? Hair that wicks bacteria and odors out of my vagina? 3. If you have hair in your vagina, you should see a doctor. The word is “vulva.” 4. Stop trying to make “vulva” happen. “Vulva” is never going to happen. 5. As a man, I can tell you: it’s a hygiene issue. I just prefer to be with women who take care of themselves. 6. When is this going to end?  In three years, are we going to have to wax off our eyebrows or be told we’re dirty hippies now?  “First they came for my pits, but I said nothing.” 7. Way to devalue the Holocaust with your bullshit rich white feminist non-issue.  You want to know about real suffering? Each one of my fingers and toes was pulled out by the roots and used to create a crown for an evil prince, which he wears while executing women who have spoken in public. 8. Why does no one talk about the Holocaust which Israel perpetuates on the Palestinians every day? 9. SHUT UP, #8. 10. I wax because I like the way it feels, not because of men. 11. You prefer the way it feels to have hot wax spread on your body’s most sensitive area, then yanked off in hairy strips? 12. You get used to it. 13. I’ve never gotten used to it. Nor have I ever gotten used to making a less-affluent woman touch my taint for fifty bucks. 14. Fifty bucks?  I pay eighty plus tip!  PM me the address! 15. You should just get lasered. 16. Yeah, and then apply a poultice of caviar. 17. Get a Groupon! 18. Groupons are destroying small businesses. 19. I’m a man, and society tells me to shave my face every day. 20. You can SEE YOUR FACE. You don’t have to brace one foot on a slippery tub and gingerly scrape your outer labia and then spend a week trying to dig out your ingrowns with a Tweezerman. 21. No, but really, I do it for myself, not for men, and feminism is about choice, and this is my choice. 22. Feminism is not about choice, it is about achieving radical gender equality. Maybe you should get back together with Trey. 23. Oh, excuse me, I didn’t know there was a High Council Meeting about what I was allowed to do with my pubic hair.  When do we get to take off our wigs and pointy shoes and learn how to poison children? 24. Do you think Gloria Steinem waxes? 25. I don’t know!  I could go either way. She’s so stylish and inspirational.  Those incredible glasses and shift dresses. 26. Can we agree that the actual litmus test of feminism is whether or not you would ask Gloria Steinem if she has pubes? 27. I’m old as dirt, and I can tell you: time will resolve this whole issue for you, sooner than you think. I have about four hairs left down there, and I’ve given them names. 28. Look, it’s nothing personal, I just hate getting hair in my teeth, so if a lady isn’t waxed, I hand her my dull Gillette, point to the bathroom, and tell her I’ll be ready to rock her world when she’s sorted that whole thing out. 29. I am a lesbian, and I eat more pussy than you could ever imagine in a thousand years of fapping to fake lesbian porn, and if you’re getting hair in your mouth you’re doing it wrong. Are you, like, dabbing at the mons with your tongue, or something? 30. I am also a lesbian, and I give amazing head, and I could probably collect all the hairs I’ve ever gotten in my teeth from it and thread them on a loom to make a decorative wall hanging of Emmylou Harris. Wax that shit. 31. I’m Paleo, so I believe that accidentally eating pubic hair is natural, and certainly better than ingesting grains and legumes. But you still absolutely need to shave your legs, because women with hairy legs are disgusting. 32. You know, you can get hair in your teeth from going down on dudes, too. 33. Not really. 34. Yeah, that’s not the same.  Because dicks go UP, right, out of the hair. 35. Honestly, I just hate it when I have my period and it gets all matted. 36. THAT DOESN’T HAPPEN TO ME BECAUSE I USE A DIVACUP WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW MORE CAN I TELL YOU MORE ABOUT MY DIVACUP ANYTHING BAD YOU’VE HEARD IS A LIE FROM TAMPON COMPANIES 37. It’s amazing how literally every woman used to have pubes, and no one shrank away in fear. 38. Well, Ruskin. 39. Oh, right. Ruskin. Or is that apocryphal? 40. It’s because now women expect oral sex, so they’ve had to improve their grooming standards. 41. Excuse me? Why does every generation assume they invented eating pussy? When my husband returned from the Crimean War, the first thing he did was flip my dress up and go to town on me, and I looked like an upside-down Troll doll. 42. Men who want women to be hairless are pedophiles. You can tell I can menstruate and hold political office and see R-rated movies because I have a soft, fluffy bush. 43. Only a pedophile would say that a grown-ass woman with a naked snatch looks like a baby. 44. ladies i think u and your hairy pussies are beautiful send me pics i am real man who appreciates real lady 45. This thread has been closed for review by a moderator." - ((°}
Grazie :-) - Emma Woodhouse
The Strange Tale of the North Pond Hermit - http://www.gq.com/news-po...
"For nearly thirty years, a phantom haunted the woods of Central Maine. Unseen and unknown, he lived in secret, creeping into homes in the dead of night and surviving on what he could steal. To the spooked locals, he became a legend—or maybe a myth. They wondered how he could possibly be real. Until one day last year, the hermit came out of the forest" - ((°}
LauraD, non ti ho messa in copia ma sappi che ti ho pensata: ecco il vero dinamite bla delle nostre storie - ((°}
(il resto del'articolo leggetevelo, perché merita non molto ma moltissimo) - ((°}
dagli torto - ((°}