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November 2012

1 post

Love

erikbernhardsson:

image

Printed t-shirt, edition of 10-1.

Printed on generic, what-have-you, ‘printed t-shirt’ t-shirt and roughly matches up to that quality.

Chinese XXL or One Size:

Back length: 71 cm

Chest width: 55 cm

Shoulder width: 51 cm

Free shipping to —the world—.

Ships with regular mail from Shenzhen, China.

FASAD Fronts LLC.

Love,

Nov 4, 201212 notes
#FASAD Fronts LLC #Love

October 2012

14 posts

Oct 13, 20125 notes
F de C: Purchase F de C Reader 2012-1  → fdec.tumblr.com

fdec:

Buy here

The F de C Reader #1 is F de C’s first exploitation of print.

A bi-yearly ”fashion magazine”, the Reader will be complemented by a separate visual publication, also published twice a year.

180 pages, containing only the images necessary to give it sense, the F de C de Reader is…

Oct 11, 20125 notes
Oct 11, 201261 notes
Oct 9, 2012249 notes
Oct 7, 2012
Oct 6, 20121 note
Oct 4, 2012
Oct 3, 201213 notes
Oct 3, 2012884 notes
Oct 3, 2012
“Nothing haunts us like the things we don’t say.” —Mitch Albom (via fantasiesandlullabies)
Oct 3, 201268,732 notes
Oct 3, 2012277 notes
“The loneliest people are the kindest. The saddest people smile the brightest. The most damaged people are the wisest. All because they do not wish to see anyone else suffer the way they do.” —

Unknown

(via pepguardiola)

Oct 3, 2012158,249 notes
“The loneliest people are the kindest. The saddest people smile the brightest. The most damaged people are the wisest. All because they do not wish to see anyone else suffer the way they do.” —

Unknown

(via pepguardiola)

Oct 3, 2012158,249 notes

September 2012

49 posts

“Not being racist is not some default starting position. You don’t simply get to say you’re not a racist; not being racist — or a sexist or a homophobe — is a constant, arduous process of unlearning, of being uncomfortable, of eating crow and being humbled and re-evaluating. It’s probably hard to start that process if you’ve been told that every thought you have is golden and should be given voice, and that people who are offended by what you say are hypersensitive simpletons.” —(via djphatrick, meow-sense) (via garychou)
Sep 30, 201214,644 notes
Sep 27, 2012
“Photography is a very lonely medium. There’s a kind of beautiful loneliness in voyeurism. And that’s why I’m a photographer.” —Alec Soth, “Dismantling My Career” (via timelightbox)
Sep 27, 2012574 notes
Sep 27, 2012
“Did you know that for pretty much the entire history of the human species, the average life span was less than thirty years? You could count on ten years or so of real adulthood, right? There was no planning for retirement, There was no planning for a career. There was no planning. No time for plannning. No time for a future. But then the life spans started getting longer, and people started having more and more future. And now life has become the future. Every moment of your life is lived for the future—you go to high school so you can go to college so you can get a good job so you can get a nice house so you can afford to send your kids to college so they can get a good job so they can get a nice house so they can afford to send their kids to college.” —John Green, Paper Towns (via entropy-entropy)
Sep 25, 2012220 notes
“The sign of intelligence is that you are constantly wondering. Idiots are always dead sure about every damn thing they are doing in their life.” —Vasudev (via h-o-r-n-g-r-y)
Sep 25, 201291,000 notes
Sep 21, 20126 notes
Sep 19, 201228 notes
“The only people I would care to be with now are artists and people who have suffered: those who know what beauty is, and those who know what sorrow is: nobody else interests me.” —Oscar Wilde (via loveage-moondream)
Sep 19, 2012684 notes
“People are so alienated from their own soul that when they meet their soul they think it comes from another star system” —~ Terence McKenna (via meditationsinwonderland)
Sep 19, 201265 notes

No one ever says, Here I am, and I have brought my body with me.

— Modes of Thought, Whitehead; p 114

Sep 19, 201258 notes
“What a gift, to be able to take all that happened to you with such a light-hearted spirit, a genuine sense of humour about a mixed-up world.” —Michael Gill, How Starbucks Saved My Life (via quote-book)
Sep 17, 20121,969 notes
Sep 17, 2012205 notes
Sep 16, 2012210 notes
“Let me finally return to Dwight Macdonald and the responsibility of intellectuals. Macdonald quotes an interview with a death-camp paymaster who burst into tears when told that the Russians would hang him. “Why should they? What have I done?” he asked. Macdonald concludes: “Only those who are willing to resist authority themselves when it conflicts too intolerably with their personal moral code, only they have the right to condemn the death-camp paymaster.” The question, “What have I done?” is one that we may well ask ourselves, as we read each day of fresh atrocities in Vietnam—as we create, or mouth, or tolerate the deceptions that will be used to justify the next defense of freedom.” —Noam Chomsky, “The Responsibility of the Intellectuals”, 1967. Written during the Vietnam War. Full text here. (via abdullahnaeem)
Sep 16, 201220 notes
Sep 16, 2012

arielnietzsche:

i have foucault, milk instead of beeR (cuZ Im KEWL) and cookies to spend my night instead of writing my six page essay

Sep 14, 20124 notes
Sep 14, 201213,224 notes
Sep 14, 2012187,114 notes
Sep 13, 20123,517 notes

modus-ponies:

Forever caught in the balancing act of wanting to be there for someone and not wanting to be another pestering fly.

Sep 12, 201214 notes
Sep 9, 2012651 notes
Strangers on a bus: Study reveals lengths commuters go to avoid each other → phys.org

projnex:

“You’re on the bus, and one of the only free seats is next to you. How, and why, do you stop another passenger sitting there? New research reveals the tactics commuters use to avoid each other, a practice the paper, published in Symbolic Interaction describes as ‘nonsocial transient behavior.’ “


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-strangers-bus-reveals-lengths-commuters.html#jCp”

Sep 7, 201210 notes
Sep 7, 201242 notes
“Why are people sad? That’s simple. They are the prisoners of their personal history. Everyone believes that the main aim in life is to follow a plan. They never ask if that plan is theirs or if it was created by another person. They accumulate experiences, memories, things, other people’s ideas, and it is more than they can possibly cope with. And that is why they forget their dreams.” —Paulo Coelho (via forgottencityiram)
Sep 6, 20121,261 notes
“I lost respect when I learned of Gandhi’s body hatred and even more that he refused to have sex with his wife for the last thirty-eight years of their marriage (in fact he felt that people should have sex only three or four times in their lives) I lost even more [respect] when I found out that in order to test his commitment to celibacy, he had beautiful young women lie next to him naked through the night: evidently his wife - whom he described as looking like a ‘meek cow’ - was no longer desirable enough [to] be a solid test” —

On Pacifism

-Derrick Jenson

(via fortalameda)

Yeah, Gandhi was an unbelievably selfish individual. My biggest reason for losing respect for him, though, was that he criticized the Jews for defending themselves against the Holocaust — he insisted that they should have committed public mass suicide in order to “shame” the Germans instead of fighting back.

(via freedominwickedness)

…. In order to shame the Germans?  WTF?  The Germans wouldn’t’ve been shamed - they’d’ve been thrilled to get their way so easily!

(via christinathena)

Gandhi’s exact words were: “But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher’s knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs. As it is, they succumbed anyway in their millions.” He also wrote an open letter to the British people in 1940 telling them to surrender to the Axis even if it meant accepting genocide:

“I would like you to lay down the arms you have as being useless for saving you or humanity. You will invite Herr Hitler and Signor Mussolini to take what they want of the countries you call your possessions. Let them take possession of your beautiful island, with your many beautiful buildings. You will give all these but neither your souls, nor your minds. If these gentlemen choose to occupy your homes, you will vacate them. If they do not give you free passage out, you will allow yourself, man, woman and child, to be slaughtered, but you will refuse to owe allegiance to them.”

(via freedominwickedness)

he was also anti-black (lost all respect for him after reading how he treated sub-saharan africans).

http://www.trinicenter.com/WorldNews/ghandi4.htm

read this. everyone needs to know gandhi’s “true colors”. 

(via cynique)

finally

(via dumbthingswhitepplsay)

Sep 6, 20124,135 notes
F de C: ALTERNATIVES IN PRINT: F DE C READER  → fdec.tumblr.com

fdec:

The F de C Reader is a pocket-sized biannual emergent from a certain redundancy in publications regarding the world of fashion. Rather than claim, the reader exudes need for a re-primed canvas with a peculiar focus on clothing and all its metaphorical and metaphysical realms. Seasons and…

Sep 6, 20123 notes
Sep 6, 201212 notes
Sep 6, 20121 note
Sep 6, 20121 note
Sep 5, 201217,658 notes
F de C: ALTERNATIVES IN PRINT: F DE C READER  → fdec.tumblr.com

fdec:

The F de C Reader is a pocket-sized biannual emergent from a certain redundancy in publications regarding the world of fashion. Rather than claim, the reader exudes need for a re-primed canvas with a peculiar focus on clothing and all its metaphorical and metaphysical realms. Seasons and…

Sep 5, 20123 notes
“Reject the buffoons we are told by others are the ‘voices of our generation,’ vacuous one percenters like Lena Dunham, scribbling thousands of words in the degraded coloring book The New Yorker about the agony of being defriended on Facebook by her ex-boyfriend’s parents. Reject corn-fed pop simpletons like Chuck Klosterman, who finds Steely Dan ‘more lyrically subversive’ than the Sex Pistols, or bourgeois security blankets like Jon Stewart, or M.F.A. poetasters like David Foster Wallace, the best at packing more words and fewer authentic feelings between two covers. Reject Obama, the worst of them all; he will not save you.” —General Gandhi, “The Yacht Rock Counterrevolution,” Jacobin Magazine (via andrewfm)
Sep 4, 201234 notes
“One of the questions asked in that study was, How many Vietnamese casualties would you estimate that there were during the Vietnam war? The average response on the part of Americans today is about 100,000. The official figure is about two million. The actual figure is probably three to four million. The people who conducted the study raised an appropriate question: What would we think about German political culture if, when you asked people today how many Jews died in the Holocaust, they estimated about 300,000? What would that tell us about German political culture?” —

Noam Chomsky, “Media Control” (via siegfriedandfreud)

Three or four million Asians killed by the US — and three Southeast Asian countries (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos) shattered for several generations — is nothing to US Americans, not even worth a footnote. In World War II, 20 million Chinese were killed, many in concentration camps every bit as brutal as those in Germany, subject to human experimentation for developing chemical and biological weapons, yet I guarantee you that most US Americans have no idea this happened in a war in which the US and China were ostensibly fighting as allies and indeed the Chinese land war was every bit as critical to securing Japan’s surrender as the US naval campaign. Any German who believes that only 300,000 Jews were killed in the Holocaust is rightly condemned as a history-denying racist, and for me the same logic applies to US Americans.

(via zuky)

Sep 4, 20122,312 notes
Sep 3, 201223 notes
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