Shared posts

07 Nov 04:19

China Killed 180k Dogs to Trade for Russian Su-27 Fighter Jet

by Joe

su-27-doge-pelts

Chinese netizens react in disbelief to a recent claim made by military expert Du Wenlong on Yunnan TV regarding the slaughtering of 180,000 dogs to make dog pelt coats to trade for Russian-made Su-27 fighter jets. The reality is that in the early 1990s, 70% of the costs of the first shipment of Su-27s were paid for using industrial and consumer products under ”Project 906“.

From Sina Weibo:

@凤凰网: Russian Fighter Jets Traded to China for Dog Pelts, China Killed Dogs in 3 Provinces to Meet the Demand — Military expert Senior Colonel Du Wenlong: Back when China was requesting to buy Su-27s, the terms set by the Russians was to trade using 10,000 dog pelt coats. 10,000 dog pelt coats created a lot of pressure/difficulties for us. It takes 18 dogs to make one coat, so that winter we killed all the dogs from the three provinces of Henan, Shandong, etc. in order to trade for Su-27s.

china-killed-180k-dogs-to-trade-for-russian-su-27-fighter-jets-01

Full statement from the expert:

”Back when we were importing Su-27s, Russia was also having economic difficulties. They only wanted three things: One, flashlights; two, vacuum flasks; three, dog pelt coats. 10,000 dog pelt coats, that created a lot of pressure/difficulties for us. It takes 18 dog pelts to make one dog pelt coat. So that winter we killed all the dogs in the three provinces of Henan, Shandong, etc. in order to trade for Su-27s. So dogs in China had made significant contributions to China’s military and weapons modernization.”

Comments on Sina Weibo:

酒仙迷踪:

So is this the real reason behind the beating of dogs?

成都企业法律顾问:

If this is true, then of the 180k dogs, how many were loyal Hachikos, how many seniors lost their only companions, and how many children lost their childhood friends. To make this kind of deal is no different than trading your soul to the devil, and even the most despicable words cannot describe it. After all, one Su-27 means little to a great nation in comparison.

蹬山队: (responding to 我真不一定是好人)

Before 1994, dog pelt coats were the main exports to Russia, I personally sold over 1,000, but compared to the China National Native Produce and Animal By-Products Import and Export Corporation (CNNPABIEC), I’m nothing. They exported millions of dog pelts to Russia each year, so much that there weren’t enough dogs in the countrysides to kill. Later, the Russians changed their living habits and started to wear sable, so dog pelts lost its market, and people stopped raising those dogs.

海德拉巴的搬运工:

Now we can kill 50 cent dogs, in exchange for jet engines.

Hitting_on:

Poor doggies. Vicious evil humans. Such evil will definitely face retribution [karma].

牛牛很忙虎虎虎:

Such a ridiculous request. Now when we buy Su-35s, are we supposed to send over some excess stock of melamine-tainted cheese?

DJ老重:

After skimming the comments, most of them are jeering~ and I’m too lazy to say much tonight. This isn’t news on military forums. When the Soviet Union collapsed, there was a critical shortage of many commodities, not just dog pelts but also many light industrial products.

Terrific:

Why does this feel like I’m watching a show from Taiwan?

Stevp:

China, you sure are cruel.

BalanceX:

The first batch of Su-27s were traded with material goods. Material commodities made up a significant portion of the payment.

姿势改变命运:

Doggies sacrificed their lives for the nation.

陈大人英明啊:

I personally think we should turn these experts into leather coats…

叫我厂长啊啊啊:

This is quite believable. The civilian goods economy in the Soviet Union was rubbish at the time, and they often traded military hardware for foreign civilian goods.

海柳云烟:

Good thing Tsarist Russia didn’t ask for human pelts.

病入腠理:

Actually, Du Wenlong is really a great speaker. Every time I watch his analysis, I feel as if our Heavenly Kingdom is about to take over the world.

警视听kito:

Yuling Dog Meat Festival can’t be considered a festival anymore. The Su-27’s nickname should be the dog slaughter fighter.

熊摇熊滚熊:

When the Soviet Union collapsed, the Russians were so poor that they lacked everything, with the only thing left over being a bunch of weapons from the Soviet era. You could’ve offered them cabbage and they would’ve traded, let alone coats.

07 Nov 02:09

it must be fed

by kris
Mahmoud

that song is so annoying and also probably the movie

20141106-buzz

this came from me thinking the new star wars movie title was all right. i thought “how are people going to break this one apart and say it’s awful,” and all i could think was “it seems fine.”

07 Nov 00:17

This time with new notebooks and color-coded everything

by Dorothy

Comic

07 Nov 00:08

better keep up

Mahmoud

you ever wonder about some of these lithographs

Today on Married To The Sea: better keep up
04 Nov 10:21

Managing a Nightmare: How the CIA Watched Over the Destruction of Gary Webb

by Ryan Devereaux
Mahmoud

man, all the theaters showing this are too far away

Eighteen years after it was published, “Dark Alliance,” the San Jose Mercury News’s bombshell investigation into links between the cocaine trade, Nicaragua’s Contra rebels, and African American neighborhoods in California, remains one of the most explosive and controversial exposés in American journalism.

The 20,000-word series enraged black communities, prompted Congressional hearings, and became one of the first major national security stories in history to blow up online. It also sparked an aggressive backlash from the nation’s most powerful media outlets, which devoted considerable resources to discredit author Gary Webb’s reporting. Their efforts succeeded, costing Webb his career. On December 10, 2004, the journalist was found dead in his apartment, having ended his eight-year downfall with two .38-caliber bullets to the head.

These days, Webb is being cast in a more sympathetic light. He’s portrayed heroically in a major motion picture set to premiere nationwide next month. And documents newly released by the CIA provide fresh context to the “Dark Alliance” saga — information that paints an ugly portrait of the mainstream media at the time.

On September 18, the agency released a trove of documents spanning three decades of secret government operations. Culled from the agency’s in-house journal, Studies in Intelligence, the materials include a previously unreleased six-page article titled “Managing a Nightmare: CIA Public Affairs and the Drug Conspiracy Story.” Looking back on the weeks immediately following the publication of “Dark Alliance,” the document offers a unique window into the CIA’s internal reaction to what it called “a genuine public relations crisis” while revealing just how little the agency ultimately had to do to swiftly extinguish the public outcry. Thanks in part to what author Nicholas Dujmovic, a CIA Directorate of Intelligence staffer at the time of publication, describes as “a ground base of already productive relations with journalists,” the CIA’s Public Affairs officers watched with relief as the largest newspapers in the country rescued the agency from disaster, and, in the process, destroyed the reputation of an aggressive, award-winning reporter.

(Dujmovic’s name was redacted in the released version of the CIA document, but was included in a footnote in a 2010 article in the Journal of Intelligence. Dujmovic confirmed his authorship to The Intercept.)

Kill the Messenger Jeremy Renner

Actor Jeremy Renner stars as investigative journalist Gary Webb in the upcoming film “Kill the Messenger.”

Webb’s troubles began in August 1996, when his employer, the San Jose Mercury News, published a groundbreaking, three-part investigation he had worked on for more than a year. Carrying the full title “Dark Alliance: The Story Behind the Crack Explosion,” Webb’s series reported that in addition to waging a proxy war for the U.S. government against Nicaragua’s revolutionary Sandinista government in the 1980s, elements of the CIA-backed Contra rebels were also involved in trafficking cocaine to the U.S. in order to fund their counter-revolutionary campaign. The secret flow of drugs and money, Webb reported, had a direct link to the subsequent explosion of crack cocaine abuse that had devastated California’s most vulnerable African American neighborhoods.

Derided by some as conspiracy theory and heralded by others as investigative reporting at its finest, Webb’s series spread through extensive talk radio coverage and global availability via the internet, which at the time was still a novel way to promote national news.

Though “Dark Alliance” would eventually morph into a personal crisis for Webb, it was initially a PR disaster for the CIA. In “Managing a Nightmare,” Dujmovic minced no words in describing the potentially devastating  effect of the series on the agency’s image:

The charges could hardly be worse. A widely read newspaper series leads many Americans to believe CIA is guilty of at least complicity, if not conspiracy, in the outbreak of crack cocaine in America’s cities. In more extreme versions of the story circulating on talk radio and the internet, the Agency was the instrument of a consistent strategy by the US Government to destroy the black community and keep black Americans from advancing. Denunciations of CIA–reminiscent of the 1970s–abound. Investigations are demanded and initiated. The Congress gets involved.

Dujmovic acknowledged that Webb “did not state outright that CIA ran the drug trade or even knew about it.” In fact, the agency’s central complaint, according to the document, was over the graphics that accompanied the series, which suggested a link between the CIA and the crack scare, and Webb’s description of the Contras as “the CIA’s army” (despite the fact that the Contras were quite literally an armed, militant group not-so-secretly supported by the U.S., at war with the government of Nicaragua).

Dujmovic complained that Webb’s series “appeared with no warning,” remarking that, for all his journalistic credentials, “he apparently could not come up with a widely available and well-known telephone number for CIA Public Affairs.” This was probably because Webb “was uninterested in anything the Agency might have to say that would diminish the impact of his series,” he wrote. (Webb later said that he did contact the CIA but that the agency would not return his calls; efforts to obtain CIA comment were not mentioned in the “Dark Alliance” series).

Dujmovic also pointed out that much of what was reported in “Dark Alliance” was not new. Indeed, in 1985, more than a decade before the series was published, Associated Press journalists Robert Parry and Brian Barger found that Contra groups had “engaged in cocaine trafficking, in part to help finance their war against Nicaragua.” In a move that foreshadowed Webb’s experience, the Reagan White House launched “a concerted behind-the-scenes campaign to besmirch the professionalism of Parry and Barger and to discredit all reporting on the contras and drugs,” according to a 1997 article by Peter Kornbluh for the Columbia Journalism Review. “Whether the campaign was the cause or not, coverage was minimal.”

Neverthess, a special senate subcommittee, chaired by then-senator John Kerry, investigated the AP’s findings and, in 1989, released a 1,166-page report on covert U.S. operations throughout Latin America and the Caribbean (summary here). It found “considerable evidence” that the Contras were linked to running drugs and guns — and that the U.S. government knew about it.

Nicaragua Contras 1983

1983, Anti-Sandinista Contra forces move down the San Juan River which separates Nicaragua from Costa Rica.

From the subcommittee report:

On the basis of this evidence, it is clear that individuals who provided support for the Contras were involved in drug trafficking, the supply network of the Contras was used by drug trafficking organizations, and elements of the Contras themselves knowingly received financial and material assistance from drug traffickers. In each case, one or another agency of the U.S. government had information regarding the involvement either while it was occurring, or immediately thereafter.

The chief of the CIA’s Central America Task Force was also quoted as saying, “With respect to (drug trafficking) by the Resistance Forces…it is not a couple of people. It is a lot of people.”

Despite such damning assessments, the subcommittee report received scant attention from the country’s major newspapers. Seven years later, Webb would be the one to pick up the story. His articles distinguished themselves from the AP’s reporting in part by connecting an issue that seemed distant to many U.S. readers — drug trafficking in Central America — to a deeply-felt domestic story, the impact of crack cocaine in California’s urban, African American communities.

“Dark Alliance” focused on the lives of three men involved in shipping cocaine to the U.S.: Ricky “Freeway” Ross, a legendary L.A. drug dealer; Oscar Danilo Blandón Reyes, considered by the U.S. government to be Nicaragua’s biggest cocaine dealer living in the United States; and Meneses Cantarero, a powerful Nicaraguan player who had allegedly recruited Blandón to sell drugs in support of the counter-revolution. The series examined the relationship between the men, their impact on the drug market in California and elsewhere, and the disproportionate sentencing of African Americans under crack cocaine laws.

And while its content was not all new, the series marked the beginning of something that was: an in-depth investigation published outside the traditional mainstream media outlets and successfully promoted on the internet. More than a decade before Wikileaks and Edward Snowden, Webb showcased the power and reach of online journalism. Key documents were hosted on the San Jose Mercury News website, with hyperlinks, wiretap recordings and follow-up stories. The series was widely discussed on African American talk radio stations; on some days attracting more than one million readers to the newspaper’s website. As Webb later remarked, “you don’t have be The New York Times or The Washington Post to bust a national story anymore.”

But newspapers like the Times and the Post seemed to spend far more time trying to poke holes in the series than in following up on the underreported scandal at its heart, the involvement of U.S.-backed proxy forces in international drug trafficking. The Los Angeles Times was especially aggressive. Scooped in its own backyard, the California paper assigned no fewer than 17 reporters to pick apart Webb’s reporting. While employees denied an outright effort to attack the Mercury News, one of the 17 referred to it as the “get Gary Webb team.” Another said at the time, “We’re going to take away that guy’s Pulitzer,” according to Kornbluh’s CJR piece. Within two months of the publication of “Dark Alliance,” the L.A. Times devoted more words to dismantling its competitor’s breakout hit than comprised the series itself.

The CIA watched these developments closely, collaborating where it could with outlets who wanted to challenge Webb’s reporting. Media inquiries had started almost immediately following the publication of “Dark Alliance,” and Dujmovic in “Managing a Nightmare” cites the CIA’s success in discouraging “one major news affiliate” from covering the story. He also boasts that the agency effectively departed from its own longstanding policies in order to discredit the series. “For example, in order to help a journalist working on a story that would undermine the Mercury News allegations, Public Affairs was able to deny any affiliation of a particular individual — which is a rare exception to the general policy that CIA does not comment on any individual’s alleged CIA ties.”

The document chronicles the shift in public opinion as it moved in favor of the CIA, a trend that began about a month and a half after the series was published. “That third week in September was a turning point in media coverage of this story,” Dujmovic wrote, citing “[r]espected columnists, including prominent blacks,” along with the New York Daily News, the Baltimore Sun, The Weekly Standard and the Washington Post. The agency supplied the press, “as well as former Agency officials, who were themselves representing the Agency in interviews with the media,” with “these more balanced stories,” Dujmovic wrote. The Washington Post proved particularly useful. “Because of the Post‘s national reputation, its articles especially were picked up by other papers, helping to create what the Associated Press called a ‘firestorm of reaction’ against the San Jose Mercury News.” Over the month that followed, critical media coverage of the series (“balanced reporting”) far outnumbered supportive stories, a trend the CIA credited to the Post, The New York Times, “and especially the Los Angeles Times.” Webb’s editors began to distance themselves from their reporter.

By the end of October, two months after “Dark Alliance” was published, “the tone of the entire CIA-drug story had changed,” Dujmovic was pleased to report. “Most press coverage included, as a routine matter, the now-widespread criticism of the Mercury News allegations.”

“This success has to be in relative terms,” Dujmovic wrote, summing up the episode. “In the world of public relations, as in war, avoiding a rout in the face of hostile multitudes can be considered a success.”

dark_alliance_540

Artwork that accompanied the original Dark Alliance series published in the San Jose Mercury News.

There’s no question that “Dark Alliance” included flaws, which the CIA was able to exploit.

In his CJR piece, Kornbluh said the series was “problematically sourced” and criticized it for “repeatedly promised evidence that, on close reading, it did not deliver.” It failed to definitively connect the story’s key players to the CIA, he noted, and there were inconsistencies in Webb’s timeline of events.

But Kornbluh also uncovered problems with the retaliatory reports described as “balanced” by the CIA. In the case of the L.A. Times, he wrote, the paper “stumbled into some of the same problems of hyperbole, selectivity, and credibility that it was attempting to expose” while ignoring declassified evidence (also neglected by the  New York Times and the Washington Post) that lent credibility to Webb’s thesis. “Clearly, there was room to advance the contra/drug/CIA story rather than simply denounce it,” Kornbluh wrote.

The Mercury News was partially responsible “for the sometimes distorted public furor the stories generated,” Kornbluh said, but also achieved “something that neither the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, nor The New York Times had been willing or able to do — revisit a significant story that had been inexplicably abandoned by the mainstream press, report a new dimension to it, and thus put it back on the national agenda where it belongs.”

In October, the story of Gary Webb will reach a national moviegoing audience, likely reviving old questions about his reporting and the outrage it ignited. Director Michael Cuesta’s film, Kill the Messenger, stars Jeremy Renner as the hard-charging investigative reporter and borrows its title from a 2006 biography written by award-winning investigative journalist Nick Schou, who worked as a consultant on the script.

Discussing the newly disclosed “Managing a Nightmare” document, Schou says it squares with what he found while doing his own reporting. Rather than some dastardly, covert plot to destroy (or, as some went so far as to suggest, murder) Webb, Schou posits that the journalist was ultimately undone by the petty jealousies of the modern media world. The CIA “didn’t really need to lift a finger to try to ruin Gary Webb’s credibility,” Schou told The Intercept. “They just sat there and watched these journalists go after Gary like a bunch of piranhas.”

“They must have been delighted over at Langley, the way this all unfolded,” Schou added.

At least one journalist who helped lead the campaign to discredit Webb, feels remorse for what he did. As Schou reported for L.A. Weekly, in a 2013 radio interview L.A. Times reporter Jesse Katz recalled the episode, saying, “As an L.A. Times reporter, we saw this series in the San Jose Mercury News and kind of wonder[ed] how legit it was and kind of put it under a microscope. And we did it in a way that most of us who were involved in it, I think, would look back on that and say it was overkill. We had this huge team of people at the L.A. Times and kind of piled on to one lone muckraker up in Northern California.”

Schou, too, readily concedes there were problems with Webb’s reporting, but maintains that the most important components of his investigation stood up to scrutiny, only to be buried under the attacks from the nation’s biggest papers.

“I think it’s fair to take a look at the story objectively and say that it could have been better edited, it could have been packaged better, it would have been less inflammatory. And sure, maybe Gary could have, like, actually put in the story somewhere ‘I called the CIA X-amount of times and they didn’t respond.’ That wasn’t in there,” he said. “But these are all kind of minor things compared to the bigger picture, which is that he documented for the first time in the history of U.S. media how CIA complicity with Central American drug traffickers had actually impacted the sale of drugs north of the border in a very detailed, accurate story. And that’s, I think, the take-away here.”

As for Webb’s tragic death, Schou is certain it was a direct consequence of the smear campaign against him.

“As much as it’s true that he suffered from a clinical depression for years and years — and even before ‘Dark Alliance’ to a certain extent — it’s impossible to view what happened to him without understanding the death of his career as a result of this story,” he explained. “It was really the central defining event of his career and of his life.”

“Once you take away a journalist’s credibility, that’s all they have,” Schou says. “He was never able to recover from that.”

Kill the Messenger, a thriller based on Webb’s story, will be released October 10.

In “Managing a Nightmare,” Dujmovic attributed the initial outcry over the “Dark Alliance” series to “societal shortcomings” that are not present in the spy agency.

“As a personal post-script, I would submit that ultimately the CIA-drug story says a lot more about American society on the eve of the millennium that [sic] it does about either the CIA or the media,” he wrote. “We live in somewhat coarse and emotional times–when large numbers of Americans do not adhere to the same standards of logic, evidence, or even civil discourse as those practiced by members of the CIA community.”

Webb obviously saw things differently. He reflected on his fall from grace in the 2002 book, Into the Buzzsaw. Prior to “Dark Alliance,” Webb said, “I was winning awards, getting raises, lecturing college classes, appearing on TV shows, and judging journalism contests.”

“And then I wrote some stories that made me realize how sadly misplaced my bliss had been. The reason I’d enjoyed such smooth sailing for so long hadn’t been, as I’d assumed, because I was careful and diligent and good at my job,” Webb wrote. “The truth was that, in all those years, I hadn’t written anything important enough to suppress.”

 

Photo: Webb: Bob Berg/Getty Images; Kill the Messenger: Chuck Zlotnick/Focus Features; Contras: Bill Gentile/Corbis

The post Managing a Nightmare: How the CIA Watched Over the Destruction of Gary Webb appeared first on The Intercept.

02 Nov 07:57

Melonocide 3

30 Oct 17:55

bite the cheese

TODAYS SUPERPOOP: bite the cheese
27 Oct 09:19

Hallelujah, it’s Sunday morning.

by Jessica Hagy

card4454

Share and Enjoy:DiggStumbleUpondel.icio.usFacebookTwitterGoogle Bookmarks

27 Oct 06:59

Sketch Writin

TODAYS @DREWTOOTHPASTE: Sketch Writin
25 Oct 08:14

Overcast

25 Oct 08:14

Sexy Costumes For The Women Of 2014

by drew
monsters-inc-sulley-women monsters-inc-sulley-men

In this year’s rundown of sexy women’s Halloween costumes, I’ve posted the women’s costume on the left, and the men’s costume (i.e. how the character actually looks) on the right. Just in case you thought the main character from Monsters Inc. had exposed, tanned thighs showing between his short skirt and leg-warmers.

sonic-the-hedgehog-costume-women sonic-the-hedgehog-costume-men

“Gotta go… fast,” Sonic The Woman Hedgehog sighed, slipping on her ankle-warmers and three-inch heels.

duff-beer-costume-women duff-beer-costume-men

I could show you sexy women’s versions of what men are doing all day.

thing-2-women thing-2-men

Just like society.

24 Oct 23:05

goodbye chainsawsuit

by kris
Mahmoud

isn't this the original plot of i am legend the book?

20141023-chainsawsuit

sorry, man. you had a good run out there. but if you’d only waited 6 years, the virus would have cleared up on its own. after that it’s just chicken soup and plenty of bed rest

24 Oct 20:14

The forgotten coup - how America and Britain crushed the government of their 'ally', Australia

Mahmoud

shhiiiiit i shoulda known this by now

In an article for the Guardian, John Pilger marks the death of former Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam with the one story missing from the 'tributes' to a man whose extraordinary political demise is one of America's dirtiest secrets.

24 Oct 17:04

Lego Compatible Robot Frame #3DPrinting #3DThursday

by Pedro Ruiz

lego bot

Use these core bricks to build a frame and cover it with Lego bricks, and create your action robot! The 3D designs include print supports, and they can be easily removed after printing.

Download the files:
http://www.herodesignstw.com/#!i-agree-frame-typea/c28e


649-1
Every Thursday is #3dthursday here at Adafruit! The DIY 3D printing community has passion and dedication for making solid objects from digital models. Recently, we have noticed electronics projects integrated with 3D printed enclosures, brackets, and sculptures, so each Thursday we celebrate and highlight these bold pioneers!

Have you considered building a 3D project around an Arduino or other microcontroller? How about printing a bracket to mount your Raspberry Pi to the back of your HD monitor? And don’t forget the countless LED projects that are possible when you are modeling your projects in 3D!

24 Oct 17:00

[stackola]

24 Oct 16:59

Air New Zealand made a Lord of the Rings movie for an epic safety video

by Casey Chan on Sploid, shared by Casey Chan to Gizmodo
Mahmoud

it's true, air new zealand has the best in-flight videos

Air New Zealand made a Lord of the Rings movie for an epic safety video

Air New Zealand loves to make fun in-flight safety videos that can include anything from body paint to supermodels to Richard Simmons to Betty White. This time though, they've gone beyond epic: the safety video is basically a full on LOTR and Hobbit movie set in Middle Earth. It's impressive.

Read more...








24 Oct 08:57

Episode 1 | HyperToe | Adult Swim

by Adult Swim
Mahmoud

i'd say worth the two minutes. many of the comments are hilariously old.

1 More?: http://asw.im/68n1Ru SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/AdultSwimSubscribe About HyperToe: HyperToe is a breathlessly paced video comedy show tailor made for ...
From: Adult Swim
Views: 22105
901 ratings
Time: 02:05 More in Entertainment
24 Oct 08:30

Maps Of Street Layouts Colored By Orientation

by jwz
24 Oct 08:30

Men Cannot Understand the Hassles Women Have With Their Hair

by Fauna
Mahmoud

tell it sister

Hair problems for women.

From Sina Weibo:

@伟大的安妮: This is why regardless of whether women have long hair or short hair, it is…always…this…troublesome… #Men Simply Cannot Understand The Pain Women Have With Their With Hair!!!!#

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-01-english-translation

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-02-english-translation

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-03-english-translation

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-04-english-translation

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-05-english-translation

chinese-weibo-greatanny-hair-troubles-annoyances-for-women-06-english-translation

Comments from Sina Weibo:

阿恋恋恋恋_:

When your hair reaches your waist, remember to hold it up when taking a shit.

鲸俞:

Hahaha, your hair definitely must’ve been dipped in shit before.

阿弟哥iii:

So all you need to cover your physique [private parts] is a small little red heart. [哈哈]

iBy_Yu:

@黄灿灿acan It’s obvious that the last part of the fifth image is talking about you. [拜拜][拜拜]

爬爬_小铜钱:

Also your hair will get in the way when eating, so you have to hold it back with your hand!!! Such a hassle!

丁丁洛必达:

Anny, why is it that your feces are right in front of your head…?

StillAlive麻团:

Couldn’t you have avoided drawing the shit? [doge][doge][doge]

叶meihua:

@黄灿灿acan The last part of image five, bro, it must be talking about you.

小兔牙_Jiaaaaaaa:

Every female has experienced going from a bowl cut [bangs cut straight across] to a slanting cut to parting to the side to parting down the middle. So cherish every single woman with a middle part around you, because you do not know what kind of suffering she has been through. [拜拜]

还是喜欢向日葵和猫:

It is because haircutters do not understand our world that I have now risen to become a haircutter. [拜拜]

23 Oct 06:41

Realistic cactus cupcakes

by Xeni Jardin

tumblr_ndl49kB3qb1qlq9poo1_1280

From Alana Jones-Mann, a baker, culinary artist and DIY enthusiast in Brooklyn, cupcakes that look like miniature cacti. They're so cute, they're even planted in crushed graham cracker soil.

Read the rest

18 Oct 06:36

Doghouse Diaries

17 Oct 08:31

A tale of Ebola in America

by drew
Mahmoud

whoaaa

ebola-book

This book is a story of a man with Ebola who flew to Dallas and began the Ebola pandemic in America.

Not creepy until you see it was written in 1999.

15 Oct 08:28

Slender Man, Fat

by drew
Mahmoud

it's a scary fuckin world

slender-man-fat

Slender Man, the imaginary Internet villain whose creepy stories influenced several teenagers to attack and kill their classmates, is now available as a Halloween costume. And for some reason, the Halloween version is a fat, battery-operated inflatable onesie, despite the name Slender Man.

This is the world we live in. Get used to it.

15 Oct 00:45

Flyer screens

by jwz
Mahmoud

bahahaha what a joke

So we got that Android box running one of our flyer screens reasonably well, and ordered four more, and guess what? They all have exactly the same MAC address. No, that doesn't make our network lose its mind at all, why do you ask?

Seriously, who does that?

00:e0:11:22:33:44, if you were wondering. What a clever number.

Apparently you can only change this by jailbreaking them, which was an icepick we weren't exactly looking forward to trying on for size. Hooray.

14 Oct 19:54

NINJA

by CDTcrew
Mahmoud

the ending is... confusing. and that's saying something coming from cdtcrew.

silent assassin.
From: CDTcrew
Views: 1113
42 ratings
Time: 01:42 More in Film & Animation
14 Oct 18:28

Edward Snowden’s Privacy Tips: “Get Rid Of Dropbox,” Avoid Facebook And Google

by Anthony Ha
Mahmoud

erryday

edward snowden According to Edward Snowden, people who care about their privacy should stay away from popular consumer Internet services like Dropbox, Facebook, and Google. Snowden conducted a remote interview today as part of the New Yorker Festival, where he was asked a couple of variants on the question of what we can do to protect our privacy. Read More
12 Oct 20:03

DUMPBRASKA

by bubbaprog
Mahmoud

what's the story here

DUMPBRASKA
12 Oct 18:56

Grimes Shares 13 Lessons On Being A Boss

by Stereogum
Mahmoud

learn from your mistress, sena.

Anyone who’s seen Grimes perform live can tell you she’s a boss, figuratively. But as Claire Boucher recently explained for Tavi Gevinson’s new literature collection ROOKIE YEARBOOK THREE, she’s also a boss, literally. In the name of getting her music out there, she already owns two companies and just started a third one with her brother. Grimes’ essay includes 13 tips on how to be an entrepreneur. Elle reprinted the article today, and you can read the list below.

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12 Oct 18:56

Потому что борщ нужно готовить вовремя!

Mahmoud

TIL stun guns give girls immediate orgasms.



11 Oct 06:20

POV Footage of a Guy Riding His Bike over a Bridge’s Arch Beam