carly rae jepson - call me maybe
there are tears rolling down my face
reblogging again because yolo
(via karinanirak)
266,660 plays
Justin Bieber — Die In Your Arms
I cant help it I’m just selfish, there’s no way that
I could share you
That would break my heart to pieces
Honestly the truth is…If I could just die in your arms
I wouldnt mind
Cause everytime you touch me I just
Die in your arms, oh it feels so right
So baby baby please dont stop girl
(via heyitsadelyn)
150 playsTomgram: Noam Chomsky, A Rebellious World or a New Dark Age? | TomDispatch (via nickturse)Before the 1970s, banks were banks. They did what banks were supposed to do in a state capitalist economy: they took unused funds from your bank account, for example, and transferred them to some potentially useful purpose like helping a family buy a home or send a kid to college. That changed dramatically in the 1970s. Until then, there had been no financial crises since the Great Depression. The 1950s and 1960s had been a period of enormous growth, the highest in American history, maybe in economic history.
And it was egalitarian. The lowest quintile did about as well as the highest quintile. Lots of people moved into reasonable lifestyles — what’s called the “middle class” here, the “working class” in other countries — but it was real. And the 1960s accelerated it. The activism of those years, after a pretty dismal decade, really civilized the country in lots of ways that are permanent.
When the 1970s came along, there were sudden and sharp changes: de-industrialization, the off-shoring of production, and the shift to financial institutions, which grew enormously. I should say that, in the 1950s and 1960s, there was also the development of what several decades later became the high-tech economy: computers, the Internet, the IT Revolution developed substantially in the state sector.
The developments that took place during the 1970s set off a vicious cycle. It led to the concentration of wealth increasingly in the hands of the financial sector. This doesn’t benefit the economy — it probably harms it and society — but it did lead to a tremendous concentration of wealth.
(via nickturse)
I did this with my friend once…such fond memories
that looks like fun
I want to do this. Haven’t done something like this since summer camp