Your Friendly Neighborhood Liberal

Diego / 1989 / South Florida

Music Appreciator. Book Slayer. Immigrant. Critical Thinking Advocate. Artist. Super Skeptic. Progressive Liberal. Atheist

  1. I know, right. I’m just gonna place it somewhere where everyone can be graced by its badassness. Maybe later on I’ll get a landline; when we finally find out that cellphones do actually poison us

My mom went to an auction and she decided to surprise me with an M&M phone. I’m a chocolate addict and I love it, but I think she forgot that there are no landlines in my apartment…..or anywhere anymore

lulz-time:

2minutedrill:

Second graders learn grammar by correcting tweets from NFL players. 

My lovely followers, please follow this blog immediately!

(via beautiful-anomaly)

383 plays
Daft Punk Ft. Pharrell,
Random Access Memories

salmanhyder:

Daft Punk Ft. Pharrell - Lose Yourself To Dance

Where the hell have you been, Pharrell ?!?!?!?!

come on come on come on come on come on come on come on

Jamming hardcore to Daft Punk right now

283 plays
Daft Punk,
Random Access Memories

lollopelooza:

Daft Punk - Giorgio by Moroder (feat. Giorgio Moroder)

“My name is Giovanni Giorgio, but everybody calls me Giorgio…..”

God damn I fucking love this track

sexintartarus:

excuse you our porn is of the finest quality

(via democratsaresexier)

The missile hits, and after the smoke clears there’s a crater there and you can see body parts from the people. [A] guy that was running from the rear to front, his left leg had been taken off above the knee, and I watched him bleed out.

These guys had no hostile intent. In Montana, everyone has a gun. These guys could have been local people that had to protect themselves. I think we jumped the gun.

Former drone operator Brandon Bryant, on his first drone strike.

Bryant quit the drone program after realizing its disregard for life and how numb strikes made him feel, saying he “couldn’t do it anymore.”

(via hipsterlibertarian)

48 plays
Gerry Rafferty,
City to City

Gerry Rafferty - Baker Street

seapeny:

rainbow-road-to-happiness:

image

You can choose what kind of tree you want to become

image

Idk I just find this beautiful 

just imagine cemeteries looking like this

image

a forest of living, changing, beautiful trees. I think a tombstone holds much more finality in death than a tree. It’s like you are living on symbolically through something greater than yourself.

this is a serious post about how much I want this. I’ll make sure my family knows.

(via emma-and-the-doctor)

heatherannehogan:

Katherine Kane and Bruce Wayne: Then and Now.

Detective Comics #233 (July 1956) // Batwoman #18 (April 2013)

So I’m kinda in love with the Batwoman books right now. It’s really fucking good and I’m addicted. Actually, I’m gonna go ahead and say it’s one of my favorite reads right now. As much as I love Batman - I’m kinda hoping to see her beat the snot out of him in the next few issues hehe

excitablehonky:

“Timely Justice,” my ass:

For a state with 24 death row exonerations under its belt (the highest in the country), you would think Florida might want to slow down its execution process to avoid putting innocent people to death. But Florida lawmakers are doing just the opposite

The Miami Herald calls the bill “unacceptable”:

As Mark Elliott, director of Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, points out, “That’s one exoneration for every three executions.”

That should give every Floridian pause.

Frank Lee Smith died of cancer on Death Row after 14 years in prison. Sadly, after his death, DNA testing proved he was innocent and also identified the real killer. What kind of justice did Mr. Smith get?

Natasha Lennard, writing for Salon, calls it “ill-named”:

In a most perverse admission, flagged by Khalek, Republican Senator Rob Bradley said “this is not about guilt or innocence, it’s about timely justice.” So long as proceedings through the Kangaroo court are swift, Bradley seems to admit, the lives of inmates are expendable.

Chris Hedges calls it “cynically named”:

William Van Poyck … is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 6 p.m. June 12 at Florida State Prison. He is a writer who has spent years exposing the cruelty of our system of mass incarceration. On June 12, if Gov. Rick Scott has his way, Van Poyck will write no more. And that is exactly how our political class of murderers wants it.

The New York Times calls it “grotesquely named”:

As the American Bar Association explained in a scathing 2006 report on the state’s death penalty system, Florida is one of the few states that allows a jury to recommend a sentence of death based on a majority vote rather than a unanimous one. Defendants charged with capital crimes often have woefully unqualified counsel, and are much more likely to be convicted and sentenced to death if the victim is white — a sign of racial disparity that is clearly unconstitutional. The flaws in Florida’s system, which soaks up huge amounts of resources, cannot be fixed. It is long past time to abolish capital punishment.

An MSN headline appropriately summarizes, “Florida’s death row Timely Justice Act is cool, unless you’re innocent“—which Juan Melendez can understand since he spent 18 years on death row before being exonerated in 2002

The “Timely Justice Act” would speed up a system we know has already sent innocent men, like myself, to death row. Some of these prisoners may be men like me, who have exhausted their legal appeals, yet keep trying to find a way to prove their innocence.

In multiple cases of current death row prisoners, we don’t know exactly what the legal claims are. Some of the men on Florida’s death row ran out of legal options simply because their attorneys missed filing deadlines.

In those instances, no court had the opportunity to evaluate the claims and determine whether they have merit. How can we possibly justify speeding up the execution of prisoners in those cases?

According to logic of the “Timely Justice Act,” any prisoner who has exhausted his appeals and been through a clemency process has had every opportunity and is ready for an execution date, regardless of the specific questions and issues that surround his case.

I am living proof that each case is unique and that the system must allow ample time for the truth to emerge.

Given Florida’s troubling track record on wrongful convictions, this legislation ensures the unthinkable — the execution of an innocent person.

There needs to be more outrage about this.

rudethoughtsonbabyanimals:

“well we couldve been friends if u werent such a fuckin misogynist”

rudethoughtsonbabyanimals:

“well we couldve been friends if u werent such a fuckin misogynist”

(via asgardian-feminist)