lovely-v:

lovely-v:

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Favorite ship dynamic

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laurenillustrated:

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May the 4th be with you ⭐️

metamorphesque:

I love you. Without end.ALT

— Vladimir Nabokov, Letters to Véra

r0zeclawz:

here on roze.com we ask the hard hitting questions. what if.. oopy ear keep going.

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merlinsorb:

lovely-v:

lovely-v:

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Favorite ship dynamic

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hey siri my wife keeps telling me my pussy tastes like soup and gravy, is that normal

mudshadow:
“😚😚
”

mudshadow:

😚😚

telltaletypist:

telltaletypist:

your favorite youtubers and content creators are about to be offered some tantalizing tv/streaming deals so we’re all about to find out who the real working class allys are

someone’s gonna get cancelled doing this and they’re gonna cry crocodile tears over how difficult it is to make a living as a content creator and i’m telling you right now we are NOT going to buy it, got it? scabs deserve no sympathy

turtlesandfrogs:

So I was scrolling and saw this image in an article about the European heat wave,

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And was like, uh, are you missing something there, buddy? Like all that red in northern Africa? Because that’s a lot of red.

And I was going to give them the benefit of doubt, since I don’t know much about the climate in Northern Africa, aside from Morroco and Egypt, which seem like really hot places, so you know, maybe it’s normal there?

But nope, that’s not the case:

Some selections from the article:

“The region has been experiencing some of the most intense heat waves in recent years, but in many cases they’ve been under-reported due to misconceptions about Africans’ ability to withstand them.

“Africa is seen as a sunny and hot continent,” said Amadou Thierno Gaye, a research scientist and professor at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Dakar, the capital of Senegal. “People think we are used to heat, but we are having high temperatures for a longer duration. Nobody is used to this.”

The Sahel, for instance, has been heating at a faster pace than the global average despite being hot already. Burkina Faso and Mali, both in West Africa’s Sahel, are among countries that are set to become almost uninhabitable by 2080, if the world continues on its current trajectory, a UK university study found. Its people are especially vulnerable due to shrinking resources, such as water, and poor amenities, and a dearth of trees and parks means there are few options for places to cool off.“