The catholic church has a secret menu just ask for the body of Christ monkey style and theyâll give you a wafer with peanut butter on it
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@upchuckthepunx
The catholic church has a secret menu just ask for the body of Christ monkey style and theyâll give you a wafer with peanut butter on it

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Cute baby was stranded and returned to the water :3 But not before they got a nice picture snapped!
Photo from white shark projects
funko pop lookin ass
Itâs time to end this.Â
Imagine the response if this was Al Qaeda
We already have people locked up for years in maximum security prison because we suspected they might be connected in some way to terrorism and that leaves us absolutely zero excuse not to do exactly the same to every single person who shares white supremacist shit on social media.
jeff bezos comin in strong

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This is Susan Robinson, one of the last people in the country who can preform late term abortions after the murder of Dr. George Tiller. This is from an awesome documentary called After Tiller, about the last 4 late-term abortion practitioners in the country.
This documentary is so so powerful and also available on Netflix! I highly recommend it
itâs also on youtube:Â https://youtu.be/rvavyqrmbWc
Nearly 99% of all abortions in the US occur before 21 weeks. Of those that happen late in pregnancy, many are due to complex circumstances, including severe fetal anomalies.
*takes these*
capitalism is fucking scary because it will commodify literally anything. it commodifies the rebellion culture that is supposed to strike against the system but capitalism turns it into âpunk rockâ. it commodifies spirituality to make you buy self help books that teaches you to stay away from capitalism. it commodifies minimalism and makes you buy things to maintain your minimalist aesthetic. it commodifies global warming, one of the deadliest consequences of capitalism itself and guilt trips you into buying âgreen productsâ. it commodifies itself and creates the idea that vanity is fashionable. it will eat everything up.
Eleven people were killed on Saturday when a gunman entered Pittsburghâs Tree of Life synagogue and opened fire on the congregants. The victims ranged in age from 54 to 97; eight were men, three were women. Two of them were brothers, and two were a married couple.
Chuck Diamond was a rabbi at Tree of Life until about a year ago, and he remains a member of the community, living just around the corner from the synagogue. He knew many of the victims.
âThese are wonderful people, good souls, who were just coming to synagogue as the usually did,â he told NPR on Sunday. âSynagogue was just getting started and mostly elderly people who come there are there at the beginning, and you could count on them every week for coming. ⌠Itâs such a crime that their lives were taken from us.â
The names of the victims were released on Sunday morning by the Allegheny County Office of the Medical Examiner. Here are some of their stories, as we learn them.
Rose Mallinger, 97, of Squirrel Hill, was the oldest of the victims.
Diamond told NPR that Rose âwas in her 90s, but she was one of the younger ones among us, I have to tell you, in terms of her spirit. Rose was wonderful.â
Daniel Stein, 71, lived in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh. He is the former president of the New Light Congregation, a Conservative synagogue that held services at Tree of Life.
He was remembered for his kindness.
âHe was always willing to help anybody,â his nephew Steven Halle told TribLIVE, formerly the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. âHe was somebody that everybody liked, very dry sense of humor and recently had a grandson who loved him.â
Melvin Wax, 88, also of Squirrel Hill, was a remembered as a pillar of the New Light Congregation.
âHe was such a kind, kind person,â his friend and fellow congregant Myron Snider told The Associated Press. âWhen my daughters were younger, they would go to him, and he would help them with their federal income tax every year. Never charged them.â
âHe and I used to, at the end of services, try to tell a joke or two to each other. Most of the time they were clean jokes. Most of the time. I wonât say all the time. But most of the time.â
Snider said Wax was a bit hard of hearing, and unfailingly attended Friday, Saturday, and Sunday services, filling in at nearly every role if someone didnât show up.
âJust a sweet, sweet guy,â he said.
Jerry Rabinowitz, 66, of Edgewood Borough, was a family doctor.
He practiced in a âsmall, cozy office in Pittsburghâs Bloomfield neighborhood,â TribLIVE reporter Ben Schmitt wrote in a personal remembrance. Rabinowitz was his fatherâs doctor, and his own.
Schmitt recalled how his father became ill on a trip to India, and called back to Rabinowitz in Pittsburgh for advice. The doctor called his father every day for the rest of his trip to check in on his health.
âI felt like I was in such competent, caring hands,â Schmittâs father said. âSuch a kind and gentle man.â
Rabinowitz also was the personal physician to former Allegheny County Deputy District Attorney Lawrence Claus, who released a statement on Sunday remembering him.
âDr. Jerry Rabinowitz ⌠was truly a trusted confidant and healer who could always be counted upon to provide sage advice whenever he was consulted on medical matters, usually providing that advice with a touch of genuine humor,â said Claus, according to CBS affiliate KDKA. âHe had a truly uplifting demeanor, and as a practicing physician he was among the very best.â
Cecil Rosenthal, 59, and David Rosenthal, 54, were brothers who shared an apartment in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood.
Raye Coffey, a close friend and former neighbor of the Rosenthalsâ parents, toldTribLIVE that the Rosenthals spent a lot of time in her house when they were younger. She said the brothers faced mental challenges and were fixtures at Tree of Life, where Cecil was a greeter.
âCecil was always a big brother. He was very warm and very loving. Whenever he would see us, he would always say, âHi, Coffeys!â â
âDavid was quieter,â she said. âBut both were ⌠to die like this is horrendous.â
ACHIEVA, an organization that works with people with disabilities said that the brothers were well-respected members of its community. Chris Schopf, who runs the groupâs residential programs, said the brothers never missed a Saturday at Tree of Life.
âIf they were here they would tell you that is where they were supposed to be,â Schopf said in a statement. âCecilâs laugh was infectious. David was so kind and had such a gentle spirit. Together, they looked out for one another. They were inseparable. Most of all, they were kind, good people with a strong faith and respect for everyone around.â
Bernice Simon, 84, and Sylvan Simon, 86, of Wilkinsburg were remembered by neighbors as sweet, kind, and generous.
They were married at the Tree of Life synagogue in December 1956, according to TribLIVE.
âA loving couple and theyâve been together forever,â longtime friend and neighbor Michael Stepaniak told the news site. âI hope they didnât suffer much and I miss them terribly.â
Joyce Fienberg, 75, lived in Pittsburghâs Oakland neighborhood, and grew up in Toronto. She had two sons and was remembered as a proud grandmother.
â[She was] the most amazing and giving person,â her brother, Bob Libman, told the CBC.
Fienberg was a researcher at the University of Pittsburghâs Learning Research and Development Center for more than 25 years.
In a statement on Sunday, the center called her âa cherished friendâ and âan engaging, elegant, and warm person.â
Gaea Leinhardt, professor emerita at Pitt, called Fienberg her best friend and told The Washington Post that she had a way of putting teachers at ease when she visited their classrooms.
âShe was very intellectual,â Leinhardt said. âBut also people would just always open up to her in a very easy way. She was an ideal observer.â
Her husband, internationally celebrated statistician Stephen Fienberg, died in 2016.
Leinhardt told the Post that Fienberg had been especially involved at Tree of Life since her husbandâs death. âI just canât say how terribly sad I am that this person isnât in the world anymore.â
Richard Gottfried, 65, of Ross Township, shared a dentistry practice with his wife.
The two met as dental students at the University of Pittsburgh, the Post reports, and they volunteered with Catholic Charitiesâ dental clinic. He was said to be an avid runner and had been going to services at Tree of Life more often recently.
Irving Younger, 69, ran a real estate business in Squirrel Hill for many years, and was also a youth football and baseball coach.
Tina Prizner, who lived next door to Younger in the Mt. Washington neighborhood, remembered him as âthe most wonderful dad and grandpaâ and as a devoted member of his congregation.
âHe went every day. He was an usher at his synagogue, and he never missed a day,â she told TribLIVE. âHe was a beautiful person, a beautiful soul.â
âWonderful People, Good Soulsâ: The Victims Of The Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting
First photo:Â Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Second photo: Jerry Rabinowitz in 2013. Photo courtesy of his family.
3,000 civilian officers operate with no state oversight.
âThey have guns, wear badges and patrol Michiganâs streets.
Theyâre even in uniform. But theyâre not real cops.
Across Michigan, police departments have enlisted civilians to work alongside licensed officers to patrol communities and even assist real cops with arrests. But unlike the regular officers licensed by the state, these armed civilians are unregulated.
A Detroit Free Press investigation found there are no state-established training requirements for reserve officers, as they are commonly known; no standards for screening their qualifications, and no process for monitoring their conduct. The state agency responsible for police licensing and training is not regulating reserve officers â despite gaining authority last year to do just that â and has no idea how many such unlicensed volunteers there are statewide.â

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I made a big, dumb backup because big, dumb tumblr won't let me change my email address associated with this account ¯\_(ă)_/ÂŻ
http://www.skankplissken.tumblr.com
canât shake the devilâs hand and say youâre only kidding.Â
âIf youâre poor, the only way youâre likely to injure someone is the old traditional way: artisanal violence, we could call it â by hands, by knife, by club, or maybe modern hands-on violence, by gun or by car. But if youâre tremendously wealthy, you can practice industrial-scale violence without any manual labor on your own part. You can, say, build a sweatshop factory that will collapse in Bangladesh and kill more people than any hands-on mass murderer ever did, or you can calculate risk and benefit about putting poisons or unsafe machines into the world, as manufacturers do every day. If youâre the leader of a country, you can declare war and kill by the hundreds of thousands or millions. And the nuclear superpowers â the US and Russia â still hold the option of destroying quite a lot of life on Earth. So do the carbon barons. But when we talk about violence, we almost always talk about violence from below, not above. [âŚ] People revolt when their lives are unbearable. Sometimes material reality creates that unbearableness: droughts, plagues, storms, floods. But food and medical care, health and well-being, access to housing and education â these things are also governed by economic means and government policy.[âŚ] Thatâs a tired phrase, the destruction of the Earth, but translate it into the face of a starving child and a barren field â and then multiply that a few million times. Or just picture the tiny bivalves: scallops, oysters, Arctic sea snails that canât form shells in acidifying oceans right now. Or another superstorm tearing apart another city. Climate change is global-scale violence, against places and species as well as against human beings. Once we call it by name, we can start having a real conversation about our priorities and values. Because the revolt against brutality begins with a revolt against the language that hides that brutality.â
â Call Climate Change What It Is: Violence, Rebecca Solnit (via tchaikovskaya)

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I'll stick it deep inside
cuz I'mÂ
Someone photoshopped Jay out đđđ
good
thank you