a one girl revolution

Just a random teenage girl who loves the crazy ups and downs of this roller coaster ride we call life. She believes in luck and superstition. She stays up late to gaze into the galaxy and all its stars.

A certified bookworm, sweet tooth & music lover. been Tumblring since 2008.

She loves movies, music, books, photography, travelling, cats, gadgets, Harry Potter, NCIS, Bones, Grey's Anatomy, Gossip Girl, Glee and the 90s

Favorite bands include Mayday Parade, We The Kings, 30 Seconds to Mars and All Time Low. One day this dreamer would like to live in LONDON or NEW YORK and fall in love in Paris. :) <3

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June 1st
11:14 AM
Via

fuckyeahpotions-master:

marssfield:

lol drawn by Luan UIASDHADSUI

lettersfromhere:


There are 5,393 carceral facilities in the United States, places where people are held in local jails, state prisons, federal corrections facilities, immigration detention centers – “anywhere where an individual can be sort of confined and locked up,” explains Josh Begley, “and, in some of the bigger instances, warehoused in one place.”
Begley is a master’s student in the Interactive Telecommunications program at New York University. He wanted to graphically represent what all of this means, to communicate not just the sheer quantity of prisons in America (a number that has been booming for decades), but their volume on our landscape. As part of a class project, he created the oddly beautiful website Prison Map, which offers a mashed-up birds-eye view of all of these places, taken from Google Satellite images.

 (via The Stunning Geography of Incarceration - Design - The Atlantic Cities)

lettersfromhere:

There are 5,393 carceral facilities in the United States, places where people are held in local jails, state prisons, federal corrections facilities, immigration detention centers – “anywhere where an individual can be sort of confined and locked up,” explains Josh Begley, “and, in some of the bigger instances, warehoused in one place.”

Begley is a master’s student in the Interactive Telecommunications program at New York University. He wanted to graphically represent what all of this means, to communicate not just the sheer quantity of prisons in America (a number that has been booming for decades), but their volume on our landscape. As part of a class project, he created the oddly beautiful website Prison Map, which offers a mashed-up birds-eye view of all of these places, taken from Google Satellite images.

 (via The Stunning Geography of Incarceration - Design - The Atlantic Cities)

11:10 AM
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1:59 AM
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May 31st
3:23 PM
Via

Steady to his purpose, he scarcely spoke ten words to her through the whole of Saturday, and though they were at one time left by themselves for half an hour, he adhered most conscientiously to his book, and would not even look at her.