Aspiranto

Jun 03

Overcrowding in Brazilian prisons - Imgur -

Overcrowding in California prisons - Imgur -

May 19

Nadhani nitafute kwa vigumu kazi…

Nimelewa, na kama nilivyofikiri, sasa ni usiku na ninataka sana sana kuanza cho chote cha kazi!  Ikiwa nitakuwa na bahati nzuri, nitaweza kufanya kazi kwenye pahala poa ambapo bado sijaona.

May 12

“The Met Food where Biggie once bagged groceries is still there, but a hip-hop record store on Fulton that sold bootleg CDs has disappeared. A couple of storefronts over is the Brooklyn Victory Garden, which since 2011 has been selling cheeses and meats that are “locally, ethically and sustainably sourced.” — http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/05/12/nyregion/brooklyn-hip-hop-tour.html?_r=0

May 08

meangirlsofphilosophy:

Stop trying to make synthetic a priori happen. It’s NOT going to happen!

meangirlsofphilosophy:

Stop trying to make synthetic a priori happen. It’s NOT going to happen!

Apr 24

Nimesahau tunavyofanya kazi.  Uuugh.

Apr 16

[video]

Mar 29

Apartments in Hong Kong so small they can only be photographed from above

Jogo entre Contra Mestra Tatiana e Mestre Cobra Mansa.

Mar 28

nybooks:

For the first time, a former head of state is being tried for genocide in the courts of his own country. The trial of General Efraín Ríos Montt, who served as president of Guatemala from the time he seized power in a military coup in March 1982 until he was forced out in another military coup in August 1983, began on March 19 in Guatemala City. The prosecutor alleged that Ríos Montt and Rodriguez Sanchez, his chief of intelligence, were responsible for the killing of 1,771 Ixils—one of Guatemala’s twenty-two distinct indigenous peoples—and the forced displacement of another 29,000, many them tortured or sexually abused by the army.
Reckoning with Genocide By Aryeh Neier
Photo: General Efraín Ríos Montt (center) announcing his military coup, Guatemala City, March 23, 1982 (Bettman/Corbis)

nybooks:

For the first time, a former head of state is being tried for genocide in the courts of his own country. The trial of General Efraín Ríos Montt, who served as president of Guatemala from the time he seized power in a military coup in March 1982 until he was forced out in another military coup in August 1983, began on March 19 in Guatemala City. The prosecutor alleged that Ríos Montt and Rodriguez Sanchez, his chief of intelligence, were responsible for the killing of 1,771 Ixils—one of Guatemala’s twenty-two distinct indigenous peoples—and the forced displacement of another 29,000, many them tortured or sexually abused by the army.

Reckoning with Genocide By Aryeh Neier

Photo: General Efraín Ríos Montt (center) announcing his military coup, Guatemala City, March 23, 1982 (Bettman/Corbis)

(via fylatinamericanhistory)