If you’re one of the millions of Californians who voted against labeling genetically modified foods, you can’t complain when it turns out you have horse meat in your hamburger, and your sushi is made up of lost cats and condoms. You said you didn’t want to know, so lap that shit up. […]

And if we really don’t want to know, why don’t we take all the labels off and replace them with just, ‘sugary shit’, ‘salty shit’, and ‘cool ranch shit with extra shit’?
Bill Maher (via kateoplis)

That’s not what “genetically modified” means. It just means they don’t want to know whether they’re food it organically grown or grown in a lab using chemicals. Ignorant either way- we should be concerned about what goes into our bodies. But the government and FDA lie about it anyways.

sexnoise:

transparent :)

sexnoise:

transparent :)

I miss you.

All the time, I know you think I forgot you but actually I think about you every single day. All I have is my studys, pay, and a boyfriend I’m trying not to be clingy with cause he’s really the only personal human contact I get besides my occasional hangouts with my family. God I’m so alone. My best friend is just as busy. I’ve isolated myself cause ill just be leaving this town anyways. I love you. I’m sorry I’ve been a horrible friend but from your posts I see when I have time you look like you’re doing okay. Man this sucks, my only hangout options are people who will either use me or want to hook up with me and it makes me not like people. Ill have to get use to being alone and not using Justin as a crutch cause it’ll be awhile before I actually stay in one place. But when that happens will I be too old to have friends? I hate this.

kateoplis:

Chapel of St. Kinga in Wieliczka Salt Mine, Poland
Before going down into the dark, many miners pray. (So would you.) It’s not uncommon for them to build chapels in the caverns they create, and the workers in this Polish salt mine took that task seriously, carving a 10,400-square-foot chapel into the crystalline walls. Józef Markowski started work on this particular chamber in 1896, handing it off to his brother Tomasz in 1920. Nearly everything in the room—from the chandeliers to the bas-reliefs—is carved out of rock salt. Wieliczka, which was a working mine from the 13th century until 1996, holds some 2,000 excavation chambers on nine underground levels, many decorated by miners with carvings and chapels dedicated to saints—and to those who lost their lives digging sodium chloride out of the earth.

kateoplis:

Chapel of St. Kinga in Wieliczka Salt Mine, Poland

Before going down into the dark, many miners pray. (So would you.) It’s not uncommon for them to build chapels in the caverns they create, and the workers in this Polish salt mine took that task seriously, carving a 10,400-square-foot chapel into the crystalline walls. Józef Markowski started work on this particular chamber in 1896, handing it off to his brother Tomasz in 1920. Nearly everything in the room—from the chandeliers to the bas-reliefs—is carved out of rock salt. Wieliczka, which was a working mine from the 13th century until 1996, holds some 2,000 excavation chambers on nine underground levels, many decorated by miners with carvings and chapels dedicated to saints—and to those who lost their lives digging sodium chloride out of the earth.

My heart is so broke up right now, I honestly don’t know what to do