#Brasts
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vroomvroomwee · 1 year ago
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David Tennant at 3 am popping up in the writer's house of whatever show he's currently filming ready to propose his new character be asexual and genderfluid
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supernovaae · 5 months ago
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New Info
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ENG TRANSLATION: [1. Optimize the attribute echo function experience After optimization, you will get the legendary agent if you echo up to 100 times in the attribute echo card pool in a row. The three attributes of burning, roaring and surging will share the minimum number of times. 2. Optimization of the barren environment. The first 100 times a week to get a catalytic stone bonus of 200%, and you can get the divine quality catalytic stone in the difficult mode! 3. More agents are open (life circle): the power of Brast Gam, Tang Yun's six-eared macaque, and Sloan Eleshkigal. 4. The recruitment scope of the club has been expanded. After the update, all players in the same war zone can apply to join any club in the war zone. When joining the cross-server club, the relevant functions in the club are no different from that in the server club. * For more details, please wait patiently for the official announcement~]
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sivavakkiyar · 8 months ago
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Japanese krautrock from 1975. great stuff if you’re into stuff like this
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complete on YouTube here
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milfronin · 17 days ago
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baiken im sooo drunk... BAIKENNNNN
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zef-zef · 1 year ago
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Masabumi Kikuchi - Susto (Japan, 1981) Terumasa Hino - Spark (Somethin' Else-Japan, 1994) Hiroki Inui & Tao - The Illusion Of Sand Hills (Warner Bros., 1971) Takami Nakamoto - Velocity (NNTK, 2017) Kuniyuki Takahashi - Early Tape Works (1986-1993) Vol. 2 (Music from Memory, 2018) Zeni Geva - Freedom Bondage (Alternative Tentacles, 1995) Yamasuki ‎- Le Monde Fabuleux Des Yamasuki (Biram, 1971) Yasuaki Shimizu - Music For Commercials (Crammed Discs, 1987) Brast Burn - Debon (Voice, 1975) Date Course Pentagon Royal Garden - Stayin' Alive / Fame / Pan-American Beef Stake Art Federation 2 (P-Vine, 2004) Merzbow, Keiji Haino, Balazs Pandi - An Untroublesome Defencelessness (RareNoise, 2016)
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aisphotostuff · 4 months ago
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Kent High Weald AONB...
flickr
Kent High Weald AONB... by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Obriss Farm Near Westerham, Kent..Obriss Farm dates to Tudor and Elizabethan times and looks south over the Weald, surrounded by rolling countryside.
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snigepippi · 2 years ago
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The fat content to other cell content ratio is also pretty much the same between C-E cup and brain.
About 60% of the human brain is fat.
In bigger breasts the fat content is about 57% (it varies from 7% to 57% depending on size and genetics).
fun fact if your breasts¹ are somewhere between a 36C-36D² then they weight³ about the same as your brain⁴
if you're above a D-cup⁵ you've probably got more boob than brain⁶
1. Both breasts combined. 2. UK and US bras are the same at this cup size. 3. Sourced from this blog post; a different source was found but excluded as it didn't account for band size. If you have a better referenced source let me know. 4. An adult human brain weighs ~1.3kg (2.8lb). 5. A 36D cup, or sister size (40B, 38C, 34E, 32F, etc) 6. Both breasts combined. A single 36G/H cup breast is about brain-sized.
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latesthealthupdates · 8 months ago
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Proactive Steps To Prevent Breast Cancer
Understanding how to prevent breast cancer is essential for women’s health. By taking proactive steps and implementing lifestyle changes, individuals can significantly reduce their risk of developing this disease. From maintaining a healthy diet to regular exercise and screening, adopting preventive measures plays a crucial role in promoting breast health and overall well-being.
For more information Visit:
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xtruss · 1 year ago
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At age 110, Lawrence Brooks of New Orleans is the Oldest Known Living U.S. Veteran of World War II. From 1941 to 1945 he served in the Pacific with the Army’s predominantly African American 91st Engineer Battalion, as a support worker to its officers. Of the 16 million U.S. veterans who fought in World War II, only 300,000 are still alive. He credits a healthy lifestyle, deep faith and love of people for his longevity. Photograph By Robert Clark
America’s Oldest Living WWII Veteran Faced Hostility Abroad—And At Home
At 110 Years Old, Louisiana Native Lawrence Brooks is Proud of His Service and Says he Would Do It Again.
— By Chelsea Brasted | Published: May 11, 2020 | Saturday November 11, 2023
Editor's Note: Lawrence Brooks died on January 5, 2022, at the age of 112, the National WWII Museum said in a statement.
The memories are more than 75 years old now: Cooking red beans and rice halfway around the world from the place in Louisiana that first made the recipe. Cleaning uniforms and shining shoes for three officers. Hopping in foxholes when his trained ear could tell the approaching warplanes were not American but Japanese.
The man who keeps these memories is older still. At 110, Lawrence Brooks is the oldest known U.S. veteran of World War II. This month marks the 75th anniversary of the end of the war in Europe. Of the 16 million U.S. veterans who served, about 300,000 are still alive today, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
Brooks is proud of his military service, even though his memories of it are complicated. Black soldiers fighting in the war could not escape the racism, discrimination, and hostility at home.
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Lawrence Brooks, photographed in his home, holds a portrait of his younger self. Born September 12, 1909, Brooks was drafted into the Army at age 31. Despite the segregated army and hostile treatment he received during and after the war, Brooks is a proud veteran. After the war he worked as a forklift operator until he retired nearly 40 years ago. The national World War II Museum in New Orleans hosts a birthday party for him each year. Photograph By Robert Clark
When Brooks was stationed with the U.S. Army in Australia, he was an African-American man in a time well before the Civil Rights Movement would at least codify something like equality in his home country.
“I was treated so much better in Australia than I was by my own white people,” Brooks says. “I wondered about that. That’s what worried me so much. Why?”
Rob Citino, Senior Historian at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, says the U.S. military then had “racist characterizations” of African-American soldiers during the war.
“You couldn’t put a gun in their hands,” he says of the then-prevalent attitude. “They could do simple menial tasks. That was the lot of the African-American soldier, sailor, airman, you name it.”
The jobs open to African-American troops depended on the branch of service and changed as the need for manpower increased throughout the long years of war.
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“We went to war with Hitler, the world’s most horrible racist, and we did so with a segregated army because, despite guarantees of equal treatment, this was still Jim Crow America,” Citino says. “African Americans were still subject to all kinds of limitations and discrimination based on the color of their skin. I think they were fighting for the promise of America rather than the reality of America.”
Of the 16 million Americans who donned a military uniform, 1.2 million were African Americans who were “often being treated as second-class citizens at home,” Citino says.
To put that into perspective, Citino says, consider that German prisoners of war could have been served at restaurants while en route to or from their quarters at Camp Hearne in Texas, but the African-American soldiers who transported them would have been denied service.
Brooks says he never discussed these inequalities with his fellow African-American service members. “Every time I think about it, I’d get angry, so the best thing I’d do is just leave it go,” he says.
The military was not formally desegregated until President Harry Truman forced it with a 1948 executive order. For Brooks, who served in the Army between 1940 and 1945, that order would come too late.
A reluctant soldier, it didn’t sit right with him that he might be required to take another person’s life.
“My mother and father always raised me to love people, and I don’t care what kind of people they are,” he says. “And you mean to tell me, I get up on these people and I got to go kill them? Oh, no, I don’t know how that’s going to work out.
Raised in Norwood, Louisiana, near Baton Rouge, Brooks came from a big family of 15 children. He drew on another lesson from his mother—cooking—in his Army job, which had him assisting a few white officers, doing their cleaning and cooking. Part of the 91st Engineers Battalion in the Pacific Theater, whose responsibility was to build military infrastructure, Brooks’ unit often didn’t stay anywhere long. He’d occasionally drive the officers he served to nights out on the town when they could get away for an adventure or two. But even that job didn’t keep him from carrying a rifle everywhere he went.
“I had to keep it with me,” he says. “And I was glad I did. I didn’t want to be out there shooting at people because they’d be shooting at me, and they might have got lucky and hit.”
Brooks says he was treated “better” by white Americans when he returned from the war, but it would take nearly two decades before the Civil Rights Act was signed into law.
The father of five children, 13 grandchildren, and 22 great grandchildren, Brooks worked for many years as a forklift operator before retiring in his seventies. For years he avoided discussing his experiences in the war, sharing little of his story with his children as they grew up.
His daughter, Vanessa Brooks, who cares for him, says the first time she started hearing his stories was about five years ago when the World War II Museum began hosting annual birthday parties for him in New Orleans, where he now lives. But he still shies away from his family’s questions about his war years.
“I had some good times and I had some bad times,” Brooks says. “I just tried to put all the good ones and the bad ones together and tried to forget about all of them.”
Brooks says his military years taught him to straighten up, so he did his best to eat right and stay healthy. He never enjoyed the taste of alcohol and the way liquor burned his throat. “I don't like hurting my body,” he says.
In 2005, Brooks lost his wife, Leona, to Hurricane Katrina. She died shortly after the couple was evacuated by helicopter from their home. “Hurricane Katrina took everything I owned, washed away everything,” he said last year.
Still, Brooks is upbeat. He enjoys spending warm days on his daughter’s front porch in Central City, a neighborhood at the heart of New Orleans. It’s not uncommon to hear Mardi Gras Indians singing, or watch a brass band-led second-line parade go by on Sundays.
Brooks uses his walker to head out of his bedroom—bedecked in the black and gold colors of the New Orleans Saints—to chat with the children at the daycare next door. At 110, he says, his key to a good life is straightforward: “Serve God, and be nice to people.”
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rwpohl · 1 year ago
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skullunter · 4 months ago
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(via qwertyfingers, fuckyeaheverythingeverything, fuckyeaheverythingeverything)
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lepetitdragonvert · 1 year ago
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Vid första tonen var det något som brast inne i Agnetas hjärta
Dès la première note, quelque chose se brisa dans le cœur d’Agneta
From the very first note, something broke in Agneta’s heart.
1910
Artist : John Bauer
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oldgamedebris · 2 years ago
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Underground Martian cuisine consists of the following staples: Breakfast Tacos Breakfasos Breakfas Breakfast Tacos Breakfast Taos Breakst Tacos Breakfast Tacos Breakfast Tos Brast Tacos Breos
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girlballs · 1 year ago
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"based" this and "based" that why dont you go look at some brastes or something
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agbpaints · 3 months ago
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Tabletop isn't as accessible as, say, 40k, by dint of not being backed by GW money, but its about as accessible as its ever been and in a very healthy state- definitely the best its been since the '08 death of MWDA and arguably since the death of FASA around the turn of the millennium. Consistent physical product releases and continuing support from Catalyst coupled with a reasonably sized online community and support from LGSs is not a bad place to be in
It really kinda sucks to be a fan of BT in the current decade or so
MWO is in a dire state, with the devs driving the proverbial car off a cliff at request of competitive players, ignoring all else
MW5 was and still is a dumpster fire of a game
Battletech (HBS) is Paradox DLC slop city. Want to pay $104 for a game? no? Too bad.
what else is there?
Tabletop? Hard to get into, different rulesets to the games by a mile
...books?...
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missy-kinks · 2 years ago
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@sinful-souls
Autumn, a girl who is very attractive and endowed with large tits and a great ass, happened to be the daughter of a futa named Missy. Missy was for sure a great mother and since it was mother's day Autumn wanted to give her a gift when she got off work.
As time passed, Autumn would getting dressed in the sexiest lingerie she could get, one that hugged every curve and accentuate her brasts and ass perfect. Then she would go and lay on her mother's bed in a secy position to great her mother. When the door to the bedroom opens Autumn would smile
"Happy mothers day!!!!"
Autumn exclaims, eager to see Missy's reaction.
missy blushes hard seeing her sexy daughter laying in just some lingerie on her bed she slowly walks over. "T-thank you honey." She look over her daughters body being so tempted to claim her body. "Why are you dressed like this for on my bed though."
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