LaT updated so heres this rockstar lolbit fanart i made a while ago then forgot about
anyway AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA /pos
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I had an extremely intense day today and I’m exhausted, so it's mostly going down memory lane and and doing a little fun style exploration/origins: I'm drawing all the comics I grew up with and trying to push my own style a little further by drawing some of the people I’ve known in my life. I have no idea which comic has had the biggest influence on me, but I have a burning suspicion that in spite of everything Tintin and Suske and Wiske are still the biggest ones
(Ps: the one labelled ‘weirdo’ is me)
(PPs: Peter Lorre, what are you doing here?)
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“Tôi cho rằng, trẻ con khi cười mới là dáng vẻ xinh đẹp nhất. Nếu em còn mãi khóc, em sẽ trở thành cô bé xấu xí đấy! Thật hy vọng em cả đời vui vẻ, bình an mà trưởng thành.”
- Giằng Co Nguy Hiểm -
Thật hy vọng, anh xuất hiện đúng lúc.
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ripped natural muscle daddy
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#black #lats #sigs #art #stunner
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um. have this (pre-fnaf2) lolmike
bcuz i binge-read the whole fic in three days
@inkspottie
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Who the hell voted for Latvia?!
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I began work immediately, performing 10 to 12 surgeries a day, working 14 to 16 hours at a time. The operating room would often shake from the incessant bombings, sometimes as frequent as every 30 seconds. We operated in unsterile settings that would’ve been unthinkable in the United States. We had limited access to critical medical equipment: We performed amputations of arms and legs daily, using a Gigli saw, a Civil War-era tool, essentially a segment of barbed wire. Many amputations could’ve been avoided if we’d had access to standard medical equipment. It was a struggle trying to care for all the injured within the constructs of a healthcare system that has utterly collapsed. There was only one local plastic surgeon left and he covered the hospital 24/7. His home had been destroyed..
“On one occasion, a handful of children, all about ages 5 to 8, were carried to the emergency room by their parents. All had single sniper shots to the head.” Opinion: I'm an American doctor who went to Gaza. What I saw wasn't war — it was annihilation
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Opinion: I'm an American doctor who went to Gaza. I saw annihilation, not war - Los Angeles Times (latimes.com)
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