The Real McKoy: Spilled Milk

Apr 24

(via Everything Will Be OK… Throw Pillow by Jason The Real McKoy | Society6)
On sale now.

(via Everything Will Be OK… Throw Pillow by Jason The Real McKoy | Society6)

On sale now.

bitchyfish:

this is the most done i have ever seen batman and he looks done like 100% of the time 

This will forever crack me the fuck up like somebody dropped a bunch of eggs out of a horn-of-plenty.

bitchyfish:

this is the most done i have ever seen batman and he looks done like 100% of the time 

This will forever crack me the fuck up like somebody dropped a bunch of eggs out of a horn-of-plenty.

(Source: insidetheinsideout, via duuwollop)

twitterthecomic:


“dead space more like dad space” dad gimme back my xbox “more like call of daddy” get out of my room “more like grandfather auto IV” stop
— 808s&Human Sacrifice (@CRIMEGOLEM)
January 21, 2013


Had to reblog b/c FUCK YOU.

twitterthecomic:

“dead space more like dad space” dad gimme back my xbox “more like call of daddy” get out of my room “more like grandfather auto IV” stop

— 808s&Human Sacrifice (@CRIMEGOLEM)
January 21, 2013

Had to reblog b/c FUCK YOU.

(via gamefreaksnz)

Apr 23

(via Murder Bunny Throw Pillow by Jason The Real McKoy | Society6)
Buy the stuffing out of this!

(via Murder Bunny Throw Pillow by Jason The Real McKoy | Society6)

Buy the stuffing out of this!

Apr 18

hifructosemag:

The Hummer styled by Little Willie, modeled by Sharv Bailey, 2010Professional photographer Peter Hapak, documented these outlandish hair styles which were created by the world’s most legendary hair designers in 2010. The unusual updos were featured in the African-American hair design show in Detroit’s city’s center calledHump the Grinder’s Hair Wars. This 25-year-old Detroit tradition was started in 1985 by deejay David Humphries aka Hump the Grinder. Some of the hair styles featured here took 10 hours to complete. This year’s Hair Wars event will be hosted by Queen of Kitsch,Allee Willis. All photos by Peter Hapak for Time. See more images below! MORE: http://hifructose.com/2013/04/16/detroits-legendary-and-outlandish-hair-wars/

Recognize.

hifructosemag:

The Hummer styled by Little Willie, modeled by Sharv Bailey, 2010
Professional photographer Peter Hapak, documented these outlandish hair styles which were created by the world’s most legendary hair designers in 2010. The unusual updos were featured in the African-American hair design show in Detroit’s city’s center calledHump the Grinder’s Hair Wars. This 25-year-old Detroit tradition was started in 1985 by deejay David Humphries aka Hump the Grinder. Some of the hair styles featured here took 10 hours to complete. This year’s Hair Wars event will be hosted by Queen of Kitsch,Allee Willis. All photos by Peter Hapak for Time. See more images below! MORE: http://hifructose.com/2013/04/16/detroits-legendary-and-outlandish-hair-wars/

Recognize.

[video]

Apr 15

vicemag:

The People of Guerrero, Mexico, Have Taken Justice Into Their Own Hands
above: Militia members in Cuautepec, Guerrero, where they gathered to take an oath to defend their communities against organized crime. Photos by Carlos Alvarez Montero.
On January 5 in El Potrero, a small town in the Mexican state of Guerrero, a man named Eusebio García Alvarado was kidnapped by a local criminal syndicate. Kidnappings are fairly common in Guerrero—the state, just south of Mexico City, is one of the poorest in the country and the site of some of the worst violence in the ongoing battle between the drug cartels and Mexican authorities. Guerrero’s largest city, Acapulco, is known to Americans as a tourist hot spot. It’s also currently the second most dangerous city in the world, according to a study released by a Mexican think tank in February.
Eusebio’s kidnapping, though, was exceptional. He served as the town commissioner of Rancho Nuevo and was a member of the community activist organization Union of Towns and Organizations of the State of Guerrero (UPOEG), and the brazenness the criminals showed in snatching him up pissed off his neighbors so much that they took matters into their own hands. 
Gonzalo Torres, also known as G-1, the leader of the UPOEG militia in Ayulta.
The day after Eusebio was abducted, hundreds of people from the nearby towns of Ayutla de los Libres and Tecoanapa decided that they could do a better job policing their communities than the local authorities. They grabbed whatever weapons they had—mostly hunting rifles and shotguns—set up checkpoints at entrances to their villages, and patrolled the roads in pickup trucks, often hiding their faces with ski masks and bandanas. Overnight, UPOEG transformed from an organization of advocates for better roads and infrastructure into a group of armed vigilantes operating without the endorsement of any branch of the government. The kidnappers released Eusebio that day, but UPOEG’s checkpoints and patrols didn’t disappear with his return. In fact, there was a groundswell of support. Five municipalities in the surrounding Costa Chica region followed suit and established their own militias. Soon, armed and masked citizens ensured that travelers and strangers weren’t allowed to enter any of their towns uninvited.
These militias captured 54 people whom they alleged to be involved in organized crime (including two minors and four women), imprisoning them inside a house that became an improvised jail. On January 31, the communities gathered on an outdoor basketball court in the village of El Meson to publicly try their detainees. The charges ran the gamut from kidnapping, extortion, drug trafficking, and homicide to smoking weed. More than 500 people attended, and the trial was covered by media outlets all over the world.
Continue

This is an aspect or organization that many American “gangs” neglect: the policing of your own hood when the police will not. Social justice is the only reason to form a militia type group.

vicemag:

The People of Guerrero, Mexico, Have Taken Justice Into Their Own Hands

above: Militia members in Cuautepec, Guerrero, where they gathered to take an oath to defend their communities against organized crime. Photos by Carlos Alvarez Montero.

On January 5 in El Potrero, a small town in the Mexican state of Guerrero, a man named Eusebio García Alvarado was kidnapped by a local criminal syndicate. Kidnappings are fairly common in Guerrero—the state, just south of Mexico City, is one of the poorest in the country and the site of some of the worst violence in the ongoing battle between the drug cartels and Mexican authorities. Guerrero’s largest city, Acapulco, is known to Americans as a tourist hot spot. It’s also currently the second most dangerous city in the world, according to a study released by a Mexican think tank in February.

Eusebio’s kidnapping, though, was exceptional. He served as the town commissioner of Rancho Nuevo and was a member of the community activist organization Union of Towns and Organizations of the State of Guerrero (UPOEG), and the brazenness the criminals showed in snatching him up pissed off his neighbors so much that they took matters into their own hands. 


Gonzalo Torres, also known as G-1, the leader of the UPOEG militia in Ayulta.

The day after Eusebio was abducted, hundreds of people from the nearby towns of Ayutla de los Libres and Tecoanapa decided that they could do a better job policing their communities than the local authorities. They grabbed whatever weapons they had—mostly hunting rifles and shotguns—set up checkpoints at entrances to their villages, and patrolled the roads in pickup trucks, often hiding their faces with ski masks and bandanas. Overnight, UPOEG transformed from an organization of advocates for better roads and infrastructure into a group of armed vigilantes operating without the endorsement of any branch of the government. The kidnappers released Eusebio that day, but UPOEG’s checkpoints and patrols didn’t disappear with his return. In fact, there was a groundswell of support. Five municipalities in the surrounding Costa Chica region followed suit and established their own militias. Soon, armed and masked citizens ensured that travelers and strangers weren’t allowed to enter any of their towns uninvited.

These militias captured 54 people whom they alleged to be involved in organized crime (including two minors and four women), imprisoning them inside a house that became an improvised jail. On January 31, the communities gathered on an outdoor basketball court in the village of El Meson to publicly try their detainees. The charges ran the gamut from kidnapping, extortion, drug trafficking, and homicide to smoking weed. More than 500 people attended, and the trial was covered by media outlets all over the world.

Continue

This is an aspect or organization that many American “gangs” neglect: the policing of your own hood when the police will not. Social justice is the only reason to form a militia type group.

Apr 12

[video]

Apr 11

(via Anonymous Isn’t Releasing Names of Teen Suicide Victim’s Rapists… Yet)
Somebody has to get justice for those in justice has turned a blind eye on.

(via Anonymous Isn’t Releasing Names of Teen Suicide Victim’s Rapists… Yet)

Somebody has to get justice for those in justice has turned a blind eye on.

Apr 10

(via Lindsay Lohan Is My Spirit Animal - McKoy’s Many Mart - Skreened T-shirts, Organic Shirts, Hoodies, Kids Tees, Baby One-Pieces and Tote Bags Custom T-Shirts, Organic Shirts, Hoodies, Novelty Gifts, Kids Apparel, Baby One-Pieces | Skreened - Ethical Custom Apparel)

(via Lindsay Lohan Is My Spirit Animal - McKoy’s Many Mart - Skreened T-shirts, Organic Shirts, Hoodies, Kids Tees, Baby One-Pieces and Tote Bags Custom T-Shirts, Organic Shirts, Hoodies, Novelty Gifts, Kids Apparel, Baby One-Pieces | Skreened - Ethical Custom Apparel)

Apr 09

sdelabelle:

my favorite topping


You just ruined the pizza with your dirty money. Fuck Riches, Get Pizza!

sdelabelle:

my favorite topping

You just ruined the pizza with your dirty money.

Fuck Riches, Get Pizza!

(Source: anthonyantonellis.com, via adieu-to-you)

Apr 02

[video]