the-absolute-best-posts:

Submitted by                                                                                                                       thekaycho
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heysoulmate:


Put a message in a bottle, and toss it out to sea.

USB in a Bottle

heysoulmate:

Put a message in a bottle, and toss it out to sea.

USB in a Bottle

Me: I think I'm gonna go to sleep now.
TV: lol but good shows are on.
iPod: sleep? Is that a new app?
Sleeping position: lol I'm not gonna be comfortable.
Mind: what's the meaning of life though?
Temperature: lol it's too hot and too cold.
Noises: oh, you said be louder? Okay.
Body: Lol time for itches.
Person I like: Hey
mochacafe:

via otakulei
mermaid-in-the-makingg:

thesuniswatching:

mo-ist:

My name is Elliott and I like taking long walks on the beach.
This gif is 80 frames. I took a photo every ten steps.
Well, this dope dude.
this is gonna get s shit load of notes
i actually reblogged this 10 hours ago and  it had like 70 notes

omg

wowwwzzaaaa

mermaid-in-the-makingg:

thesuniswatching:

mo-ist:

My name is Elliott and I like taking long walks on the beach.

This gif is 80 frames. I took a photo every ten steps.

Well, this dope dude.

this is gonna get s shit load of notes

i actually reblogged this 10 hours ago and  it had like 70 notes

omg

wowwwzzaaaa

bullshitliees:

oh my god. yes. FLAT STOMACH AND THIGHS THAT DON’T TOUCH, HERE I COME.

yups i will so give up after today 

lunchboxhabitat:

“All sorts of things go wrong in these systems. These are very fast growing birds. The typical chicken that’s produced in this and sold at the supermarket is 42 days old when killed, so it’s really a baby. But, it’s a very big baby because we’ve selected these birds over many, many generations to grow very, very fast and that’s the economics of it.
 That’s the cheapest way to produce them, but one of the results is that their bones are still immature and they grow to this weight that, whatever it is when you buy them, four to five pounds, and their legs often can’t actually hold them and their legs may just actually crumple under them and they may just collapse on the floor, unable to walk. 
And if that happens when they’re far away from the feeding pipe and can’t get food or water, they are just going to die of thirst and nobody is going to come through and say ‘Oh, there’s a sick bird I’d better do something about it.’ Every now and then they’ll pick up the corpses as they decay and get maggoty and so on. Mostly they lay there until they’re dead.”
—Peter Singer (Australian Philosopher of Bioethics)

lunchboxhabitat:

All sorts of things go wrong in these systems. These are very fast growing birds. The typical chicken that’s produced in this and sold at the supermarket is 42 days old when killed, so it’s really a baby. But, it’s a very big baby because we’ve selected these birds over many, many generations to grow very, very fast and that’s the economics of it.

That’s the cheapest way to produce them, but one of the results is that their bones are still immature and they grow to this weight that, whatever it is when you buy them, four to five pounds, and their legs often can’t actually hold them and their legs may just actually crumple under them and they may just collapse on the floor, unable to walk.

And if that happens when they’re far away from the feeding pipe and can’t get food or water, they are just going to die of thirst and nobody is going to come through and say ‘Oh, there’s a sick bird I’d better do something about it.’ Every now and then they’ll pick up the corpses as they decay and get maggoty and so on. Mostly they lay there until they’re dead.”

Peter Singer (Australian Philosopher of Bioethics)