Shit people have forgotten about the Bush Era:

onionhighonionandrenown:

venusian–eye:

veronica-rich:

oak23:

newwavenova:

tiffanarchy:

lady–liberty:

steviemcfly:

comedownstairsandsayhello:

lord-kitschener:

sidneyia:

asgardreid:

jean-luc-gohard:

catsallthewaydown:

lizdexia:

jean-luc-gohard:

  • Free Speech Zones, which were a real thing and not a plot element in a particularly ham-handed dystopian novel.
  • The phrase “hidey hole.”
  • Watching a budget surplus become a massive deficit that was bigger than it even looked because the White House was just like, “Okay, we’ll just not put the wars on the books and just ask for more money for those every few months.”
  • The sheer number of times Alberto Gonzalez said, “I don’t recall,” to Congress regarding war crimes and human rights violations.
  • “…now watch this drive.”
  • Mission Accomplished.
  • “The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence,” “yellowcake uranium,” Condoleeza’s “mushroom clouds” fearmongering, and all the other bullshit we were fed to get into Iraq.
  • The President of the United States said so many stupid things that there were one-a-day calendars consisting of an individual quote for each day of the year. They didn’t all have the exact same quotes.

“There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don’t know we don’t know.”

And then we went to war.

“Tonight I ask you to pass legislation to prohibit the most egregious abuses of medical research: human cloning in all its forms; creating or implanting embryos for experiments; creating human-animal hybrids; and buying, selling or patenting human embryos.” - George W. Bush, 2006 State of the Union

Okay, that’s the best one.

Bush watched that Batman Beyond splicing episode and had nightmares for a week

was it hidey-hole? i thought it was spider-hole.

Yeah, it was spider-hole

I think my favorite was how we un-ironically referred to a whole set of countries as the “Axis of Evil” as if that phrase gives us some kind of meaningful understanding of their geopolitical role and isn’t borrowed straight out of a mediocre made-for-TV superhero movie.

And then there was:

image

We literally got a terrorism forecast on the news every morning like it was pollen. So many of the things that happened, if they were in a dystopian novel, people would be like, “That’s way too goofy and ridiculous to actually happen in real life,” and yet they did.

THE LAST ONE’S REAL?

Yeah
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeland_Security_Advisory_System

Not only was the terror threat system real, but it was often raised and lowered based entirely on how panicked they wanted us to be. Famously they raised the level for no reason during the 2004 election.

Also, “Free Speech Zones” looked something like this:

image

It was literally a cage.

I genuinely forget that people, even within my own age group, has forgotten the Bush era since they were teenagers and below the voting age at the time, and so forgot how fucking horrifying it was.

“You’re doing a heckuva job, Brownie!”

I was 28 when he took office … I still don’t know if I’m worse or better off than people who aren’t old enough to remember things before 2001.

I was only ten but I was furious and horrified for the entire eight years of the Bush regime

I’d just like to add a reminder of Bush’s famous “You’re either with us or you’re with the terrorists” speech. He sounded like a second rate supervillain. (And this seconds after he’d announced we were declaring war on a noun.)

(via iwantyoudarachme)

epic4chan:
“ They’re both texting someone right now saying ‘some weird guy next to me is wearing the same thing as me.’
”

epic4chan:

They’re both texting someone right now saying ‘some weird guy next to me is wearing the same thing as me.’

(via zoe2berry)

alwaysabeautifullife:

I know everyone on this site hates children but I just want you to know my 2 year old daughter stayed up until midnight gently touching my face and singing “the cheese stands alone” for over two hours

(via walk-by-faith-always)

davidslynched:

We’ve always defined ourselves by the ability to overcome the impossible. And we count these moments. These moments when we dare to aim higher, to break barriers, to reach for the stars, to make the unknown known. We count these moments as our proudest achievements. But we lost all that. Or perhaps we’ve just forgotten that we are still pioneers. And we’ve barely begun. And that our greatest accomplishments cannot be behind us, because our destiny lies above us.

Interstellar (2014) dir. Christopher Nolan

(via iwantyoudarachme)

kkaroushi:

shatterpath:

Wow, this is incredibly powerful and I’m just weeping quietly. Amazing.

I’ve seen this so many times and it never ceases to move me.

(via walk-by-faith-always)

corpidicarta:

Yesterday a terrorist killed 41 people in a stadium in Al-Asriya, a few miles from Baghdad. It was a football tournament. Seventeen aged between 10 and 16 died. Had it happened in Europe, the entire world would be weeping; our politicians would spend hours saying how Islam hates the West and how we should ‘close the borders’ to refugees. But these boys died in Iraq, and some bombs are not as loud as others. May they rest in peace. 

(via iwantyoudarachme)

animedads:

they call me… 7 Knives. because that’s how many knives it takes me to cook things because I keep puttin em in the fuckin sink without thinking about it

(via spattergroit101)

mistymorningme:
“  Western Prom Foliage by Corey Templeton
Via Flickr:
Some trees at peak foliage on the Western Promenade. Corey Templeton Photography | Portland Daily Photo | Facebook
”

mistymorningme:

Western Prom Foliage by Corey Templeton
Via Flickr:
Some trees at peak foliage on the Western Promenade. Corey Templeton Photography | Portland Daily Photo | Facebook

(via holdingthisworld)

amyraudenfeldsdonutshirt:

There is literally an entire Amanda Bynes movie about this

(via holdingthisworld)

hansolocareer:

walking into Zootopia thinking it’s a cute, passable kids movie

image

when you realize that it’s a commentary on racial and gender stereotyping and how it can create harmful stigmas and how those stigmas can cause people to be ignorant and dangerous towards others or how it can effect minorities 

image

(via holdingthisworld)

tinybigpaws:

In case anyone was in need of puppies

(via holdingthisworld)