Par hasard is a tumblelog by tumbleLan.

"par hasard" in French
"by chance" in English
"偶然,不期,意外地" in Chinese

8th May 2009

Photo reblogged from eatsleepdraw

PhotoAlt}

eatsleepdraw:

@endoftv

5th May 2009

Quote

As corporations gain ever more control over our economy, government, and culture, it is only natural for us to blame them for the helplessness we now feel over the direction of our personal and collective destinies. But it is both too easy and utterly futile to point the finger of blame at corporations or the robber barons at their helms—not even those handcuffed CEOs gracing the cover of the business section. Not even mortgage brokers, credit- card executives, or the Fed. This state of affairs isn’t being entirely orchestrated from the top of a glass building by an élite group of bankers and businessmen, however much everyone would like to think so—themselves included. And while the growth of corporations and a preponderance of corporate activity have allowed them to permeate most every aspect of our awareness and activity, these entities are not solely responsible for the predicament in which we have found ourselves. Rather, it is corporatism itself: a logic we have internalized into our very being, a lens through which we view the world around us, and an ethos with which we justify our behaviors. Making matters worse, we accept its dominance over us as preexisting—as a given circumstance of the human condition. It just is.

5th May 2009

Quote reblogged from Marco.org

Yes, he stole $65 billion from some already quite wealthy people. I know that’s upsetting to them because rich guys like Bernie are not supposed to be stealing from their own kind. Crime, thievery, looting — that’s what happens on the other side of town. The rules of the money game on Park Avenue and Wall Street are comprised of things like charging the public 29% credit card interest, tricking people into taking out a second mortgage they can’t afford, and concocting a student loan system that has graduates in hock for the next 20 years. Now that’s smart business! And it’s legal. That’s where Bernie went wrong — his scheming, his trickery was an outrage both because it was illegal and because he preyed on his side of the tracks. Had Mr. Madoff just followed the example of his fellow top one-percenters, there were many ways he could have legally multiplied his wealth many times over. Here’s how it’s done. First, threaten your workers that you’ll move their jobs offshore if they don’t agree to reduce their pay and benefits. Then move those jobs offshore. Then place that income on the shores of the Cayman Islands and pay no taxes. Don’t put the money back into your company. Put it into your pocket and the pockets of your shareholders. There! Done! Legal!
Michael Moore (via azspot, read the whole article) (via marco)

5th May 2009

Quote reblogged from farpitzs by sara zucker

i don’t think you can be all things to all people and still have a point of view.

30th April 2009

Photo

PhotoAlt} Mermaid and Fisherman: In-class oil painting. April 2009.

25th November 2008

Link reblogged from Matt Lehrer

26-Year-Old To See Every Asshole He Ever Went To High School With On Night Before Thanksgiving →

mattlehrer:

rockuboff:

One of my biggest fears during the holiday season.

25th November 2008

Photo reblogged from eatsleepdraw

PhotoAlt}

eatsleepdraw:

On canvas shoes.

helloacacia.com

25th November 2008

Photo reblogged from farpitzs by sara zucker

PhotoAlt}

sarazucker:

though h&m is still experiencing media hype from their latest capsule collection with comme des garçons, they are already planning the next line, which will be created by matthew williamson.

a women’s collection will launch on april 23rd in a select 200 stores, followed by another line for men and women in mid-may for all 1,700 stores. so, if you aren’t already, get acquainted with this british designer, known for splashes of “neon, clashing prints, and billowing silhouettes.”

i’m really hoping that the end result will look similar to his spring/summer 2008 collection.

25th November 2008

Video reblogged from William Wilkinson

“Everything’s amazing —— nobody’s happy.”

Hilarious! I’m not a fan of Conan but Louis CK, he’s just amazing.

willw:

dalasverdugo:

nickdouglas:

mel-o:

Hilarious commentary on the relationship between technology and happiness.

White whines explained

So good.

21st November 2008

Link reblogged from anyways.us

Esquire's 70 Greatest Sentences →

aja:

Now he would never write the things that he had saved to write until he knew enough to write them well. —Ernest Hemingway, “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” 1936

They are a curious mixture of Spanish tradition, American imitation and insular limitation. —Helen Lawrenson, “Latins Are Lousy Lovers,” 1936

Bust, bosom, boobs, babaloos, beanbags, buds, bulbs, balcony, balloons, bangers, bazongas, bazooms, baseballs, beach balls, berthas, bettys, beausom, beauts, begonias, big brown eyes, bits, blubbers, bobbers, BB’s, bonbons, boom-booms, bongos, bings, bounty, the Bobsy twins, bottles, boulders, bikini filler, brassiere food, breastices, bosiasm, bubbles, bubbies, buddies, bozos, bee stings, bullets, bumps, buffers, bumpers, busters, best friends, bug bites, butter-bags, the baby bar—that’s fifty just in the b’s, and we probably missed one or two. —Larry Doyle, Esky, 1999

And too much testosterone is what causes men to commit unspeakable crimes like murder and rape and The Rock and Bad Boys. —Jeanne Marie Laskas, “Michael Bay,” 2001

It is, for men, at some terrible level the closest thing to what childbirth is for women: the initiation into the power of life and death. —William Broyles Jr., “Why Men Love War,” 1984

Pants-pressers of the world unite! you have nothing to loose but your pants. —e. e. cummings, “Exit the Boob,” 1935

A child is a territory, a landscape, a region, an outpost, a republic and island of worry. —Alec Wilkinson, “Sam and Other Reflections on Being a Father,” 2000

In adolescence, I had only to say “God,” and I would think of my groin. —Norman Mailer, “A Piece of Harlot’s Ghost,” 1988

Cancer walked all over my father, in large part because he opened the door, turned on the porch light, and invited it in heartily—You old bastard! Come in and have a vodka tonic! —Dave Eggers, “Long Live the Career Smoker,” 1998

I am the happiest man in the world and here’s why: I walk down a street and I see a woman, not tall but well-proportioned, very dark-haired, very neat in her dress, wearing a dark skirt with deep pleats that swing with the rhythm of her rather quick steps; her stockings, of dark color, are carefully, impeccably smooth; her face is not smiling, this woman walks down the street without trying to please, as if she were unconscious of what she represented: a good carnal image of woman, a physical image, more than a sexy image, a sexual image. —Francois Truffaut, “Is Truffaut the Happiest Man on Earth? Yes,” 1970

Also, I shouldn’t have to say this, but do not, under any circumstances, put Pop Rocks in your ass. —Stacey Grenrock Woods, Sex column, 2003

We decided to spend a few minutes analyzing our motives—something we often do when there’s nothing good on television. —Calvin Trillin, “A Day at the Spaces,” 1977

For all her chic thinness, she had an almost breakfast-cereal air of health, a soap-and-lemon cleanness, a rough pink darkening of the cheeks. —Truman Capote, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” 1958

She is cute as a button, pretty as a picture, eminently fuckable, totally unavailable. —Mike Sager, “Beautiful,” 1999

But at three o’clock in the morning, a forgotten package has the same tragic importance as a death sentence, and the cure doesn’t work—and in a real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning, day after day. —F. Scott Fitzgerald, “Pasting It Together,” 1936

He is lousy at alone. —Bill Zehme, “The Man Who Loved Women,” 1998

“Jewey Jew a piece of Jew on my Jew?” he says to Tracey. —Jon Stewart, “Jon,” 2001

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