Flickr: Wishbooks Photostream
Rated • 3 reviews • photography, 80s • flickr.com


Sears wish books from years past. Shocking.
Last seen: 8 months ago
RP. is a 28 year old guy from Summerside, PEI, Canada
even though someone has commented that the pic does look like me, I don't have a stache. It's a sore point with me.
Rated • 3 reviews • photography, 80s • flickr.com


Sears wish books from years past. Shocking.
Rated • 2 reviews • religion • stumbleupon.com
Is it any less arrogant to insist there is no such thing as a higher power, than to insist there is one?
No. Not that I think there's anything wrong with arrogance.
Rated • 1 review • blogs • stumbleupon.com
I've always maintained that a smidge of modesty, privacy and shame are essential for the smooth running of society...sadly, these attributes are severely lacking in individuals today.
Spot on.
Rated • 38 reviews • humor, postmodern • elsewhere.org
In the works of Rushdie, a predominant concept is the distinction between feminine and masculine. Bataille suggests the use of Lacanist obscurity to attack hierarchy. Therefore, Sontag uses the term `neocapitalist narrative' to denote the role of the writer as artist.
"Class is part of the futility of art," says Marx; however, according to Prinn[1] , it is not so much class that is part of the futility of art, but rather the stasis, and eventually the genre, of class. The premise of postcapitalist theory holds that language is capable of social comment. However, the primary theme of Dietrich's[2] critique of modernism is the meaninglessness, and some would say the absurdity, of textual society.
Precapitalist libertarianism states that culture, somewhat paradoxically, has intrinsic meaning. In a sense, in The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Rushdie examines neocapitalist narrative; in The Moor's Last Sigh, however, he analyses deconstructivist sublimation.
Derrida promotes the use of Lacanist obscurity to read and analyse sexual identity. However, if modernism holds, the works of Rushdie are reminiscent of Mapplethorpe.
Rated • 50 reviews • humor, blogs, star wars • winterson.com



Everybody's seen this by now. Hilarious.
Rated • 10 reviews • substance abuse • drugfree.org

Scary!
Rated • 2 reviews • law • canlii.org
Free legal information, including a growing amount of case law. Not as easy to use as, say, QuickLaw or whatever Carswell is called these days, but good for looking up a single case.
Rated • 2 reviews • bizarre • viceland.com


How to prepare placenta. To eat. Placenta kebabs, anyone?
Rated • 1116 reviews • humor • rinkworks.com
When I first heard these quotes I laffed so hard I fell offa my dinosaur. Actually, I still find them funny. Funny thing is, I can almost understand why they asked those particular questions.
Rated • 3 reviews • politics, progressive, leftism • progressivebloggers.ca
Something like 200 liberal, socialist, green and centrist blogs from Canada.