The young have aspirations that never come to pass, the old have reminiscences of what never happened.
Sydney Harbour Bridge, Australia

Sydney Harbour Bridge, Australia

1 day ago
2 notes
Copacabana, Lake Titicaca, Bolivia

Copacabana, Lake Titicaca, Bolivia

5 days ago
5 notes
Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

1 week ago
4 notes
Barangaroo, Sydney, Australia

Barangaroo, Sydney, Australia

1 day ago
3 notes
Circular Quay, Sydney, Australia

Circular Quay, Sydney, Australia

1 day ago
1 note
Country New South Wales, Australia

Country New South Wales, Australia

5 days ago
1 note
When you’re president, as opposed to the head of a private equity firm, then your job is not simply to maximize profits. Your job is to figure out how everybody in the country has a fair shot… And so if your main argument for how to grow the economy is ‘I knew how to make a lot of money for investors,’ then you’re missing what this job is about.

President Obama on why Mitt Romney’s record in the private sector matters (via barackobama)

I love how our president can rationally articulate a thought.

(via aaronmeier)

(via wilwheaton)

6 days ago
3,202 notes
“MOSCOW — As a bloody skirmish between police and opposition activists in central Moscow was drawing to a close on Sunday a small boy on a tiny bicycle pedaled through the crowd and approached a line of hulking riot police.
He sat there for a moment, balancing on his training wheels, staring at the menacing troops who were decked out in blue camouflage uniforms and full riot gear, nightsticks at the ready.
A group of protesters who had been heckling the cops began jeering, “Here’s the guy that will storm the Kremlin. Be ready boys! Here he comes!”
Julia Ioffe, the Moscow correspondent for The New Yorker and Foreign Policy magazine, happened to be standing right behind him. She whipped out her iPhone and snapped a picture which she tweeted out to her over 6,000 followers with the caption “Russia’s Tianamen (sic) image.”

MOSCOW — As a bloody skirmish between police and opposition activists in central Moscow was drawing to a close on Sunday a small boy on a tiny bicycle pedaled through the crowd and approached a line of hulking riot police.

He sat there for a moment, balancing on his training wheels, staring at the menacing troops who were decked out in blue camouflage uniforms and full riot gear, nightsticks at the ready.

A group of protesters who had been heckling the cops began jeering, “Here’s the guy that will storm the Kremlin. Be ready boys! Here he comes!”

Julia Ioffe, the Moscow correspondent for The New Yorker and Foreign Policy magazine, happened to be standing right behind him. She whipped out her iPhone and snapped a picture which she tweeted out to her over 6,000 followers with the caption “Russia’s Tianamen (sic) image.”

2 weeks ago
2 notes