Odd One Out

Take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.

Elie Wiesel, concentration camp survivor (via rainelectriclove)

(via i-rastaflower)


That goes to the heart of the series, which is the question why fight? Why fight? We accept the inevitability of evil in the world and we accept that things can’t always be fair, we accept that things will never be perfect. Why fight? Why fight? And that’s a question the characters answer in their different ways. Some characters say “I’m not fighting - I have to accept the inevitable”, and other characters say “I will fight until I die…to make the world a better place, to save a friend.” And I suppose that’s what the final battle is about.

That goes to the heart of the series, which is the question why fight? Why fight? We accept the inevitability of evil in the world and we accept that things can’t always be fair, we accept that things will never be perfect. Why fight? Why fight? And that’s a question the characters answer in their different ways. Some characters say “I’m not fighting - I have to accept the inevitable”, and other characters say “I will fight until I die…to make the world a better place, to save a friend.” And I suppose that’s what the final battle is about.

(via surfeitdoldrums)

resurrectingpavarotti:

nosolidanswer:

“Yes, it’s rather funny, really, that next to no one realized the snake that Harry set free in Philosopher’s Stone turned out to be Voldemort’s final Horcrux, Nagini.”
—JK Rowling 

WHY DID I NEVER REALIZE?!??!!?

Am I the only one that suspected this?

(via unfoundwaldo)

[Flash 10 is required to watch video]

killemwithhkindness:

helennmelonn:

ATTENTION INTERNET: THIS IS A PENGUIN BEING TICKLED.

GODDAMMIT FUCK THIS IS THE GREATEST THING I’VE EVER HEARD.

I NEED THIS ON MY BLOG

AWH. OMG.

I NEED one. 

(Source: itsxplacebo, via die-sehnsucht-und-sucht)