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  • Joined: 05/03/09
  • Visits: 3005
  • Total Discussion Posts: 8
  • Portfolio Count: 103 | View
  • Blog Entries Count: 34 | View
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Monday May 25th, 2009
If you think that you’re living bad, then take a look at these pictures. Especially, it concerns children and young people.


Jainal works in silver cooking pot factory. He is 11 years old. He has been working
in this factory for three years. His work starts at 9 a.m. and ends at 6 p.m. For his
work he gets 700 taka (10 USD) for a month. His parents are so poor that they can
not afford to send him to school. According to the factory owner, the parents do not
care for their children; they send their kids to work for money and allegedly don't
feel sorry for these small kids. Dhaka 2008


A young laborer making metal components at a factory. Dhaka.Bangladesh


13-year-old Liyakot Ali works in a silver cooking pot factory in Old Dhaka.
The children work 10 hour days in hazardous conditions, for a weekly wage
of 200 taka (3 USD). Dhaka. Bangladesh. June 2008


A child on the side of the road attempts to sell roses to passing commuters in cars and buses. Dhaka.


7-year-old Jasmine collects rubbish from a steaming rubbish heap on a cold winter morning.
She earns money to support her family by scavenging for items on the Kajla rubbish dump.
It is one of three landfill sites in a city of 12 million people. Around 5,000 tons of garbage are
dumped here each day and more than 1,000 people work among the rubbish, sorting through
the waste and collecting items to sell to retailers for recycling.


Children at a brick factory in Fatullah. For each 1,000 bricks they carry, they earn
the equivalent of 0.9 USD.


A young girl working in a brick crushing factory in Dhaka.


Children at a brick factory in Fatullah. For each 1,000 bricks they carry, they earn the equivalent of 0.9 USD.


Hands of 8-year-old Munna while working in a rickshaw parts making factory.
He works 10 hours a day and gets 8 USD for a month. Dhaka 2007.


Ten-year-old Shaifur working in a door lock factory in Old Dhaka. Unlike his colleague,
Shaifur works without a mask.


Eight-year-old Munna works in a rickshaw factory. He earns about 500 taka (7 USD)
a month, working 10 hours a day. When the production often stops due to lack of electricity,
he has time to play. Dhaka 2007


Children are compelled to work for long working hours with inadequate or no rest period.
Moreover, they are paid with minimum wages and enjoy no job security. Many people
prefer to employ young boys to maximize services for those minimum wages. Dhaka 2006.


Thirteen-year-old Islam works in a silver cooking pot factory. He has been working at
the factory for the last two years, in hazardous conditions, where it is common practice
for the factory owners to take on children as unpaid apprentices, only providing them with two meals a day.


17.5 percent of children in the aged 5–15 are engaged in economic activities. Many
of these children are engaged in various hazardous occupations in manufacturing factories. Dhaka 2006.


Eight-year-old Razu works in a rickshaw factory. He earns about 500 taka (7 USD) a month,
working 10 hours a day. When the production often stops due to lack of electricity,
he has time to play.


Photographed by Zoriah Miller ©
via [zoriah]


p/s - I so envy this guy HAHA Emotion: laugh.gif
Monday May 25th, 2009
Love and sorrow,
Felt by all living creatures.



Here his mate is injured and the condition is fatal. She was hit by a car
as she swooped low across the road



Here he brought her food and attended to her with love and compassion.


He brought her food again but shocked to find her dead. He tried to move her...
a rarely-seen effort for swallows.



Aware that his sweetheart is dead and will never come back to him again,
he cried with adoring love.



He stood beside her, saddened by her death.


Finally aware that she would never return to him, he stood beside her
body with sadness and sorrow.


Millions of people cried after watching this picture in America and Europe and even in India . It is said
that the photographer sold these pictures for a nominal fee to the most famous newspaper in France .
All copies of that newspaper were sold out on the day these pictures were published.



I know it's silly but I cried thinking how the bird must have felt.. It's so sad Emotion: sad.gif
Monday May 25th, 2009






























I am not a vegan but this is too tskk tsskkk..


via [Denmark Whaling]
Sunday May 24th, 2009

1930. Lynching
Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith were African-Americans who were lynched on
August 7, 1930 in Marion, Indiana. They had been arrested the night before,
charged with robbing and murdering a white factory worker and raping his girlfriend.
A large crowd broke into the jail with sledgehammers, beat the two men, and
hanged them. Police officers in the crowd cooperated in the lynching. A third
person, 16 year old James Cameron, narrowly escaped lynching thanks to
an unidentified participant who announced that he had nothing to do with the
rape or murder. (Hangings, beatings and mutilations were called the sentence
of “Judge Lynch.”) Some lynching photos were made into postcards designed
to boost white supremacy, but the tortured bodies and grotesquely happy
crowds ended up revolting as many as they scared. Today the images remind
us that we have not come as far from barbarity as we’d like to think.
[1930 Lynching] image source [flickr]
Photographed by Lawrence Beitler



1970. May 4 Massacre
When President Richard Nixon said he was sending troops to Cambodia, the nation’s colleges
erupted in protest. At Kent State some threw rocks. The Ohio National Guard, called in to quell the
turmoil, suddenly turned and fired, killing four; two were simply walking to class. This photo
captured a pivotal moment: American soldiers had just killed American kids. The girl, Mary Ann
Vecchio, turned out not to be a Kent State student, but a 14-year-old runaway. Mary Ann Vecchio
kneeling over the dead body of Jeffrey Miller after he was shot by the National Guard.
[Kent State Shootings] image source [link]
Photographed by John Filo



1957. Hazel Massery
Hazel Massery (born Hazel Bryan) was a student at Little Rock Central High School during the
1950s. She was depicted in an iconic photograph that showed her shouting at Elizabeth Eckford,
one of the Little Rock Nine, during the integration crisis. In her later life, she would attempt to
make amends for this and briefly became friends with Eckford.
[Hazel Massery] image source [flickr]
Photographed by Will Counts



1911. Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City on March 25, 1911, was the largest industrial
disaster in the history of the city of New York, causing the death of 146 garment workers.
Witnesses thought the owners were tossing their best fabric out the windows to save it, then
realized workers were jumping, sometimes after sharing a kiss.
[Triangle Shirtwaist Factory] image source [link]
Photographed by The International Ladies Garment Workers Union



1966. South of the DMZ
image source [link]
Photograhed by Larry Burrows

Saturday May 23rd, 2009


The self-immolation of Thich Quang Duc.
Photographed by Malcolm Browne [Thích Quảng Đức]


1980 ; A kid in Uganda about to die of hunger and a missionaire.
Photographed by Michael Wells [Nachofoto]


June 5, 1989 ; Tank Man, China.
A man who stood in front of a column of Chinese Type 59 tanks.
Photographed by Jeff Widener [Tank Man]


1992. A mother in Somalia holds the body of her child who died of hunger
Photograhed by James Nachtwey [photopumpkin]



1994. A man who was tortured by the soldiers since he was suspected to
have spoken with the Tutsi rebels.
Photographed by James Nachtwey [photopumpkin]


2003. An Iraqi prisoner of war with a hood over his head comforts his son at a holding centre.
Photographed by Jean-Marc Bouju [photopumpkin]


1957. The first day of Dorothy Counts at the Harry Harding High School in the United States. Counts were one of the first black students admitted in the school, and she was no longer
able to stand the harassments after 4 days.
Photographed by Douglas Martin [Dorothy Counts]


1962. During an uprising by the Venezuelan guerrilla organisation
Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional, a dying soldier clings
to a priest with sniper fire all around them.
Photographed by Héctor Rondón Lovera [photopumpkin]






boredom which leads to surfing the net = this.
All pictures are linked back to which ever site I found them,
some of them I put the link next to it and some I put a link to a little info bout the picture


*sorry bout my crappy english. I hope you get what I mean!
Thursday May 21st, 2009

Thursday May 21st, 2009

Thursday May 21st, 2009

personally, eventho' I'm against hitting kids if I have a son like that I would definitely slap him. I like the ending