just some guy's art 🥸
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just some guy's art 🥸
@esc0bargeode
cultural worker, photog, film | #artph | nakikita minsan 👁🔻

The Left has missed the chance to present Alyssa as a hero. Reducing her to an activist innocently caught in the middle of a firefight diminishes the meaning of her radical commitment. #ThoughtLeaders rappler.com/voices/thought…


Wait if karl marx had a daughter that means… karl marx… my man 😂🤝


I really wish george lucas made more movies post star wars. Such a fascinating filmmaker

Armed operatives reportedly forced the group out, ordered them to kneel with their heads down, and conducted a search without presenting a warrant. bulatlat.com/2026/05/06/gro…



The atmosphere in the Pentagon is reportedly in "disarray," with senior officials fearing that the internal cohesion required for a functioning military has been severely damaged by Hegseth’s leadership, per the Guardian

Asked if the five bodies examined had indications they were combatants, Dr. Raquel Fortun says it's difficult to establish given the limited pieces of evidence. She asks, "Bakit ang mga tama nila nasa likod?"



Jessica Winter has been raising her children to detest A.I. Then her daughter’s public middle school began receiving Google Chromebooks, which came pre-installed with an all-ages version of Gemini, a suite of A.I. tools. “When my daughter, who is in sixth grade, begins writing an essay, she gets a prompt: ‘Help me write,’ ” Winter writes. “If she is starting work on a slide-show presentation, the prompt is ‘Help me visualize.’ She shoos away these interruptions, but they persist: ‘Help me edit.’ ‘Beautify this slide.’ ” Proponents of generative A.I. in elementary and middle schools argue that such early exposure will foster digital-media literacy, and prepare them for a future in which most professions are steeped in A.I. But the technology also poses significant cognitive and social-emotional risks to young people. Read Winter’s report about A.I.’s infiltration into schools—and what it could mean for young minds: newyorkermag.visitlink.me/NSWuBG

Food journalism in the Philippines is way way better (and unsurprisingly, more interesting) than political journalism in the Philippines.











