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الخميس، 24 أكتوبر 2013

ما الفرق بين الصورتين ؟


أزياء : صابونه + ليفه


صور أفغانستان قبل الحرب

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When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

"Biology class, Kabul University."
In the 1950s and '60s, women were able to pursue professional careers in fields such as medicine. Today, schools that educate women are a target for violence, even more so than five or six years ago.
When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

"Student nurses at Maternity Hospital, Kabul."
When I was growing up, education was valued and viewed as the great equalizer. If you went to school and achieved good grades, you'd have the chance to enter college, maybe study abroad, be part of the middle class, and enjoy a comfortable lifestyle. Education was a hallowed value. Today, I think people have become far more cynical. They do not see the link between education and a better life; they see instead that those who have accumulated wealth and power have not done so through legitimate means.
When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

"Most hospitals give extensive post-natal care to young mothers."
This infant ward in a Kabul hospital in the 1960s contrasts sharply with one I visited in 2004 in Mazar-e-Sharif. There I found two babies born prematurely sharing the same incubator. That hospital, like many in Afghanistan today, did not have enough equipment.
When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

"Infant ward at feeding time."
In the 1960s, about half of Afghanistan's people had access to some level of medical care; now a much smaller percentage do. Today's hospitals are crowded, the facilities limited; nearly one in four babies born in Afghanistan today does not reach its fifth birthday.
When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

"A laboratory at the Vaccine Research Center."
Above is a vaccine research center attached to a Kabul hospital in the 1960s. Today, medical care across the country is limited by several factors, including lack of electricity. Less than 20 percent of Afghans have access to electricity; many homes are lit by kerosene lamps, with only fans running to combat the heat.
When Afghanistan Had Hopes for the Future (23 pics)

حصل خير


1They Should Have Seen That Coming
2They Should Have Seen That Coming
3They Should Have Seen That Coming
4They Should Have Seen That Coming

أخيراً وصل طرد فيدكس

delivered by FedEx
1Fedex Can’t See What’s Wrong with It
2Fedex Can’t See What’s Wrong with It
 
#3Fedex Can’t See What’s Wrong with It

طريق قوس قزح


Rainbow Road
1Rainbow Road
2Rainbow Road

الأربعاء، 23 أكتوبر 2013

أمرأه تتحول الى رجل كمال أجسام

, from Walthamstow in London, whose steroid abuse has effectively turned her into a man.

Candi before she started taking steroids
Not stopping: According to Candace, things would be worse if she stopped because she would lose her muscles
Candice before she started taking anabolic steroids, which led to her developing facial hair, acne, and various other male characteristics, including a one-inch penis. Candice (right) as she is now

Irreversible: Candice Armstrong's steroid abuse has left her with male characteristics such as facial hair
Irreversible: Candice Armstrong's steroid abuse has left her with male characteristics such as facial hair

Candace says that bulking up has opened the door to a whole new world of opportunity
Because Candace is insulted in the street when she dresses as a woman, she has been forced to wear men's clothes
Insults: Candice is the target of comments on the street because of her looks and has to wear men's clothes