History is my profession. Film is my passion. People often describe me as a nice bloke.

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fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

As part of a Peruvian tourism promotion, a group of Peruvian celebrities visit the small town of Peru, Nebraska.

33 notes 12 hours agoReblog
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

marcovilla:

solerares ii

The Kinks /// This time tomorrow

5 notes 17 hours agoReblog

(Source: profblues)

13 notes 3 days agoReblog

(Source: mooganbaby, via michael-emerson-is-beetee)

232 notes 3 days agoReblog
patrickwundke:

condell, valparaíso chile, 2012

patrickwundke:

condell, valparaíso chile, 2012

13 notes 3 days agoReblog

(via thehassasin)

1985 notes 3 days agoReblog
fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

“Fuereños” (Outsiders), by Agustín Victor Casasola (ca. 1910).

fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

“Fuereños” (Outsiders), by Agustín Victor Casasola (ca. 1910).

(Source: sagababy)

760 notes 5 days agoReblog

(Source: eggplantation)

140 notes 1 week agoReblog

(via afireworksshow)

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fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

World War II Propaganda Poster (1943)
Mexico declared war on the Axis powers on May 22, 1942, days after two of its oil tankers, Potrero del Llano and Faja de Oro, were destroyed by German U-boats in the Gulf of Mexico. While some Mexican troops fought alongside US troops against the Japanese in the Phillipines towards the end of the war, Mexico’s main contribution to the war effort was the enactment of the Bracero Program, a guest worker program which eventually sent hundreds of thousands of Mexican men to work in the United States during its two decade-long history.

fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

World War II Propaganda Poster (1943)

Mexico declared war on the Axis powers on May 22, 1942, days after two of its oil tankers, Potrero del Llano and Faja de Oro, were destroyed by German U-boats in the Gulf of Mexico. While some Mexican troops fought alongside US troops against the Japanese in the Phillipines towards the end of the war, Mexico’s main contribution to the war effort was the enactment of the Bracero Program, a guest worker program which eventually sent hundreds of thousands of Mexican men to work in the United States during its two decade-long history.

145 notes 1 week agoReblog
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