• Damorte@lemmy.world
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    51 minutes ago

    This is the hubble Deep Field in a series of deep field images. It was taken by directing the hubble telescope on a tiny dark spot of space. Every single light in this image is a galaxy, many of them as large or larger than our own. It truly shows the immensity of our universe and shows how insignifcant all our problems really are in the grand scheme of things.

  • folaht@lemmy.ml
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    40 minutes ago

    I like pictures with bright colors in them.
    To me that’s a sign towards a bright present and future.

    All those war, hunger and oppression photos just depress me.

  • KuromiGirl04@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    6-year old Ruby Bridges walking to school.

    This picture was always so powerful to me. I think I had that one famous illustrated storybook about Ruby Bridges.

    • anotherspinelessdem@lemmy.ml
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      37 minutes ago

      On the one hand, very important photo to understand the context of the time.

      On the other hand, monstrous that a child going to school was such a big deal and so much attention was focused on her. Can’t imagine that making a positive impression on a child.

  • fort_burp@feddit.nl
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    4 hours ago

    Great post and I really enjoyed the replies. Mine is of Chavez visiting Castro in 2006 in Havanna, as Castro was dying of cancer. Both men were imprisoned for a failed coup but later rose to power (Chavez democratically and Castro by revolutionary liberation of the country), and both men died in a hospital bed in their respective countries in 2013.

  • Weydemeyer@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    OP’s photo is my favorite, so I will have to mention my second favorite (though calling it a “favorite” feels off).

    This photo was taken in 2003 in Iraq. This man is comforting his son. They are being held in an American camp. IIRC to this day we don’t know what happened to these two.

    I think if I had to explain the last 25 years to a time-traveler, this would be the one photo I would choose.

  • eightpix@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Frederick Douglass by Samuel J. Miller circa 1850

    this portrait of Frederick Douglass—an escaped slave who had become a lauded speaker, writer, and abolitionist agitator—is a striking exception. Northeastern Ohio was a center of abolitionism prior to the Civil War, and Douglass knew that this picture, one of an astonishing number that he commissioned or posed for, would be seen by ardent supporters of his campaign to end slavery. Douglass was an intelligent manager of his public image and likely guided Miller in projecting his intensity and sheer force of character. As a result, this portrait demonstrates that Douglass truly appeared “majestic in his wrath,” as the nineteenth-century feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton observed.

    https://www.artic.edu/artworks/145681/frederick-douglass

  • lichtmetzger@discuss.tchncs.de
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    11 hours ago

    Deepwater Horizon sinking in the Gulf of Mexico on April 22, 2010.

    It caused an equivalent oil spill of 4.9 million barrels and exposed the surrounding wildlife to toxic materials, covering thousands of animals in oil. The cleanup efforts took years.

    A prime example of humans messing up this planet for their own gains.

  • bia@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    This one really affected me. It’s one of the first images from the surface of Mars. I was quite young, and it clicked in me that other planets actually exists and are out there in space.

  • Clot@lemmy.zip
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    10 hours ago

    Communists defeated fascism. We won 20th century. We will win 21st century.

  • EvenOdds@lemmy.zip
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    13 hours ago

    The terror of war.

    Nobody wins in war, and I hate how angry this photo makes me feel.

    • Riverside@reddthat.com
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      10 hours ago

      Nobody wins in war

      The Vietnamese won, as a matter of fact, and liberated themselves from colonialism as a consequence