The Mistle-Tones. It’s so bad, and I love it so much! It’s a family tradition now to get high and watch it every year, and it’s my favorite tradition.
The Mistle-Tones. It’s so bad, and I love it so much! It’s a family tradition now to get high and watch it every year, and it’s my favorite tradition.
The tide will destroy my sandcastle and it’ll be forgotten, but it can’t take that I did it anyways.
I love this so much.
Heightened class awareness and solidarity maybe? A person can dream.
I get that. It makes logical sense. It’s just that corporations have so much power to impose their will and it feels weird to me that we let them do that even when it comes to how a human presents themself.
I agree, but then I started thinking “why the hell do I think it’s so reasonable for a corporation to strip away the humanity of its employees” and I’m not sure where I’ve landed now.
You can’t control your feet and they always shapeshift to a size that makes your shoes too tight.
Lego Batman. If you haven’t seen it, go; go now.
For whatever it’s worth I don’t see anything Meta or Facebook related on my Pixel 4 running Android 13.
I’ve always used the version “Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good.” Didn’t know there were so many ways to say it!
There’s something interesting in here about the persistence of legacy systems that I can’t quite put my finger on. Rest assured I will be consumed by the thought for the remainder of the day.
In dad-a-tables
Wouldn’t be the same movie, but would definitely still be a beloved classic.
Absolutely not. I just know eventually I’d get stuck on pause and slowly lose my mind over eternity.
The fear of death is important to me. It helps keep me degenerate adjacent.
Too noticable. Once the kids in your middle school figure it out they’ll use you as a test dummy and that would only get worse with time.
I’m online too much as it is.
Slow, steady progress as you get older but without the hassle of having to level up manually? Perfect.
There was a study done on this kind of mentality. Researches invited pairs of players and before each game flipped a coin to designate one player rich and the other poor. The rich player was then given more money and an easier set of rules. At the end of the game they interviewed the player that inevitably won, and in all cases the players reported that they won because of key decisions they made while playing. Not one mentioned they got lucky with the coin flip.
Summary and interview with a researcher: https://www.marketplace.org/2021/01/19/why-rich-people-tend-think-they-deserve-their-money/amp/
Study (pdf): https://studenttheses.universiteitleiden.nl/access/item%3A2661526/view
This sounds delicious. Thanks for sharing.
I’d guess to make certain activities auditable as a means to protect the company and workers from accusations of improperly torquing important fasteners.