cosmic horror (god loves you too much and keeps resurrecting you)
cosmic soap opera (god loves your boyfriend too much and everytime you die it basically breaks him so god has to resurrect you even though he’s really annoyed about it)
cosmic family drama (god stops ressurecting you bc now it’s giving him an existential crisis but after you die you’re ressurected by your son who overhears the grief of your boyfriend and also your son is a direct threat to god)
Their flagship store and New York has unionized along with 3-4 other stores! This is happening! People are tired of being seen as dollar signs and being made to work just to get to work more, to survive instead of thrive. Keep it UP.
“average person eats 3 spiders a year” factoid actualy just statistical error. average person eats 0 spiders per year. Spiders Georg, who lives in cave & eats over 10,000 each day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted
An actual World Heritage Post
how does this post not have a million notes but anyone online can quote it
A friend once said to me “I feel like I’m not actually working at my job because there’s so little to do” and I was like “the way I see it, if you can’t sleep and you can’t jerk off, you’re at work no matter what”.
And I just realized this gives me a new perspective on homelessness. There’s a certain baseline amount of labor you’re expected to do in public, finding places to exist unobtrusively, moving when the cops tell you to. No one is ever truly “off the clock” until they’re in their own home, if they have one.
I’m sure Michel Foucault or somebody wrote about this long before I did.
Or to put it another way, if home is the “first place” and work is the “second place” then the removal of third places from society means that if you don’t have a first place everywhere defaults to being a second place
If existing in public is a job then police are the managers, and calling the cops on someone for sleeping in public is, in effect, snitching on a fellow worker. I guess this functions as an explanation for why police unions “don’t count”.