
EndOfLine
I once threw away baba ghanoush that was intended for dinner because I thought it was discarded remains. I thought I was being helpful, but I was not.
Trump gets in a feud with the Pope. Trump says that the Pope's brother is "MAGA all the way". Pope's brother gets a bomb threat.
I am genuinely confused about what message was supposed to have been sent by the threat.
This is an overly simplified view and missing a lot of complexities, but think of it this way:
The cost to bring something to market is passed to the consumer plus a percentage the Company adds for their profit margin.
Item costs $1.00 to bring to market + 10% for corporate profits = retail price of $1.10 of which the Company makes $0.10.
An increase of item costs to $1.20 to bring to market + the same 10% for corporate profits = retail price of $1.32 of which the Company makes $0.12 for the same thing.
They make more money while passing the go-to-market increase onto you.
Again? Am I having a Mandela Effect moment or wasn't this decided decades ago to no meaningful change?
“The evil I saw in that White House was staggering. In 2020, I finally said ‘enough,’”
Meanwhile millions of Americans were able to see the evil without having to be inside the White House. Even if she's genuinely switching sides and changed her religious views or whatever she used to justify the Republicans repeated attacks on female body autonomy and LGBTQ+ equality and voter oppression and defending / prompting sexual abusers and spreading blatant lies about political opponents and diverting funds from social services to billionaires etc etc etc, she's too oblivious to the suffering of the American people to be a public servant.

Who wants to tell him?
Even if they turn sour on Trump, I bet they will continue to support and vote for everything he stands for and all of the people that protect him and empower him.
This right here.
Annecdotal, but I have never worked for a company nor in a team that did not have a fair share of people that took the work experience route instead of the school route. It took them longer to get to the jobs fresh college grads were applying for and they had to work some shit jobs on the way, but that real-world experience gave them a perspective that college never could and it was a valued resource that provided immense benefits to the teams they worked with.
Is it just me or do the logos for those companies look like drawings of anuses?
Doesn't sound desperate at all. /s