The shit is crumbling. The dynasty he wanted ain't gonna happen.
Tenderly Tracking My Husband
We love Olivia Benson
Residents fear Frederick County will be the new ‘data center alley’
In This Church, Child Sexual Abuse Has Gone Unchecked for So Long That It Spans Generations
I Turned Off My Phone for a Month and Used a Landline No texts, no Instagram, no subway Slack.
When ICE arrests you, what happens to your car?
I Fed the People Building the Metaverse
"The machine inherits its makers."
Troubled Water
Designer Sam Masters Waited 16 Years to Land His 420-Square-Foot Apartment
What I Witnessed In Palestine Made Me Think About My Gun
“You like geese?” he asks with a smirk.
“No, I’m more of a birds of prey guy,” I reply, still staring at the geese.
“Ah,” he clicks his tongue. “You Americans, you always like things that kill.”
"This celebration of sleep evokes recent critiques of unbridled capitalism – a rejection of hyper-productivity, often associated with exploitative labour practices. In his Aeon essay, the political theorist
Jonathan White has shown that sleeping in sync with our natural circadian rhythms is a matter of political justice. Not only does poor sleep often accompany socioeconomic inequality, it also detracts from the capacity to cope with difficult life circumstances. ‘Poor sleep is a corrosive disadvantage – one that yields more of the same,’ he writes. White advocates for what he calls ‘circadian justice’, which would require a radical, but not impossible, restructuring of society so that everyone’s circadian rhythms are respected, and people are free to choose work schedules that suit their needs."
No comments:
Post a Comment