What are some really dumb shows you would recommend? I'm thinking dumb & random like what adult swim offers for example. I used to get into stuff like Tim & Eric, The Loiter Squad, The Boondocks, and a lot of the other stuff adult swim pulled out of their bag. I haven't watched adult swim in years, is it worth checking out these days? Any new shows worth checking out?
I used to go to sleep watching adult swim back in high school. It's honestly what helped me sleep back then.
What do you think? Will electric cars be out future? I mean, most of them will still hold gas tanks just in case, but I think in the very near future, most cars produced will start to be electric. I don't know if i like that or hate it. Part of me wants to try an electric car, but part of me isn't sure it's worth it.
If electric cars become the standard soon, will you get an electric car eventually?
I read a lot about toxins and their effects on the human body, brain, and hormones. We made a switch to toxic plastics as production ramped up to cut costs. Eventually importing these plastics from places like China (known for their hatred of blacks, Muslims, and gay folk). I read some studies on how certain plastics can almost alter the DNA of a baby while still in the womb and hurt/harm children prior to puberty. I have to wonder if this ties in with the expansion and growth of homosexual numbers in the US. This is not to spread hatred or anything. I am sure plenty just feel freer to be themselves today than they did 20 or 30 years ago but now we have children who aren't even hitting puberty thinking they are of the wrong gender or liking the same sex. I just have to question things like this.
Has anyone been contacted by the CDC? I received 2 calls, and a blank voice mail from them. I didn't pick up because i don't known anyone from the CDC. I thought this was weird AF, wha could be the reason for a call from the CDC?
Look what Disney is pushing to our kids: Login to view embedded mediaOf course, Shea Butter Twitter & Septum Ring Social Media are celebrating and "yassssing" the fact that #TheAgenda is being marketed directly to Black children.
The pandemic seems to have shifted men's priorities away from the bedroom
www.insidehook.com
I regret to inform you that sex has been canceled — at least among single men, once believed to make up the horniest demographic on earth. While rumors that younger generations are having less sex than their forefathers have been swirling for years, this time it’s not Millennials being accused of killing sex, but the pandemic. According to a new survey from online dating platform Match, the vast majority of single men — 81 percent, to be exact — say they now find sex to be less important than in their blissful days of pre-pandemic horniness.
These days, it seems, men have undergone what Match has dubbed a post-pandemic “man-volution” that has found them leaving their sex-obsessed playboy days behind and instead focusing more on emotional compatibility, romance and long-term relationships. While it may seem surprising, these findings are consistent with the broader “post-traumatic growth” Match has observed among singles in America post-pandemic, one that has reportedly seen singles of all genders slowing down, settling down and prioritizing emotional maturity and compatibility over physical attractiveness. The survey found that 83 percent of singles are looking for a partner with emotional maturity, compared to 78 percent who name physical appearance among their top criteria. (That’s down from 90 percent in 2020, suggesting a second year of pandemic dating has really encouraged us all to lower our standards.)
Meanwhile, the “hookup culture” that dominated anxious headlines over the past couple of decades seems to be on a significant decline. According to the survey, “The pandemic has initiated an appetite for more meaningful, steadfast and long-term relationships,” leaving only 11 percent of singles looking for something casual. These days, taking it slow is back, as is the “three-date rule.” According to Match, nearly half of singles said their ideal sexual situation right now would be a “committed, exclusive relationship,” and two in three singles said they prefer to wait till the third date before having sex.
Perhaps most surprising of all is the fact that these trends appear to be most pronounced among men. As previous research has suggested, men do in fact have feelings, and Match’s survey indicates men are actually quicker to catch feels than women, with 53 percent of guys saying they can feel an emotional connection after two dates, compared to just 38 percent of women. Men are also feeling more pressure to settle down than their female counterparts, with 24 percent feeling social pressure to find a relationship compared to 17 percent of women.
The trading platform surged by operating from nowhere in particular—without offices, licenses or headquarters. Now governments are insisting on taking some control.
A “patrol mission report” from 21-27 June suggests that officers were deployed to the “anchor point” at Hussle’s intersection in a crime “suppression” effort. During that week at the location and surrounding blocks, LAPD recorded 58 stops, but made only seven arrests, suggesting that for the vast majority of people stopped or detained, there was no probable cause to arrest them.
In a mission the following week, LAPD stopped 103 people, and made only three arrests; the records say LAPD was looking for a robbery suspect described only as a Black male between 16 and 18 years old.
“It was like every ten minutes a [police] car is coming through the lot, and officers are hopping out. It was nonstop,” he said. In one instance, LAPD even stopped and questioned shoppers who appeared to be tourists, he said. The shoppers turned out to be off-duty police officers from out of state.
“It became, ‘Don’t come here if you don’t want police contact.’ If you did have a warrant, you ain’t coming to buy nothing from us. It was like, ‘Shit, I’m gonna get pulled over. I’m gonna get targeted,’” he said.
Asghedom said it felt as if the LAPD officers were angry about the success of the store, which was a source of pride for the local community and drew fans and supporters from across the US: “We’re here every day selling clothes, so there is less crime. This is something that y’all should be happy about. But instead, their whole goal was just to shut it down.”
Police sent patrols to stop people around The Marathon Clothing store, records show, as Hussle’s brother tells the Guardian: ‘Everybody would get harassed’
So Christmas is nearly here, this month has gone by way too fast and I need to get my girlfriend a gift and I haven't yet. Thing is, she's tough to buy stuff for, because she pretty much has everything she wants or needs. What do you get someone who has everything already? I was thinking about making her something, but I have no artistic skills to do anything great. So idk.
I might just end up taking her out to dinner and maybe see a movie or something. But do you guys have any suggestions?
One thing I don't usually do often, is to share personal photos of myself on social media. I have a profile picture, and that's pretty much it. I find it weird when people share pictures of their kids and family on social media. I get why, because they have to show off their family, but if you're going to share your personal photos, please make your profile private and only visible to your friends.
There are a lot of creeps out there, and if you post pictures of your kids for example, there will be creeps likely out there finding them. So, I private every damn thing. I don't even post pics of family.
What's your view on this? Are you okay posting pics of yourself and your family on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter? Or do you prefer to keep that part of your life for only close friends and family and not on social media?
When it comes to working out, what kind of programs do you use? I have used the likes of P90, P90X, Insanity and I think that was it. Oh, I also subbed to some workout program called Daily Burn that gives you a catalog of workouts you can mess around with. I didn't stay subbed for long though. I really liked P90 and P90X when it came to workout programs that worked wonders.
What are some workout programs you like to use? Or discuss what kind of workouts you like doing if you're not using a program.
I have a few older laptops laying around and i wanted to install windows 11 on one but the laptop didn't meet the requirements to support running windows 11, my CPU wasn't supported. I found a work around, tried it and it works! The laptop I installed it on has an i5 in it, I don't understand why it's not supported when they have laptops with i3's that are supported. anyhow i followed these steps and it installed no problem, it runs faster as well. Windows 10 is definitely a solid OS but I like the look and smoothness of windows 11. here's the article that will walk you through the process.
According to this article the numbers are going up for everybody, but us. Why is this? These aren't the results we voted for, so what do we have to do to turn this around.
Unemployment going down for everybody but Black folks
Despite rising inflation and legislative drama, some economists are touting the latest jobs numbers as a cause for celebration.
www.flcourier.com
Despite rising inflation and legislative drama, some economists are touting the latest jobs numbers as a cause for celebration.
And there is good news in the recent jobs report. Job growth exceeded expectations, adding nearly 100,000 jobs from last month.
Wages increased. But Black folks didn’t get the same gains that others did. The unemployment rate is trending down for everyone but Black folks.
So, while the overall unemployment rate dropped from 4.8 percent to 4.6 percent, the Black unemployment rate remained at 7.9 percent. The President who “has outback” backed out of the issue of economic equity.
Unemployment going down for everybody but Black folks
Nov 12, 2021 Updated 6 hrs ago
Despite rising inflation and legislative drama, some economists are touting the latest jobs numbers as a cause for celebration. And there is good news in the recent jobs report. Job growth exceeded expectations, adding nearly 100,000 jobs from last month.
Wages increased. But Black folks didn’t get the same gains that others did. The unemployment rate is trending down for everyone but Black folks. So, while the overall unemployment rate dropped from 4.8 percent to 4.6 percent, the Black unemployment rate remained at 7.9 percent. The President who “has outback” backed out of the issue of economic equity.
Good news for who?
Am I being unfair? The racial unemployment gap is as old as our post-enslavement reality. It is, perhaps, unrealistic to expect President Biden to alter a racist, predatory capitalistic economic structure that yields unequal results for Black folks. At the same time, when a “brother” says he got your back, you want to see results. So far, few results. Just as COVID-19 blew the lid off our nation’s flaws and inequality, so will the aftermath of COVID continue to highlight our nation’s inequality in education, health, and employment. Black folk are still the last hired, first fired. Even as some employers say they are desperately seeking workers, they aren’t desperately seeking Black folks. The Black unemployment rate, as always twice the white rate, is a testament to that. The Build Back Better legislation will create some jobs and repair some infrastructure. Still, will enough of these gains be targeted to those African Americans who have been historically sidelined and further impacted by the violent treatment of Black folks in our nation’s history? Some unenlightened white folks are resisting any notion of closing, like the white farmers who don’t even want pennies to be offered to Black farmers who have lost much of their land because of the racism that permeated the documented racism of the Department of Agriculture.
Juggling the racial fence
The Black folks who worked so hard to get the vote out aren’t seeing the expected return on investment. All this talk of good news leaves some Black folks feeling “some kind of way” as if we have been used and discarded.
And President Biden and Vice President Harris are juggling aggrieved Black people and entitled white people who ignore history. The pushback to “critical race theory,” which is taught in no k-12 school, nor any undergraduate college, is a way of saying that too many white people don’t want to deal with our nation’s second original sin (the first is the expropriation of American Indian land, the second being the brutality of enslavement). Whatever the Biden-Harris team is juggling, they risk alienating their base if they don’t do more for Black folks. Where is the good news for Black folks in these recent economic reports? It’s not in the unemployment rate nor in the wages creeping up for some, not for others. It’s not in the uneven ways that inflation affects us. It’s not even in the Build Back Better infrastructure legislation, which may or may not have a positive impact on Black cities and Black clean water when Republican legislatures will decide who gets what from BBB. The legislation would be more potent if cities, instead of states, were prioritized, since we know that the pandemic affected urban dwellers more than cities.
Still on the sidelines
I was sitting with a young activist, counseling the patience that many sowed into me decades ago when I was an angry baby girl activist. I was told then that it was going to be an evolution, not a revolution. I resisted that advice saying that things could immediately change if we demanded it. Not. We can’t flip the script right this minute. But we can’t give up. When we hear this economic good news, we must resist the celebration and remind our allies that as long as there is a racial economic gap, there should be no economic celebration. The so-called progressives ex- cited about Biden gains need to ask themselves why Black folks remain sidelined and why the racial economic gap is acceptable. And they need to be as vocal about these gaps as they are about climate change and other vital issues. Who get to live economic good news? Good economic news is only tepid news for Black folks. Dr. Julianne Malveaux is an economist, author and dean of the College of Ethnic Studies at Cal State LA.
When it comes to buying gifts for lovers, friends, or family - how do you view it? (for birthdays, Christmas, and other special occasions)
Do you think there should be an agreeance on what to spend? Should gift-giving come from the heart and money not matter? What about buying gifts for people who don't always get you something?
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register. By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.