I made a redbubble store in case you ever have any desire to see my stuff around your house while helping me pay my bills.
Message me if you have a certain picture of mine you’d like to be available to buy on redbubble. Depends on the picture size tho so sorry in advance if past me’s decision to draw on tiny canvas makes it impossible to have it available.
Also plugging my friend, @elontaival who is helping me sell a few prints, stickers and badges and if you live around Finland, they table at cons a lot so you can check out our stuff in person. They lists the cons they will be tabling at on their IG. We’ve done several collabs and their artworks are great!
If you’re feeling generous without wanting to buy merch, I have ko-fi. If you’re more into buying digital stuff, I also do commissions
Person A gets kidnapped by some people, and Person B has to find them somehow.
Option 1.) They find Person A dead.
Option 2.) They find Person A alive, but is horribly injured mentally and psychologically. Person B is hurt seeing Person A in such a state; flinching away from people, jumping at sudden noises or movement, afraid of being alone.
Option 3.) They never find Person A.
OH SHIT UMM…
NONE OF MY SHIPS HAVE REACHED THE LEVEL OF ME BEING OKAY WITH INCLUDING ANGST IN THEM
Then you’re not shipping right
@angstprompts EXCUSE ME. You are missing several extra-angsty options here!
Option 4) They find Person A alive, barely, but begging for death. Person B is forced to put them out of their misery.
Option 5) They find Person A alive, but A dies in the escape attempt.
Option 6) They find Person A alive, but Person B is mortally wounded during the rescue. Person A has to come to terms with the fact that Person B died to save them.
Option 7) They find Person A alive. It was a trap. Now Person A and Person B are both kidnapped.
Do you guys remember when Hobby Lobby was caught working with a terrorist organization to smuggle middle eastern artifacts into the country? That was a real thing that happened that we just don’t talk about any more
To @kushandwizdom this is a rather unfair portrayal of Africa as a whole since half of these are literally just South Africa. So Instead to add to this post and better dispel the myth of Africa as the vast wasteland of poverty most people think, I found a much more mixed collection of pics from various countries.
Luanda, Angola
Agadir, Morocco
Lagos, Nigeria
Cairo, Egypt
Port Louis, Mauritius
Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire
Algiers, Algeria
Tripoli, Libya
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Tunis, Tunisia
So, there, a much better case demonstrating the various major cities around Africa showing it isn’t some technologically backwards continent, but actually pretty up-and-coming in the world of commerce.
these look so beautiful omg
Lets not forget the beauty that is Chefchaouen, Morocco;
Absolutely magical place. I visited there over 20 years ago and what was remarkable was how cool the blue walls were to the touch. And the Moroccan people are so friendly and hospitable.
@spacemonkeyg78 this is a shade lighter than the blue I was talking about last summer.
Africa is a whole damn continent and people still have the audacity to think those commercials of mud huts are actually the entire country. it’s not a shocker as Africa is a majority black country and you know how that’s received by white media.
Don’t tag this bullshit as LGBT, this is not LGBT. You are NOT LGBT for being ‘‘nonbinary’‘, call yourself any shit, but you are not LGBT and don’t tell lies.
do you see that T in LGBT?
stop excluding agender and non-binary folk. cis people do a good enough of a job at that already.
You’ve been fired. According to your employer’s data, your facial expressions showed you were insubordinate and not trustworthy. You also move your hands at a rate that is considered substandard. Other companies you may want to work for could receive this data, making it difficult for you to find other work in this field.
That may sound like a scenario straight out of a George Orwell novel, but it’s the future many American workers could soon be facing.
In early February, media outlets reported that Amazon had received a patent for ultrasonic wristbands that could track the movement of warehouse workers’ hands during their shifts. If workers’ hands began moving in the wrong direction, the wristband would buzz, issuing an electronic corrective. If employed, this technology could easily be used to further surveil employees who already work under intense supervision.
Whole Foods, which is now owned by Amazon, recently instituted a complex and punitive inventory system where employees are graded based on everything from how quickly and effectively they stock shelves to how they report theft. The system is so harsh it reportedly causes employees enough stress to bring them to tears on a regular basis.
UPS drivers, who often operate individually on the road, are now becoming increasingly surveilled. Sensors in every UPS truck track when drivers’ seatbelts are put on, when doors open and close and when the engines start in order to monitor employee productivity at all times.
The technology company Steelcase has experimented with monitoring employees’ faces to judge their expressions. The company claims that this innovation, which monitors and analyzes workers’ facial movements throughout the work day, is being used for research and to inform best practices on the job. Other companies are also taking interest in this kind of mood-observing technology, from Bank of America to Cubist Pharmaceuticals Inc.
These developments are part of a larger trend of workers being watched and judged—often at jobs that offer low pay and demand long hours. Beyond simply tracking worker performance, it is becoming more common for companies to monitor the emails and phone calls their employees make, analyzing personal traits along with output.
Some companies are now using monitoring techniques—referred to as “people analytics”—to learn as much as they can about you, from your communication patterns to what types of websites you visit to how often you use the bathroom. This type of privacy invasion can cause employees immense stress, as they work with the constant knowledge that their boss is aware of their every behavior—and able to use that against them as they see fit.
Lewis Maltby, president of the National Workrights Institute at Cornell University, tells In These Times that the level of surveillance workers are facing is increasing exponentially.
“If you look at what some people call ‘people analytics,’ it’s positively frightening,” Maltby says. “People analytics devices get how often you talk, the tone of your voice, where you are every single second you’re at work, your body language, your facial expressions and something called ‘patterns of interaction.’” He explains that some of these devices even record what employees say at work.