This reminds me of am episode of Love Death and Robots
Phoenixbouncing
Malicious compliance, I like it.
But you have to count the nipples to know she's a witch!
Also keep your regulation pin handy at all times.
I'd appreciate the runtime hints since depending on what I'm doing I won't have more than 10 minutes at a time
I feel this touches on two really important points. Firstly the need for a community hub where men and boys can meet and grow, and where we can help men who are feeling lost find places where they can exchange and realise they aren't alone.
Secondly, brining books allows a broadening of experiences beyond just the people present and a nice counter balance to social media.
Clearly enough are that this problem is pervasive accross several police forces. It's clearly the case in the US, and we have a similar problem with the Police National in France (bizzarly, the Gendarmerie who performe policing outside the cities and are a part of the armed forces seem to have far less issues in this regard...)
Technically it's their client that's putting the thumb screws to them.
If that's the case the logical solution is to put your commercial hat on and find another client. Amazon aren't the only ones paying.
If Amazon was your only client that'll be tough, but speaking from experience if you don't diversify your client base, you're living on borrowed time anyway.
This doesn't mean Amazon are not being abusive, but the solution isn't to moan on the internet.
Don't worry, it's business insider India, nothing to do with the reputable site.
A really nice article, but one I feel needs to go a step further.
From experience, and outside really abusive relationships, if a relationship fails there's always blame enough for both parties. I takes two to mess up a tango.
It's worrying that social media is pushing these black and white narratives rather than helping growth.
The article is a sobering read, but unfortunately not a surprising one.
Demographically, Israel is split in 3 with secular Jews having a below replacement fecundity, orthodox Jews being off the charts (think 5 or 6 children per woman) and Israeli Arabs being around replacement.
This means that the orthodox community is getting bigger and bigger in the population, and this trend shows no sign of stopping.
Since orthodox women don't work and orthodox men don't serve in the army and often do religious studies, this means the community is becoming a bigger and bigger weight on Israeli society.
The current moves seem aimed at trying to appease the orthodox, and stave off an economic collapse in a few decades. Unfortunately by then the orthodox could well be a majority, and women look like the big loosers in this situation.
Short answer but absolutely, I'd jump at the chance.
I must admit I thought it was the tea party mouvement, but I didn't follow either too closely at the time.