The reason they make you do group project at school is as a preventative measure against falling into conspiracy theories as an adult. The vast majority of the population can and will come out of the experience with a much better understanding of just how goddamn impossible it is to make multiple people do what they were supposed to do, everything they were supposed to do, and nothing but what they were supposed to do. You can't make five people do that, and yet billions of people are keeping this supposed machine rolling?
Anonymous asked:
Be honest do you think that actually learning things in high school is important
electronicmail answered:
yeah dude or else youre gonna be that coworker people post about
yeah dude or else youre
gonna be that coworker
people post about
Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.
Specialist vets are so impressive. I sent a picture of my cat to an eye doctor for animals and they were like "I suspect this is [condition that's super rare in cats], if you want to you can ask your vet to do [test nobody at our primary vet clinic had ever ordered for a cat before]" and of course, the test came back positive. Looks like that's exactly what she has.
there's this phenomenon i've noticed on youtube which i dub "man math" which is when men STEM-ify hobbies/activities/art forms in order to make them more masculine. it's very noticeable in the cooking video sphere where there's an endless stream of videos made by men along the lines of "the SCIENTIFICALLY PROVEN best way to cook an egg" (and dgmw, i watch them and find them helpful, but the observation stands), but i notice it also in the way men approach ceramics (a lot of focus on mold-making and slip-casting to perfection, basically reinventing one man mass-production rather than play and discovery), tailoring/sewing/knitting/textile art, gardening and other nature-oriented hobbies, interior decor, furniture making and woodworking, journaling/planning/productivity, even drawing and painting, there's always some man math angle to it that although interesting it often strikes me as some sort of overcompensation to move away from the inherent vulnerability that comes with art making and once you notice it it's literally everywhere






