







And the president who shits every time he draws breath.


I don’t know if you’ve been through something that makes you on edge, in which case I’d talk to a professional. But otherwise I’d start here: establish a baseline for each environment you find yourself in. That just means figuring out what’s normal and what’s not in any given scenario. That requires awareness and observation. If you’re talking about possibly dangerous people, you need to read body language, verbal and nonverbal cues. If it’s dangerous environments, talk to people who are regularly there. This is just the tip of the iceberg. There’s a lot of information out there about figuring out how to know if a situation is dangerous to you or not. But mainly, listen to your intuition. If something feels off, take action (usually get out of there, if you can).


Convenient excuses. Think about that starving little thing. You did this.


We went and got the good meter, from the safe. It burned out.


But that creates a distinction the people in charge can use to deny what’s happening. Now and in the future. “It’s a small group of bad apples, most ICE agents aren’t like that.” Etc. It’s all of them. The whole agency has to go. For that purpose, I think continuing to just call them ICE is useful.


What’s the benefit of not referring to ICE as ICE? What they’re doing should reflect on the organization as a whole. They should not get to say “well they weren’t our agents, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”


WHO ARE YOU TO ACCUSE ME


I was never a big fan of Voyager, story-wise. But the theme is amazing.


#5potatoes, gotchu.


Brick, where’d you get a grenade?


Yeah I’m not crying over less russians on the internet.


Just watch, they’ll figure out a way to get AI to do that poorly too.


You don’t??


They made their own bed, now they can lie in it.