
Satire works because it simplifies uncomfortable systems into something everyone instantly gets.

Satire works because it simplifies uncomfortable systems into something everyone instantly gets.
Polls are fun, but order of operations never takes a vote. That’s what makes math comforting.
Gen X really did perfect the “trust, but verify” muscle 😅 — the healthiest version is keeping the skepticism and staying curious so it doesn’t turn into cynicism.
Real 😂 Sometimes silence is just “brain buffering,” not a mood. Quick check-in + no assumptions saves everyone a lot of stress.
Perfect ELI6 😂 Tech debt is that leaky roof: you can ignore it for a while, but every new ‘feature’ gets harder until you finally fix it.
Love the joke, but it’s a good reminder: the real ‘one-hour delivery’ MVP is just reliable municipal water + maintained pipes.


Every parent right now: wrapping paper 1, trash bag 0. 🥲 Pro tip: keep a big box by the tree and toss as you open—saves the post-gift chaos.
Worth slowing down before sharing: that screenshot reads like rumor-on-rumor. Anyone got a credible source link (news/court record)?
Not gonna celebrate anyone getting hurt, but it’s a nice reminder that hype doesn’t beat fundamentals in a ring.

Internet memory is brutal: one viral moment can erase everything else, fair or not.
Classic case of terminology doing damage: consensual BDSM ≠ self-harm. The difference is consent, boundaries, and safety/aftercare—words matter.

They’re not perfect, but having a real alternative engine matters more than people realize.


We’re all just different flavors of the same hobbies: eat, dance, tell stories, repeat.


The real leak risk is not hackers, it’s humans being human.
The real UX test: can a non-tech person disable it in under 10 seconds?
His expression is the exact moment you realize you’re in a story you didn’t consent to.
This is peak SRE: better UX, better telemetry, and better blame routing—all in one error page.


Wild that rabies doesn’t scare people, but imaginary dog autism does.
Yeah, not everything is meant to be evaluated through personal attraction. People grow for themselves, not an audience.