Witch house aesthetic
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Louder for the people in the back
I canât ask a client if her husband rapes her because sheâll say no.Â
Instead I ask her if he has ever forced her to have sex or she ever feels like she canât say no.Â
And sheâll say:Â
âWell sometimes heâŚâ
Thatâs how fucking normalized marital rape is in this culture.Â
This reminds me of that study that asked college men if they would force a woman to have sex and 1 out of 3 responded that they would. When the word ârapeâ was used however, the number dropped significantly.
tfw you pick up a Gay Novel TM at the library but upon reading it discover its all about being gay and how hard tm it is but you already graduated this level of beginners gay and youre mad bc you cant find Advanced Gay literature
instagram.com/chromat
Moana concept art by Ryan Lang
can you imagine if our generationâs cartoons were put under the same criticisms as cartoons today
âOh you like codename kids next door? well theyâre literally a rogue guerrilla militia so nice terrorism apologismâ
âthe powerpuff girls do way more damage to townsville than the so called monsters (allegory?) that they ASSAULTâ
âphineas and ferb is liberal garbage perry should have killed doofenshmirtz instead of being a pussyâ
âbatman: the animated series is⌠well it even has lesbians so never mind, it can stay i guessâ
Iâm confused
It used to be that paper currency was backed by gold and silver for its value. A 10$ paper note would be redeemable for 10$ worth of gold or silver following the gold or silver standard. Currently our bills are fiat money which means they are not backed by any tangible item. Theyâre just based on the strength of the economy. The economy can fluctuate so it makes the actual value of a bill unstable. These Mcdonalds coins, however, would be a currency that are redeemable for a Big Mac. This would make them a technically more stable currency as they are always have the value of a Big Mac they can be redeemed for.
Keep in mind that the instability of our currency is a *feature*, not a bugâwhen the dollar gets weak, it makes domestic products cheaper for foreign buyers, which naturally encourages investment in our products by foreign trade partners. Essentially, the instability of our currency makes our recessions less bad, and less long-lasting, than they would be if we were backed by gold or if we couldnât print our own money to pay our debts.Â
Thatâs why, for example, Greece is in as bad a situation as it isâthey donât control their own currency (the Euro), which means their currency essentially has a fixed value. Itâs not truly fixed, but it is related to the economy of Europe as a whole rather than to Greece in particular, which means the only way it encourages foreign investment is if all of Europe suffers a recessionâwhich it is terribly unlikely to do outside of a worldwide recession that would prevent it from benefitingâplus what influx they do get from a weak Euro is not to the benefit of a single economy, but distributed amongst multiple separate economies.Â
This is one of the big weaknesses of the EU as a political entityâwhile it has a lot of benefits in terms of encouraging trade and immigration amongst its member states, economically speaking it doesnât go far enough to unify the European economy and therefore actually *weakens* its member states that donât retain their own currency. And despite this, leaving the EU after already having become a member hurts the economy *even more* than joining it in the first place did (see for example how badly Britain is being affected by the clusterfuck that is Brexit).
Thus, Greece was in between Scylla and Charybdis when their economic blunders hit home. They couldnât print their own money to pay their debts, and they also werenât enjoying the benefits of a truly unified European economyâthey were forced to take loans from other Euro-states like Germany who imposed austerity measures as terms of their loans that were *even worse* for their economy. It might be generations before Greece is again a healthy economic entity, and while in large part this was due to mismanagement of their governmentâs spending practices, the reason itâs going to be as long-lasting an effect as it is was because their currency was too stable for them to easily bounce back.
tl;dr: Instability in currency might make the economic highs less high, but it also makes the economic lows a lot less low. The net effect is beneficial.
And yes, Iâm well aware Iâve put far too much effort into a reply to a silly thread about the economic ramifications of hamburger coins. Iâm just passionate about the importance of fiat currency and deflating the âcommon senseâ belief a lot of people have that a currency that has a stable value is superior.
f3mc:
aliens are cool fuck walls