Give him a 5th 😂😂😂 can someone explain the efficacy of multiple lifetime bans? I think it's time to put an ankle monitor that can sense the speed he's traveling.... anything past the average human running speed of 13km/h triggers a visit from police...
He should've studied something a little more lucrative... i.e. being a CEO or International Selling Artist, a masters in Drug Lord? you can't possibly think earning a degree in something like engineering, medicine, or law is enough...
(Sarcasm for those that won't get it)
Yesterday, my Uber driver told me he’s a full time engineer in the GTA. But, due to extremely high living costs, he works all day as an engineer and then all night as an Uber driver. He told me he’s barely scraping by, thanks to school debt and interest rates.
This is insanity.
In ancient Athens, citizens had the annual opportunity to banish individuals they deemed too powerful and a threat to democracy through a process known as Ostracism. The "winner" of this vote would be exiled from Athens for ten years. One notable figure, Aristides, nicknamed "the Just," experienced exile via this process in 482 BC. Aristides was an Athenian statesman acclaimed for his role in the Persian Wars, and the historian Herodotus described him as "the best and most honorable man in Athens."
During the Ostracism vote, an illiterate citizen, unaware of Aristides' identity, asked him to write "Aristides" on his ostracon (a pottery shard used for voting). In response, Aristides inquired if he had been wronged by him, to which the citizen replied, "No, and I do not even know him, but it irritates me to hear him everywhere called 'the Just.'" Surprisingly, Aristides wrote his own name on the ostracon.
While this incident is anecdotal, Aristides' ostracism primarily resulted from his rivalry with Themistocles, who enjoyed immense popularity among poor Athenian citizens due to his humble background as the "man of the people." The philosopher Plutarch suggests that their rivalry began when they both vied for the affections of the same youth, Stesilaus from Ceos.
In 483 BC, the discovery of substantial silver deposits in Athenian mines presented a choice: Themistocles proposed using the silver to bolster Athenian naval power and defeat the Aeginetans, their current adversaries, while Aristides suggested distributing it among the citizens. The ostracism of 482 BC revolved around support for either Themistocles' or Aristides' policies.
With Aristides exiled, Themistocles continued to consolidate power for a decade, but his arrogance led to the ostracism of Themistocles in either 472 or 471 BC.
@DailyLoud it’s really folks walking around RICH as hell, then there’s me.. checking my bank account to see if Apple took their $6 from the 16.24 I got left.
I am excited to welcome Linda Yaccarino as the new CEO of Twitter!
@LindaYacc will focus primarily on business operations, while I focus on product design & new technology.
Looking forward to working with Linda to transform this platform into X, the everything app.