@k8eho i have a friend who does load in/stage set up for venues in manchester and he posted about the ateez concert last year and someone who works for the AO replied complaining that the fans at barricade were "pestering" her for water ??? god forbid they need hydration ๐ญ
no one shows more chronically online behaviour than your friend who despises their job but has no choice but to stay there because the job market is so shitty
@surshless@tsamarel@Kittenfish817 i had a housemate who did the exact same thing!! one time i used the toilet after she'd "cleaned" and she didn't tell any of us she'd just covered the seat in bleach so i ended up with it all over my ass/ top of my thighs and she didn't understand why i was mad ๐
@ArchonAaron after 5 years of playing i only just started doing sumeru dailies because i was trying to get that inazuma quest finished first, i had to give up ๐
this was one of my favourite books as a kid and now i'm trying to be a park ranger and i've kept caterpillars/butterflies ๐ never seen such a lack of joy and whimsy before
Butterflies are some of the most beautiful creatures on earth. Very Hungry Caterpillar somehow portrays them as ugly and horrifying crap. An exposure to nature is meant to inspire children with an exposure to the natural perfection and beauty in God's handiwork that points back toward Him. Ugliness in children's artwork about nature is necessarily nefarious and evil because it degrades the world of nature for children. The purpose is to make them see the world in the same vulgar hateful nihilistic worldview that these vile artists see the world with. They package it as "artform" and tell us that we're not sophisticated if we don't like it. They hand it to children at their tenderest age so that they associate ugliness with the nostalgia for the purity of childhood and can't judge it properly anymore. It's nothing but evil.