Santos is one of the oldest and most popular festivities in Lisbon.
Interestingly enough, it has fully embraced AI-generated illustrations.
Tbh, AI slop x local festival kinda works well 👀
Santos is one of the oldest and most popular festivities in Lisbon.
Interestingly enough, it has fully embraced AI-generated illustrations.
Tbh, AI slop x local festival kinda works well 👀
Italian efficiency when it comes to coffee should be studied.
In Italy:
- Walk into a bar and look at the guy
- Un caffe
- 30 seconds later it’s ready
- Shoot it
- Leave €1
- Walk out
In the US:
- Join a line
- Wait
- Order coffee
- Answer 12 questions: Size? Milk? Roast? Sugar? Temperature? Colombia beans? Name? How do you spell it?
- $12.34
- Ask for a 20% tip. Click 5 times on a ipad to have a custom tip
- Tap phone
- ask where to send the invoice
- Wait again on a different line
- Someone call a name that sounds similar to mine
- get the coffee
- too hot, can't drink it
- finally at temperature
taste like shit
Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth. #ApostolicJourney#Cameroon https://t.co/bKteFZ3iWE
The scandal over this photo perfectly reflects so many accusations of antisemitism.
In this case, a photo captures exactly how a settler looks, and the magazine is condemned as antisemitic because his appearance supposedly is identical to “caricatures.”
Meanwhile, when criticizing Israel, you can accurately describe exactly what it does with extensive sources and proof, and they call you hateful because the actions may align with antisemitic “tropes.”
Instead of condemning Israel for manifesting the worst antisemitic stereotypes, they say doing so is hateful.
Reality is antisemitic to them because it does not align with the Jewish supremacist worldview they have been propagating their whole lives.
https://t.co/XA9bXJJ0Yl
I am in Bali now for 2 weeks …. And I’m too old for this place.
The crowd is easy to spot.
Yoga mats. Linen bags. Tattoos.
Matcha to go.
Scooters. No helmet. No shirt.
It’s almost a UNIFORM/ BRAND of
the consciously awakened nomad, spiritually aligned,
recently escaped from the 9–5 pressure of the West.
Three months in Bali. Sometimes more.
Living well on prices they’d complain about back home.
Sitting in cafés, MacBooks open,
talking about healing, spirituality, the next cacao ceremony.
And how much they LOVE this island.
Sure you do.
You love your photos.
The aesthetic.
The affordable “healthy lifestyle”…. bowls, matcha, sunlight.
But DO YOU actually love Bali?
Because loving a place isn’t just consuming what’s beautiful.
It’s taking responsibility for what isn’t.
And the other Bali exists too….
trash in the streets,
sick street dogs, stray cats,
the parts that don’t fit your feed.
They don’t disappear just because you crop them out.
So here’s a thought:
Skip one smoothie. One.
And donate that money to the people actually doing the work here…
cleaning up what your version of Bali ignores.
Or at least BE HONEST.
You don’t love Bali.
You love the version of it that looks good on your social media feed.
GenZ daily routine:
- Wake up
- Stare at 6.7 inch screen
- Work on a 16 inch screen
- Relax with a 55 inch screen
- Stare at 6.7 inch screen
- Sleep
Repeat
HVAC, electrician and plumber professionals calling their high school buddies who spent the past 10 years as a software engineer and repeatedly told them “learn how to code”: