There’s a Russian phrase: “I’m not a dollar to be liked by everyone.”
But these days, even the dollar isn’t that popular.
Will this turn sarcastic now?
What’s still universally liked?
Maybe: “I’m not free Wi-Fi to connect with everyone.”
“AttenshYON, Passenzhers!” The PA screamed in a thick Slavic bark, echoing off yellow tiles and rat‑chewed rails. Two seconds earlier my friend and I were just waiting for a train; now he was convinced the Soviets had taken over the New York subway ... want to read it?
In truth, it feels like one of those empty phrases — a bit of marketing fluff, meant to flatter more than say anything real.
Maybe it’s just me. Maybe it’s a language barrier thing. Or maybe I’m just allergic to hollowness in words that try to sound deep but say nothing at all.
That's an interesting oxymoron — 'emotionally intelligent.' Intelligence is usually tied to reason, detachment, and logic; emotion is fluid, volatile, deeply human. Put them together, and you're not especially intelligent or especially emotional — you're just... regular.
@realDonaldTrump Bad tattoos can be evidence only in the court of public opinion, in the actual courtroom you have to provide evidence connecting this person to the Gans, tattoo is circumstantial at best.