I’m A Goof

I seek sleep
  • rss
  • archive
  • heterophobebucky:

    true friendship

    (via rockboci)

    • 5 years ago
    • 24441 notes
  • geekandmisandry:
“ pidgepitchu:
“ strict-constitutionalist:
“ constitutioncutie:
“ Minimum wage: $7.25
$7.25 x 40 hour full time work week: $290
$290 x 4 weeks per month: $1,160
In every Southern state (didn’t have time to look at the rest of the...

    geekandmisandry:

    pidgepitchu:

    strict-constitutionalist:

    constitutioncutie:

    Minimum wage: $7.25

    $7.25 x 40 hour full time work week: $290

    $290 x 4 weeks per month: $1,160

    In every Southern state (didn’t have time to look at the rest of the country) you can find some sort of studio apartment for around $500 per month, sometimes less than that. Why bother lying about something so easily disproven? 

    Because Bernie Sanders supporters aren’t going to fact check him, and they’ll ignore any contrary evidence that’s presented to them anyways.

    Things like this really tick me off and It’s not political or anything but it’s the fact that you think all that money is there. Here’s what I mean;

    That weekly check comes to, according to you, 290. Most places DO NOT pay for your half hour lunch that is required by law. So your beginning number was wrong. $7.25 x 7.5 hours a day x 5 days a week only gets you $271.88.  Most people in America get paid bi-weekly, so let’s double it to get the budget. $543.75. That’s GROSS, not NET. Out of that comes anywhere between 10% and 15% taxes depending on state so we’ll low ball it at 10%. Automatically down to $489.38 a pay check. Now health insurance. Usually anywhere from 70-100 a pay check for the cheapest plans. Again, we’ll low ball and go $70. So now we have $419.39 a paycheck. x 2  = $839. 

    Eight hundred thirty nine dollars. A MONTH.

    But again, you seem to think that’s fair. So let’s proceed. You say rent is $500? Okay. This person now has $339 left to buy groceries for the whole month, pay utilities, car payment, car insurance, and gas money to get to work. 

    Those are the bare needs. You have to eat. You have to pay for heat, water, garbage removal, gas and or electricity because apartments do not always include things and rarely all of the above. Most cities in America do not have public transportation. Mine doesn’t despite the fact that our population is over 15,000 people, not counting a taxi. If you have a car, you have to pay that. If you have a car, legally you have to have car insurance. You have to pay that. You have to have gas in that car to get to work to make that money.

    Now if you can tell me you can get all of that out of $339 you’re lying.

    You are so focused on rent that you aren’t thinking about everything else people have to pay for. Rent was an example. This is a breakdown of the budget you gave me and it’s not possible to live off that in 2017 America. 

    And BECAUSE this person makes over $800 a month, they probably won’t qualify for financial aid or food stamps. $800 is the line in my state where they won’t help you. No food stamps, financial aid, or government housing if you make more than $800 a month. 

    Why does it bother you that people deserve to live above the poverty line?

    “Lol, Bernie supporters won’t fact check” you didn’t even check yourself.

    (via pomodoko)

    • 5 years ago
    • 334337 notes
  • robinbuckely:

    “Even as we were casting the kids, we were thinking of who to cast as the adults. They had to be great actors, of course. And they really had to look like the kids.”- Barbara Muschietti

    (via yaboybokuto)

    • 5 years ago
    • 5355 notes
  • They Say When you Can’t Hear a Bomb Drop If It’s Right Above You: A Spoiler-Free Bombshell Review

    mrnerdteacher:

    image

    In the very first scene of Bombshell, the audience is walked through the layout of the Fox News Building. We are shown where the studios are in relation to the writer’s room. We get to see the decor of the executive offices and the elevators that lead to them. We are shown such things to establish one very important fact: this script was written with intimate knowledge of what goes on behind the scenes at Fox News.

    And it’s not pretty.

    However, as someone who is STILL getting in intense online arguments defending the all-female Ghostbusters reboot, there was very little chance I was going to dislike a movie about rising up against a system that seeks to objectify women. But what I didn’t expect was how much this movie made me empathize with people on the far right.

    It doesn’t need to be said that this is one of the most polarizing time in our nation’s recent history. But after seeing Bombshell, I am reminded that after Trump eventually leaves office, we will still need to find a way to coexist with the 40% of the country that still loves him. And those people are not Stormtroopers or Nazis or video game villains (despite how they behave at rallies). They are people. People who have DRASTICALLY different values than me, but people who have ups and down, triumphs and tears.

    Early in the movie, Margot Robbie’s fictional news writer Kayla Pospisil defends Fox New’s zealous pandering to the far right as “balancing the national conversation.” That was the first time in my life I ever heard a defense of Fox News that I could actually understand philosophically, even if I didn’t agree with it. Charlize Theron’s surreally accurate portrayal of Megyn Kelly (a woman I grew up hating) made me see her as someone who was intelligent, strong, and willing to fight for her beliefs and her fellow woman. I was even moved by John Lithgow’s revolting performance as sexual abuser Roger Ailes, for while I despised his actions, I couldn’t help but feel a pang of sympathy every time he derided his own slovenly, half-crippled appearance.

    It’s very easy to make an argument against the far right, but it’s tricky to do so without abandoning empathy for them. And that’s why Bombshell is more than one of the best movies I’ve ever seen; it’s also one of the most important.

    FINAL GRADE: A+

    • 5 years ago
    • 53 notes
  • They Say When you Can’t Hear a Bomb Drop If It’s Right Above You: A Spoiler-Free Bombshell Review

    mrnerdteacher:

    image

    In the very first scene of Bombshell, the audience is walked through the layout of the Fox News Building. We are shown where the studios are in relation to the writer’s room. We get to see the decor of the executive offices and the elevators that lead to them. We are shown such things to establish one very important fact: this script was written with intimate knowledge of what goes on behind the scenes at Fox News.

    And it’s not pretty.

    However, as someone who is STILL getting in intense online arguments defending the all-female Ghostbusters reboot, there was very little chance I was going to dislike a movie about rising up against a system that seeks to objectify women. But what I didn’t expect was how much this movie made me empathize with people on the far right.

    It doesn’t need to be said that this is one of the most polarizing time in our nation’s recent history. But after seeing Bombshell, I am reminded that after Trump eventually leaves office, we will still need to find a way to coexist with the 40% of the country that still loves him. And those people are not Stormtroopers or Nazis or video game villains (despite how they behave at rallies). They are people. People who have DRASTICALLY different values than me, but people who have ups and down, triumphs and tears.

    Early in the movie, Margot Robbie’s fictional news writer Kayla Pospisil defends Fox New’s zealous pandering to the far right as “balancing the national conversation.” That was the first time in my life I ever heard a defense of Fox News that I could actually understand philosophically, even if I didn’t agree with it. Charlize Theron’s surreally accurate portrayal of Megyn Kelly (a woman I grew up hating) made me see her as someone who was intelligent, strong, and willing to fight for her beliefs and her fellow woman. I was even moved by John Lithgow’s revolting performance as sexual abuser Roger Ailes, for while I despised his actions, I couldn’t help but feel a pang of sympathy every time he derided his own slovenly, half-crippled appearance.

    It’s very easy to make an argument against the far right, but it’s tricky to do so without abandoning empathy for them. And that’s why Bombshell is more than one of the best movies I’ve ever seen; it’s also one of the most important.

    FINAL GRADE: A+

    • 5 years ago
    • 53 notes
  • chickpeamcb:
“angery.png
”

    chickpeamcb:

    angery.png

    • 5 years ago
    • 694 notes
  • sadgreencloud:

    follow your own path, wherever that takes you.

    Keep reading

    • 5 years ago
    • 3139 notes
  • retrogamingblog:

    GBA memories by LeapHere

    • 5 years ago
    • 9905 notes
  • nobodyanybody0:

    There’s been asks about my color tutorial / process

    but, really, not much to say…it’s similar the way I paint oil paintings

    (via nbgpart-deactivated20220811)

    • 5 years ago
    • 2081 notes
  • calmao666:

    ´´We are in WAR
    Against a powerful enemy
    Relentless
    That does not respect anything or anyone
    Who is willing to use violence and crime without any limits. Even when it means the loss of human lives
    Who are willing to burn hospitals, subway stations and supermarkets
    With the sole purpose of producing as much damage as possible to all Chileans
    They are at WAR with all Chileans of good will that we want to live in democracy, with freedom and in peace.“

    - President Sebastian Piñera; 21-10-19 -

    NO ESTAMOS EN GUERRA 

    that our own president has declared such words against his own country denotes the disconnection of this government with his people.

    WE DEMAND BASIC HUMAN RIGHTS, WE DEMAND DIGNIFY LIFE

    WE DEMAND TO BE HEARD, WE DEMAND NO MORE LIES

    summary of what’s happening in Chile

    • 5 years ago
    • 3824 notes
© 2013–2025 I’m A Goof
Next page
  • Page 1 / 90