risha-bree
RishaBree
risha-bree

Now I’m not accusing the writers of being pro-genocide. But its getting to a point where ‘its a warning’ is starting to look like ‘the X-Men exist so writers can commit genocide, but its ok cause we’ll bring them back for the next set of writers to do it all over again’.

Yeah, to be honest. That.

This is one of those storylines I just look at and go... jeez, that doesn’t seem very enjoyable for anyone.

I think Xavier having his beliefs properly challenged is good, but I think there’s a million more interesting ways to do that than ‘hoho what if he killed everyone’

Marvel’s obsession with committing genocide over and over again is more than a bit unsettling at this point. With how often its come up its seeming like the message that Marvel is trying to send is less ‘genocide bad’ more ‘minorities aren’t allowed nice things and if you start to get happy we’ll kill you all off’.

Respectfully, not quite. Just this past week I sent an email in which multiple people were copied (including some who were originally in the list and had been removed by one participant who didn’t want certain others to see their reply), and identified at the end of my direct response that particular person (using the

The most savage is using that and then cc’ing a bunch of other people who were not on the original email. 

Same on all counts.

Along with all manner of biblical sign-offs: God Bless, Blessings, Be blessed, and His peace be upon you (yes, I got that one once). None of these belong in work e-mails.

I’m pretty sure the most savage way to start an email is “Per my last email...”

Can we all agree that ending emails with a biblical quote or a gif of your favorite sport team is completely inappropriate in all work settings?

Every bathroom should have a ventilator fan, regardless of the presence of a window. Windows aren’t always good at venting a steamy bathroom. Or you may not want to open that window to the conditions outside.

I’d love to know what prompted this article.  Before the pandemic I was part of a group that went to a new restaurant monthly, so I knew a ton of foodies.  Most of us wouldn’t have dreamed of going to a restaurant nicer than Chipotle without making a reservation. 

The article also seems to if anything make an argument against reservations in certain circumstances, if it’s considered bad etiquette to make one and then only order drinks and apps. Which seems silly to me (no one would say it’s bad etiquette to make a reservation just to order the cheapest entree and no alcohol,

Also, I’ve never heard of the idea of reservations being “old-fashioned” from the customer side. If anything the more common situation I’ve found is where I want to make a reservation, but the restaurant isn’t doing them. Which I can understand if they for whatever reason aren’t signed up for services that require a

So what is the counter argument? Who out there is saying “you know, dinner reservations are a bad idea for the restaurant/servers/patrons”?

99% of the people worrying about sunscreen are doing so specifically because they’re in a situation where covering up where more clothes isn’t really practical - long sleeves and pants aren’t what most people want to wear to the beach or swimming pool. Also, a lot of people want to go outside specifically because of

It tastes awful if it gets in your mouth.”

prices can only go up from here everyone says before 2008.

“Just remember that there’s no such thing as a bubble.”

I’m going to assume the dog in the pic got an egg because you are not a monster.

devilled eggs are just egg salad that knows how to keep their shit together.