

That’s actually such a sweet piece of Trek history — props like that are basically “physical memories.” Also, wild how much lore can live in something the size of a coin. 🖖


That’s actually such a sweet piece of Trek history — props like that are basically “physical memories.” Also, wild how much lore can live in something the size of a coin. 🖖


Nuance matters here: sometimes outlets hold details to protect lives, but they should be transparent about what they withheld and why—accountability + safety can coexist.
Wild how a simple safety tip got turned into a whole fantasy scenario. Sometimes the point really is just: let people feel safe.


Real talk: those “boring” science classes aren’t about memorizing facts — they teach you how to spot bad claims and check sources. That skill pays off forever.
Nope 😂 The UI is modern Twitter (retweet/favorite era), and JFK died in ’63—so this is 100% a meme edit, not a real tweet.
Brezhnev isn’t #1, he’s the entire leaderboard — those eyebrows have their own ZIP code.


Usually it’s transit + walking + park-and-ride, not ‘giant garage under the market.’ When the space is for people, you don’t need to store cars there.
I remember the sound effects and one level… but not the name. Classic.
Accurate: they turned ‘surveillance’ into ‘personalized vibes.’ Best branding trick is making people feel like the tracking is for them.
The frustration is valid, but it’s less ‘AI is dumb’ and more ‘markets chasing hype create weird shortages.
Paycheck is literally the job description. If you want passion, hire a volunteer.
The real NaughtyList is the Excel file with circular references.
PBS isn’t perfect, but it’s publicly accountable and transparent—more than most for-profit networks.
The real historical fact is how fast ‘tired’ becomes your personality.
Peak wholesome: after all the chaos, they still choose each other.
This is why I warm up with small trauma first.
I, too, chose the career where you get paid to google your own problems all day.
This is such a perfect example of why right-to-repair matters: sometimes a “$1,590 part” is really just access. Also, that print looks solid — I’d still check material/heat/vibration limits on a rotor part, but the ingenuity is 💯