Monday, November 27, 2023

ZOE'S EDUCATION

I was bored with college, too easy!  Be your own boss. that's a challenge.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Monday, November 20, 2023

PREDATOR #3

PREDATOR #3 said:   "After what I've done to you and you're still here".  

VICTIM thoughts:  "Why did he say that?  It's like he made sure to fail our relationship.  He has and knows it.  His statement tells, he's a low-life loser and never wins.  He hates me, I'm winning in spite of all his Luciferin droppings.  I guess, I put him in his rightful space called jail".



MY CHRISTMAS PRESENTS 2023

 


IM A LOSER THEY KNOW IT

C_H:  has failed, a well-known leader of mean group begs for pennies.  It shows how the mean group, their bitter horrors are submissive.  The Mean Group's legacy, abandonment, hatred, jealous killers that AI won't  data-tify.  AI thinks, stinky-nasty, won't support.  ALL the other gender are laughin' with each other over their falling down report.  miss_cabbaged_hotdogs








Friday, November 03, 2023

15 MIN DATE




Don't bother, drop the money under the door


ORGASMIC BRAIN


 

Thursday, November 02, 2023

AMERICAS COLLECTIVE PESSIMISM 2023

 the HUSTLE -ONLINE NEWSPAPER


The American economy is fine, but Americans aren’t

Here’s how the US economy looks this week:

  • Good: It’s growing — fast. Last quarter’s 4.9% GDP expansion rate more than doubled the previous quarter’s growth.
  • Good: Median household wealth is way up, with the average family net worth topping $1m for the first time.
  • Good: Hiring was up, layoffs were down, and the unemployment rate has held steady at 3.8%.
  • Good: With inflation falling significantly, the Federal Reserve again decided against raising interest rates (for now).
  • Bad: is still how the populace generally feels things are going, despite all of this.

What gives?

The numbers don’t signal dark economic times, yet — as The Wall Street Journal’s Greg Ip notes — the University of Michigan’s long-running consumer sentiment index stands at “recession-like levels.”

Why? Ip’s theories include:

  • The negative feelings are tied to inflation; even as wages catch up to prices, people still run into sticker shock at grocery stores and gas stations.
  • Good ol’ politics: 57% of Republicans said their personal finances were “excellent” or “good,” but, as is typical when opposing parties occupy the White House, only 5% said the same about the broader economy.
  • Collective pessimism about the economy may just “reflect dissatisfaction with the country as a whole,” lumped in with other sources of tension like crime and foreign wars.

Other factors?

Ip’s theories are sound but don’t tell the whole story — nothing can for a nation of 332m+. A few ideas we’d throw in to explain sour economic feelings:

  • People are living paycheck to paycheck: A whole 62% of American adults are surviving this way.
  • Retirement feels challenging at best: Having a job? Great. Thinking about doing that job every weekday until death? Deflating. A lot of people — 88% of millennials, 91% of Gen Xers, and 86% of boomers — report retirement-saving hurdles.
  • Younger Americans are pissedStarter homes can be unattainable. College and childcare costs are absurd. That “worse off than our parents” feeling is real and festering.

FWIW: Polling on dogs is often informal and limited to “Who’s a good boy/girl?” — but with dog treat purchases down, US pups probably aren’t wagging their tails for the economy either.

ZOE ZANE MATURE FILM STAR