- Jul 20, 2009
- 64,966
- 196,178
Enough is enough
Oatmeal cookies are trash. If you like oatmeal cookies then you must still have carpet in your house. Complete poverty
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Enough is enough
Oatmeal cookies are trash. If you like oatmeal cookies then you must still have carpet in your house. Complete poverty
Probably wearing shoes inside to walk on those carpets too.Oatmeal cookies are trash. If you like oatmeal cookies then you must still have carpet in your house. Complete poverty
Fridge, oven, microwave and dishwasher don’t even match.Probably wearing shoes inside to walk on those carpets too.
I don't want to start a war in here, but I bet they also have popcorn ceilings and a walled off kitchen where they make their instant coffee.
Stopped respecting bothDelk and Rusty have something in common Just over 48 hours and Biden is making unimaginable unity happen in the country
Bezos and Amazon rich as **** with no signs of slowing down ever, no reason they can't have a union.
Fridge, oven, microwave and dishwasher don’t even match.
Homeless >
Probably wearing shoes inside to walk on those carpets too.
that’s me, stainless fridge, beige oven and a 30 year old dishwasher.
my kitchen is trash.
Jeff might as well be livin in a bando
Drawing on decades of economic research, Why Nations Fail argues that political institutions — not culture, natural resources or geography — explain why some nations have gotten rich while others remain poor. A good example is North Korea and South Korea. Eighty years ago, the two were virtually indistinguishable. But after a civil war, North Korea turned to communism, while South Korea embraced markets and, eventually, democracy. The authors argue that South Korea's institutions are the clear reason that it has grown insanely more rich than North Korea.
Nations like South Korea have what Acemoglu and Robinson call "inclusive institutions," such as representative legislatures, good public schools, open markets and strong patent systems. Inclusive institutions educate their populations. They invest in infrastructure. They fight poverty and disease. They encourage innovation. They are far different from the "extractive institutions" found in countries like North Korea, Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, where small groups of elites use state power for their own ends and prosper through corruption, rent-seeking or brutally forcing people to work.
that’s me, stainless fridge, beige oven and a 30 year old dishwasher.
my kitchen is trash.
Stop stalling and get this done with
Are you saying your appliances don't have custom paneling to match your cabinets?that’s me, stainless fridge, beige oven and a 30 year old dishwasher.
my kitchen is trash.
Are you saying your appliances don't have custom paneling to match your cabinets?
(I've lived most of my adult life without a dishwasher and using a stack of microwaves as a makeshift island because I had no counter space)