Glass Onion-Knives Out Mystery (2022)
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Glass Onion-Knives Out Mystery (2022)

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Gandersauce
I'm on a 20+ city book tour for<p>placehold://://er </p> my new novel PICKS AND SHOVELS. Catch me in AUSTIN on MONDAY (Mar 10). I'm also appearing at SXSW and at many events around town, for Creative Commons and Fediverse House. More tour dates here.
It's true that capitalists by and large hate capitalism – given their druthers, entrepreneurs would like to attain a perch from which they get to set prices and wages and need not fear competitors. A market where everything is up for grabs is great – if you're the one doing the grabbing. Less so if you're the one whose profits, customers and workers are being grabbed at.
But while all capitalists hate all capitalism, a specific subset of capitalists really, really hate a specific kind of capitalism. The capitalists who hate capitalism the most are Big Tech bosses, and the capitalism they hate the most is techno-capitalism. Specifically, the techno-capitalism of the first decade of this century – the move fast/break things capitalism, the beg forgiveness, not permission capitalism, the blitzscaling capitalism.
The capitalism tech bosses hate most of all is disruptive capitalism, where a single technological intervention, often made by low-resourced individuals or small groups, can upend whole industries. That kind of disruption is only fun when you're the disruptor, but it's no fun for the disruptees.
Jeff Bezos's founding mantra for Amazon was "your margin is my opportunity." This is a classic disruption story: I'm willing to take a smaller profit than the established players in the industry. My lower prices will let me poach their customers, so I grow quickly and find more opportunities to cut margins but make it up in volume. Bezos described this as a flywheel that would spin faster and faster, rolling up more and more industries. It worked!
https://techcrunch.com/2016/09/10/at-amazon-the-flywheel-effect-drives-innovation/
The point of that flywheel wasn't the low prices, of course. Amazon is a paperclip-maximizing artificial intelligence, and the paperclip it wants to maximize is profits, and the path to maximum profits is to charge infinity dollars for things that cost you zero dollars. Infinite prices and nonexistent wages are Amazon's twin pole-stars. Amazon warehouse workers don't have to be injured at three times the industry average, but maiming workers is cheaper than keeping them in good health. Once Amazon vanquished its competitors and captured the majority of US consumers, it raised prices, and used its market dominance to force everyone else to raise their prices, too. Call it "bezosflation":
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/25/greedflation/#commissar-bezos
Success doesn't teach as many lessons as failure
Jay Samit
I miss all my creature Cas.... 🥺
I have a lot of other fic to work on, but I miss my special little guys, and I decided I will give myself a treat and write about one of them a little bit more! And you get to help me decide which one!
Which creature should I write a timestamp for?
Siren Cas
Octo Cas
Faun Cas
Centaur Cas
Phoenix Cas
Werewolf Cas is not available because he's getting a longfic eventually and I'm making changes to the set up.
(In case you don't know what I'm talking about, HERE is my series of AU creature Cas tied up in various Situations. If you wanna check 'em out.)
"NOTHING IS NORMAL ANYMORE."
Rep. Mohamud Noor: ICE has stopped me in my own neighborhood. They've detained US citizens in front of me while I was begging them to let them go. My kids' schools went into lockdown because ICE was outside. "Nothing is normal anymore."

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Operation Inflation is a grassroots tactic or loose initiative that distributes free inflatable costumes (like oversized cartoon animals) to people at protests, especially at demonstrations against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). These costumes are meant to be whimsical, theatrical and highly visible in media coverage. 
Philosophy and goals:
Narrative disruption and optics: They use absurdity to change what protest imagery “looks like” in the media and social feeds, creating visuals that make militarized force appear disproportionate or ridiculous rather than menacing. This shifts the narrative away from stereotypes of violent protest.
• Deflating tension: The costumes can lower the emotional temperature at demonstrations by inserting playfulness and humor, which may diffuse confrontations and make it harder for officials to portray protestors as a threat. 
• Identity protection and inclusivity: Inflatable suits obscure individual features, offering a degree of anonymity from surveillance technologies and enabling many people to participate without fear of being singled out. 
• Subverting symbols of authoritarian control: By juxtaposing cheerful, exaggerated figures with heavily armed agents or serious protest scenes, the project highlights the contrast between joy and aggressive power structures, making the latter look absurd or out of place. 
In other words, through creative, playful, and absurd imagery, Operation Inflation seeks to undermine rigid, frightening “roles” in protest narratives, making authoritarian symbols look strange or silly, and helping reshape public perception of protests in a more human and less threatening way.
Executive Functions: Cognitive Flexibility & ADHD
People who have good Cognitive Flexibility are able to kind of “go with the flow”. They handle sudden changes in situations or in the environment without a lot of freaking out. Yes, ADHDers have a reputation for being laid-back and easy-going, and great in an emergency. Lots of us end up working in jobs like emergency medicine, after all. So if we say that ADHDers struggle with Cognitive…