The Honk pill (Clown World)

MartyMcFly

Pelican
Other Christian
They say: Study hard, don't sleep, fight for your dreams, prove who you are, work harder, believe in your potential, strive always to achieve the corporation goals, be a nice team player, comply ...
Clown world reality:
View attachment 41371
Originally from twitter.com/lporiginalg
Did anybody here in this forum try such a tactic to improve your chances of being hired? If so, did it work? I remember a co-worker suggesting to state you are Hispanic to improve your chances of being hired. I never thought of the idea of stating you are a tranny or homosexual on a cover letter would be appropriate or even helpful.
 

muscacav

Robin
Other Christian
Did anybody here in this forum try such a tactic to improve your chances of being hired? If so, did it work? I remember a co-worker suggesting to state you are Hispanic to improve your chances of being hired. I never thought of the idea of stating you are a tranny or homosexual on a cover letter would be appropriate or even helpful.
Dude got his resume accepted after resubmitting it as a lesbian.
 

MartyMcFly

Pelican
Other Christian
Dude got his resume accepted after resubmitting it as a lesbian.
This reminds me of a classic movie that a lot of woke people whine about even though it shows how clownish things are and were even in 1986.

The nice thing about stating you are pansexual or bisexual on a resume is that it won't be noticeable when you are being interviewed. The interviewer likely won't even discuss it, but it covers the diversity requirements so you can get the job. Pretending to be transsexual might be harder in the interview. Maybe this movie can be remade for modern times.

1322Soul_Man.jpg
 

budoslavic

Eagle
Orthodox
Gold Member
05de1bac41675fb1.jpeg


ff43e5886f61d243.jpeg
 

MartyMcFly

Pelican
Other Christian
Huge ads should never be placed on attractive buildings. In modern ugly areas like Times Square, they are not so bad. Even a normal ad would be tasteless here.

I also am not a fan of foreigners being on ads. In China, I want to see Chinese people in ads. In France, I want to see real French people (2nd generation migrants from Niger are not French). In Nigeria, I want to see Nigerians in ads and so on. Globalization is killing cultures.
 

Brother Abdul Majeed

Kingfisher
Catholic
Gold Member
I'm not so sure. I'm striving to be a fat black unhealthy lesbian. It's totally possible these days. With my intelligence and skillset, my brave and stunning new identity will certainly land me a $150,000.00 salary at some large corporation as the VP of one or another human resources department. I can get by on that salary, and the Starbucks coffee and muffins every morning will just be an additional perk.
 

muscacav

Robin
Other Christian
I'm not so sure. I'm striving to be a fat black unhealthy lesbian. It's totally possible these days. With my intelligence and skillset, my brave and stunning new identity will certainly land me a $150,000.00 salary at some large corporation as the VP of one or another human resources department. I can get by on that salary, and the Starbucks coffee and muffins every morning will just be an additional perk.
As long as your company can be financed by a ESG hedge fund, you core bussiness doesn't matter anymore.
32acc26c-142c-4358-bc16-38af7f56af53.jpeg
 

muscacav

Robin
Other Christian

From Ted Kazyncski's manifesto:
20. Notice the masochistic tendency of leftist tactics. Leftists protest by lying down in front of vehicles, they intentionally provoke police or racists to abuse them, etc. These tactics may often be effective, but many leftists use them not as a means to an end but because they PREFER masochistic tactics. Self-hatred is a leftist trait.
 

budoslavic

Eagle
Orthodox
Gold Member
amanda-trenfield-book.jpg


Mom left husband of 14 years for ‘soul mate’ — only to be rejected​

It takes two souls to tango.

A mom of two has been mocked on social media after revealing she left her longtime husband for a man she believed to be her “soul mate” — only for him to promptly reject her.

Amanda Trenfield has been described by critics as a “self-destructive sociopath” for writing about the emotional saga in her new book, “When A Soulmate Says No.”

An excerpt from the tome, published in the Sydney Morning Herald last week, sparked ridicule from readers who claimed the rejection was karma for the fact she had blown up her own marriage.

“She ruined her life for nothing! One of the biggest losses we’ve ever seen,” one reader quipped with glee.

In the extract, Trenfield describes an electric encounter with her so-called soul mate, which occurred while she was at a dinner party with her husband.

“As I settled into my seat, I looked up and immediately lost my breath,” Trenfield wrote. “When our eyes met there was an instant familiarity that ran deeper than water-cooler chat. These eyes had locked before. Twelve years earlier. His name was Jason. I hadn’t forgotten.”

Trenfield did not explain the circumstances under which she previously met Jason, but said that she felt an immediate attraction and soon struck up a conversation with him.

“Over the course of the evening, my attraction to Jason developed. I soon became aware of his every breath and I unconsciously mirrored his pace,” Trenfield swooned. “I caught myself, embarrassingly, looking at his chest through his slim-fitted white evening shirt. Yes, he had a fit, toned and attractive body, but was it his chest I was drawn to?”

The pair continued to drink and talk into the night, with the author insisting that her attraction to Jason only intensified as the hours went by.

“By the time the group left the restaurant late in the evening, all my senses were on high alert. It was abundantly clear that the energy between Jason and me was somehow charged,” Trenfield alleged.

The pair ended the evening with a hug, as Trenfield whispered into Jason’s ear: “This isn’t over, I need to see you again.”

“I had never felt anything like this before. I had never experienced this sensation,” she gushed. “I now know without hesitation, without question, without any doubt in my mind, my body or my heart, that the energy we experienced that evening was our souls connecting. I left [the dinner party] a different woman.”

The author continued to coo over the intoxicating experience with Jason, writing: “I knew in my heart, in my soul, in the very fabric of my being that I had profoundly changed. I couldn’t articulate the feelings, the sensations, the experience. The connectedness I experienced with Jason was at a level impossible to describe. All I knew for certain was that this one encounter, in the most unlikely of places, under the most unusual of circumstances, had dramatically altered my life.”

Less than a month later, Trenfield ended her 14-year marriage with her husband, despite not having had any further communication with Jason since the night of the dinner party.

“The woman who had always been so careful, so planned, so organized and so clear about the path her life would take, had just made the most dramatic decision of her life, one affecting those dearest to her — her family,” Trenfield candidly wrote.

In spite of her memoir’s title, the passage printed in the Australian newspaper ended on a cliffhanger — and left out the part where Trenfield gets rejected by Jason.

The piece quickly went viral on Twitter, with many seeming to enjoy the prospect of Trenfield’s heartbreak.

“Of course [the soul mate] said no! She ghosted her husband after one night! I’d be afraid of dating someone with no object permanence, too,” one theorized.

“Lady your kids will read this one day and will know that you blew up the family because you got too horny on shiraz,” another sniped, telling Trenfield she should not have published such a shameless account.

However, the author also had a small number of supporters, who commended her for writing her emotional truth.

“She actually didn’t ‘ruin’ her life for nothing,” one defender wrote. “She left a marriage that most likely needed to end, otherwise she wouldn’t have been swayed by another. It looks like she’s happy & making the best of the situation. Her ex-husband is probably happier too. Sounds like a win.”

Trenfield has not publicly responded to the controversy the excerpt had caused.

She reportedly now works as a “life coach” and does not appear to have reconciled with her ex-husband.
 

rouchno1fan

Robin
Orthodox Inquirer
"Soul mate" is just a feel good term for extreme lust. That's all that story is about: she felt lust for a man who isn't her husband, and instead of calling it what it is (a sin that needs to be corrected), she blew up her family in pursuit of it. There is a reason why lust is a major sin. Everyone embraces it these days.
Yes I agree. In this case it might be fiction anyway, just to flog some stupid book.
 
Top