I'm about to blow your mind with the best Cyber Monday deal of the entire day. Honestly, this deal is better than most of the Cyber Monday deals I've seen, and all the Black Friday deals from last week combined. It almost makes me think Amazon made a mistake, but they didn't (I don't think): Dickies 874 Work Pants are on sale for 15 bucks today. Reread that, if you need to. Dickies for 15 bucks! For Cyber Monday, Amazon has marked down the 874s by 50%, so today, you can buy Dickies for less than your lunch. |
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This rare discount is selling fast. |
| An unheard of deal that'll be gone by the end of the day. |
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Donald Trump won the 2020 election," Steve Bannon pronounces. "Of that there is not even a question." Obviously you expect me not to agree with you, I say. "Of course I expect you not to agree with me," he says. "And I'm also not looking for you to agree with me. And I also don't give a fuck who in the mainstream media agrees or disagrees with me." And so off we go—about this and about Covid (the Bannon view: "It's 100 percent a bioweapon—fucking not even a question") and about vaccines ("I would never in ten million years get this vaccine," Bannon says, and asks if I would; I simply hand him my vax card, which he looks at with apparent amazement: "I've never . . .") and about what I view—but naturally Bannon doesn't—as his incessant anti-Semitic dog-whistling. At one point, he rhapsodizes about the range of information available to people these days. Or misinformation, I say. |
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Naturally, Bezos makes up his own rules. |
| Blueair never has deals this good. |
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Today's students, it seems, are never not thinking about money. Lynn Steger Strong, whose novel Want is a precarity novel set in the world of academia, said that her students at Columbia and Princeton "are so aware of the ways that this won't work"—this being the occupation of writing. "There is a level of fear in the world right now that's so intense," she continued. She herself thinks of the campus as an "endlessly precarious place" where students are fighting for a prosperous future as contingent laborers (think: adjuncts) are always fighting for another semester of employment. "I love my job," she said. "It's hard to fully be inside of that love when you're constantly aware of the fact that it might disappear." |
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