This big, 120lb Newfoundland came in for round one today! His name is Oliver. 🥰💞

His coat was shaved. 😭 It changed his coat health, so we are focused on, and dedicated to bringing his coat back to working for him… we want him to have his own temperature regulation system back, we want his coat to have it’s beautiful luster and shine back, and mostly… we want him to feel good again. 🙏✨🐾

#newfoundland #today #working #it #dogs #doglife #dog #days #big #love #dogsofmastodon #dogsofpixelfed

head to head competition
#naked #men #thick #big #cock #bigcock #bigdick #hung
Mark Carney's Liberal tent is getting surprisingly big
During his brief and ill-fated time as leader of the Liberal Party, Michael Ignatieff invited Canadians to join him inside the "big red tent." This appeal obviously did not work out for Ignatieff. But perhaps he was merely ahead of his time.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/carney-gladu-floor-crossing-analysis-9.7156855?cmp=rss

The New Republic | The Disillusioned College Grads Turning to the Labor Movement by Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein

Starting in about 2005, something nearly unthinkable began to happen: The lifetime value of a college degree began to decline. Up until then, and really for quite a while afterward, a degree was considered a smart bet on a person’s future income and prospects. Possessing a college degree (any degree!) generally meant higher income. At the late date of 2013, Barack Obama called higher education an “economic imperative.”

Once upon a time, very few people got college degrees. About 6 percent of the population in 1950 had one (which itself, thanks to the GI Bill, was a remarkable high). College was, at some level, affordable, and by 2010 degree holders received a glorious 75 percent pay bump. And if you didn’t go to college, no sweat: Nondegree holders had plenty of options for work that paid OK, too—for instance, in skilled trades like electrical work or union jobs in hospitality.

Over the years, more and more people went to college, and today more than 50 percent of working-age adults have college degrees. Overall, they still make more money than people without college degrees. But after 2005, the ever-rising prospects for degree holders began to slouch. The job market for grads shrank, wages flatlined or backslid, and college got so expensive that the debt some people took on to get their degree almost permanently ate into their expected windfall. Degree holders had been promised the world, and a vaunted place in the professional or managerial class. Yet five years after graduation, only 55 percent of college graduates were employed in jobs that require a degree, according to a 2024 report. Many ended up working in the service industry. Caught in low-wage, often precarious jobs, some sought to form unions.

Read more: https://newrepublic.com/article/208726/mutiny-review-college-educated-labor-unions

#big-tech #culture #labor #organizedlabor #unions

The Disillusioned College Grads Turning to the Labor Movement

At workplaces from Starbucks to Apple, highly educated downwardly mobile young people are organizing for better conditions.

The New Republic