| 🔮🔮🔮🔮 | 🔮🔮🔮🔮 |
| pronouns | he/him |
| 🔮🔮🔮🔮 | 🔮🔮🔮🔮 |
| trans rights== | human rights. |
| 🔮🔮🔮🔮 | 🔮🔮🔮🔮 |
| pronouns | he/him |
| 🔮🔮🔮🔮 | 🔮🔮🔮🔮 |
| trans rights== | human rights. |
Fare-free transit just makes sense. We want people on the bus or train instead of driving. So it should be the easy choice. No scrounging for cash or filling up a card, just hop on.
It's more sustainable, it reduces traffic deaths and air pollution, and it makes cities more livable to have fewer cars.
And: there's nothing radical about it. We've got free parking frickin' everywhere even though cities' costs to provide clean well-paved asphalt are far from free.
One of the many reasons we should never go back to 100% in-office working >>
Surge in remote working due to COVID fuels record employment for the disabled https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2022-12-15/long-left-out-of-job-market-people-with-disabilities-reap-benefits-of-covid-19s-teleworking-boom
I’d like to welcome you all to imaginary sandwich theory 301, where we will explore the Unified Bread Field and contemplate both real and imaginary (complex) sandwiches.
We will not only eat bread, but come face to face with the stark truth that the universe contains more potential bread than can ever be imagined—nevermind eaten!
Prof Pumpernickel from the science department gives a guest lecture on Dark Bread, the missing bread that balances the mass of the universe.
Class participation includes a materials fee, please purchase your class bread prior to the first lecture.