I have been wondering if people will go back to wearing uncomfortable business clothes once the pandemic ends, or if we've been forever spoiled by a year dressing as slobs.
Apparently there is a compromise:
Similarly, been wondering if longer, shaggier hair will become more normalized/trendier (especially on men) or it will become trendy to crop hair short and sharp as a signal of finally being able to consume services outside the home and break with the covid era.
maybe there will be a compromise on hair, as with the business pajamas, and mullets will be back in fashion
what say you? After the pandemic, the trend will be:
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Where is the "personal responsibility" we've so often heard Republicans prattle on about?
People like Hawley aided and abetted this president. They helped brain-poison the GOP base, lying to them about election conspiracies. They fomented this armed insurrection. Own it.
Seriously. For today's seditious acts, egged on by Trump + GOP leadership, Ted Cruz bizarrely blames Beto O'Rouke. Sarah Palin & Fox anchors blame Antifa. Republican survey respondents blame Joe Biden.
TAKE SOME DAMN RESPONSIBILITY FOR WHAT YOU'VE DONE.
Trump told us, and you, that he'd do this. He literally said "there won’t be a transfer" of power. He said only way he could lose would be if election were rigged against him.
Republicans asked about these comments often refused to directly condemn them. washingtonpost.com/politics/trump…
Arguably the bigger problem is that a lot of recipients *wouldn't* spend the money (whether at Wal-Mart or elsewhere) -- savings for high-income households, many of whom would qualify for some amount of stimulus aid, are already way up. Stim check likely to get saved by them too
The households with a greater marginal propensity to consume are the lower-income ones that suffered an employment loss. Targeting aid to them (through UI, food stamps, direct checks) is not only more humanitarian/fairer; it's also likely to have bigger bang for stimulus buck
Based on the phaseout provisions in the House bill that increases max stimulus payments to $2000/person, a family of five earning up to $350k would get cut a check, per @BudgetHawks. crfb.org/blogs/how-much…
Horses that reportedly got traded today: Repubs demanded tax break for corporate meal expenses ("three martini lunches"). Dems agreed, in exchange for expanded tax credits for low income families & working poor
Pretty much sums up the parties' priorities washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2020…
At a moment when 27.4 million adults — about 13% — report that they sometimes or often didn’t have enough to eat in the last seven days, Republicans demand that the government now subsidize rich people's meals. census.gov/data-tools/dem…
And needless to say, insufficient tax deductibility of business meals hardly seems to be the reason execs aren't going to steakhouses right now. it's covid
Undergraduate enrollment fell 3.6% this fall compared to a year earlier. Massive decline (10.1%) at community colleges, but an increase at private for-profits nscresearchcenter.org/current-term-e…
enrollment of first-time students down an "unprecedented" 13.1%. at community colleges, enrollment of first-time students plummeted an astounding 21% nscresearchcenter.org/wp-content/upl…
Select factoids from their resumes: Rouse previously served as a member of the CEA under Obama. Has done a LOT of work on education (major issue right now obvi). Her paper best covered by popular press tho is probably one about "blind" orchestra auditions
Boushey has done a ton of work on women in the workforce (whose position is more precarious than usual lately, due to covid). For years she's been running the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, which focuses on inequality