Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Padding

Who did Wired write this article for? My nephew, Nicholas must be between thirteen and fifteen now; I cannot recall his birthday, but what Angela Watercutter does is remind me, equally, that some of you don't know what intake centers like Liberty represent, and my audience doesn't realize that my emotional pain resides in three dimensional space, a segregated space, one that in fact doesn't offer resources according to the definition of the term.

Am I sorry that Laurel Hester died in such piteously graphic detail? Yes, in the sense that hospitals are sad, rigidly controlled environments. Should the partner have received the pension? If we take the larger view, these estate issues become problematic, at least in terms of state civil services. I get shit from no one, essentially, and even if I could lasso a media flagship contract, the big brands are in trouble. You see Time Warner touting a contract in my direction?

This is where the disability center left me, and they should be shuttered because of it, and putting all my energy into it will not change a thing about state public welfare systems being the real big short, and so, in terms of homosexual estate benefits, it is an issue, especially as the more indigent I become, and more suicidal due to it (not quite precise,as it is more an overwhelming despondency: aging, drowning under water) the more it costs those paying into the public maintenance budget. If Hester's pension was corporate, that is private sector, but police benefits are civil. I do not believe the Scotus decision puts this issue to rest, but the movie being adapted from the documentary is too narrow cast. We're not talking about the tragic panorama of Anthony and Cleopatra, with sweeping breadth and scope. Just two lesbians, one sick, one not, in a soft tech agenda article that feels gutted, essentially nothing but a pat on the back for the killing fields of progressive majorities.

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