Also that's weird. A lot of people - half of which are women - just love to talk, and basically you only have to occasionally remind them that you are paying attention.
Person: blah blah blah for ten minutes, pauses for 2 seconds
Me: "Oh really? That's crazy. Did he ask you about it later?"
Person: blah blah blah
Honestly I love this because basically everybody has some unique and interesting things about them that you will learn if you just let them go...
A news article consisting almost entirely of embedded Twitter posts, which my browser blocks by default and which I don't really want to click through to.
Will businesses be able to trust that he won't just apply them again if he has a bad hair day? Even if they did, I can imagine that lower costs for companies would just be used to increase profits, not lower prices.
The only time that I experienced genuine dislike for my nationality was when I told a Serbian person at a training that I was giving that I'm American. I think that feelings run deeper when your home has been bombed or invaded or similar by another country.
My father in law has no time for Germans, which I kind of get since he is a Dutch Jew and half of his family was killed during the German occupation of the Netherlands.
I find this trend to disregard every action as "not enough to matter" to be tiring.
Unless such a reply contains specific actions to take in place of what is reported, then I basically consider them propaganda for the existing powers to encourage further inaction.
Well, if I'm on the aisle I want to signal to the other passengers that I will be leaving promptly, and also to people behind me that I'm going to go as soon as my row is ready.
Governments can innovate, and indeed can do so more efficiently than corporations, since they do not need profits.
I assume you're reading this on the Internet, if you need an example.