Sleeping on the job is acceptable in japan. It is viewed as exhaustion from working hard. Some people fake it to look committed to their job.
MORE OF WTF FACTS are coming HERE
awesome and fun facts ONLY
I’m moving to Japan!
Sleeping on the job is acceptable in japan. It is viewed as exhaustion from working hard. Some people fake it to look committed to their job.
MORE OF WTF FACTS are coming HERE
awesome and fun facts ONLY
I’m moving to Japan!
Taylor Swift Is Pissed At Amy Poehler And Tina Fey
Taylor Swift lashes out in the April issue of Vanity Fair about being humiliated by Amy Poehler and Tina Fey during the 2013 Golden Globe Awards. In response to Fey and Poehlers jabs about her love life, Taylor told Vanity Fair “There’s a special place in Hell for women who don’t help other women.”
Okay. As somebody who genuinely enjoy’s Taylor Swift’s music (and even finds her to be quite talented), here is my problem with her…
This is a girl who has built a career off of victimizing herself, time and time again. This is a girl who is 23 years old, and publicly mocked her ex-boyfriend at the Grammys in the most childish way ever. This is a girl who wrote an entire song about Camilla Belle being a slut. And yet, when Tina Fey and Amy Poehler crack a joke about her, rather than laugh it off like any normal celebrity would do, she victimizes herself, again. And even worse, shes turning it into an issue of women “supporting” each other .. I’m sorry, but give me a fucking break.
Its one thing to constantly victimize yourself, but its another thing when you constantly slam others (and other women) in your songs, and then try to play the victim when it comes back and bites you in the ass. I’m sorry, but it doesn’t work that way honey.
I probably wouldn’t be as annoyed by this if she stood behind herself and the crap she does, but the fact that she acts as if shes allowed to publicly bash others without anybody bashing her in return is just… stupid.
Suck it up grow a pair, Taylor Swift.
To all the women who quietly made history.
Finally, and this is important: even those women who weren’t inventors and intellectuals, even those women who really did spend all their lives doing stereotypical “women’s work”—they also built this world. The mundane labor of life is what makes everything else possible. Before you can have scientists and engineers and artists, you have to have a whole bunch of people (and it’s usually women) to hold down the basics: to grow and harvest and cook the food, to provide clothes and shelter, to fetch the firewood and the water, to nurture and nurse, to tend and teach. Every single scrap of civilized inventing and dreaming and thinking rides on top of that foundation. Never forget that. (x)