I sincerely doubt that there is a way to determine which behaviours/beliefs are good or bad. I, for example, doubt that I will get a rating of “good” beyond 75% (educated guess).
Meet me on the Internet.
I sincerely doubt that there is a way to determine which behaviours/beliefs are good or bad. I, for example, doubt that I will get a rating of “good” beyond 75% (educated guess).
I think you are correct, I may have mismatched the price tag with the product. Oops.
I linked an imgur post of the back of the packaging. It is made from clear plastic, and the blades are hidden behind black paper.
Here is the clean link: https://www.reddit.com/r/mildlyinfuriating/comments/xfnihd/no_just_no/
Here is how to clean links: https://zapier.com/blog/how-to-clean-urls/
Here is why you should clean links: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/importance-clean-urls-when-sharing-social-media-mary-silva
On that note: https://github.com/AUTplayed/imguralbumbot/blob/master/README.md
I am unconvinced that people / corporations can be neatly sorted into categories “good” or “bad”.
I argue that “good” behaviour is entirely dependent on who is the judge. There are numerous edge cases, for example, “don’t kill people”: one could argue that a company that promotes abstinence is reinforcing sexual shame, which could lead to suicide. Then another can argue that they are promoting degrowth (through abstinence), or even voluntary extinction.
Lastly I want to remind that breaking the notion that sorting people into categories like gender and sex is a similarly bad idea.