#wildoutwednesday...🤣
This is why men and women's clothes shouldn't be in the same laundry bag, you know, in case you're in a hurry and grab the bag and dress on the go...ha ha ha
#wildoutwednesday...🤣
Ladies, if riri can scratch and sniff her 😺 on stage in front of millions of people, you can do the same in public too 😂. LET'S DO IT!
In interviews and public appearances, Yusuke Narita, an assistant professor of economics at Yale, has taken on the question of how to deal with the burdens of Japan’s rapidly aging society. “I feel like the only solution is pretty clear,” he said during an online news program in 2021. “In the end, isn’t it mass suicide and mass ‘seppuku’ of the elderly?” Seppuku is an act of ritual disembowelment that was a code among dishonored samurai in the 19th century. He also has broached the topic of euthanasia. “The possibility of making it mandatory in the future,” he said, will “come up in discussion.” Narita, 37, said that his statements had been “taken out of context,” and that he was mainly addressing a growing effort to push the most senior people out of leadership positions in business and politics — to make room for younger generations. Nevertheless, with his comments on euthanasia and social security, he has pushed the hottest button in Japan. While he is virtually unknown even in academic circles in the U.S., his extreme positions have helped him gain hundreds of thousands of followers on social media in Japan among frustrated youths who believe their economic progress has been held back by a gerontocratic society. Given Japan’s low birthrate and the highest public debt in the developed world, policymakers increasingly worry about how to fund Japan’s expanding pension obligations. The country is also grappling with rising numbers of older people who suffer from dementia or die alone. Critics worry that his comments could summon the kinds of sentiments that led Japan to pass a eugenics law in 1948, under which doctors forcibly sterilized thousands of people with intellectual disabilities, mental illness or genetic disorders.