Somebody's Watching Me - Rockwell (1983)

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Somebody's Watching Me - Rockwell (1983)
chinelão
Baby, you could do a whole lot better, but you could def'nitely do a whole lot worse. How can I even try to do better if you won't give me the chance to be better first?
Incapable of understanding work as patience, churning out boredom, envy and resentment like sausages, has consensual engineering vanquished politics forever? Was Pareto right? Do the phases of History swing back and forth like the oscillations of a pendulum: youth, maturity, decadence, elites succeeding one another like the cycle of thin cows and fat cows, their cadavers accumulating like fossils? Is History just a graveyard of aristocracies, an interminable chronicle of triumphs as ephemeral and derisory as the perpetual pugilism of the Great Natural Banquet in which the species gobble each other up? To the mediocrity of the 'average man', incapable of enthusiasm and wallowing in pluralism (that anaesthetised multiple), we should oppose the anyone [l'homme quelconque], capable of awakening the political gesture that surpasses all routine and every anticipated possibility. For there is a heroism of the anyone, of that anyone who, at once singular and innocent, might be the vehicle of an exception that, as Carl Schmitt says, 'thinks the general with intense passion'
(Gilles Chatelet, To Live and Think Like Pigs, pg. 154-155)
Average Man - Reel Big Fish
Obie Trice - Average Man
Americans have continued to get bigger but not any taller since the turn of the millennium, a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found. According to the report, the average adult American’s weight and waistline have both expanded over the past 18 years, while the average adult’s height has stayed flat if not shrunk a bit.
Food for thought over the holidays! Start by cutting down on sugar.
Americans have continued to get bigger but not any taller since the turn of the millennium, a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found.
Average Adult Man
1999 to 2000: 189.4 pounds, 69.2 inches
2015 to 2016: 197.9 pounds, 69.1 inches
Average Adult Woman
1999 to 2000: 163.8 pounds, 63.8 inches
2015 to 2016: 170.6 pounds, 63.7 inches
Both men and women saw their waistline increase by more than an inch since 1999
Men: 40.2 inch waistline
Women: 38.6 inch waistline.
And obesity continues to be linked to a higher risk of numerous health conditions, particularly type 2 diabetes.
So far, despite some minor successes in preventing child obesity among the very young, there’s no indication that we’re getting any better at tackling the obesity crisis as a whole.