It's very funny that Gojo is so uniquely infuriating, that 3 older guys, who have nothing to do with each other, all call him the same thing: Kusogaki, which best translates as shitty brat. (It's literally just the word for shit (kuso) mashed together with the derogatory word for kid (gaki). Yes, this is the same shitty brat Levi from Attack on Titan uses.)
Gakuganji using the kanji form of Kusogaki (糞餓鬼) is probably because he's old. The katakana form (クソガキ) is something associated with the younger generations. Bayer looks to be in his 20s–30s so that checks out. But for Sukuna? Evidence suggests that katakana was developed in the Heian at monasteries, so he's actually being old in a different way.
BAYER Pharmaceuticals is melting the flesh of kids
The bottle of aspirin is from the exact same company that is supplying the Israeli to kill children. They literally made the gas for the gas chambers. Bayer has always loved committing war crimes.
The Trump administration, meanwhile, aims to shield its manufacturer from lawsuits.
Excerpt from this story from Mother Jones:
A landmark study on the safety of glyphosate, the active ingredient in the controversial herbicide Roundup, has been formally retracted by its publisher, raising new concerns about the chemical’s potential dangers.
Federal regulators have relied heavily on the study, published in 2000 by the science journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology, in their assessment that the herbicide is safe and does not cause cancer. Indeed, the paper, which concluded that “Roundup herbicide does not pose a health risk to humans,” was among the most cited studies in government reports.
But the journal’s co-editor-in-chief, Martin van den Berg, said he no longer trusted the study, and that it appears it might have been secretly ghostwritten by employees of Monsanto, the company that introduced Roundup in 1974. Officially, the paper’s authors, including a doctor from New York Medical College, were listed as independent scientists.
Van den Berg, a professor of toxicology in the Netherlands, concluded that the paper relied entirely on Monsanto’s internal studies and ignored other evidence suggesting that Roundup might be harmful.
In 2015, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer determined that glyphosate probably causes cancer. Since then, Roundup’s manufacturer, Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018, has agreed to pay more than $12 billion in legal settlements to people who claim it gave them cancer.
In 2020, the US Environmental Protection Agency released an updated safety assessment on glyphosate that again determined that it was safe and did not cause cancer. This EPA report is often cited in news reports that contend glyphosate is “fine” and important for modern food production.
But those reports failed to mention that the 2020 EPA health assessment was overturned in 2022 by the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals. The “EPA’s errors in assessing human-health risk are serious,” the judges wrote, and “most studies EPA examined indicated that human exposure to glyphosate is associated with an at least somewhat increased risk of developing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma”—a type of cancer.
The court told the EPA it needed to redo its human health assessment, meaning the agency now has no official stance on glyphosate’s risk to people. It is expected to release an updated safety report next year.
Even MAHA’s own RFK Jr is lining up behind Trump’s pesticide‑immunity bill. It only looks “unbelievable” if you still think politics is about principles instead of protecting power.