Guaravita é meu pastor e nada me faltará
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Guaravita é meu pastor e nada me faltará
@dualeto
Meu sonho é viver num filme da Sandra Bullock.

Dior’s new Window Displays by artist Alex Chinneck🤯

Mindy Kaling shares the reason behind her ‘scrutinized’ weight loss journey trib.al/3Z2VzME


AGORA: Instagram Plus começa a aparecer para usuários no Brasil. A assinatura vai custar R$ 10/mês e terá uma oferta de 50% de desconto por seis meses.

a coreia do sul tem duas das obras mais populares do mundo falando sobre desigualdade social que é parasita e round 6 kkkkk quem pensa que lá eh só luxo tá bem por fora

Ana Clara teve as mãos decepadas pelo ex e o irmão dele. Passou por 12h de cirurgia em hospital público do Ceará e teve as mãos reimplantadas. Hoje, já mexe os dedos. Enquanto o machismo quase matou Ana, o SUS reconstruiu suas mãos. VIVA O SUS.

eu com 14 anos quando a minha mãe pegou fanfic gay no meu celular

Our new video for Who Will You Follow directed by Jensen Noen is OUT NOW!! Head to the link below to watch! youtu.be/ak4Ti54Y6rY





With AI’s job-killing, human-replacing revolution on the horizon, the unemployment rate for young graduates is already at its highest level since the start of the pandemic — the global scourge that, just six years ago, yanked those same kids out of high school and deferred their first sweet steps out of childhood. One bolt from the blue, then another: It’s enough to make a person think the universe is out to get them. “How one would even start a career now — scarred by the recent past, menaced by a post-human future, and debilitated by early exposure to smartphones — is beyond me,” writes Ryu Spaeth. “Like many others deep into their careers, I’m apprehensive about what is ahead, too.” What advice can you then give the young grad? One school of thought holds that, whatever challenges lie in the future, people will manage to adapt and flourish. That those new to the workforce can become the “author of [their] own professional lives." Spaeth explores what happens when that promise increasingly feels like a lie: nymag.visitlink.me/eRm6Mo

From @WSJopinion: What happens when Europeans find out how poor they are? The Continent trails far behind U.S. economic output. Politics is bound to catch up sooner or later, writes Joseph Sternberg. on.wsj.com/4n5v2Wq




