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Thessa infinite progress
Thessa infinite progress









thessa infinite progress

As a viewer I heard only the soundtrack, and what they were saying was just for them. And we're part of an abusive society that chases away what is beautiful and transformative about love.Īlso, when I see them on the sunset beach on Jeju Island, I think of a lot of other scenes where their words to each other were private, when they're walking, when they're in nature, when they're alone togehter. But I think that the reason they seem so far away at the ending is that the drama is saying that society really treated them like crap, and so they've had to escape everything they've known, the place they lived, her family that also was a kind of family for him and his sister, her job. I wanted to see more of them being together, too. When he talks with his friend and sister, and she talks with Bo Ra, they each reveal, even unwillingly that they're still very much in love. When she stops packing up her apartment to go yell at him on that rainy night, it's to finish a lover's quarrel. Every moment of coldness, nervousness, inauthenticity, and conflict is them revealing to each other how much they still care. I think that each and every interaction between Joon Hee and Jin Ah starting with his appearance at the wedding is a dance bringing them back together.

thessa infinite progress thessa infinite progress

That moment when she's in the car with the businessman boyfriend and slips out of her seatbelt, out of the car, and walks out on him is like the first brick out of the dam. My impression was that her move to Jeju Island wasn't a financial decision, but that after she sees Joon Hee again, she gradually reevaluates everything in her life, sees that it's killing her, and one by one frees herself from each and every deadening element. Although with Jin Ah, I think it was also a sense that she had tried to change her life and somewhat failed after Joon Hee left - she followed through with the lawsuit (progress), but went back to having a socially acceptable boyfriend who treats her like crap (regression.) She feels that the only way to try again is to get away from her triggers that cause her to regress (break up with her boyfriend, move away from her mom, leave her job.) Seeing Joon Hee again at the wedding reminds her of her fight, even if she doesn't think she can be with him again. I think that's also why she (and Bo Ra) ultimately left the company. So he sacrificed the most visible person, but didn't do anything else. Based on how the President initially responded to the claim, and then the subsequent claims from the other women, it was clear he wasn't invested in making that kind of change. It's realistic because the sexual harassment was so entrenched in the culture of the company that the only way to really stop it would be a complete culture change with pretty drastic action coming from the top. Meaning one person (the VP) got sacrificed to show the company was doing something, but that nothing really changed within the company. If you want to get excited about the future, then this is the book for you.I always thought she won, but (like in the real world) it was an imperfect win. The future of Earth’s inhabitants has never been brighter. We are blooming, not withering, as we leverage the greatest natural resource on the planet: the human mind.” With a rational and researched optimism, Reese sees the future not as a world in a downward spiral, but as destined for progress beyond our imaginations.Īs Reese looks forward, he notes that “we are gaining speed, not winding down. Infinite Progress by Luke Cissell, released 23 December 2014 1. Reese explains how the Internet, human ingenuity, and technological innovation will help us forever end the five historic plagues of human existence: ignorance, disease, poverty, hunger, and war. He then looks forward at the technological changes we know are coming-from genetics, nanotechnology, robotics, and many other fields-and explores how they will vastly increase wealth, prolong our lifespans, redefine human rights, and alter the social fabric of the world. With the art of a storyteller, Reese synthesizes history, technology, and sociology into an exciting, fast-moving narrative that shows how technological change has had dramatic effects on humanity in the past.

#THESSA INFINITE PROGRESS PC#

That parity is really nice for setups like mine if you've got a Series X in the living room and a PC in another room, I can play anywhere I want and it all pulls from the same save. But in this electrifying new book, author Byron Reese debunks the pessimistic outlook as dangerous, and shows instead how technology will soon create a dramatically better world for every person on earth, beyond anything we have dared to imagine. I don't see any reason they wouldn't use the exact same system as MCC for tracking progress. For years we’ve been inundated with bleak forecasts about the future.











Thessa infinite progress