Инсталирайте Steam
вход
|
език
Опростен китайски (简体中文)
Традиционен китайски (繁體中文)
Японски (日本語)
Корейски (한국어)
Тайландски (ไทย)
Чешки (Čeština)
Датски (Dansk)
Немски (Deutsch)
Английски (English)
Испански — Испания (Español — España)
Испански — Латинска Америка (Español — Latinoamérica)
Гръцки (Ελληνικά)
Френски (Français)
Италиански (Italiano)
Индонезийски (Bahasa Indonesia)
Унгарски (Magyar)
Холандски (Nederlands)
Норвежки (Norsk)
Полски (Polski)
Португалски (Português)
Бразилски португалски (Português — Brasil)
Румънски (Română)
Руски (Русский)
Финландски (Suomi)
Шведски (Svenska)
Турски (Türkçe)
Виетнамски (Tiếng Việt)
Украински (Українська)
Докладване на проблем с превода
As you stroll through the aisle of your local grocery store and make your way to the bread aisle a thought lingers in your mind, a dreaded thought, the bottom crust.
Once purchased you may feel an obligation to eat the bottom crust or be considered an immature child. Consigned to your fate you eat the bottom crust in subconscious
misery.
As I ate bread recently I questioned why we need the bottom crust. So I followed the bread crumbs and came to this conclusion. During its transportation to grocery stores the bread loaf
needs a certain amount of structural integrity to maintain its shape. Thus the harder/dry bottom crust is needed to ensure its very survival.
In conclusion, the bottom crust of bread serves as a metaphor for wealth inequality. As people at the bottom work hard, those at the top enjoy an easier to chew
lifestyle on the backs of those lower than them. Basically, ♥♥♥♥ Jeff Bezos.
The Travis Scott meal, it's 6 dollars, say Cactus Jack sent you. (Barabababa)