#factor four
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
How LiveGood Supplements Transformed Melissa Ray’s Battle with Chronic Pain and Insomnia
After years of chronic pain and sleepless nights, Melissa Ray found relief with LiveGood supplements. Her emotional journey is proof that healing is possible. Read her story and start your journey today!
Melissa Ray’s Inspiring Journey: Finding Relief from Chronic Pain and Insomnia with LiveGood Supplements Living with chronic pain and insomnia can feel like an endless uphill battle. For Melissa Ray, this struggle was all too real. Years of debilitating pain and sleepless nights had left her exhausted. Countless failed remedies left her drained both physically and emotionally. But in her search…
#better sleep naturally#chronic pain relief#chronic pain support#factor four#health transformation#holistic wellness#inflammation relief#livegood supplements#livegood testimonial#magnesium for sleep#natural pain relief#organic cbd oil
0 notes
Text
factor of four
#osc#bfdi#bfb#donut bfb#bfb donut#four bfb#bfb four#4 bfb#bfb 4#GOD i hate tagging bfdi characters SPECIFICALLY. AUGH#factor of four#snail scribblezz
286 notes
·
View notes
Text

[X Factor (2006) #49 / X Factor #198]
#x men#xmen#x factor#fantastic four#fantastic 4#scott summers#cyclops#cyclops xmen#dr doom#doctor doom#victor von doom#marvel#comics
98 notes
·
View notes
Text






























Rest in peace, Peter David....
Peter David had written a lot of comics and books over the years. Since this Tumblr has the limit of having 30 images, I have to include some of the Marvel comics he wrote for this post.
The long list of the comics he wrote are under the cut.
COMICS
Action Comics Weekly #608–620 (Green Lantern serial; #615, 619–620, plot with Richard Howell) (1988)
The Phantom #1–4 (1988)
Justice #15–32 (1988–1989)
Dreadstar #41–64 (1989–1991)
Creepy: The Limited Series #1–4 (1992)
Sachs and Violens #1–4 (1993)
Captain America Drug War (1994)
Dreadstar #0.5, 1–6 (1994)
DC vs. Marvel (#2 and #4 only) (1996)
Heroes Reborn: The Return #1–4 (1997)
Babylon 5: In Valen's Name (with J. Michael Straczynski), DC Comics, 1998. ISBN 185286981X
Powerpuff Girls: Hide and Go Mojo (2002) ISBN 0-439-33249-4
The Haunted #1–4 (2002)
The Haunted: Gray Matters #1 (2002)
Red Sonja vs. Thulsa Doom #1–4 (with Luke Lieberman and Will Conrad), Dynamite Entertainment, 2006. ISBN 1-933305-96-7
Spike: Old Times (with Scott Tipton and Fernando Goni), IDW Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1-60010-030-9
Spike vs. Dracula #1–5 (with Joe Corroney and Mike Ratera), IDW Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1-60010-012-0
Wonder Man: My Fair Super Hero #1–5 (2007)
The Scream #1–4 (2007)
Halo: Helljumper #1–5 (2009)
Deadpool’s Art of War #1–4 (2014)
The Phantom: Danger in the Forbidden City #1–6 (2014)
Marvel Comics #1000 (amongst others) (2019)
Elektra: Black, White & Blood #2 (2022)
Battlestar Galactica vs. Battlestar Galactica #1—6 (Crossover of the 1978 and 2004 series, January – June 2018)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003) #1–7 (2003)
Aquaman
The Atlantis Chronicles #1–7 (1990)
Aquaman: Time and Tide #1–4 (with Kirk Jarvinen) (1993)
Aquaman Vol. 5 #0–46, Annual 1–4 (1994–1998)
Avengers
The Last Avengers Story #1–2 (1995)
Avengers: Season One (2012)
Avengers: Back to Basics #1–6 (2018)
Captain Marvel (Marvel Comics)
Captain Marvel Vol. 4 #1–35, 0 (1999–2002)
Captain Marvel Vol. 5 #1–25 (2002–2004)
Genis-Vell: Captain Marvel #1–5 (2022)
Fallen Angel
Fallen Angel #1–20 (DC) (2003–2005)
Fallen Angel #1–33 (IDW) (2005–2008)
Fallen Angel: Reborn #1–4 (2010)
Fallen Angel: Return of the Son #1–4 (2011)
Fantastic Four
Before the Fantastic Four: Reed Richards #1–3 (2000)
Marvel 1602: Fantastick Four #1–5 (2005)
Fantastic Four: The Prodigal Sun #1 (2019)
Silver Surfer: The Prodigal Sun #1 (2019)
Guardians of the Galaxy: The Prodigal Sun #1 (2019)
New Fantastic Four #1–5 (2022)
Marvel Cinematic Universe
Main article: Marvel Cinematic Universe tie-in comics
Iron Man: I Am Iron Man! #1–2 (2010)
Marvel's Captain America: The First Avenger #1–2 (2013)
Marvel's Captain America: The Winter Soldier Infinite Comic (2014)
Marvel's Black Widow Prelude #1–2 (2020)
The Incredible Hulk
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 1 (with Todd McFarlane), Marvel Comics, 2005. ISBN 0-7851-1541-2. Collects Incredible Hulk #331–339 (1987–1988).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 2 (with Todd McFarlane, Erik Larsen, and Jeff Purves), Marvel Comics, 2005. ISBN 0-7851-1878-0. Collects Incredible Hulk #340–348 (1988).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 3 (with Jeff Purves, Alex Saviuk, and Keith Pollard), Marvel Comics, 2006. ISBN 0-7851-2095-5. Collects Incredible Hulk #349–354 and Web of Spider-Man #44 (1988–1989).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 4 (with Bob Harras, Jeff Purves, and Dan Reed), Marvel Comics, 2007. ISBN 0-7851-2096-3. Collects Incredible Hulk #355–363 and Marvel Comics Presents #26 and #45 (1989–1990).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 5 (with Jeff Purves, Dale Keown, Sam Kieth, and Angel Medina), Marvel Comics, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7851-2757-4. Collects Incredible Hulk #364–372 and Incredible Hulk Annual #16 (1989–1990).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 6 (with Dale Keown,), Marvel Comics, 2009. ISBN 978-0-7851-3762-7. Collects Incredible Hulk #373–382 (1990–1991).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 7 (with Dale Keown,), Marvel Comics, 2010. ISBN 978-0-7851-4457-1. Collects Incredible Hulk #383–389 and Incredible Hulk Annual #17 (1991–1992).
Hulk Visionaries: Peter David, Volume 8 (with Dale Keown), Marvel Comics, 2011. ISBN 978-0-7851-5603-1. Collects Incredible Hulk #390–396, X-Factor #76 and Incredible Hulk Annual #18 (1992).
Epic Collection 19: Ghosts of the Past (with Dale Keown), Marvel Comics, 2015. ISBN 978-0-7851-9299-2. Collects Incredible Hulk #397–406 and Incredible Hulk Annual #18–19 (1992).
Epic Collection 20: Future Imperfect, Marvel Comics, 2017 ISBN 978-1302904708. Collects Incredible Hulk #407–419, Annual #20, Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect #1–2 and material from Marvel Holiday Special #3
Epic Collection 21: Fall of the Pantheon, Marvel Comics 2018. Collects Tales to Astonish (1994) #1, Incredible Hulk vs. Venom #1, Incredible Hulk #420–435
Epic Collection 22: Ghosts of the Future, Marvel Comics, 2019. Collects Incredible Hulk #436–448, Savage Hulk #1 and more.
Tempest Fugit (with Lee Weeks), Marvel Comics, 2005. Collects Incredible Hulk Vol. 2 #77–82.
House of M: Incredible Hulk, Marvel Comics, 2006 Collects Incredible Hulk Vol. 2 #83–87
Incredible Hulk #328, 331–359, 361–467, -1 (1987–1998)
Incredible Hulk Annual #16–20 (1990–1994)
Incredible Hulk Vol. 2 #33 (reprints Incredible Hulk #335), #77–87 (2005)
Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect #1–2 (1992)
Incredible Hulk vs. Venom #1 (1994)
Tales to Astonish vol. 3 #1 (1994)
Prime vs. The Incredible Hulk #0 (1995)
Savage Hulk #1 (1996)
Incredible Hulk/Hercules: Unleashed #1 (1996)
Hulk/Pitt #1 (1997)
Hulk: The End #1 (2002)
What If General Ross Had Become the Hulk? #1 (2005)
Hulk: Destruction #1–4 (2005)
Giant-Size Hulk #1 (2006)
World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker #1 (2007)
Marvel Adventures: Hulk #13-16 (2008)
Hulk vs. Fin Fang Foom #1 (2008)
The Incredible Hulk: The Big Picture #1 (2008)
Hulk: Broken Worlds #1 (2009)
Future Imperfect: Warzones! #1–5 (2015)
Secret Wars: Battleworld #4 (2015)
Incredible Hulk: Last Call #1 (2019)
Maestro #1–5 (2020)
Maestro: War and Pax #1–5 (2021)
Maestro: World War M #1–5 (2022)
Joe Fixit #1–5 (2023)
She-Hulk
The Sensational She-Hulk #12 (1989)
She-Hulk Vol. 2 #22–38 (2007–2009)
She-Hulk: Cosmic Collision #1 (2009)
She-Hulk: Sensational #1 (2010)
Soulsearchers & Company
Soulsearchers & Company: On the Case! #1–82 (1993–2007) (with Richard Howell, Amanda Conner, Jim Mooney)
Spider-Man
The Death of Jean DeWolff (with Rich Buckler), Marvel Comics, 1991.
Amazing Spider-Man #266–267, 278, 289, 525
Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #103, 105–110, 112–113, 115-119, 121–123, 128–129
Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man Annual #5–6
The Spectacular Spider-Man #134–136
Web of Spider-Man #7, 12–13. 40–44, 49
Web of Spider-Man Annual #6
Spider-Man Special Edition #1 (1992)
Spider-Man 2099 #1–44 (1993–1996)
Spider-Man 2099 Annual #1
Spider-Man 2099 Meets Spider-Man #1
Spider-Man Gen13 #1 (1996)
Spider-Man Family Featuring Spider-Clan #1 (2005)
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #1, 4–23 (2005–2007)
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Annual #1
Marvel Knights: Spider-Man #19 (2005)
Spider-Man: The Other (with Reginald Hudlin, J. Michael Straczynski, Pat Lee, Mike Wieringo, and Mike Deodato), Marvel Comics, 2006.
Marvel Adventures: Spider-Man #17–19 (2006), 31 (2007)
What If? Spider-Man: The Other (2007)
Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 3 #1 (2014)
Spider-Man 2099 Vol. 2 #1–12 (2014–2015)
Spider-Man 2099 Vol. 3 #1–25 (2015–2017)
Secret Wars 2099 #1–5 (2015)
Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider #1–25 (2017–2018)
Sensational Spider-Man: Self-Improvement #1 (2019)
Symbiote Spider-Man #1–5 (2019)
Absolute Carnage: Symbiote Spider-Man #1 (2019)
Symbiote Spider-Man: Alien Reality #1–5 (2019–2020)
Symbiote Spider-Man: King in Black #1–5 (2020–2021)
Symbiote Spider-Man: Crossroads #1–5 (2021)
Symbiote Spider-Man 2099 #1–5 (2024)
Spyboy
Written with Pop Mhan and Norman Lee.
SpyBoy #1–12, 14–17 (1999–2001)
SpyBoy: Motorola Special (2000)
SpyBoy/Young Justice #1–3 (2002)
SpyBoy Special: The Manchurian Candy Date (2002)
SpyBoy: The M.A.N.G.A Affair (also known as SpyBoy #13.1–13.3, compiled The M.A.N.G.A Affair miniseries #1–3) (2003)
SpyBoy: Final Exam #1–4 (2004)
Supergirl
Supergirl Vol. 4 #1–80, Annual #1–2, Supergirl Plus #1, #1000000 (with Gary Frank and Terry Dodson), DC Comics (1996-2003)
Many Happy Returns (written with Ed Benes), DC Comics, 2003.
Wolverine
Wolverine vol. 2 #9, 11–16, 24, 44 (1989, 1990, 1991)
Wolverine: Rahne of Terra (1991)
Wolverine: Global Jeopardy #1 (1993)
Wolverine: Blood Hungry, collecting Marvel Comics Presents #85–92 (Wolverine serial) (1993)
Wolverine: First Class #13���21 (2009)
X-Factor
X-Factor vol. 1 #55, 70–89 (1990–1993)
X-Factor Annual #6–8
MadroX: Multiple Choice (with Pablo Raimondi), Marvel Comics, 2005.
X-Factor Vol. 3 #1–50, #200–262 (2005–2013)
X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead #1
X-Factor: Layla Miller #1
Nation X: X-Factor #1
All-New X-Factor #1–20 (2014–2015)
X-Men Legends vol. 1 #5–6 (2021)
Young Justice
Young Justice #1–7, 9–21, 23–55, #1000000, DC Comics (1998–2003)
Young Justice: Sins of Youth #1–2 (2000)
Young Justice: A League of Their Own (with Todd Nauck), DC Comics
#Peter David#rest in peace peter david#rip peter david#Spider Man#Peter Parker#Hulk#Joe Fixit#Maestro#Bruce Banner#She Hulk#Jennifer Walters#Multiple Man#Jamie Madrox#Spider Man 2099#Miguel O'Hara#Captain Marvel#Legacy#Genis Vell#Wolverine#Logan#James Howlett#X Factor#XFactor#X Men#XMen#Fantastic Four#Avengers#the avengers#marvel
84 notes
·
View notes
Text
#linked universe#character poll#lu hyrule#lu legend#lu time#lu wind#lu four#lu twilight#lu sky#lu warriors#lu wild#this can range on multiple factors#such as actual weight#muscle rigidity/flexibility#aerodynamics#willingness to be thrown#etc#like personally?#while I think four probably weighs the least I also think he isn’t very willing to be grabbed#so I would not rank him as high as some might think#(listen yes im aware you can throw eachother in fs but like#there’s a difference in throwing urself and letting others throw you)
164 notes
·
View notes
Text


#marvel#marvel comics#magneto#wanda maximoff#pietro maximoff#steve rogers#logan howlett#scarlet witch#quicksilver#captain america#wolverine#avengers#x-men#x-factor#x-force#avengers academy#new fantastic four#brotherhood of evil mutants#new avengers#west coast avengers#alpha flight#strange academy#invaders#force works#brotherhood of arakko#defenders#new mutants#lady liberators#polls#worst retcon tournament
52 notes
·
View notes
Text
One of the biggest things that makes me see Leo as trans is absolutely the size of his carapace in comparison to his brothers’.
And I’m not talking about height! I’m specifically looking at his shell here, because when you compare him to the others, particularly Donnie who is nearly the same height as Leo, it’s very clear that Leo’s carapace is much longer in proportion to the rest of his body.
Like - standing side by side, even though Donnie is shorter his carapace ends noticeably higher up than Leo’s does. And I like this not only because it really helps push the idea that Leo could very likely be trans (or intersex!), but it’s also just a fun design difference between them.
(It also lends way to future scenarios of Donnie eventually getting taller than Leo, but sitting down still has Leo being the taller one haha.)
#rottmnt#rise of the teenage mutant ninja turtles#rottmnt leo#trans leonardo#rottmnt headcanons#rise leo#trans leo#it’s like 4 am and I’m having trans leo feelings again sorry guys#totally get if other people disagree with me on this! but it’s always gonna be my no.1 headcanon fr#his complexion the vibrancy of his colors staying even in adulthood his general demeanor and this? this hc is LOCKED in my brain#plus the times Leo’s depicted in pink white and blue throughout the series like I KNOW it wasn’t on purpose but damn if it doesn’t help#(his nails are also the exact same as his toe nails/claws but I don’t super count this one tbh)#(even though it is TECHNICALLY another point in favor of trans leo)#(mainly because all the boys’ nails are very much more humanoid than turtle)#(just like how their tails aren’t really a factor either since we see them only in their baby forms and never again)#I really like the idea that he was a female red eared slider pre mutation#and Lou Jitsu’s dna paved how his humanoid features came out (aka a more masculine build and voice)#but his turtle features are all very much more in like with a female res#love the thought of rise bros meeting og comic turtle boys and Leo being like wait you guys are res too?? but…you’re not colorful……#one headcanon I have is that - you know the cute chirping and stuff we have the boys do?#I like to think that Leo’s chirping actually sounds more feminine to himself and his bros (so he tends to not do it)#idk I love thinking about this hc a lot and there’s no time like four am to talk about it huh?#future scenario has future Donnie going up to future Leo all smug like ah Nardo how’s the weather down there#and Leo’s all like good *sits down* why don’t you join me :)#Donnie: …*sits and stretches his neck out to be taller still*#Leo calls him a cheater but Donnie calls it ‘making use of his species’s advantages’#but yeah basically for many turtles the case is - bigger carapace? female. smaller carapace? male.#so it’s very interesting to take that knowledge and apply it here#did you know one of the turtles that this rule of thumb DOESNT apply to is alligator snapping turtles? male ones are the bigger ones there!#by a big difference too so Raph’s size makes a LOT of sense
322 notes
·
View notes
Text
*Sometime after 1475 in hell*
Satan: Yo, Luci, has Vlad Tepes showed up yet? He died like three months ago, and he's not heaven
Lucifer: What? No. He hasn't showed up at all, the fuck do you mean he isn't in heaven?
Satan: Yea, some angel was asking if we had him, because we didn't. There's also like an ungodly amount of souls missing aside from that one. I think there's like over four thousand souls that are also missing as well...
Lucifer: ....There's four thousand souls missing?
Satan: Yes.
Lucifer: Well, I guess we should see what's going down on the Mortal planes than....
_____
*Dracula doing as Dracula does and devouring his own people*
Lucifer: Ok, who the fuck allowed that to happen? Who the fuck green lit that? Who let Vlad Tepes turn into a goddamn Eldritch abomination??
Satan: I think the humans are calling it a vampire
Lucifer: A vampire? That's what that is? I'm sorry, that still doesn't answer my question of who in the seven layers of hell green lit that thing!!
Satan: We didn't. The blood choose for it happen.
Lucifer: The fuck do you mean the blood chose for it
Satan: Too many people died in one place, and Vlad was too angry to die.
Lucifer: .....God allowed this to happen didn't he? He fucking let this happen, didn't He, the fucking bastard
#enjoy my rambles#alucard hellsing#hellsing#vladcard#hellsing ultimate#dracula#shitpost#Vladcard was too angry to die and so was four thousand other souls#God may or may not have let this happen for shits and giggles#hell had nothing to do with Alucard's state of being#An Eldritch being of neither heaven or hell#Just the abyss#Based off my theory that Alucard's method of becoming a vampire is based on two factors and neither of them are related to heaven or hell#but like based more in the nature of humans and more primordial aspects
317 notes
·
View notes
Text
How unions won a 30% raise for every fast food worker in California

Tonight (September 14), I'm hosting the EFF Awards in San Francisco. On September 22, I'm (virtually) presenting at the DIG Festival in Modena, Italy.
Anything that can't go on forever will eventually stop. 40 years of declining worker power shattered the American Dream (TM), producing multiple generations whose children fared worse than their parents, cratering faith in institutions and hope for a better future.
The American neoliberal malaise – celebrated in by "centrists" who insisted that everything was fine and nothing could be changed – didn't just lead to a sense of helplessness, but also hopelessness. Denialism and nihilism are Siamese twins, and the YOLO approach to the climate emergency, covid mitigation, the housing crisis and other pressing issues can't be disentangled from the Thatcherite maxim that "There is NoA lternative." If there's no alternative, then we're doomed. Dig a hole, climb inside, pull the dirt down on top of yourself.
But anything that can't go on forever will eventually stop. For decades, leftists have taken a back seat to liberals in the progressive coalition, allowing "unionize!" to be drowned out by "learn to code!" The liberal-led coalition ceded the mantle of radical change to fake populist demagogues on the right.
This opened a space for a mirror-world politics that insisted that "conservatives" were the true defenders of women (because they were transphobes), of bodily autonomy (because they were vaccine deniers), of the environment (because they opposed wind-farms) and of workers (because they opposed immigration):
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/05/not-that-naomi/#if-the-naomi-be-klein-youre-doing-just-fine
Anything that can't go on forever will eventually stop. A new coalition dedicated to fighting corporate power has emerged, tackling capitalism's monopoly power, and the corruption and abuse of workers it enables. That coalition is global, it's growing, and it's kicking ass.
Case in point: California just passed a law that will give every fast-food worker in the state a 30% raise. This law represents a profound improvement to the lives of the state's poorest workers – workers who spend long hours feeding their neighbors, but often can't afford to feed themselves at the end of a shift.
But just as remarkable as the substance of this new law is the path it took – a path that runs through a new sensibility, a new vibe, that is more powerful than mere political or legal procedure. The story is masterfully told in The American Prospect by veteran labor writer Harold Meyerson:
https://prospect.org/labor/2023-09-13-half-million-california-workers-get-raise/
The story starts with Governor Newsom signing a bill to create a new statewide labor-business board to mediate between workers and bosses, with the goal of elevating the working conditions of the state's large, minimum-wage workforce. The passage of this law triggered howls of outrage from the state's fast-food industry, who pledged to spend $200m to put forward a ballot initiative to permanently kill the labor-business board.
This is a familiar story. In 2019, California's state legislature passed AB-5, a bill designed to end the gig-work fiction that people whose boss is an algorithm are actually "independent businesses," rather than employees. AB5 wasn't perfect – it swept up all kinds of genuine freelancers, like writers who contributed articles to many publications – but the response wasn't aimed at fixing the bad parts. It was designed to destroy the good parts.
After AB-5, Uber and Lyft poured more than $200m into Prop 22, a ballot initiative designed to permanently bar the California legislature from passing any law to protect "gig workers." Prop 22's corporate backers flooded the state with disinformation, and procured a victory in 2020. The aftermath was swift and vicious, with Prop 22 used as cover in mass-firings of unionized workers across the state's workforce:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/01/05/manorialism-feudalism-cycle/#prop22
Workers and the politicians who defend them were supposed to be crushed by Prop 22. Its message was "there is no alternative." "Abandon hope all ye who enter here." "Resistance is futile." Prop 22 was worth spending $200m on because it wouldn't just win this fight – it would win all fights, forever.
But that's not what happened. When the fast-food barons announced that they were going to pump another $200m into a state ballot initiative to kill fair wages for food service workers, they got a hell of a surprise. SEIU – a union that has long struggled to organize fast-food workers – collaborated with progressive legislators to introduce a pair of new, even further-reaching bills.
One bill would have made the corporate overseers of franchise businesses jointly liable for lawbreaking by franchisees – so if a McDonald's restaurant owner stole their employees' wages, McDonalds corporate would also be on the hook for the offense. The second bill would restore funding and power to the state Industrial Welfare Commission, which once routinely intervened to set wages and working standards in many state industries:
https://www.gtlaw-laborandemployment.com/2023/08/the-california-iwc-whats-old-is-new-again/
Fast-food bosses fucked around, and boy did they find out. Funding for the IWC passed the state budget, and the franchisee joint liability is set to pass the legislature this week. The fast-food bosses cried uncle and begged Newsom's office for a deal. In exchange for defunding the IWC and canceling the vote on the liability bill, the industry has agreed to an hourly wage increase for the state's 550,000 fast-food workers, from $15.50 to $20, taking effect in April.
The deal also includes annual raises of either 3.5% or the real rise in cost of living. It keeps the labor-management council that the original bill created (the referendum on killing that council has been cancelled). The council will include two franchisees, two fast food corporate reps, two union reps, two front-line fast-food workers and a member of the public. It will have the power to direct the state Department of Labor to directly regulate working conditions in fast-food restaurants, from health and safety to workplace violence.
It's been nearly a century since business/government/labor boards like this were commonplace. The revival is a step on the way to bringing back the practice of sectoral bargaining, where workers set contracts for all employers in an industry. Sectoral bargaining was largely abolished through the dismantling of the New Deal, though elements of it remain. Entertainment industry unions are called "guilds" because they bargain with all the employers in their sector – which is why all of the Hollywood studios are being struck by SAG-AFTRA and the WGA.
So what changed between 2020 – when rideshare bosses destroyed democratic protections for workers by flooding the zone with disinformation to pass Prop 22 – and 2023, when the fast food bosses folded like a cheap suit? It wasn't changes to the laws governing ballot initiatives, nor was it a lack of ready capital for demolishing worker rights. Fast food executives weren't visited by three ghosts in the night who convinced them to care for their workers. Their hearts didn't grow by three sizes.
What changed was the vibe. The Hot Labor Summer was a rager, and it's not showing any signs of slowing. Obviously that's true in California, where nurses and hotel workers are also striking, and where strikebreaking companies like Instawork ("Uber for #scabs") attract swift regulatory sanction, rather than demoralized capitulation:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/30/computer-says-scab/#instawork
The hot labor summer wasn't a season – it was a turning point. Everyone's forming unions. Think of Equity Strip NoHo, the first strippers' union in a generation, which won recognition from their scumbag bosses at North Hollywood's Star Garden Club, who used every dirty trick to kill workplace democracy.
The story of the Equity Strippers is amazing. Two organizers, Charlie and Lilith, appeared on Adam Conover's Factually podcast to describe the incredible creativity and solidarity they used to win recognition, and the continuing struggle to get a contract out of their bosses, who are still fucking around and assuming they will not find out:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fgXihmHIZk
Like the fast-food bosses, the Star Garden's owners are in for a surprise. One of the most powerful elements of the Equity Strippers' story is the solidarity of their customers. Star Garden's owners assumed that their clientele were indiscriminate, horny assholes who didn't care about the wellbeing of the workers they patronized, and would therefore cross a picket-line because parts is parts.
Instead, the bar's clientele sided with the workers. People everywhere are siding with workers. A decade ago, when video game actors voted on a strike, the tech workers who coded the games were incredibly hostile to them. "Why should you get residuals for your contribution to this game when we don't?"
But SAG-AFTRA members who provide voice acting for games just overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike, and this time the story is very different. This time, tech workers are ride-or-die for their comrades in the sound booths:
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2023-09-13/video-game-voice-actor-sag-strike-interactive-agreement-actors-strike
What explains the change in tech workers' animal sentiments? Well, on the one hand, labor rights are in the air. The decades of cartoonish, lazy dismissals of labor struggles have ended. And on the other hand, tech workers have been proletarianized, with 260,000 layoffs in the sector, including 12,000 layoffs at Google that came immediately after a stock buyback that would have paid those 12,000 salaries for the next 27 years:
https://doctorow.medium.com/the-proletarianization-of-tech-workers-ad0a6b09f7e6
Larry Lessig once laid out a theory of change that holds that our society is governed by four forces: law (what's legal), norms (what's socially acceptable), markets (what's profitable) and code (what's technologically possible):
https://cs.stanford.edu/people/eroberts/cs181/projects/2010-11/CodeAndRegulation/about.html
These four forces interact. When queer relationships were normalized, it made it easier to legalize them, too – and then the businesses that marriage equality became both a force for more normalization and legal defense.
When Lessig formulated this argument, much of the focus was on technology – how file-sharing changed norms, which changed law. But as the decades passed, I've come to appreciate what the argument says about norms, the conversations we have with one another.
Neoliberalism wants you to think that you're an individual, not a member of a polity. Neoliberalism wants you to bargain with your boss as a "free agent," not a union member. It wants you to address the climate emergency by recycling more carefully – not by demanding laws banning single-use plastics. It wants you to fight monopolies by shopping harder – not by busting trusts.
But that's not what we're doing – not anymore. We're forming unions. We're demanding a Green New Deal. And we're busting some trusts. The DoJ Antitrust Division case against Google is the (first) trial of the century, reviving the ancient and noble practice of fighting monopolies with courts, not empty platitudes.
The trial is incredible, and Yosef Weitzman's reporting on Big Tech On Trial is required reading. I'm following it closely (thankfully, there's a fulltext RSS feed):
https://www.bigtechontrial.com/p/what-makes-google-great
The neoliberal project of instilling learned helplessness about corporate power has hit the wall, and it's wrecked. The same norms that made us furious enough to put Google on trial are the norms that made us angry – not cynical – about Clarence Thomas's bribery scandals:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/06/clarence-thomas/#harlan-crow
And they're the same norms that made us support our striking comrades, from hotel housekeepers to Hollywood actors, from strippers to Starbucks baristas:
https://thetyee.ca/News/2023/09/13/Starbucks-Workers-Back-At-Strike/
Yes, Starbucks baristas. The Starbucks unions that won hard-fought recognition drives are now fighting the next phase of corporate fuckery: Starbucks corporate's refusal to bargain for a contract. Starbucks is betting that if they just stall long enough, the workers who support the union will move on and they'll be able to go back to abusing their workers without worrying about a union.
They're fucking around, and they're finding out. Starbucks workers at two shops in British Columbia – Clayton Crossing in Surrey and Valley Centre in Langley – have authorized strikes with a 91% majority:
https://thetyee.ca/News/2023/09/13/Starbucks-Workers-Back-At-Strike/
Where did the guts to do this come from? Not from labor law, which remains disgustingly hostile to workers (though that's changing, as we'll see below). It came from norms. It came from getting pissed off and talking about it. Shouting about it. Arguing about it.
Laws, markets and code matter, but they're nothing without norms. That's why Uber and Lyft were willing to spend $200m to fight fair labor practices. They didn't just want to keep their costs low – they wanted to snuff out the vibe, the idea that workers deserve a fair deal.
They failed. The idea didn't die. It thrived. It merged with the idea that corporations and the wealthy corrupt our society. It was joined by the idea that monopolies harm us all. They're losing. We're winning.
The BC Starbucks workers secured 91% majorities in their strike votes. This is what worker power looks like. As Jane McAlevey writes in her Collective Bargain, these supermajorities – ultramajorities – are how we win.
https://doctorow.medium.com/a-collective-bargain-a48925f944fe
The neoliberal wing of the Democratic party hires high-priced consultants who advise them to seek 50.1% margins of victory – and then insist that nothing can be done because we live in the Manchin-Synematic Universe, where razor-thin majorities mean that there is no alternative. Labor organizers fight for 91% majorities – in the face of bosses' gerrymandering, disinformation and voter suppression – and get shit done.
Shifting the norms – having the conversations – is the tactic, but getting shit done is the goal. The Biden administration – a decidedly mixed bag – has some incredible, technically skilled, principled fighters who know how to get shit done. Take Lina Khan, who revived the long-dormant Section 5 of the Federal Trade Act, which gives her broad powers to ban "unfair and deceptive" practices:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/10/the-courage-to-govern/#whos-in-charge
Khan's wielding this broad power in all kinds of exciting ways. For example, she's seeking a ban on noncompetes, a form of bondage that shackles workers to shitty bosses by making it illegal to work for anyone else in the same industry:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/02/its-the-economy-stupid/#neofeudal
Noncompete apologists argue that these merely protect employers' investment in training and willingness to share sensitive trade secrets with employees. But the majority of noncompetes are applied to fast food workers – yes, the same workers who just won a 30%, across-the-board raise – in order to prevent Burger King cashiers from seeking $0.25/hour more at a local Wendy's.
Meanwhile, the most trade-secret intensive, high-training industry in the world – tech – has no noncompetes. That's not because tech bosses are good eggs who want to do right by their employees – it's because noncompetes are banned in California, where tech is headquartered.
But in other states, where noncompetes are still allowed, bosses have figured out how to use them as a slippery slope to a form of bondage that beggars the imagination. I'm speaking of the Training Repayment Agreement Provision (AKA, the TRAP), a contractual term that forces workers who quit or get fired to pay their ex-bosses tens of thousands of dollars, supposedly to recoup the cost of training them:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/08/04/its-a-trap/#a-little-on-the-nose
Now, TRAPs aren't just evil, they're also bullshit. Bosses show pet-groomers or cannabis budtenders a few videos, throw them a three-ring binder, and declare that they've received a five-figure education that they must repay if they part ways with their employers. This gives bosses broad latitude to abuse their workers and even order them to break the law, on penalty of massive fines for quitting.
If this sounds like an Unfair Labor Practice to you, you're not alone. NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo agrees with you. She's another one of those Biden appointees with a principled commitment to making life better for American workers, and the technical chops to turn that principle into muscular action.
In a case against Juvly Aesthetics – an Ohio-based chain of "alternative medicine" and "aesthetic services" – Abruzzo argues that noncompetes and TRAPs are Unfair Labor Practices that violate the National Labor Relations Act and cannot be enforced:
https://www.nlrb.gov/case/09-CA-300239
Two ex-Juvly employees have been hit with $50-60k "repayment" bills for quitting – one after refusing to violate Ohio law by performing "microneedling," another for quitting after having their wages stolen and then refusing to sign an "exit agreement":
https://prospect.org/labor/2023-09-14-nlrb-complaint-calls-noncompete-agreement-unfair-labor-practice/
If the NLRB wins, the noncompete and TRAP clauses in the workers' contracts will be voided, and the workers will get fees, missed wages, and other penalties. More to the point, the case will set the precedent that noncompetes are generally unenforceable nationwide, delivering labor protection to every worker in every sector in America.
Abruzzo has been killing it lately: just a couple weeks ago, she set a precedent that any boss that breaks labor law during a union drive automatically loses, with instant recognition for the union as a penalty (rather than a small fine, as was customary):
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/06/goons-ginks-and-company-finks/#if-blood-be-the-price-of-your-cursed-wealth
Abruzzo is amazing – as are her colleagues at the NLRB, FTC, DOJ, and other agencies. But the law they're making is downstream of the norms we set. From the California lawmakers who responded to fast food industry threats by introducing more regulations to the strip-bar patrons who refused to cross the picket-line to the legions of fans dragging Drew Barrymore for scabbing, the public mood is providing the political will for real action:
https://www.motherjones.com/media/2023/09/drew-barrymores-newest-role-scab/
The issues of corruption, worker rights and market concentration can't – and shouldn't – be teased apart. They're three facets of the same fight – the fight against oligarchy. Rarely do those issues come together more clearly than in the delicious petard-hoisting of Dave Clark, formerly the archvillain of Amazon, and now the victim of its bullying.
As Maureen Tkacik writes for The American Prospect, Clark had a long and storied career as Amazon's most vicious and unassuming ghoul, a sweatervested, Diet-Coke-swilling normie whose mild manner disguised a vicious streak a mile wide:
https://prospect.org/power/2023-09-14-catch-us-if-you-can-dave-clark-amazon/
Clark earned his nickname, "The Sniper," as a Kentucky warehouse supervisor; the name came from his habit of "lurking in the shadows [and] scoping out slackers he could fire." Clark created Amazon Flex, the "gig work" version of Amazon delivery drivers where randos in private vehicles were sent out to delivery parcels. Clark also oversaw tens of millions of dollars in wage-theft from those workers.
We have Clark to thank for the Amazon drivers who had to shit in bags and piss in bottles to make quota. Clark was behind the illegal union-busting tactics used against employees in the Bessamer, Alabama warehouse. We have Clark to thank for the Amazon chat app that banned users from posting the words "restroom," "slave labor," "plantation," and "union":
https://pluralistic.net/2022/04/05/doubleplusrelentless/#quackspeak
But Clark doesn't work for Amazon anymore. After losing a power-struggle to succeed Jeff Bezos – the job went to "longtime rival" Andy Jassy – he quit and went to work for Flexport, a logistics company that promised to provide sellers that used non-Amazon services with shipping. Flexport did a deal with Shopify, becoming its "sole official logistics partner."
But then Shopify did another logistics deal – with Amazon. Clark was ordered to tender his resignation or face immediate dismissal.
How did all this happen? Well, there are two theories. The first is that Shopify teamed up with Amazon to stab Flexport in the back, then purged all the ex-Amazonians from the Flexport upper ranks. The other is that Clark was a double-agent, who worked with Amazon to sabotage Flexport, and was caught and fired.
But either way, this is a huge win for Amazon, a monopolist who is in the FTC's crosshairs thanks to the anti-corporate vibe-shift that has consumed the nation and the world. As the sole major employer for this kind of logistics, Amazon is a de facto labor regulator, deciding who can work in the sector. The FTC's enforcement action isn't just about monopoly – it's about labor.
Now, Clark is a rich, powerful white dude, not the sort of person who needs a lot of federal help to protect his labor rights. When liberals called the shot in the progressive coalition, they scolded leftists not to speak of class, but rather to focus on identity – to be intersectionalists.
That was a trick. There's no incompatibility between caring about class and caring about gender, race and sexual orientation. Those fast food workers who are about to get a 30% wage-hike in California? Overwhelmingly Black or brown, overwhelmingly female.
The liberal version of intersectionalism observes a world run by 150 rich white men and resolves to replace half of them with women, queers and people of color. The leftist version seeks to abolish the system altogether. The leftist version of intersectionalism cares about bias and discrimination not just because of how it makes people feel, but because of how it makes them live. It cares about wages, housing, vacations, child care – the things you can't get because of your identity.
The fight for social justice is a fight for worker justice. Eminently guillotineable monsters like Tim "Avocado Toast" Gurner advocate for increasing unemployment by "40-50%" – but Gurner is just saying what other bosses are thinking:
https://jacobin.com/2023/09/tim-gurner-capitalists-neoliberalism-unemployment-precarity
Garner is 100% right when he says: "There’s been a systematic change where employees feel the employer is extremely lucky to have them, as opposed to the other way around."
And then he says this: "So it’s a dynamic that has to change. We’ve got to kill that attitude, and that has to come through hurt in the economy."
Garner knows that the vibes are upstream of the change. The capitalist dream starts with killing our imagination, to make us believe that "there is no alternative." If we can dream bigger than "better representation among oligarchs" when we might someday dream of no oligarchs. That's what he fears the most.
Watch the video of Garner. Look past the dollar-store Gordon Gecko styling. That piece of shit is terrified.
And he should be.
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/14/prop-22-never-again/#norms-code-laws-markets
EFF Awards, San Francisco, September 14
#pluralistic#factually#adam conover#starbucks#google#antitrust#dave clark#amazon#noncompetes#jennifer abruzzo#nlrb#flexport#shopify#trap#juvly#labor#calfornia#four factors#lessig#california#seiu#fast food#Industrial Welfare Commission#Department of Industrial Relations#sectoral bargaining#unions#hot labor summer#race#intersectionalism#prop 22
663 notes
·
View notes
Text
I miss fantasista squad . does anyone else miss fantasista squad
#project sekai#prsk#colorful stage#fantasista squad#tsukasa tenma#tenma tsukasa#rui kamishiro#kamishiro rui#touya aoyagi#aoyagi touya#akito shinonome#shinonome akito#i also miss yume yume jump#speaking of yume yume jump#i thought of each april fools unit from back then objectively#and if you consider various factors...#if yyj ever had a proper story they'd arguably be the most angsty#not only are they doomed to have a disbandment arc you ALSO have the fact that rad weekend is implied to still exist#mean an will also get the truth bomb from taiga somehow#then you also have kanade#then you also have potential leo/need not being together angst for shiho especially since she's had so many issues being in a band#then there's the fact that they're in the idol industry with a MANAGER meaning shizuku will have even more difficulty being her true self#then we gotta consider how the idol industry could absolutely fuck up all four of them and#how about something like fantasista squad getting closer to surpassing rad weekend while an watches in horror as her dream is slipping from#her grasp#sorry im not normal about first april fools eveng#everyday i think... fantasista squad yume yume jump interactions... gggrggrhh...#anyways back on topic to fantasista squad#i like their dynamic a lot because touya and tsukasa are wholesome#while akirui have the craziest queer tension in those area convos i swear
24 notes
·
View notes
Text

Page from Uncanny X-Men Annual #14. 1990. Art by Arthur Adams.
#marvel comics#marvel#marvel universe#mcu#x men#uncanny xmen#fantastic four#x force#x factor#art adams#arthur adams#chris claremont
69 notes
·
View notes
Text
Warren :(((((
The panel where he's getting his feathers torn out is legit upsetting to me. Love this storyline but it does hurt
#thor#warren worthington iii#scott summers#jean grey#xmen#this is Thor 374 btw not x-factor#this fucking storyline brought me to four different comic books#all the crossovers man...
35 notes
·
View notes
Text

[X Factor #202]
#x men#xmen#x factor#fantastic four#fantastic 4#reed richards#mr fantastic#ben grimm#the thing fantastic four#jamie madrox#multiple man#victor von doom#dr doom#doctor doom#marvel#comics
43 notes
·
View notes
Text
[ID: nine gifs of Dr Anne Reynolds, played by Louise Jameson]
Dr Anne Reynolds in The Ωmega Factor (4/7)
+ bonus:
#bonus bc i have four spare ones without homes#i obviously didn't ever make this with the intent of posting or i'd have made a nicer number#all these sets are also like. only the first five eps. i never got around to the end of the series lol#omega factor#my gif
11 notes
·
View notes
Note
there's something about the fact that donnie and leo are binary stars; they're an engine, a battery, a negative and positive charge, a perpetual motion machine because of their push and pull and part of what makes them fit together so well is the way that for years or days or seconds at a time one can switch their push to a pull and vice versa to meet the needs of the other, the resistance is part of the balance and now donnie has no resistance so they are spinning wildly out of control but the thing about binary stars is that wherever one tumbles out of orbit the other has to follow.
tldr: everybody talks about donnie dying but i don't really see leo surviving that in the long run either
yaaaaaaaa
also honestly i dont think its exclusive to the twins. i believe leo would fall second, but if donnie actually died it would kind of set off a chain of events. push one domino and the others fall, in kitsune's words.
its honestly how ive always imagined things going in the canon doomed future too, i like the idea of each of their deaths factoring into the next. leo and mikey already kind of do that when they die so close together and all that. the second the first one of them died, it doesn't matter if it was raph or donnie, the war was already lost. there was no way of saving the others.
#ask#canary continuity#i like making the four of them codependent as fuck#and i think a huge factor of the doomed future should be the Worst Case Scenario#so the idea of it being the ultimate culmination of this problem works for me#and yes i let it coexist with the idea that raph and leo never repair their relationship <3 they can have both problems#they make each other worse lawl. which is the problem. they cant stop orbiting each other!
22 notes
·
View notes