![]() ![]() ![]() While there, they spot a placard that reads: “On this Simpson family on a trip to China, where they visit Tiananmen The episode - firstīroadcast in 2005 and titled “Goo Goo Gai Pan” - follows the Then 13, but skips episode 12 altogether. The streamer - the one that mocks Tiananmen Square.Īccording to users, season 16 of the show offers episode 11 and With the platform’s launch in Hong Kong, users haveĭiscovered that one episode in particular has been scrubbed from “The Simpsons” ever made, but apparently, that’s not the case inĬhina. Wednesday, 1 December 2021 Disney+ Scrubs ‘The Simpsons’ Episode With Tiananmen Square Joke From Hong Kong Service ★ĭisney+ users in the U.S. For them, the next pandemic will always loom on the horizon. Today’s youth will never grow up feeling like that. ![]() The fact that we hadn’t had a major worldwide pandemic in a century led us to believe - not so much through reason, but more through gut feeling - that we couldn’t have one. A sort of “OK, fine, there’s a bad virus going around Asia, we’ve heard this story before - it’s not going to be a major issue here” mindset. The worst thing that happened in early 2020 was a sort of worldwide collective denial. There’s no question in my mind that growing up, right now, is going to lead more kids to focus their careers on science and medicine. I meant it ironically, but the truth is that for my son’s generation, proms and plagues will be part of the rituals of growing up. At some point waiting in line, I made a halfhearted joke about how we were embarking on the classic father-son ritual of heading out to the mass vaccination site to protect him from the plague. What about the more subtle psychological legacy of Covid? How will it change the way we perceive the world - and its risks - when the pandemic finally subsides? I have a memory from May of this year, taking my 17-year-old son to the Javits Center in Manhattan for his first vaccine, followed by a shopping trip to pick out a tie for his (masked, outdoor) senior prom. Steven Johnson, writing for The New York Times Magazine: This line, in particular, has stuck with me for the last week: “Expectations always move slower than facts.” Could COVID Lead to Progress? ★ But a story of how the details fit together. And there is, I think, a narrative that links all those events together. That’s a lot to unpack in 5,000 words, but the short story of what happened over the last 73 years is simple: Things were very uncertain, then they were very good, then pretty bad, then really good, then really bad, and now here we are. This is a short story about what happened to the U.S. Morgan Housel, writing at Collaborative Fund: ![]()
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