>mayor says not to panic
>but maybe if it happens to, you know, rain... a bit of cautious terror might not be out of placeNope, spiderman is a new yorker. I'm pretty sure Chicago is a myth, maybe made up by pizza companies. There wouldn't be that many people living in Illinois.
I wish I could say it was a myth, but no, I can't erase the memory of that smell. We're not talking Maryland levels of "oh god what the fuck is going on here" stank (seriously, I've been through Maryland several times, it has a very distinct odor in every part I've been through, is it the bullshit over in D.C. permeating through the rest?) but Chicago has this funky "rotten vanilla and cigar smoke" type of old man smell that makes it existing all the more baffling. Been in damn near every state except the pacific northwest and--thankfully--Florida, and there are like three spots on the map that stand out as "worth multiple hundred mile detours to avoid" to me: Maryland, that stretch through Arkansas with paper mills+pet food plants (god why), and Chicago. It's not like you're being forced to live in Illinois or Indiana or Ohio, right?
Oh god, are people being forced to live in these shitholes? Who would do something like that?
In
political comic news: Archangel is an alternate history sci-fi story by William Gibson--who you probably know of as coining the term that was made into a movie which has a scene which was referenced and turned into an ironic meme on becoming aware of certain "facts" about the real world which are generally just opinions, terrible ones, at that--and not to give away too much, but it involves trying to fix a global apocalypse which was like... actually a pretty fucking bad end, and then the last panel has the
guy landing back in the present to see he was successful and then being baffled when he sees a newspaper with a headline about Trump winning as it is clearly the least probable part of the whole story.