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Funny But Very True About Campus Life 😂😂

YOU HAVE FACED AT LEAST ONE OF THESE ON CAMPUS 😂🤣 1. Running out of allowance before mid-month and surviving on noodles. The creativity in making “noodle recipes” becomes unmatched. Hunger truly inspires innovation. 2. Fighting over sockets in the library or hostel. Everyone wants to charge their phone or laptop at once. Finding a free socket feels like winning a lottery. 3. Forgetting assignments until the night before submission. Suddenly, you type like a world-class sprinter. Panic becomes your superpower. 4. Doing laundry and realizing rain is about to fall. You rush to rescue clothes while hoping the sun returns. Campus weather has its own sense of humor. 5. Group projects where one person does all the work. The others only show up on presentation day. Yet everyone still gets the same grade. 6. Attending “free food” events only for the food to finish before your turn. You regret arriving late, but the hope for next time never dies. 7. Pretending to understand a lecture while sec...

When the Skies Go Silent: What the Air Canada Strike Teaches Us About Work and Dignity

For a brief moment this week, Canada’s skies were quieter than usual. Over 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants walked off the job, demanding better pay and recognition for the work they do beyond the beverage cart—especially the safety responsibilities that often go unnoticed by passengers. Within hours, the Canadian government intervened, calling for binding arbitration and ordering the strike to end. Flights are now resuming, though ripple effects in scheduling and service will take days to fully settle. On the surface, it looks like another labor dispute resolved by state intervention. But if we step back, the situation tells us much more about the fragile balance between labor rights, essential services, and public convenience. The Invisible Labor That Keeps Us Safe Most travelers never think about what flight attendants really do. Yes, they hand out snacks, smiles, and hot tea—but their primary duty is safety. They are trained to respond to fires at 35,000 feet, medical emergencie...