A real classic!
I randomly a number of years ago came across this drawing and ever since I have been travelling down the Far Side rabbit hole.
My original intro to the comic
This is funny because “push” sounds similar to pull in Portuguese. So it’s very common for new English speakers to read a push/pull sign, get confused, and do the opposite. All of us Portuguese speakers are “gifted” when we are just starting to learn English. 🤣
Nearly 25 years of living in the us and this is my curse, I’ll stare at the door for a second independent of which language it’s written in.
There is guidance for door design on how to best make it clear whether a door is push or pull. It’s easy: put a handle on the pull side and a push plate on the push side
True, but handled/plates are often installed incorrectly, leading to Norman Doors that get used incorrectly often.
https://99percentinvisible.org/article/norman-doors-dont-know-whether-push-pull-blame-design/
remember this getting changed to “Betsy DeVos School for the Gifted”
This is one of the best
I had this on my coffee mug back in the late 90s.
Oh the memories
I had this on a short. Probably my favorite farside comic. So simple so brilliant.
Poor guy’s just catching his breath, missed the bus and had to bike it all the way before he gets a demerit for tardiness.
Imagine someone opening that door. It is gonna be a bad time!
I had this on a T-shirt in the '90s
I still do, but I also had it in the 90’s.
You get extra mitch love today! hug
Coffee mug for me
A clear representation of gifted people being neurodivergent rather than better in some way. Sure the divergence can be beneficial in certain circumstances and at certain times, but that is not always the case.
There’s two kinds of “gifted” in American educational parlance, one has a sweet af special bus and the others are ADHD kids that like to read.
American educators today don’t use the gifted label for either of those. Here’s a bit about current gifted education: https://nagc.org/page/Gifted-Education-Strategies
They may not, but municipalities do. I have two kids in east coast public schools being my source, just as a heads up.
Yeah, it’s pretty common for states, districts, administrators, and parents to misunderstand the students, their needs, and how best to address their needs. Teachers can have misunderstandings, too, but more often their failure to meet students’ needs comes from their hands being tied in various ways by the other groups. It’s pretty rare for them to pass the blame (publicly) since they’re much more focused on the immediate classroom issues in front of them.
And all of this varies extremely widely in the U.S. since education is handled by the states with the only federal influence coming from stuff like asserting requirements in exchange for funding for (for example) low income meals.
I’ll take your word for it as that page says nothing useful itself, and note that this comic is almost forty years old.
This is a joke about your own ignorance.
“Stubbornly protesting improper installation of outer doors in violation of OSHA regulations.”
Doors opening outward is usually safer in case of a fire or other evacuation scenario.
We had an audit two weeks ago and they had a bunch of inner safety doors rebuilt the other way around for that very reason. They had just been built a month before, too!
Fact. New builds in Scandinavia are often built to have the front door open onto the street for that very reason.
Same in the US. Very nearly all exterior doors in public buildings open outward for safe egress. Doors in homes tend to open inward (presumably to protect the hinges.)
I think it’s for security reasons. The hinges are one z but the latches are also protected if the door opens inward. If it’s outward, you need to spend a lot more to secure them.
And outward facing doors are only really needed for areas with high volume of traffic where people could pile up at the doors in an emergency. That’s not a concern in a house with a handful of people.
CHILDREN BAD. Reply to this post with an AMEN if you agree 😄😄✝️
Amen and hail satan