It’s stressful and unhealthy to try and keep up with the Joneses. Maybe there are other options.

If you enjoyed this comic, you’d be doing the cats a big favor by forwarding it to someone else who might like it.
It’s stressful and unhealthy to try and keep up with the Joneses. Maybe there are other options.

If you enjoyed this comic, you’d be doing the cats a big favor by forwarding it to someone else who might like it.
It’s great to be patriotic, but how does one demonstrate one’s patriotism?

There are advantages to living a little life.

If you enjoyed this comic, you’d be doing the cats a big favor by forwarding it to someone else who might like it.
We are not very good at accurately remembering the past. In particular our emotions in the past.

In 1930, the economist John Maynard Keynes predicted that technological change and productivity improvements would eventually lead to a 15 hour workweek. Yet he was also concerned that people would not know how to use all that extra free time.

We can only really know what we directly experience. For all other knowledge we rely on outside sources. Information from those sources will then influence our thoughts and opinions. So choose those sources wisely.

What, you don’t know what transfer pricing is? Read on.

If you enjoyed this comic, you’d be doing the cats a big favour by forwarding it to someone else who might like it.
The cats love to watch the hypocrisy of governments, all claiming they will take action to prevent a rise in global temperature, but none willing to actually take the necessary actions.

Of course, there are always a few individuals willing to go off the grid, go solar, ride bicycles, never travel to foreign lands, but there are not enough of them to make the slightest difference to rising temperatures.
This comic, Part 1, and Part 3, were inspired by the wonderful book Four Thousand Weeks, by Oliver Burkeman.

If you enjoyed this comic, you’d be doing the cats a big favour by forwarding it to someone else who might like it.
This comic, Part 2, and Part 3, were inspired by the wonderful book Four Thousand Weeks, by Oliver Burkeman.
