The major arcana of the tarot are organized in a sort of metaphorical journey that a spiritual practitioner (a magician or querent) undertakes towards self-knowledge or true magic.
While the practitioner is embodied in the figure of the Fool (sometimes numbered '0', though I prefer decks that don't number it at all), this journey starts from the first 'proper' trump in the deck, I: the Magician. The Magician, originally a juggler (bateleur) in the Marseilles deck, suggests above all potential. It represents the idea of practice leading to transformation of the self. It, thus, represents Posting - but not refined or wise posting; it represents the unfiltered, loose self as expressed through unfiltered Posting.
From there, the Arcana represent certain stations in the practitioner's life. The Empress (reply guy-ing), Justice (call-out posting), the Lovers (hornyposting), etc. This cadence continues until IX, the Hermit, which symbolizes leaving something in the drafts; it stands for withdrawing from the world as the foundation of spiritual power. This central twist in the arcana continues through the Hanged Man (posting through it) and then, eventually, XIII.
I prefer decks where XIII lacks a name, but most call it Death. But note how the so-called 'Death' card comes in the middle of the process, not the end. Ego death (deleting) is a necessary step in progress and transformation.
After deactivating their account in XIII, the practitioner is finally free to obtain the true gifts of spiritual progress. They face off against the Devil (Elon Musk). In their progress, they are guided by celestial forces: The Star (the friend in the group chat telling you to post), the Moon (the friend in the group chat telling you not to post), and the Sun (the friend in the group chat actually helping you workshop the post).
Eventually, this leads to the understanding of Judgement - not the limited perspective of Justice, but the true cosmic wisdom that, when immanentized, would cast all things in their proper light. This is the knowledge of when to post and when not to post, finally made manifest.
Armed with this discernment, the practitioner then finally attains XXII: The World (severals).
Temperance is about learning to balance Posting with touching grass