1
0
Milk... (7775208002.blogspot.com)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
2
1
Man (lemmy.ml)
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

You guys need to post more. This site is fucking dead and it sucks

3
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I found this picture on here: https://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/TPV3/Voices.php/2021/02/28/hot-off-the-press-pfizer.


I get the feeling that whoever made this image didn't even read over the graphs. There's less deaths than cases in the picture. How does that make vaccines bad?

I can barely tell what these graphs are supposed to say, they are saved as a PNG and the text is so small.


Christ, this is pathetic. Anti-vaxxers are really desperate to find an excuse to be anti-vax.

4
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

It's not finished at all; but I don't want it to die in a hard drives. I don't know who made this tho.

5
2
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

It was already discriminatory to hate furries. It's just becoming obvious.

I find it disgusting to be sexually attracted to animal traits because that is just watered down beastiality. That said if you just find those traits cool or interesting from world building perspectives etc there is nothing wrong with that just as there is nothing wrong with finding animals cool.

I can't wait for them to realize that humans are a part of the animal kingdom. Is having sex with humans "bestiality" then?

Thats a load of nothing to defend your weird fetish. Just be like normal people and keep it to yourself behind closed doors. …[C]hill out with the furries until they become the next progressive movement.

That's how sexual fetishes become a progressive movement; if you bully a marginalized group enough; they will lash back.


And people wonder why there is a common fear to express sexuality…

6
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The community is about sharing bad reddit posts (and mocking them).

Bad reddit posts consist of:

  • Awful formatting.
  • Irrelevant titles. (Also immoral clickbait titles.)
  • Nonsensical posts.
  • Bad edits to the reddit post.
  • Bot activity on the post.

(I'm uncertain if it should remain apolitical; but this instance is already political anyway.)

EDIT: The content or author of the post shouldn't be criticized or shared; only the reddit post itself.

7
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
  • This symbol vaguely resembles a helmet with a spike, which looks fascist to me.

  • It also resembles a closed eye with hair (the brackets); in fact I'm about to post a flag with a symbol.

I don't know how else to use it tho.

8
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Reddit has been on a spree of banning Communist subreddits. (These subreddits have been recreated on Lemmygrad and Hexbear.)

(What worries me is that this banning spree could spread to distributist subreddits, like r/distributism.)


Now I got curious about the censorship on Distributism. I don't know of an actual instance where Distributism has ever been censored, unlike socialism. (I don't think it has been censored; probably because it's an unpopular economic system.)

9
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

From October 2021 to a few days ago I could barely make progress on my projects and I don't like feeling cold.

Now I feel like I can generate motivation again.

10
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

What is your opinion on it?


I feel like I got too much hate for it.

11
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I got some ideas for what Lemmy instance to make.

  • A distributist instance.
  • An instance for health.
  • A corporate or school instance.
  • Some more city instances.
12
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

If not, then it looks like there's a novel programming project I can work on (and then quit because it'll get boring).

13
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I had an opinion but I lost it; and my internet is down so I can't write through a physical keyboard. I also struggle to write my opinion. :(

Anyway, I'm asking because skepticism is important!

14
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I like to believe that there is a method that could give everyone their ideal universes. By giving everyone their ideal universes, we could solve morality.

Uncertainty in the predictions of the ideal universes could be a problem; an ideal universe in a frame of time could become an unideal universe in the next frame of time.


For people that don't want an ideal universe, we could give them an unideal universe (though that depends on their perspective).

15
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

They did it with Privacy and FOSS; they'll probably do it with federaton.

16
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

So I'm just now realizing why the word "trap" and animemes controversy was a controversy and I feel stupid for blindly siding with animemes.

When I first heard abut this controversy, in /r/animemes; I believed in the animemes community because I (somehow) thought their rights were being taken away.

Sometime later, I heard about the controversy through the /r/trans community; I found out that trap is a slur against (female-to-male) transsexuals. After that, I believed in the trans community side over the /r/animemes community.


I don't really care about this controversy; I forgot it even happened; but I feel so gullible in general because all sides seem to make sense to me.

17
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
18
1
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

/> tin t4

/> cost about 100 usd

/> sound amazing for the price, better than a lot of 300-400 usd headphones

/> comes with beautiful high quality case (synthetic leather)

/> headphones themselves made out of stunning machined aluminium

/> standardized detachable replaceable mmcx cable

/> cable itself pretty nice

/> 3.5 mm connector so rigid you could kill somebody with it

/> never need to be charged

/> will prolly last so long they'll outlive you

/> neutral/warm-ish sound, relatively accurate

/> relatively unknown, but of much better value than the vast majority of "known" brands

19
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I don't know if you're used to ordering stuff internationally from AliExpress or similar, but it's very normal for tracking information to dump a package into a void for about a month until the thing shows up at your door. This site actually connects the Chinese shipper's tracking information with the domestic shipper's tracking information and adds estimates on top of the shipper's info. Handy!

20
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

All is in flux.

All is uncertainty.

I recognize that at the decrepitude of 27 years of age, I am past the height of cool.

The world will shift, and I will jog to meet it or be left behind.

But if there is any mercy in you, Gen Z -- flared, bootcut, straight legged, pegged, wide legged, pleated mercy -- please do not bring back low waist jeans.

They looked awful on those of us who weren't thin even when we were young.

I will not return to that suffering. Please do not inflict it on each other.

21
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The internet is clever, but it’s not always smart. It’s personalized, but not personal. It lures you in with a timeline, then fucks with your concept of time. It doesn’t know or care whether you actually had a miscarriage, got married, moved out, or bought the sneakers. It takes those sneakers and runs with whatever signals you’ve given it, and good luck catching up.

We would never accept this kind of targeting from humans. If you offer someone a drink, they say "No thanks I'm sober", and you then keep shoving it in their face -- that is terrible of you.

We accept the equivalent as a neutral fact of Internet ads. Why?

22
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I like the rewindy-aspect of having to pick up a few cards when you get it wrong. My partner and I were both new so it's possible it's more monotonous if you're better at the strategy.

23
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

In short, [in the anti-professionalist view] the actor enmeshed in a system is doing things for the wrong reasons, not for the reasons that would recommend themselves to him if he were not thus "constricted," but for reasons that attach to the limited and suspect goals of the professional enterprise.

In this opposition of the central or essential to the superficial or ephemeral we have the essence of the long quarrel between rhetoric and philosophy, a quarrel that philosophy has by and large won, since more often than not rhetoric is identified as the art of illegitimate appeal, as a repertoire of tricks or manipulative techniques by means of which some special interest, or point of view, or temporary fashion passes itself off as the truth. The rhetorical, then, is that which stands between us and the truth, obscuring it, preventing us from allying ourselves with it, and tying us instead to some false or partial god.

That is, if one is operating from within what we might call an ideology of essences-a commitment to the centrality and ultimate availability of transcendent truths and values-one will necessarily view with suspicion and fear activities and structures that are informed by partisan purposes (the spirits of advocacy and vanity) and directed toward local and limited (that is, historical) goals. Antiprofessionalism, in short, follows inevitably from essentialism, so much so that an essentialist who wishes in some sense to give professionalism its due cannot avoid falling into the anti-professionalist stance.

The word illusion marks the passage (apparently unnoticed by the author) from observation to judgment, from the description of something as conventional and historical to the declaration that therefore it is unreal. But one cannot say that because literature and literary theory are conventional-that is, effects of discourse-they are illusory without invoking as a standard of illusion a reality that is independent of convention, as essential reality; and once one has done that (however knowingly or unknowingly) the familiar anti-professionalist complaint against structures and practices that stand between us and what is true and valuable and sincere cannot be far behind.

It might seem that the only alternative to anti-professionalism is quietism or acquiescence in the status quo because by discrediting it, I have taken away the basis on which this or that professional practice might be criticized. But in fact, the only thing that follows from my argument is that a practice cannot (or should not) be criticized because it is professional, because it is underwritten by institutionally defined goals and engaged in for institution-specific reasons; for since there are no goals and reasons that are not institutional, that do not follow from the already in-place assumptions, stipulated definitions, and categories of understanding of a socially organized activity, it makes no sense to fault someone for acting in the only way one can possibly act. This does not, however, rule out opposition, for someone can always be faulted for acting in institutional ways that have consequences you deplore; and you can always argue that certain institutional ways (and their consequences) should be altered or even abolished, although such arguments will themselves be made on behalf of other institutional ways (and their consequences).

It is an ideology both because it serves certain well-defined interests (despite its claims to neutrality and to equal access) and because it is at variance with the facts as Larson understands them. She points out that rather than owing nothing to society, the professional owes everything to society, including the self whose independence is his strongest claim and justification. That is, it is only with reference to the articulation and hierarchies of a professional bureaucracy that a sense of the self and its worth-its merit-emerge and become measurable.

A professional must find a way to operate in the context of purposes, motivations, and possibilities that precede and even define him and yet maintain the conviction that he is "essentially the proprietor of his own person and capacities." The way he finds is anti-professionalism. As we have seen again and again, antiprofessionalism is by and large a protest against those aspects of professionalism that constitute a threat to individual freedom, true merit, genuine authority. It is therefore the strongest representation within the professional community of the ideals which give that community its (ideological) form. Far from being a stance taken at the margins or the periphery, anti-professionalism is the very center of the professional ethos, constituting by the very vigor of its opposition the true form of that which it opposes. Professionalism cannot do without anti-professionalism; it is the chief support and maintenance of the professional ideology; its presence is a continual assertion and sign of the purity of the profession's intentions. In short, the ideology of anti-professionalism-of essential and independent values chosen freely by an independent self-is nothing more or less than the ideology of professionalism taking itself seriously.

What this means, finally, is that even if one is convinced (as I am) that the world he sees and the values he espouses are constructions, or, as some say, "effects of discourse," that conviction will in no way render that world any less perspicuous or those values any less compelling. It is thus a condition of human life always to be operating as an extension of beliefs and assumptions that are historically contingent, and yet to be holding those beliefs and assumptions with an absoluteness that is the necessary consequence of the absoluteness with which they hold-inform, shape, constitute-us.

I came upon this because I was really looking for criticisms of The Professions made on the grounds that they are too siloed from wider society, and I think that's sort of rattling around within Eagleton's complaint. It isn't that there isn't social validation of (whatever we're agreeing counts as) professionalist nonsense, it's that the institutions that provide that validation are not capital-S Society. But it's fun to get to that ending excerpt and find the intellectual tension between the absolute and contingent that is both irrefutable (in any satisfying way) and unacceptable (in any sense that demands satisfaction).

24
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The thing that's novel here, to me, is not that they were pushing engagement at all costs; that was evident from Zuck's whole....shtick. The key is that they were aware what those costs were, in more detail than anyone could divine from the outside.

What do we have to offer people in response to this that's positive? What is being built that's better? What are the funding models that don't inevitably circle the advertising-eyeballs drain? I want to read people's positive visions for change. I want to help things change. That's one thing the Indieweb has going for it--even when you aren't Fully Onboard With All Parts Of It, it's clearly articulating what a better world might look like, and the big names there deserve props for it. The Fediverse, too--it's growing toward what it wants to be, and that's beautiful and wonderful.

(I also want to break up Facebook and salt the goddamn earth of Menlo Park, but that's its own thing, I suppose)

25
1
submitted 3 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

If you began this article with the hope and expectation that you would get to see us spit on our hands, put on our dictionary pants, and tell the people who use supposably that we are very disappointed in them….that’s not going to happen.

First of all, dictionary pants are very tight and uncomfortable, and are only worn in the direst of circumstances.

view more: next ›

Anything

88 readers
1 users here now

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS