Skip Navigation
Posts
9
Comments
238
Joined
2 yr. ago

rule

  • It has a delicious sort of passive aggressive vibe to it.

  • Did the alleged "slum lords" lose against the actual slum lords' smear campaign?

  • I wouldn't be surprised if they called developers "terrorists" at some point.

    NIMBY property owners are so convinced of the righteousness of their assets -- and of the evil lurking within any effort to slightly slow down their appreciating value -- that I don't think there's a level of wickedness that exceeds a threat to those assets.

    Like, I wouldn't be surprised if they thought: "these developers are worse than Bin Laden. At least Bin Laden didn't decrease the worth of MY property."

  • When the argument against an initiative says, "greedy developers" that is just a populist NIMBY smear spoken by even greedier, already-existing landlords.

    I actually voted against a housing development one time because I got played by those words. I'm a little wiser now.

  • Oops. Sorry about that. I opened the Voyager app and found an unsent reply, and was like, "I thought I sent this."

    And I hit send.

    But apparently, if you've had the Voyager web app minimized... and come back to it after 30-40 minutes... AND hit send... it might just reply to a totally unrelated comment in the same post.

  • Maybe he killed his first enemy combatant and realized he wasn't a soldier?

  • I'm glad you got a good upvote:downvote ratio for that post. It's encouraging to know that people are at least willing to listen to a reasonable take on Taylor Swift.

  • People have been hating Swift for decades now. They were hating her for writing too many relationship-related songs even before the American left revived.

    She's an easy target because her target demographic is teenage girls, and anything / anyone beloved by teenage girls MUST necessarily be gay and worthless.

    See also: Justin Bieber, the Backstreet Boys, and the Jonas Brothers.

    I highly suspect people joined the left and transferred their hatred from, "Taylor Swift the musician for stupid, hysterical girls, who I hate" to, "Taylor Swift, the billionaire," without once examining the lens through which they first started hating her. And now she gets more "anti-billionaire" hate than Jeff Bezos?

    It bothers me.

    Misogyny is a tool of capitalism, and to quote Lorde: the tools of the master will never dismantle the master's house. No one is destroying capitalism by weirdly fixating on Taylor Swift and her fans "because she's a billionaire" while criticizing her more than basically all other billionaires.

    I look forward to the day I see a leftist meme reminding me "you can't love Bruce Springsteen (1.1b) or Jay-Z (2.5b) and still be a leftist."

    Until then, I'm not taking lectures on leftism from people who haven't deconstructed their own feelings of hatred and superiority towards teenage girls.

    Edit: I hope I didn't come across as angry at you in particular. You don't seem to be joining in the hypocritical, unnuanced hate.

  • To tell any other story in the Star Wars universe, you must first retcon the Original Trilogy.

    See, the Original Trilogy established that the "dark side" was a temptation for every Jedi. Like cocaine or meth for modern humans: addictive poison that gives a temporary rush of power.

    That's great for the whole spiritual, mystic, two-wolves-within-you conflict Luke went through. His victory was overcoming his shortcomings in the form of fear and anger.

    But it's actually terrible for any story made afterwards.

    On the one hand, you can't now make a story where, "maybe the Jedi were excessively stoic." without also inadvertently making the argument that Luke was maybe... wrong?... to conquer his emotions? It undermines Luke's conflict.

    On the other hand, you also can't make the Dark Side totally evil without flattening Vader's character. When Luke loses himself to fear in Episode 5 and to anger in Episode 6, he proves that the Dark Side doesn't sink its teeth into you and control you permanently after a single moment of weakness. Even after losing yourself to the Dark Side, you can still observe how it is hurting your loved ones and then choose to pull yourself out of it, conquering your fear and anger in order to protect them. Exactly as Luke does for Vader, and exactly as Vader does immediately after for Luke.

    Which means Anakin was just... one-dimensional up until that point. Weak. Too simple to be a protagonist. He wakes up to find he's killed Padme, and yet still doesn't turn his life around and learn to fight the temptation of the Dark Side? He hunts down and kills Jedi who had nothing to do with his fall, and yet never looks into their eyes to realize he's fallen?

    No matter how you look at it, it just... doesn't work.

    That's why the prequels retconned the Jedi into something morally ambiguous. And why the sequels retconned them into a past that needed killing. It's why the Clone Wars animated series turned the Jedi into a bureaucratically anti-emotion order. And why a lot of video games added lore where the Jedi actually committed genocide against the Sith. It's also why pretty much none of these other media talk about the Dark Side in the same tone as the OT.

    The second the OT ended, the Dark Side could no be longer a "temptation". It had to became a faction. An unjustly vilified piece of humanity. An ethnic group.

    Because you can't have a "dark side" and have complicated, nuanced characters and extensive world-building: either A) the world will fall apart, B) the characters will be woefully inconsistent, or C) all of the above.

    So every, single time you want to make new Star Wars media, you have to retcon the "Dark Side" essentially out of existence.

  • Materialist answer (inspired by a video called Why The Political Compass is Wrong: Establishing An Accurate Model of Political Ideology, by breadtuber Halim Alrah... and also Jane Elliott's famous experiment)

    Business owner makes money by paying workers to produce widgets at $6 / unit. Owner sells these widgets at $10 / unit, making a $4 profit each sale.

    Before long, the workers catch on to the reality of the situation: the owner could be making a lot less and still be able to provide "leadership" (or whatever it is he provides). They decide not to work for less than... $8 per unit. With this price, the owner will still be wealthy (the business makes hundreds of widgets, after all). But now, so will the workers.

    So the workers save up money and use it to go on strike.

    However: business owner comes up with a better solution to the problem: he divides the workers into brown-eyed workers and blue-eyed workers. He then uses his money to discriminate against the brown-eyed workers. His cronies in government make it legal to deny brown-eyed workers jobs and housing. His cronies in the media write hysterical anecdotal stories about various brown-eyed rapists, thieves, and murderers.

    Terrified mobs -- stoked into a frenzy by the business owner's well-funded propaganda -- tear down brown-eyed people's homes and food supplies, leaving them destitute before the strike is done.

    The brown-eyed workers now must choose between returning to work for the business owner at $5 / unit... or starving to death.

    The blue-eyed workers, meanwhile, have just been tricked into betraying their own team. Some were not tricked, but simply unprepared. These unprepared workers stood by in either shock, uncertainty, or laziness, unable to comprehend how their fellow blue-eyed workers could have become so foolishly self-defeating and cruel.

    But now the business owner can put up the illusion of no longer needing the blue-eyed workers. He can run his factory on a skeleton crew of desperate, brown-eyed workers, and say to the blue, "uh oh! Looks like the brown-eyed workers just stole your jobs!"

    Much like the brown-eyed workers, the blue-eyed workers have a restricted set of choices: A) admit they were suckers --fooled into attacking their own team -- and try to apologize and rebuild their union, B) double down and blame brown-eyed people for undercutting them... but reluctantly return to work, because the strike is broken, or C) just like the brown-eyed workers, they can choose to starve to death.

    (A) will be the most difficult. As Mark Twain said: "it's easier to fool people than convince them they have been fooled."

    The business owner wins, and now society has an eye-color-discrimination problem. Eye color was an arbitrary characteristic. Yet now it decides where someone lives, who they spend time with, and what kinds of opportunities they have access to.

    The business owner can rinse and repeat for: skin tone, religion, country of origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, etc. As the saying goes,

    "Divide and conquer."

    You asked why trans people are currently the subject of fear and hysteria? No reason. Not any new reason at least. Trans people are different. Any and every difference between workers is an opportunity for those fatcats rich enough to own "The Daily Mail" and the "The New York Post" to separate us into camps and drain us dry, one camp at a time.

  • That sounds like the 2003 film, "Good Boy!"

  • I mean... look at the number of people who still, to this day, believe Joe Biden has dementia.

    He's an elderly man with a speech impediment, and anyone with reasoning skills could tell he's still lucid. But the right's centuries-long war against education has paid off, and now reasoning skills are scarce.

    Plus, ever since TikTok, there are now millions of people who get their "news" from five-second clips / soundbites. So if your "message" can't be summed up in what is essentially two pages of a picture book, in a way that can be digested without critical thinking, you are no longer a viable candidate.

    Put differently, the winner from now on is whoever better pulls the gullible vote.

  • I see you use capital letters in your post, so you presumably used a modifier key (shift) - unless you do modal caps with CapsLock all the time. I don’t know why people find that normal and easy, but as soon as it’s Ctrl or Alt they get in a tizzy and start talking about RSI.

    I know why:

    <Ctrl>

    and

    <Alt>

    are further from the home row than

    <Shift>

    .

    <Shift>

    is millimeters from the pinkie finger on either side. Your pinkie can reach that thing while the other three fingers stay put.

    <CapsLock>

    is in a similarly easy position, (and, in fact, another bit of Emacs advice I ran across is "switch

    <CapsLock>

    with

    <Ctrl>

    ", which feels like it wouldn't be "often recommended" for Emacs users if default Emacs was conducive to the standard qwerty keyboard layout.)

    The bottom row of the keyboard is just too far from the home row.

    <Right Alt>

    strains my right hand so much that I rarely reach for it instinctively, and using my left? Gotta say, whoever chose (zap-to-char) and (scroll-down-command) as the punishments upon any failed attempt at reaching M-x really knew how to intimidate the newcomers and the slow-learners (like me) to these heavy-duty text editors.

    The same story goes for

    <Ctrl>

    . The Odyssey that stands between my right pinkie and

    <Right Ctrl>

    is so easily blown off-course that said pinkie never volunteers to embark when I think "

    <Ctrl>

    " for fear it will never see its wife Penelope again... which means I end up typing C-x (and all that follows) entirely with my left hand... which stretches my left hand off the home row and trashes my accuracy.

    But I feel like I should note at this point: I have large hands and unusually broad shoulders, and if one of my hands is resting on the home row in a comfortable position (75-80 degrees), the other one is reaching the home row at a stark diagonal (50-60 degrees). Maybe I'm the unusual one. Maybe I'm a rare kind of person who needs to be using a rare keyboard to accommodate my stature. And maybe everyone else can use Emacs just fine (... though, again, I note: there are a few too many ergonomic hacks for Emacs available online for that to be the case).

    Main point: for me -- and apparently a decent number of forum users giving each other Emacs advice online -- the bottom-row modifiers are hard to hit. And it should come as no surprise, considering how far those keys are from the home row.

  • I did not know those existed. But I'm not surprised Emacs users would be seeking them out.

    Nor am I surprised that an entire writeup on Emacs-triggered hand strain is one of the hyperlinks on the article you linked.

    https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/RepeatedStrainInjury

  • GNU+Linux Humor @lemmy.ml
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    Durga, goddess of Emacs

    image transcription: picture of a statue of the Hindu deity Durga. The statue has ten arms.

    caption underneath the picture reads: in Hinduism, Durga is revered as the goddess of war, motherhood, and protection. But did you know she also wrote the default key bindings for Emacs?

    Permanently Deleted

  • The movie maybe. But that intro was basically divorced from the rest of the movie.

    The intro suggested that stupid people having kids was the reason humanity started evolving backward. It invoked natural selection and "survival of the fittest."

    The intro even labeled the low birth rate couple and high birthrate couple with IQ scores to illustrate this point.

    You argue that that the movie attributes the stupidity of its world to societal shifts. It does. It does a great job laying out a progression from late stage capitalism to idiocracy.

    But that just further highlights how unnecessary that intro was. The intro attributed the stupidity to something entirely different.

  • Permanently Deleted

  • Agreed. As iconic as that eugenicist prologue might be, it harms humanity and doesn't really serve the plot.

  • Writing Prompts @literature.cafe
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    Immediately after your death, you hear, "focus tester #503, thank you for participating in Earth. Remember: your feedback will likely be incorporated into future updates."

    From an AskLemmy question by @[email protected]

    Link to Lemmy World Post

    Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    What are some promising solutions to solar power's lack of night time availability? Is "transoceanic power transportation" on the list?

    EDIT: Submarine power transportation is indeed on the list

    Not transoceanic, but there are two projects currently proposed that will -- when constructed -- break the current record for the "longest undersea power transmission cable" (a record currently held by the North Sea Link at 720 km, or 450 miles.)

    One of these projects is the Xlinks Morocco-UK Power Project which aims to lay 3,800 km (2,400 miles) of cable and sell Morocco's solar power to England.

    There is, as of yet, not enough cable in the world to even begin this project. The company proposing the project is building factories to produce this cable.

    The other is the Australia-Asia Power Link, which aims to provide Australian solar power to Singapore using a 4,500 km (2,800 miles) undersea cable.

    Where the Xlinks project ran into a "not enough cable in the world" problem, Sun Cable's AAPL

    Work Reform @lemmy.world
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    Is this significant?

    I have questions about this event.

    First of all,

    Democratically Elected

    As the first-ever democratically elected leader of the UAW, Fain, a long-time union member himself, has taken a more confrontational approach to negotiations than his predecessors — including filming himself throwing Big Three automaker proposals in the trash.

    What was the process before? Was it worse?

    Has UAW been a sleeping giant this whole time on account of its leadership selection process?

    Stand Up Strikes

    But the strike won't involve all of the nearly 150,000 union members who work at the three automakers walking off their jobs en masse.

    Instead, workers at three Midwest auto plants — a General Motors assembly plant in Wentzville, Missouri, a Stellantis assembly plant in Toledo, Ohio, and part of a Ford plant in Wayne, Mich. -- were the first to walk off the job under UAW president Shawn Fain's "stand up strike" strategy.

    Are stand up strikes common? Do they win concessions?

    ADHD @lemmy.world
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    Official diagnostic tests?

    I want get myself an official diagnosis on ADHD and an answer regarding whether I'm autistic.

    Typically, a "10 minute test" takes me several hours. I spend a great deal of time contemplating the questions, filled with indecision. So I want to fill out the test before I even get to the psychologist's office.

    Which is why I plugged "official ADHD test" into a search engine, and got overwhelmed by the choices. And my main questions are:

    • do some websites offer a test they inaccurately describe as the official test? (If so, do those show up high on search results?)
    • do some websites offer the official test... and also augment the test with extra resources that help a cripplingly indecisive person answer more efficiently? (That would save me time.)
    Writing Prompts @literature.cafe
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    It's our world, (and the events can be ordinary and boring), but the narration and main character's internal monologue are in the tone of a cyberpunk dystopia.

    Example:

    Darren operated the mouse and keyboard, aware of them only as mundane extensions of himself, told his computer's web browser to establish a connection with the address called "Amazon." As if an online "marketplace" (powered by an ever evolving, manipulative artificial intelligence) bore any resemblance to the wilderness that used to cover the earth.

    Especially when said stretch of wilderness was already a fraction of itself, eaten up for strip farming or land speculation by dozens of corporations driven by the same profit-seeking mindset that motivated Amazon itself: infinite growth.

    Millions of microscopic lights flashed to show images of "products you might be interested in." Darren, like any other person, had to constantly relearn how to push past and ignore the suggestions. A subtle arms race between humans and the AI built by the rich to control the poor.

    GNU+Linux Humor @lemmy.ml
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    It can be a frustrating experience collecting Bing Rewards points while trying to learn Emacs. Microsoft understands, and is there for you.

    196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    Jump cut rule

    Fediverse @lemmy.world
    OwenEverbinde @lemmy.myserv.one

    I want an alt account for writing. Is there a corner of the Fediverse you recommend?

    I want to respond to writing prompts, but from a separate account. That way, if someone enjoys a story, they can scroll through my (alt account's) history for more writing without needing to dig through all of the dramatic, vitriolic, shit-stirring my main account will be regularly diving into.

    I was wondering if one of you wonderful people was familiar with some corner of the Fediverse perfect for this sort of use? Or would you recommend I create the account here on Lemmy?

    • If I do go outside of Lemmy, I want to go somewhere capable of commenting on lemmy.ml and lemmy.world posts (in particular, commenting in the WritingPrompts communities on those servers).
    • I would prefer to join a public instance, like I did when I signed up for Mastodon and Lemmy.
    • Note: as mentioned above I have used Lemmy and Mastodon so far.

    So: is there a part of the Fediverse I ought to be examining for this? WriteFreely, for example? Micro.blog perhaps?