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442
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • They've already been doing a "buy canadian" campaign and I started shopping at co-op and most of their meat is Canadian so I think we will be okay as consumers. It'll take time for production to adapt tho

  • Hell the people may do to him what they did to mussolini

  • When his money runs out, we move onto them. We clear them all out.

  • I hope when this is all over that Donald Trump personally is held liable for everything

  • Idk i was just making fun of JBP because of "up yours, woke moralists!"

    Everyone is a moralist on the internet, it's just another way to divide people. The differences between the dems and repubs are just for show. It's been an oligarchy for decades, it's just obvious now.

  • Oh fuck that's a great business model. Maybe one day I'll open a library/cafe/bar with nice music and atmosphere

  • I mean, there's no cheat code to meeting people. It requires you to put yourself out there, and what better way to put yourself out there than to publicly enjoy things you enjoy?

    Do things you're interested in, self express (have fun with clothes, pins, patches, whatever, they make a good conversation starter), notice other people self expressing. As far as approaching people goes, it's always safe to quickly compliment something somebody obviously put effort into, and then from there you can gauge whether they're interested in more of a conversation.

    An example being if somebody has clearly crocheted their bag or something, you could say something like "that is a great bag, did you make it?/where did you get it?" Big rule when complimenting is ALWAYS be ready to let a conversation end where it starts. You're just throwing a ball into their court to see if they engage further than a "thank you!" You're just throwing out a line to see who bites, because nobody owes you their attention, but somebody who wants to give it may make it clear if you open the floor.

    Opening yourself up to rejection is difficult and scary, but also just a necessary part of making connections.

  • Library or bookstore, babeeeey

  • I don't understand what you mean. His entire activism history is on his Wikipedia page. He's been fighting the good fight and influencing people in lower politics long before he became a senator.

    He did a lot in the 60s as a university student during the Civil Rights Movement, a time when a lot of white people weren't stepping up, and they really needed to.

    "He became the chairman of the university chapter of the Congress for Racial Equality (CORE) and merged the group with SNCC — the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. Bernie literally helped lead the first known sit-in in at the University of Chicago, where 33 students camped outside of the President’s office — protesting segregating housing on campus."

    This is from this article: https://medium.com/@ShaunKing/you-dont-really-know-who-bernie-sanders-was-in-the-1960s-79628016125f

    Feel free to read more if you like. He did a lot of protesting against police brutality at the time as well.

    Just because somebody hasn't fixed every issue doesn't mean they aren't fighting the good fight. Bernie is clearly a man who has always had his heart in the right place and knows that the good fight requires more than just him, but that doesn't mean he's ever gonna stop.

  • For videogame essays, my two faves are Jacob Geller and Powerpak

  • Idk man, I've chosen not to question the names this absolute circus chooses

  • "a movement that has already caused Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, to comment that advocates are “making it very difficult” to detain people."

    Good. That's the fucking point. Let's make it even more difficult. Hell, it'll be pretty difficult to take over a country without a head.