From Mastodon, you can treat Lemmy communities as if they're users (the ActivityPub term, I believe, is "agents"). That means you can follow them, and things posted to the community will get pushed out to you just as if they're Mastodon posts.
I'm shocked -- shocked, I say -- to hear that the National Post thinks the government shouldn't help people. Obviously the only thing it should spend money on is corporate subsidies.
Reddit was self-siloing and community moderated, so it was easier to avoid the worst of right-wing social media bullshit, but the place was (and is) crawling with anarcho-capitalists, techbro libertarians, and socons, and fascists with just enough brain cells to rub together to not get banned from the site.
Moderated spaces tend to filter out the biggest assholes who can't help themselves when it comes to blatantly and openly attacking people, but Reddit is not a moderated space. It's just that it contains moderated spaces that became large -- the unmoderated ones don't grow at the same rate. But there have been fairly long standing, ongoing, and successful efforts to fash up mid-sized subreddits and turn them into cesspits.
Big, noisy rooms promote this kind of behaviours. It's also why comment chains on big Reddit subreddits degrade into memes, injokes, and other flavours of referential humour.
It's all about being punchy and popular for Internet points, because otherwise no one is ever even going to read your words. They'll just be buried in the noise.
It'll be just like YouTube, where people are huddled on the floor praying to "the algorithm" with each bit of "content" they post, hoping to make it big as a "professional Redditor".
I can't wait to see the per-user algorithmic feeds. One post from r/conspiracy or r/conservative scrolls past your screen, and suddenly it's all you see.
There is also always a flurry of people trying out accounts in multiple instances whenever there's a migration wave, so not only are we seeing people who dipped a toe in only to leave, or go back to Reddit, but we're seeing the effect of people understanding how the ecosystem works better and settling into a single active account.
Given the rights prisoners have in many other countries, it might be better to say that things are just as bad in the US as the media paints other countries.
Because, uh, prison labour is pretty fucking awful, especially when considering that y'all gots them private prisons down there.
Once you get them together, consider doing the POSSE thing and posting them to a blog first. That way you can retain full control of them and still spread them around wherever they may be useful. There's even an ActivityPub module for WordPress!
I have a 2019 MBP for work, and honestly, it doesn't sleep right, either. I'm kinda at the point where I think Intel has a significant problem.
Windows has become a lumbering trash heap, Intel doesn't seem to be much better on the hardware side of things. Together, Wintel has kind of become something of a shit storm.
But, I don’t know, if someone can comfortably afford it and they perceive some benefit, is it a bad thing?
Well, they could be going to someone for an actual treatment for their issues, which would do them better in the long run. Plus, many people can claim chiropractic therapy costs can as medical expenses for tax purposes, meaning all of us are paying for it. And for those who can't, many insurance plans cover chiropractics, meaning those with supplementary health insurance plans are paying more or getting less for their money because it's propping up sham therapies and poorly regulated physiotherapy LARPers.
Ah, got ya. I didn't clue in to the being passed part of the scenario.
Thanks!