Skip Navigation

Posts
1
Comments
819
Joined
8 mo. ago

  • That... means so much. Thank you. From the bottom of my heart. 🥲

  • Yeah, cool, you got that marketing lingo down and this is totally not the first thing you said that doesn't vaguely sound AI generated.

    Be that as it may, as I said, I'm not going to buy any cryptocoins of any kind, so what am I even doing here. Wait, should I NOT have mentioned that to get more of a response to what I'm actually asking? Dangit.

  • You're here now, why make lil ol' hungover me do the work of sifting through more marketing speech?

  • This is still full of words that mean nothing to me and marketing speech and doesn't explain what the cryptocoin does in all this.

    community-driven token

    What does it mean for a token to be community-driven?

    Crypto, especially on the BNB Smart Chain, lets us send help fast and cheaply, directly to those agents — no banks, no red tape, no waiting weeks.

    And you can't do that with existing coins? Why the need for a new one?

    We’ve already set up transparent donation routes: no need for anyone to connect a wallet, just send to our public address on the site. This makes donating accessible to anyone with crypto — no fancy tools or apps needed.

    I suppose this is "transparent" for people who understand cryptocurrency.

    all funds go to relief

    "Funds", is that the money you make in the initial sale of the coin?

    like Wikipedia, but for emergency aid.

    What part exactly would be "like Wikipedia"?

    we want the community to shape this with us

    Shape what? What does a "community" do here?

    Sidenote: why does everything need a "community" these days? Don't answer that.

    This is not a comprehensive list of my thoughts. It's early, I'm hungover, and I'm not your target audience because I don't have the money OR the inclination to buy cryptocoin.

  • use crypto to help people in crisis

    Then this part needs to be about 5000% longer and explain in excruciating detail how a cryptocoin is going to help anyone, preferably in a way that non-techbros like me can understand. Right now, this is just another one of those "coins" to me.

  • Man. I'm gonna go pout in my nerd corner now.

  • Last names and stage names are entirely different species of names. I maintain (based on no evidence and personal belief only) that most of the people burdening their daughters with this name don't know it's a title.

    Edit: wait, I tell a lie, my evidence is that SO MANY people called Daenerys "Khaleesi" as her name. "Khaleesi did this, Khaleesi did that, my favourite character is Khaleesi, Khaleesi is Jon's aunt."

  • The thing that annoys me the most about all those Khaleesis is that Khaleesi is NOT HER NAME, IT'S HER TITLE FFS.

  • Any, really. Mm, Agimus...

  • All I can do is point you to Dr Barkley's work (he's a trusted authority on ADHD) and the references at the bottom. I know this isn't ideal but I am utterly incapable of reading entire actual scientific papers, it's a miracle when I manage to read articles like this from start to finish - which I know is an issue. Which is also why I tried to hedge my words in my original post (there seems to be evidence).

  • Jeffrey Combs.

  • In heat

    Jump
  • It's not just any human though, it's an actor, so movie related words should statistically be more likely.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The characters's behaviour...? I don't follow. You said you saw a picture?

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • It depends on how your dislike manifests. If you just take yourself out of the equation and leave them be, that's self-care. Telling them to stop a behaviour that they can't help because of some disability, telling them they're "lesser", that's ableist.

    How is you liking that character relevant?

  • Yeah, I should've looked it up first, Russell Barkley says it's 30% (I got a digit correct yay!). I know what you mean, all my classmates somehow seemed much more mature than me and I had no way to express that feeling back then.

  • There seems to be evidence that ADHD brains are a few years behind in development. I think I remember it being 3 years on average? Don't quote me, I have ADHD and my brain shouldn't be trusted with details. Anyway, that really shouldn't result in the kind of behaviour OP is describing though.