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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SL
Posts
1
Comments
59
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I got one off etsy, it's just 3d printed. Works fairly well, but the floss can get a little loose towards the end. But it's easy enough to fix.

    Not quite as convenient as the individual picks, but FAR less waste. A trade off I'm happy to make.

  • The Civil Rights Act was passed in large part because of it. Is your argument that the Civil Rights Act changed nothing? Because that's silly. Or were you just not thinking, and trying to score internet points? Because that's also silly. You're being silly.

  • My understanding is that it was created in response to a ton of Musk spam which was primarily positive, when he was first emerging as a popular figure. People got fed up with hearing about him, and started Enough Musk Spam to point out how absolutely terrible he actually is.

    Nowadays, there's much less positive Musk news, so it feels more like a misnomer. But it was started as an attempt to highlight how bad he is. Seems to have worked a bit, tbh.

  • "instead of using the singular nongendered pronoun already present in English."

    Lmao. That shoulda given away the /s right there.

    But uh, I think the pronoun you're talking about there is "they." 😜

  • Completely fair, and I totally agree! I'm also not a person of color, so I hope my comment didn't come across as trying to co-opt the movement. Just wanted to, as you said, point out there are a lot of similarities and lessons that could be learned.

    I, as a trans person, fully recognize that black people had it worse than trans people do now. While both communities face violence, black people faced violence that was heavily state-sponsored and far more widespread, even with the recent increased rates of violence against trans people. The entire U.S. legal system was rigged against them from the start. It was their blood that earned us the Civil Rights Act, which is the foundation our movement needed. And that's a debt we will owe forever. And I also recognize that people of color continue to face discrimination. The fight isn't over, for any of us.

    I'm getting wordy. I think we're both on the same page here. I guess civil rights discussions get me going (but tbh, I'm okay with that). Hope you have a great day!

  • That's a quote from his letter from Birmingham jail, right?

    While there are, of course, major differences in trans and black liberation, I read the full letter again recently and was shocked at how much of it was applicable to the current trans rights movement. I actually get the feeling that the two movements are more alike than they are different.

    History repeats itself. I highly encourage everyone to take a half hour and read the full letter. Maybe if everyone took his words to heart, we could avoid some of the bullshit this time around. The conservative playbook of oppression hasn't changed much. It's just focused on a different target this time.

  • Do you have the exact numbers handy? That's not something I'd heard. Not saying you're wrong, I'd just like to see the actual breakdown.

    Regardless, I think my overall stance will stay the same. This isn't a black and white issue. And I still trust them FAR more than anyone else in Congress. Even if they didn't get all the workers everything they asked for once. And let's be clear, the workers still got a lot from those negotiations. They're in a much better spot now than they were. No, it doesn't mean the fight is over, but the wheel of progress turns slowly, especially when one party is throwing every resource they have to get it to spin backwards. Small wins are still wins.

    Or to put it in American terms: you can win by 5 touchdowns or a single extra point, either way, your record looks the same. Sure, it feels better to win by blowout. But it feels a LOT worse to lose.

  • I don't even necessarily agree their right to protest was undermined. There were 12 unions negotiating during that period. Only four of them were wanting the strike to continue. It's a weird situation, and you're right, we can't pretend to know what went on behind closed doors. But to me, it looked like 4 unions were trying to hold the rest hostage and force everyone to keep striking when they didn't want to.

    Regardless, this certainly isn't something anyone should be villainizing The Squad for. They've done more for progressive rights than any group of congresspeople in recent memory. People who are still salty over it should maybe take a moment of introspection and figure out if they actually think The Squad are bad people, or if maybe Right wing media got ahold of the one time they weren't 100% on the side of unions and workers and ran it into the ground as a way to diminish support for them.

    To me, it's almost certainly the latter.

    https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/congress-votes-to-avert-rail-strike-amid-dire-warnings

  • That's been Catholicism's playbook since day one. There's a reason they're so against any kind of sex that doesn't lead to procreation.

    Course, it also used to be rooted in the fact that medicine was trash for a long time, and a lot of kids died, so you'd want to have as many as you could to give some a shot at living a full life. But that's not the case anymore, so yeah, the only reasons to have as many kids as possible is as you say, to outnumber the sane people, and to keep the working class populated, so we inch closer and closer to Idiocracy becoming reality every day.

    But hey, look at those shareholder's profits!

  • See, e.g., the war on "drugs"

    The GOP has been working towards making the US a dictatorship since the 60s. We passed the civil rights act and the right was so appalled that they had to treat people of color like, well, people, that they've been coming up with new ways to ensure progress never happens again ever since.

  • Hi, I'm a lawyer. While I work in a different area of law and therefore can't speak too in depth about this with certainty, if their terms are as enforceable as the linked articles seem to indicate, then yes, this is good advice.

    As always with the law, things may vary by jurisdiction. If you have specific questions, contact a lawyer in your area.

  • I don't get why people here are so in favor of bot seeding. To me, that makes a network inorganic and it intimidates average users from posting since it will more than likely be drowned out by all the bots. There are plenty of link aggregators in the world if all you want is funny memes.

    I prefer places that feel like a real forum, with real people, interacting in real ways. That's what used to make reddit unique to me. That's what I love about Lemmy now.

    I don't care if a community doesn't grow at a rapid pace. I'd rather have thoughtful conversations from a few individuals rather than a wall of spam that stifles discussion by making it harder to find discussions, since it spaces all the content out over dozens or hundreds of posts.

    If all you want to do is doomscroll, there is no shortage of places to do that. But if you want to have actual discussions with real people... I'm not even sure there's a place for that anymore with how pro-bot this comment section is.

    Guess I'm the old person yelling at clouds at this point, but it makes me kind of sad to see.

  • You have the right to request access to inspect the personal information a company stores on you. At least, in the US. And I believe the UK and EU as well but I can't speak as much to those.

    If you want to be truly terrified (or enlightened, however you prefer to think of it), pick any big company that you've used and request all the data they have stored on you. The amount of data they'll have is STAGGERING. Certainly hundreds of pages, possibly thousands. It's insane.