The meme is not about the specific person in the photo. You're not supposed to hate the specific person in the photo. It's about the type of person described in the text and the picture is just a stand-in for those people.
This type of Christian is very real and numerous and make service workers lives much harder. This meme, I believe, is by and for the people who are effected by their attitudes.
I think you might not enjoy the meme because you haven't had experience with this type of Christian. That's okay. Not every meme has to be for everyone. But please, don't let your takeaway be that we hate the specific woman in from the photo.
I'm very new to Linux, and the two distros that seem the most appealing are Fedora, possibly Nobara, and openSUSE. Do you know why Fedora gets recommended so much more often over openSUSE? I'd like to narrow down my choice between these two. If it helps, I'd like to use KDE, and I game a lot.
I agree people can and do create without IP as a motivation, and would continue to in its absence. I believe in a perfect world where everyone's needs are met, IP may not be necessary at all. I would argue, though, that in the world we live in, the economic incentive IP creates has tangibly contributed to many valuable innovations that benefit humanity. Many people and companies rely on that incentive to be able to fund the work needed to create.
It's really only creepy old dudes I get it from. It seems pretty genuine most of the time. These comments are more frequent and more egregious with my women coworkers, though, as one might expect.
That's valid. Just because I can't relate to that desire doesn't make it wrong. That's why I mentioned it was just my opinion and specifically why I'm not a fan.
A little bit. Different groups might engage more with different aspects of my personality, so I find myself naturally emphasizing different parts of myself accordingly. Code switching isn't that unusual, I don't think.
Maybe the o is a nose and the slash is the mouth? Like how ":-)" uses three characters.