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2 yr. ago

  • Arlo is also notourious for his recording of The City of New Orleans. He didn't write it, but he made it famous, and it has since been recorded by just about everyone.

  • This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don't give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that's all we wanted to do.

    — Woody Guthrie on copyright

  • Yup. Huge selection bias.

    The people bothering to post random negative comments arealso likely to have too much time om their hands, leading them to post a lot inn general. But there are also plenty of nice people woth too much time on their hands.

  • I'd recommend all Americans to check out the verses they don't teach you in school.

    There's several versions, but they go something like this:

       
        
    One Sunday morning in the shadow of a steeple  
    By the relief office I saw my people  
    As they stood hungry, I stood there asking  
    Was this land made for you and me?  
    
    There was a big high wall there that tried to stop me  
    Sign was painted, saying "private property" 
    But on the back side it didn't say nothing  
    That side was made for you and me  
    
      
  • Shipping out to Boston is not even forgotten in the taperoom - in all likelihood Guthrie never recorded it.

    There's a bunch of songs Guthrie wrote but never recorded. His estate keeps track of all of them, recorded or not, on woodyguthrie.org.

    Wilco teamed up with singer Billy Bragg to release three volumes of previously unreleased Guthrie songs under the title Mermaid Avenue. They're amazing albums.

    One of the most interesting songs, and related to this post, is titled "All You Fascists". After the release of the Wilco version in 2000, they discovered a wartime Guthrie recording from the BBC, so we now have access to the original as well. But the cover version was released first.

    The whole Mermaid Avenue series is worth a spin. Lots of fun upbeat stuff as well, not only about defeating fascism.

  • I agree the quote is not a particularly good addition, and the framing of "what happened" would be better answered by just telling people what happened. I just think it's good to call on people to rethink economic structures, though arguably a Hayek quote foreshadowing crypto might not be the best way of doing it.

  • It's a site compiling a bunch of random graphs explaining how the American economy went to shot after the end of Bretton Woods, despite most Americans not realizing and living on as if their country still cares about them?

    I don't see the libertarian angle here so much. To me this is all speaking for Keynesian economics if anything.

  • Considering this is the problem, I struggle to believe "more nukes" is the solution. No matter how much American political realists enjoy jerking off to their doomsday scenarios.

  • We should be hesitant to accept too many lessons from the American realist school of thought. Their great legacy is to narrowly steer clear of a nuclear holocaust, on several instances out of sheer luck, while repeatedly fucking up huge parts of the world beyond recognition.

    Somehow we celebrate this clown parade for the one disaster they nearly brought upon us, but we narrowly escaped. There's no lessons to be learned from the Americans, except as a cautionary tale.

    Sure, MAD worked; we only came closer to our own extinction than we ever have in the process.

  • Build up defence, and a plausible threat using other less awful weapons.

    Nuclear threatens the civil population. Despots like Putin might not even care all that much about that. What we need is targeted weapons and intelligence. Putin should expect that, if he launches a nuke, it might not mean that Moscow will be transformed to ashes, but we'll take out him and his crooks with targeted strikes wherever they may hide.

    The Russians have a history of burning their cities to the ground, and of sacrificing their population for strategic reasons. Targeting the civilian population is pointless. We can do a lot better with targeted strikes, and with modern technology it should be possible.

  • Nuclear war is not a stick battle, it's a knife fight. You'll both end up bleeding out. Best thing you can do is to not participate.

    People should watch Doctor Strangelove as a fucking case study.

  • This comment section seems to assume that just because the cold war never went nuclear, it never could have. It also seems to forget the stress of living under constant threat of nuclear war.

    We need to get rid of nukes, not build new ones. One of our core projects as humanity should be to get rid of nuclear weapons. Our failure to do so is the fault of the Americans as much as the Russians, if not more. You guys sure love your bombs.

    So to answer the question: Nah, fuck that.

  • You might be slower than the rest, but still smarter than them. Hare and turtoise kinda situation. Nothing wrong with being a slow learner, the willingness to learn is where it's at.

  • I feel like I can download files to my newest laptop faster than I can move them around locally on my older ones. But maybe I'm just getting old, and my reference points are dates. Or maybe I just don't know what I'm talking about, that's also likely.

    In either case, thanks for the explanation!

  • I get that it's not very fun to talk about, but I wish women would tell men about these constant risk assessments more often. We live in parallel worlds and it seems most men are completely fucking oblivious - even many of the mostly well meaning ones. And even when they're told about it they might initially dismiss it as crazy talk.

  • A new laptop, even the best in the world, won't make your downloads any faster.

    I struggle to make sense of this. Most obviously, network cards have gotten better with time. It obviously depends on what you're coming from and what you're changing to, but of course a laptop upgrade could make your downloads faster?

  • I have awful experience with recent T series ThinkPads.

    My Ideapad 510S that I bought many many years ago is much more robust, and has lived through a lot of use and abuse. Meanwhile I treat my ThinkPads like precious relics, and they still keep breaking down on me for stupid-ass reasons. I bought ThinkPad because I thought it could last me at least a decade ­— that couldn't be further from the truth. What a pile of trash. I guess they were good ten years ago.

    Next time I'm gonna put good money into a laptop — and, as both charging ports on my T14s are currently failing, I'm afraid it won't be long — I'll get myself a Framework.

    For the lower end of the price spectrum I sadly have no idea. I'm just here to warn everyone about ThinkPads. It has become my destiny in life.

  • I like the idea of content creators pooling together to create an instance.

    Viewers could donate to the instance, and the money could be divided between content creators after server costs are covered. Suddenly you have an open source payment optional Netflix alternative up and running.

    In a way it's a bit weird to me that we haven't seen more experiments like this. But then again, I guess content creators are too busy creating content to think about crazy innovative distribution models.

  • If you're alone and/or feeling potentially unsafe, you did the right thing no question. Prevent the situation from escalating, get away, leave him to his daily routine of making people feel uncomfortable.

    If you have a greater audience and you're in a safer setting, you could consider calling him out. Make eye contact, flip him off, make him know he is not being appreciated. That could be a learning moment, but it could also be the moment when he starts giving you extra attention as you have acknowledged his existence and/or hurt his ego. So it could go both ways and should never be attempted without bystanders.

    In a setting where you're in a mixed gender group, make a male friend aware of the situation and ask them if they could go tell the creep that they're making you uncomfortable. Men are sadly more likely to believe that their behaviour is creepy when it's coming from other men, in my experience.

    Raising awareness of the issue in general is good, and judging by the comment section here so far there's not all that much of it around. So that's also something. I think this is really a question that should go out to men more than to women - what should we do when we observe men making women feel uncomfortable? How can we react in a constructive manner?

  • Strong disagree on the whole giving up part.

    Looking over briefly and not as subtly as one would maybe have hoped is normal behaviour. Coming up and staring is not.

    Sadly, if there was an easy solution to this problem we would all have been well aware of it by now. But giving the world up to the creeps is not the right way to go - they will keep going at it forever, shrinking in women's freedoms little by little until there's nothing left and women won't be allowed to leave the fucking house without a man any more. We've seen it happen, anyone who thinks America is any better should take a second look at it.