I imagine he could feel very angry, sad and resentful about that. And the yet he can't express it to the thing that's being so unfair to him how do you tell your illness it's being unfair?
So it's just sat there until someone comes along and reminds him of how unfair it is and how angry he is by telling him to take his medication, and again he's feeling powerless.
So he takes what little power he has back, he refuses his medication and attacks the nurses.
Extreme situation, given it's potentially life and death stuff, regular human behaviour. Who hasn't snapped at someone when we're in a bad mood when they were trying to help?
This is an interesting bit of writing, drawing that distinction.
It seems focused on what a protest isn't, could do with more on what it is. What does it look like to think systemically when you turn that into action?
I've been shocked by the way people will believe violent Demagogues who convince them horrible things are okay if they're doing them for the benefit of their group of people.
The number of conspiracy theories people of the past were willing to believe about queer folk, foreign people and anyone who didn't conform is absolutely staggering.
Nope.
Tried the big two didn't get anything out of it.
Dropped Reddit during the big storm.
I'm fine with things as they are now.
The lower amount of content on Lemmy is balanced by the increased quality and the fact I can't spend all day on here