This could be a great time to make a Captain America movie that captures the current political moment and actually says something. Redskull running for president and taking over the country or something, while Cap has to fight against an utterly feckless Iron Man capitulating to corporatocracy and punch a bunch of Nazis in cheap Temu suits. But that would require a spine.
It's pretty neat that we can see something like that from the distant past of our universe. Like, I'm aware that everything we see out in space is pretty delayed, but hearing this referred to as being in the 'early universe' really drives home that we're looking into the past on such incredibly long time scales. It makes the hundred thousand years or so from one end of the Milky Way to the other sound pretty recent in comparison.
This is actually why I stopped using Startrek.website, though. One of their mods posts constant updates about STO. Honestly, I'm pretty sure he's employed by STO.
To be fair, it is kind of odd to post patch notes. All sorts of games get new patches all the time. If people start making a habit of posting every set of patch notes for the games that they play, it'd very quickly become a substantial portion of the posts here.
Personally, if people were regularly spamming patch notes I'd probably eventually either block the community or block the poster.
It's good to see this. This is vital. Atomizing the coalitions that can build the numbers to oppose entrenched corpo-fascist power is a substantial part of the strategy for rendering us toothless. Coming together in spite of our differences is absolutely necessary to combating that strategy.
Yeah, but communication was so different at that time and the awareness of like, as stupid as it sounds, just the concept that racism is bad was so abysmal. Like, looking at the way people talked about race at the time it doesn't seem like there was much awareness at all of how unreasonable and harmful racism is to society as a whole. Obviously we've still got a long way to go on that, and Trump's election can be seen as an indicator that we're not as far as some might have guessed (probably mostly white people), but people do seem to be at least more aware than they were. We also have the knowledge of that history of both the Japanese internment camps in the US and Germany's concentration camps.
There definitely are substantial dehumanization efforts acting to counter this knowledge. But even there, you hear these stories of people being shocked that people they knew and cared about were among the people being deported during these crackdowns. They were sold on the idea of 'bad people' being deported, but the actuality is that it's their neighbors who they actually like or even rely on who fall victim to these policies. A lot of people think of this stuff in terms of 'exceptions', where they might have a principle that they're against undocumented immigration, but they don't realize that the person at the counter of the local restaurant who they have a positive impression of is undocumented.
I see this myself every time I go to the grocery store. I can tell there are people who voted for Trump and are largely on board with the transphobic rhetoric in theory, but when they interact with me in the simplest of ways you can see this guilt in their face as they realize I'm actually just another human being and part of their community. They may not like the bogeyman of trans people, but when they meet an actual human being who's kind to them? Even who just smiles at them and says hello? It conflicts with that propaganda that they've acted on in their politics and they literally do feel bad. Not all of them, to be sure, but some of them. That's a good sign.
It means that there's some capacity for learning. That we may be susceptible to propaganda and ignorance, but we're also capable of learning from our mistakes. The question is how long it takes that capacity for learning to be triggered and override our capacity for ignorance, and how bad things get in the mean time.
Hopefully seeing those camps is one of the things that triggers that learning. That it rhymes enough with the history we're aware of that people in the right positions start to realize how dangerously close we're getting to something really bad before we actually get all the way there.
Like I can understand wanting to maximize exposure, but they could literally just set up cross-posting and journalists could start screencapping their mastodon instead of their twitter. But people can't even be bothered with that level of ease. It's easier to just do what they've been doing, so that's what they do.
Honestly, it makes me wonder if this crisis mode shit that Trump is sparking will end up finally lighting a fire under people's asses on a few things and getting them to move the ball where they would have just sat around talking about moving the ball otherwise.
I hope this level of stupidity acts as a sort of social vaccine before it does too much damage.
Not to undercut the story itself, but I find it absolutely wild that people are still using Twitter to talk about this. Like.. what? If you can't even get off Twitter how are you going to do anything actually substantive?
Most single player steam games are cracked anyway. The real danger of steam is the reliance on it for most multiplayer games. Though if it were to get particularly nasty I imagine adding aftermarket multiplayer functionality would probably be in the realm of possibility. If private WoW servers are a thing, it stands to reason that the same can be done with a lot of other games.
I would also like to know this. I'd rather not start making content only to realize I picked an instance with insufficient resources or that's just going to disappear in a couple of months.
Only the reactants ever change their clothes, and reactant 1 only changes after leaving the catalyst.
That man stinky.
Also there's a bridesmaid in the back covering some guy's face out of crab in a bucket distress at not being in the picture.