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2 yr. ago

  • I think it's important to realize that these old stereotypes aren't necessarily as true as they used to be. I started on Bazzite and it was great, but I didn't like immutability so I switched to Garuda. It's an Arch distro and is dead easy and super beginner friendly.

  • Even if it works exactly like that, let's say you are poor and barely make enough to live, you still have to give 20% (as an example) to the government, even if you are fucked after and can't pay rent or buy food. If you make 20% more than you need, you end up with nothing left after. Rich people may end up paying more, sure, but a flat tax still screws over the poor as a rule unless there is some provision that it only starts after X income, and you know that threshold will always be set too low.

  • Well that's idiotic. You can also drop it off in person at any mailbox or any county drop box. If you want to define it by your proximity to where you drop it off instead of by process, we can say it's all in person voting.

    And of course I'm arguing semantics, definitions ARE a matter of semantics. Also, I work for the government, you have no idea the number of stupid ambiguous laws we have to navigate every day. We live in a world of semantics.

  • One of us is an elections official in Washington, it isn't you. King county is having a special election right now, if you are in a participating district, ask them what the difference is between the "in person" ballot and the mail in when you go in. It's the same ballot.

  • Oh that makes sense, they do have a separate process there to handle all the people that are convinced that there's an in person process, but it's still just a mail in ballot and a county drop box, they just don't have time to try and convince you that you aren't special.

  • Maybe that was back when they still had in person voting in Washington, but it's just one type of ballot packet and mail or drop boxes now.

    Maybe they held your hand and called it in person to make you feel better, but there's no different process in Washington State that's different than the mail in process.

  • Yeah, no.

    Even if you choose to pick up your mail in ballot in our office, and even if you drop off in the drop box in our office, you still got a mail in ballot and dropped it in a county drop box. Everyone can do that, you weren't special or different, just needy.

  • Maybe so, but in that case doing it at home with your own mailbox meets that same criteria.

    My point is that there isn't a different "in person" process. There's only one process; you get a mail ballot packet, you fill it out, and you drop off in a mailbox or county drop box.

  • I work in elections in Washington, there is only mail in voting plus county drop boxes. Yes you can say you lost your ballot or didn't get it and come in for a replacement, but we give you the same mail in packet you world receive at home.

    Yes you can drop it in the drop box in our office or you can take it home and mail it. But any voter can drop their mail in ballot off in our office as well. We don't have polling places or voting machines, or a way to separate out and assign race to a ballot so we could somehow treat those differently. They all come in as a big stack for processing.

    Why do ballots get rejected? Mismatched signatures is the biggest reason. If your signature doesn't match what we have on file we mail you a form to fix it, we also text and email you. Maybe from demographic groups are less likely to respond? The other one is people who forget to sign, which follows the same procedure.

    What I can say is that is there is some sort of disparity, it isn't happening in the ballot processing room.

  • Bazzite was my first first into Linux. I loved it overall, the thing that eventually made me switch was that the login screen background was locked behind immutability. It's stupid, but matters to me. I'm on Garuda now and it has been great too.

  • I tried Bazzite as my first try with Linux for a while and liked it; it was super easy. I didn't like that the immutability went so far as to lock me out of some parts of the OS that I thought should be open, like lock screen customization.

    Now I am on Garuda Arch and it has been really easy too.

  • A person killing another person. People will mourn him. I guarantee someone is crying over this, a child, a parent, a lover. If you can't see that side of it at all you need to take a step back and think about your humanity.

    But as a system... It's a different story. Sometimes things have to break before change happens, and afterward, people are likely to just think about it in terms of a beneficial change, not the people who didn't survive the conflict.

  • If you look at it at the individual level, of course it's a tragedy.

    At the systematic level though, big change historically almost always includes death, and at the end people everywhere celebrate the successful revolution with very little thought to those sacrificed to get it.

  • I'll just add, next time, find a group of women and attach yourself to them as soon as you feel unsafe. If this was a predator you are just doing him a favor by isolating yourself and leaving a public area. You want to be sure you are decreasing your anonymity, not increasing it.