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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Well, let's not pretend any of us even 'need' American influence to become shitty. The entirety of Europe has apparently decided that it's been long enough since WW2 for us to give Fascism another try. Sure, the US influences the world, but we're more than capable of fucking things up ourselves.

    While maybe not as bad as the US yet, that image can be recycled for Europe in a short while.

  • It's looking bleak here, indeed. My Heimat is jerking off Wilders and here in Germany it's the AfD, though luckily in BW they aren't as popular as in other parts of Germany..

    Still, not really sure what to do about it. I vote, but it doesn't seem to matter. Don't know how to explain to people why they should care about others. It's a good thing I have enough books and games and series to offer escapism, because otherwise I'd probably need to get some prescription medication.

  • I had to look up the meaning and now I can only imagine the confusion this person must have felt, before he figured it out, lol.

  • I'll tell you what I told the previous commenter: They were not all runner-ups, that's misinformation. The assassinations were not presidential candidates. They were local politicians, running for mayoral or council seats.

    Which is also disgusting, of course, but no, the cartels did not kill off all her competition to get her into office.

  • They were not all runner-ups, you're falling for misinformation bullshit (and stop upvoting misinformation, people!). The assassinations were not presidential candidates. They were local politicians, running for mayoral or council seats.

    Which is absolutely fucking horrifying in and of itself, don't get me wrong, but what you're saying is just not true.

  • Really not a fan of speed walking. So in stead I went home and painted rainbow colors on my bigoted neighbor's door. Wonder if I turned him gay..

  • I have honestly never heard of pingas and pootis, or fan flashes. Are those American things? Or was I already too old for these things 20 years ago. Late thirties here.

    Edit: and even after skimming this thread, I still have no clue what skibidi toilets are, haha.

  • False claim? How about we call them lies? Trump is a liar. He lies.

    A false claim implies it could be made with good intentions, simply out of ignorance. No. Trump lies. He lies maliciously.

    How many lie-filled years need to pass before media call it what it is?

  • I actually think those kinds of mistakes are made more often by native speakers, because they learn it from other people as they're growing up (including all the mistakes), while non-native speakers learn it correctly (from books and teachers). Same goes for the then/than or they're/their/there, etc. When you learn it spoken first, and incorrectly, it's harder to correct those mistakes than to learn it correctly from the start.

    In Dutch, for example, we have loads of people who will say "groter als" (bigger than), which is dead wrong - it should be "groter dan." This als/dan-mistake is something typical of natives, and I've never heard a non-native make this mistake. Same goes for zij/hun. Usually kids just learn incorrectly from their parents. My own parents make those mistakes as well and it took more than a year of my elementary school teacher correcting me every. single. time I made the mistakes, for me to correct them.

  • Vlooienmarkt in Dutch, also literally flea market.

    Edit: Nvm, I'm blind, I see you already mentioned it.

  • It's like, totally unreadable, like, my mind just, sort of, shuts down, like it really, sort of, hurts, you know?

    Like, AAAAAHHHH. Sort of.

  • Well, there's a shocker. But not to worry! He'll surely not get away with the next crime he commits.

  • Exactly right! I think we're actually agreed on this.

    I just meant that OP used to say they ought to do it, which was his 'emotional' response to it, which is easier when it's in abstract. But in reality he doesn't like it at all when his government actually does it.

    I'd never heard about that reddit story, but I think it's very apt, lol.

  • This is because we can be of two minds about these things. You can have a personal response to heinous acts, but still think the government ought to be better.

    If some guy murders the murderer of their kid, I can absolutely 100% understand why, and I could even admit that I might do the same in their position. But I still think that as a society we should not lower ourselves to this standard and I will always be against the death penalty (especially because the system will never be perfect and I will never think it's worth killing even one innocent person by accident).

    It's why vigilante justice is so easily understood, but it's still something we, as a society, shouldn't accept.

    Emotional reactions can cloud our minds to these things. But I absolutely agree with you. This is horrendous and barbarous. I can still somewhat understand the "he deserves it for what he did"-response, but I'm absolutely against this on a deeper level.