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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • It’s a rather bizarre argument, essentially saying “it’s not the whole solution so it’s not a solution at all”

    Lawdamercy, can you please say it louder for the people in the back whinging that they refuse to vote for Biden because his Climate Bill wasn’t perfectly everything all at once? In the face of the Republican denialist obstructionism, it’s pretty fucking miraculous. The ultimate solution to climate change is going to be a patchwork quilt of a million different tiny solutions


  • This reminds me of one of my favorite wholesome jokes:

    Guy is driving down the highway with 17 penguins in the back of his car. Cop pulls him over, shakes his head and says, “Man, I don’t even want to know. You gotta take these penguins to the zoo right now.”

    Guy looks forlorn, but nods and says, “Alright officer,” before driving off.

    Next day, same guy is driving down the street with 17 penguins in the back of his car. Cop pulls him over and says, “Listen, I thought I told you to take these penguins to the zoo yesterday!”

    Guy says, “I did! Today we’re going to the beach!”





  • I only have WhatsApp because I have so many non-American friends ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    I dragged my mom and sister over to using it, and everyone has been warned that the second I see Meta trying to monetize it, I’m going to whine until they all move to Signal (which has pretty much identical functionality.)





  • Fully admits to being a literal child at the time. Still talking like they have something to contribute about the situation they fully admit to knowing nothing about. Gets snarky with the people who were actually impacted by it.

    Fucking why do people like you feel the compulsive need to open their mouths about every god damned thing? Maybe your opinion, I dunno, isn’t relevant.

    I would like to introduce you to a different possibility. It’s called keeping your mouth shut and listening. Crazy idea, I know, but it’s often followed by this thing called learning.

    Give it a try sometime.


  • Well there are two of us right here in the comment section. I had a great job at a startup online retailer. They had a good business model, it was a great place to work.

    We had been beating our sales projections and were only a couple months away from being profitable when the Sept 11 attacks happened. Within two weeks, our VC funding stopped and we were all out of jobs because the company owners had to choose between paying rent and paying us. They chose to pay us all severance, bless them for that.

    Thankfully I was young, didn’t own a house, didn’t have kids. But a lot of my colleagues did.


  • Understaffing, penny-pinching, forcing medical professionals to take on more and more work with no help, to say nothing of increased pay. These working conditions hurt patients chronically.

    That’s why doctors and nurses strike. Especially THESE doctors - the new ones who just graduated from medical school. They’re the single most exploited group of people working in healthcare when you account for how little they are paid in comparison to how much they’re expected to work and how much revenue they generate.

    In the US we call them resident doctors. In the UK junior doctors. I absolutely support their strike


  • Well, we’re not. There’s a reason you don’t see New York City jumping to adopt this tech, and it’s because they bothered to invest in a public transit system that makes cars obsolete for a lot of people. If we got decent public transit in more cities combined with an actually functional high speed rail system in this country, you’d see cars become obsolete for a whole lot more people.

    This “lifestyle/culture” developed out of sheer necessity given the geographic size of this country and the complete failure to invest in mass transit. It can and must be changed, if we want our future to be viable at all.