this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
368 points (95.5% liked)
NiceMemes
2930 readers
532 users here now
A place to post memes & images that won't absolutely obliterate your mental health! Memes must not stray into hopelessness and be generally positive or neutral.
I made this with my kid in mind, so that they can have a good, safe place to look at memes, just made to make folks laugh and smile!
Only goofs & silliness. (:
- no NSFW. ever.
- no sexually suggestive material
- swearing is fine, but please don't go overboard.
- no sad or depressing content
- no politics or politically-motivated content – this include comments.
- no outrage content or bait
- no AI-generated images. Understandably, some may slip through the cracks, but assume no malicious intent.
- no AI accusations. Are you unsure? Leave it be. Is it obvious it's AI? Please report it.
- No spamming of personal links. You can credit an author, but not spam or advertise.
founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
What? I don't know when any of these were not perceived as skills. I'm not saying this to be elitist either; I'm fucking embarrassing at all three.
This post has a solid, positive message of "we should be wary of being too rigid in our assessments of human creativity" and "just let yourself have fun", but it comes from a really weird assumption that humans haven't been judging humans for these things for literally ever.
When did the "so now" part start, exactly? And how are we arbitrarily delineating "skills" and "behaviors"? Distance running is a quintessential human behavior, but it's also a skill.
Maybe before recording and communication technologies allowed us to see and hear the best stuff all the time? Or before American Idol hammered the point home?
I dunno, I think it's pointing at something real, although it's more a change in degree