PhilipTheBucket

joined 3 months ago
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Being from the US, you'd think they treat the current situation in their country in a mature way, pointing out the actual fascist from the White House - while this happens in, like, a bunch of their posts, mostly, if you think this way, you're DEAD WRONG. They spend most of their energy pointing out how bLuE aNd ReD aRe ThE sAmE and how oBaMa aLsO dId X sHiT tHaT tRuMp DiD aNd YoU tHe LiBs WeRe OkAy WiTh ThAt (oh, and not to mention the meme about how the No Kings protests are actually a CIA psyop or some shit. Yeah, if you go out and protest for a cause is not because you're fed up with all that shit you see in your daily life, it's because the intelligence told you so).

The other fucking wild thing is that, now that people are in the streets and time is actually ripe for some sort of genuine political upheaval in the United States, 90% of their political agitation energy is spent... being angry within the bounds of the accepted "blue" / "red" dichotomy.

Careful boys we got some deep thinkers on our hands lol

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

Sweet... now make the same meme but with the lever labeled "capitalism" / "communism" instead

Edit: I tried to go and do it, but (a) I'm pretty sure I am still banned anyway (b) the quality of memes in !memes@lemmy.ml made me lose my will to live before I got there. This is honestly like "right-wing humor," in the US except for some reason there seems to be a population of people who are eating it up and eager for more and to make more of it themselves. I am honestly confused about who the fuck these people are and what's wrong with them...

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 3 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

I think it is nitrates. I mean, I am sure there are other preservatives that are harmful but nitrates is the class of chemical that usually is what is killing people in this context. Almost any type of "processed" meat is going to give you significantly elevated risk of cancer if you eat it regularly.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 30 points 4 weeks ago (5 children)

It's not the communism that appeals to them. It is the authoritarianism. They don't like Western democracies, elections, free media, and so on, not for the reasons they claim (because those things are dishonest fakes put up by an authoritarian structure, although those things are partly that also yes). The reason they don't like those things are because those things are anti-authoritarian, and they like and feel more comfortable with authoritarianism. They don't criticize the authoritarian governments because they like that way better: An official party line that is the allowed way to believe, backed up by force and deception to enforce the will of the correct faction and expand its rule over the enemies.

Once you realize that, a lot of the inconsistencies in what they say suddenly become resolved, and all of a sudden it all makes total sense.

Needs a blank space instead of the fourth caption. Don't keep selling after the close.

I think it is far more likely that Trump has been pissing off Russia, and that's why all his puppets in congress have all of a sudden started talking about what a bad idea Trump is, and the Epstein files. She doesn't give a shit about things as far as I can tell.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 19 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

There are quite a few honestly. Team Fortress and DayZ are obvious examples, I also quite liked Natural Selection.

Oh. I'm a dummy, fixed, thank you.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 2 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (1 children)

Here's a book based on extensive history and study of when revolutions have and have not succeeded in a huge number of countries across the world, and what the factors are that lead them to be successful:

https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/126900/8008_FDTD.pdf

One of the most critical conclusions is that in a military conflict, with the lines of allegiance staying fixed in their pre-revolution locations, the oppressor will win. It's not to say that violence or forceful resistance is never a good strategy, but starting a physical fight with the government forces is (in most cases) about like starting a fistfight with your physically abusive spouse. That is the terrain they want the conflict to take place in anyway.

(Edit: Oh, I didn't notice you were posting this under a month-old article. Why did you post this comment lol? I would recommend posting it under my new Robert Reich post instead)

Yeah. It's a necessary task, just I think the idea of parceling it out to overworked volunteers who are traditionally encouraged to create "rules" for the types of things that people are and are not allowed to say within their little domain, is a stinker of an idea.

Slashdot had a far better model for this: Duties pretty similar to what would be "moderation" in the current system got parceled out at random in tiny, tiny increments to well-established and active users. If it happened to be your day to take your 3 allotted mod actions (or whatever), and on that day you saw some spam or racism or something, you clicked to deal with it, end of story. Other than than, people just got to talk.

That model had some flaws (and I am oversimplifying a bit with that summary) but I think that now that we've had some experience with a variety of systems, that kind of idea showed itself to be infinitely superior to the Reddit model and pretty foresighted in a couple aspects of its construction.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 4 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (2 children)

This is 100% a problem. The whole moderation model for Reddit/Lemmy really invites this kind of censorship, whether intended or not (for example, prioritizing "civility" means that groups of users can start long, infuriatingly bad-faith arguments with anyone who expresses certain views, which will inevitably get them banned eventually when on one random day they manage to lose their temper about it). And even well intentioned things like banning "misinformation" can also feed into this silo-creating effect, yes.

For what it's worth, !politics@piefed.social does not delete comments based on viewpoint or civility, for exactly this reason. There is also !deleted@quokk.au; it was intended as a space to restart conversations or repost things that were getting deleted elsewhere. It pretty quickly evolved into my personal sandbox for griping about the moderation but it could in theory still be that other thing too lol.

I'm not sure it works that way. I mean, maybe, the circumstances of everyone being separated into a collective of one-culture countries instead of mixed together make the circumstances a little different, but at the same time it's definitely true that the US being able to leverage "cultural differences" to build an alloy that's stronger than the components has a huge amount to do with its strength as a world power.

(Well, strength as of 2015 or so. Trump attempting to tear down the unique benefits of a truly multicultural country is one of the reasons he is such a catastrophe.)

 

Maria Heavener had opened the windows of her first-grade classroom to let in the unusually warm October breeze when the sound of helicopters, sirens, and a flood of notifications compelled her to slam them shut. During a raid on a nearby grocery store, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had hurled tear gas canisters into a parking lot across the street from Chicago’s Funston Elementary School, spreading a thick, choking smog toward the building while class was in session.

Heavener had heard rumors that ICE was planning to detain unaccompanied minors and that schools could be a target, but this scenario had never crossed her mind. “We definitely didn’t expect what happened,” she said. “We didn’t expect them to throw tear gas right outside of our school building.”

For the last month, the Trump administration has kept Chicago under siege. Customs and Border Protection agents arrested a 15-year-old U.S. citizen earlier this weekafter unleashing tear gas into a crowded residential neighborhood. Earlier in October, masked federal agents raided a five-story apartment building in a predominantly Black neighborhood of Chicago and zip-tied naked children as they dragged their parents away.

The Trump administration claims that Chicago is unsafe and needs order, despite the fact that the city experienced its lowest homicide rate in 60 years this summer. But instead of investing in underfunded schools or attempting to eradicate poverty, which have been shown to increase public safety, the administration is pouring millions into the militarization of American cities and fighting a court battle to federalize the National Guard in Chicago.

“We didn’t expect them to throw tear gas right outside of our school building.”

The Trump administration’s war on immigrants has had a disastrous impact on the city’s children, Chicago teachers told The Intercept.

“The smoke bombs that they dropped in front of school right at dismissal, the detainment of grown-ups after they drop off their children, or as they’re picking them up. All of that is violent. All of that is traumatic,” said Stacy Davis Gates, president of the Chicago Teachers Union. “And for the first time, that is what many students in this city are experiencing.”

Heavener said she struggled to explain the events that occurred on October 3 to her class of 6 and 7-year-olds. “A lot of them were sad, worried, scared, nervous,” she said. “Some of them said they’re scared because they don’t want their own family members to be taken away.”

One of her students became so overwhelmed that he had a panic attack. “It’s very scary because this is their normal,” said Heavener. “You start forming your memories more solidly around 4 or 5 years old, so they have some happy kindergarten memories. But now all of sudden, this is going to take over their experiences and worldview, and it’s going to shape a lot for them, and it’s traumatic, and they’re all going to hold that in their bodies as they grow up.”

[

The stakes feel even higher at schools with older kids, where Heavener and other staff fear students will become targets. The recent arrest of the 15-year-old, Heavener said, has had a particular chilling effect**.** His lawyers allege that the teenager was detained in a federal facility for five hours without anyone telling his family where he was being held. The Department of Homeland Security denied that CBP “kidnapped” the teen, noting that “a U.S. citizen teenager threw eggs and hit a CBP Officer in the head.”

“The media is sadly attempting to create a climate of fear and smear law enforcement. These smears are contributing to our ICE law enforcement officers facing 1,000% increase in assaults against them,” DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin wrote in a statement. “ICE is not conducting enforcement operations at, or ‘raiding,’ schools. ICE is not going to schools to make arrests of children. Criminals are no longer be able to hide in America’s schools to avoid arrest. The Trump Administration will not tie the hands of our brave law enforcement and instead trusts them to use common sense.”

“Attendance at a lot of [schools] is down,” Gates told The Intercept. “Senior nights have been cancelled. Fall sports and after-school activities have been sparsely attended … because of the unpredictability and the violence of Trump’s troops.”

“It makes me want to cry,” said Heavener. “Generally, the societal norm is that children are sacred, and we take care of our children. Now it seems like they’re being targeted.”

Amid the chaos, Gates said that teachers, parents, students, and community organizers had come together to help make students safer. At Funston Elementary, for example, community members lined the streets to form a safe walking corridor for students and their families after the tear-gas incident. Heavener said the community has remained vigilant for ICE activity — although Facebook shuttered local groups used to alert schools about ICE’s presence.

Kathryn, an elementary school music teacher who wanted to use her first name to protect her school from being targeted by ICE, has tried to make her classroom a safe space for her students.

“It’s even more important right now that we have stable, predictable classrooms and especially places where students can continue to be imaginative and experience joy and learn to work with other people,” she said, “and especially learn to work with people who are different from them.”

Still, she said normalcy and joy are difficult to achieve in the current environment.

“I’m worried every day,” said Kathryn. “I’m worried that we’ll have kids here waiting to be picked up and nobody will ever come for them, because we’ve seen it happen.”

A middle school student was recently at home when ICE came to detain their parents. Through the process, Kathryn learned how to navigate the fact “that you can set up temporary guardianship for a minor if it’s less than a year,” she said. “I would like to live in a world where that’s not a thing I need to know, but I do.”

[MCALLEN, TX - JUNE 23: A Guatemalan father and his daughter arrives with dozens of other women, men and their children at a bus station following release from Customs and Border Protection on June 23, 2018 in McAllen, Texas. Once families and individuals are released and given a court hearing date they are brought to the Catholic Charities Humanitarian Respite Center to rest, clean up, enjoy a meal and to get guidance to their next destination. Before President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that halts the practice of separating families who are seeking asylum, over 2,300 immigrant children had been separated from their parents in the zero-tolerance policy for border crossers (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Despite claims from the Trump administration that Chicago is unsafe, Kathryn argues they’re the ones who’ve turned the streets into a war zone. “I was born and raised in Chicago,” said Kathryn. “I’ve never seen the city as unsafe as it is right now with them here.”

[

What makes it worse is that the money the administration is spending to deploy federal agents to patrol outside of elementary schools could genuinely make a difference in Chicago Public Schools. An estimate from the National Priorities Project found that a National Guard deployment to Chicago, currently blocked in federal court, could cost roughly $1.59 million a day. The latest Republican spending bill added $29.9 billion to ICE’s enforcement budget — a boost that nearly triples the $10.25 billion operating budget for the entire Chicago public school system, which includes 630 schools.

“Our school budget was slashed by two-thirds here,” said Kathryn. She pointed out that ICE is offering “$50,000 signing bonuses for people who are willing to kidnap other people,” while she finds herself telling kids: “Sorry, you can’t join the band right now because I don’t have enough instruments.”

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