How is wanting to avoid civil war "mainstream"? I mean sure, go and promote revolution from the comfort of your climate controlled box with modern amenities, detached from the horrors of war. The feds have tanks.
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Diplomacy, conflict resolution, etc. Not really motivated to fight against the tide of lemmy people sipping koolaid. But if you step outside the echo chamber, it's mostly common sense.
Yeah, that was 200 years ago. We have better ways to handle things now.
Very recent history shows Republican senators are almost entirely to blame.
That's still a violent thing to wish on people.
Reddit isn't worth it as it's now run by fascists, but if you really have to, the best way to create an account is to just use a new IP. This could just be your phone with wifi disabled. Most carriers use ipv6 now, they're not going to be able to track the rotating IPs your phone carrier assigns. Create the account with a browser you haven't used Reddit with before and let it sit for a few months. Then use it carefully. Really, not defending the gatekeeping and if anything condemning it, but just telling you how to work around it.
Those snoo avatars for the execs look like the most soulless looking art styles possible, sort of like how Chuck E Cheese got rebranded. Pretty gross.
I've gone out of my way to avoid giving Microsoft money over their continual hypocrisy on almost virtually any issue I care about. Really, a shitty company that gets away with way too much.
I was building a Reddit clone a long time ago and this man has followed my Github profile for the last 10 years. Of course that was a different era. That's my anecdote though, I think underneath all of these silicon bros is a spoiled nerdy interior that sold out. Kind of sad.
Right, except the tariff gets baked into the price your importer pays to bring the product into the US. So while you don't cut a check to the US Treasury, your buyer does, and that either makes your product less competitive or forces you to eat the cost in your margins. But yeah, "carry on".
A lot of this is reductionist and kind of generalizing. Really depends on what we're talking about. There are ways to punish companies and hit them where it hurts, money, for instance. There are ways to lobby Congress. I'm just saying there's a framework for being strategic about these things, and distilling it down to violent uprising is just lacking any nuance any of these types of conversations actually deserve.