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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)Z
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3 yr. ago

  • That is such an adorable and proud smile. I love it. She looks exactly like one of my nieces too. Excuse me while I have my old man moment.

  • I'm not sure where to start here, so here are two equally important building blocks.

    First, aside from other reasons the Nazi/minority is wrong, you are comparing a label somebody gets for existing the way they were born with a label somebody gets for actions they take that harm other people.

    Second, some kind of mishmash of the terms "social contract" and "paradox of tolerance."

  • Jeez. Forget going mask-off. This asshole just did the equivalent of walking in the room naked.

  • To a huge extent, I don't think they know there are other options.

    Or they are well aware of different cultures but know to their core that the USA is the greatest society to ever exist and God's chosen or some shit. So all those progressive policies sound nice, yet they have produced abysmal results in every single European country! This is true by definition when every place outside the US is utter trash in your lead-addled brain.

  • Oh I want those things too. The current size of Lemmy is not my ideal. It's just really really nice in its current form for me as a unique little nerdy place hidden in plain sight from what most of the internet has become.

    It was more the juxtaposition of how the world needs all these open technologies that people band together to create for the good of all, buuuuut if nobody notices this particular one then that will serve my personal interests. And to be clear I'm not hoping for that or trying to hold it back. Just pointing it out. :)

  • American here, and one who grew up in what is now trump country. Well, I guess I still live in a republican area now, but I started out rural.

    Your conclusion about how the society as a whole is sick is 100% spot on.

    I don't do much international travel, but I did get to spend a little bit of time in europe in the past couple years. Most of it in scandinavia of all places!

    The difference is crazy, even not counting all this recent crazy shit. On the surface things look similar. But being immersed in it let all the little details sink in simultaneously.

    There's an air of dignity and respect that I am just not used to in american society. Even just the instances of "we couldn't have that, somebody would immediately ruin it" were constant.

  • Yep, I'm ready to read the news that this platform surpassed the user base of Lemmy on the first day and never looked back. And I am ready to not be bothered by it.

    Good on them for any pain they inflict on reddit. And I do hope the fediverse takes over the global media landscape because that is better for humanity than corpo-governmental gatekeepers. But if Lemmy's user base just hangs around in the tens of thousands rather than the tens of millions, I am content.

  • Oh no, the US's military strikes now have press-only events, information embargoes, and street dates like it's the damned video game industry?

  • You have to love it when people whose frickin' job is the law just stand there and say "unlawful" followed by a word from the bill of rights.

    I mean, we are way past that, but still fuck this guy.

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  • Intellectual laziness really is a big part of the evil that conservatives/nazis put into the world.

    Don't work on yourself. Go with your gut.

    Don't question authority. Just go with it.

    Don't criticize your country. Just be comfortable in the knowledge that it's the best.

    Don't spend all that energy processing and handling your base urges. You deserve what you want, and those "other" people really are below you.

    Life is easy. Ignorance is bliss. It's totally normal that you communicate only via complaints and threats!

  • So are we living in some kind of Bizarro Eternal September?

    Where instead of being flooded with normies, a few dozen thousand of us are walled in behind barriers to entry that the greybeards of old could only imagine.

    It's like a social experiment that would be unethical if we weren't all self-selected to be here. Will we flourish or will we go mad?!?

    Given my experiences so far, I'm gonna ride this thing as far as it takes me. Just today I was inspired by a fellow lemming to format my entire hard drive just to switch to a slightly different Linux distro. On my work laptop! :>

  • Mama!

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  • Fun, fun, we skip along together!

    Swirling towards the center...

    Where there is no pain and we are truly together, forever.

    ...

    Eat at Arby's

  • I don't think the point was supposed to be that Valve is good.

    I think it was supposed to be that it is possible for a profit-motivated company to do something that legitimately benefits the rest of us even though the motivation was their profit goals.

    Maybe more of the credit for that should go to the original creators of the FOSS licenses than to Gabe Newell, but it's still nice that it happened either way.

  • In Mint right now if I hit the menu and type "photo" I get five options and GIMP is one of them. But it doesn't say GIMP on my screen, it says "GNU Image ..." next to the icon.

    If I type "image" then GIMP is second in the list after photo viewer.

    Normally though I just hit super - g - i - m - p - ENTER. Because I wanna run GIMP damn it!

  • Because the standard version of Mint uses the ubuntu repositories. You get to utilize most of what makes up ubuntu, but decoupled from the stuff Canonical wants to push. It has some added polish as well.

    It was more of an ubuntu-specific reply rather than "what's the best distro" thing.

    But now that you mention it, there is also Linux Mint Debian Edition! :D

    I might actually start using LMDE at work, since we have some stuff that's more focused on debian than ubuntu.

  • If they want ubuntu, let them Linux Mint! :D

  • Thank you for this post!

    For me, getting into self hosting was nice because of the privacy and tinkering yes, but a huge part of it was just having my stuff work reliably and without enshittification.

    I just set up my Home Assistant server and new Zigbee network in the past few weeks and it's pretty awesome. Was already using Jellyfin despite having a lifetime Plex pass. Feels good man.

  • I'll proudly wear my Space Nerd badge all day long!

    It does look like an artist's rendition of the Milky Way galaxy like it's an alien meme pointing at us. But, wouldn't you know it, it's not pointing to the right place. :D

    It looks like we are half way out between the core and the outer rim. (very sci-fi sounding sentence, but I like it)

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  • Sorry to take so long to reply! I hope you see this.

    The metaphor I came up with a couple years back when I was still in therapy was that we all have unique individualized instruction manuals for our brains and bodies, but for some cruel reason we do not get a copy.

    Naturally, our two instruction manuals will be very similar in most areas. Needs for nutrition, water, and sleep probably overlap a lot. But maybe lactose will ruin my day and gluten will ruin yours.

    Getting into the realm of mental health, medications, neurodiversity, physical health, personality disorders, and our closest relationships, all of those things interact constantly the complexity just explodes. It is unavoidable that any given person will have to to do some trial and error to craft a lifestyle where they can thrive.

    Unfortunately I think tons of miserable people passively fall into the routine laid before them and don't even think about what options might be out there. And double unfortunately, society only seems to be more designed to push people in this direction because it's good for business. Work hard to keep yourself alive, consume to feel something, repeat.

    An important subtext underlying all of this is how our biology is so reactive and adaptive to our environment. Do you want to be better at lifting heavy things? Lift heavy things more often. Do you want to be better at playing the guitar? Play the guitar more often. Do you want to be better at being mindful of what's actually important to you? Be better about being in a meditative mental state and in control of your mind? All need their respective workouts.

    And it's never just one silver bullet. That last paragraph sounds pretty chill and zen, and that's how I am most of the time. I'm not in therapy any longer and I'm good at introspection, but I am still on my medications that keep chemical stuff in balance.

    Some philosophies that really stuck with me:

    Buddhism: meditation and the focus on being able to step back and be an observer of your emotions and sensory inputs and whatnot. It's a nice framework for exercising whatever you want to call the muscle that lets you be in control of your own mind and understand your reactions better.

    Stoics: the notion that in many cases, things can only hurt us if we let them. We can recognize a problem and solve it, but whether that causes anxiety or dread or excitement in our minds is something we can control.

    And above all: continuous improvement. You aren't going to read something and fix all your problems. But if you find a tidbit that resonates with you and you do something that makes life 1% better permanently? Huge victory, and a great use of your day!