Skip Navigation

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/)T
Posts
3
Comments
260
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Ban all lead bullets. Ban all semi-auto. Ban all pistols, revolvers, handguns. Nothing but black powder, or bolt action rifle.

  • If this was based on scientific research, you bet that the creators would be pushing the academics that formed the policy to endorse this. This is just junk pseudo-science. Serious researchers would do small sample testing before rolling out a wide program, especially for something like this

  • Any large scale plan, involving teachers, and students needs to be boiled down to extremely simple concepts that can be taught in a few words. Most kids have a hard time with subtraction and division. This will become simplified and resented.

  • Also, when people are trying to make a point, inadvertently they'll stand differently and have different posture ever so subtly.

  • Bringing in cheap TFW also screws up the coffee/hospitality industry. Lots of local people would start their own coffee shop, serve sandwiches, it's not rocket science. But there is no way to compete with a company that brings in TFW. So you're left with bad food, and an unpleasant place to sit. Nowadays the shops are dirty and uncomfortable. Also cause high local unemployment, of people that could start a small business but it's not a fair playing field. Even if a local starts a coffee shop and fails, they learnt many valuable skills; accounting, permit applications, human resourcing. The coffee shop was a place to start for a local needing to make money and move up in life. That's why I hate places like Tim Hortons and Starbucks, and all the chains.

    TFW should be brought in, but there should be a $50K application fee per worker per year, to insure that these jobs are for understaffed specialist positions.

  • It's a shitty article, that uses shitty polling data.What it means to be lib vs. con in different time periods and different countries is a complex question. I guarantee you that in absolute terms, white boys from the Midwest are much less racist than they were 40 years ago.

    It misses the biggest swing from lib to conservative that happened, that older white women, without a college education, flipped to conservative, from consistently voting Democrat.

    The article implicitly is trying to cast blame on young white boys, turning conservative, and therefore pushing the country into being regressive. It misses that the biggest regressive block are still the elderly white folk, and that that block is also the biggest voting block.

  • It's not even libertarianism at this point. I don't have a name for it; part stupidity, part bravado, no compassion, no responsibility.

  • 'nothing you do matters, you can't even hurt anyone else, so you're actions really aren't important'', is more of the nihilistic message.

  • The article is referring to South Korea, the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom, 4 countries. I'd argue that the youth vote never really mattered to turn these elections. You have to examine who actually voted, turned out to the ballot box.

  • The author is discussing several countries, including the U.S.A., saying that it is the same trend for each. So yest they are implying the US.

  • young women backed the liberal Democratic party in almost equal and opposite numbers

    This is only partially true. The key swing vote in the election, that handed Trump the win were; 40+year old white women without a college education. Until this election, that group was almost entirely in the Democrat camp, but went full MAGA.The youth vote only has a small turnout, with voting patterns locked into geographic regions, there wasn't too much unexpected that happened with the youth vote.Be skeptical of recent survey data, reflection on this past election, or any survey data for that matter, especially in a Medium article.

  • Not really a coherent philosophical narrative for them to latch onto; 'the world is fucked, they're fucked' is the main message they hear.

  • You're right, people do have rose colored glasses, when it comes to the past.

    I've added the 'anymore' statement because I think that we've fallen below a 'critical mass'.

    Bowling isn't a good example because it isn't popular anymore, but I'll use it as an example anyway. If there aren't a core group of people that can consistently pay to play, the bowling alley goes bankrupt. That hurts the people that, because of a financial constraints, may have gone only occasionally. Even if there are a handful of ultra-wealthy people in a community that can go whenever then want, there are too few of them to really sustain a bowling alley, as they won't be going everyday.

  • Everybody, and every corporations jumped on the landlord bandwagon, rents went crazy. Now there is nowhere to go, most small cool places, with live music, or a kitschy theme, have either closed or have become too expensive.

    This is bad. At least in the 1990s when the economy was hard, someone could afford to rent out a small place and make a fun bar.

  • Everything is too expensive. People simply can't afford to do things anymore.

  • What Canada really needs is a massive drone program. Drones from the size of a 747 to the size of a dime, and everything inbetween. The entire Russia-Ukraine war is a drone war.

  • In reality you should put free phones everywhere in prison. It's literally the cheapest way of keeping somebody occupied.

  • The US got left behind the global CAR race in the 1980s, when the Japanese and Koreans started to produce cheap fuel efficient cars.