OneTwoThree

joined 4 months ago
[–] [email protected] 21 points 15 hours ago (4 children)

Donald Trump and Elon Musk should be assassinated ☺️ 😍 😋 🤪 😇

Wow, just being able to say that when inciting violence is banned on most other social media felt empowering. I know to y'all this probably comes off as just another basic one-liner comment, but.. I've only recently started using Lemmy when I used to just browse Reddit without an account. There were times when I almost felt crazy, because I felt so much rage against these rapist scum I thought- given the opportunity- I would end their lives in an instant, consequences be damned. But on Reddit where any talk of violence (against the state) is banned (but violence via political persecution of minorities is A-OK!), I thought I was just a radical extremist.

And maybe I am a radical extremist, Lemmy as a whole is certainly small enough to be an echo chamber, but in a time where peaceful protest does nothing but paint a target on your back, free speech by necessity needs to include ushering people to make use of "the 4th box of liberty," the cartridge box. By god does it feel good to finally be able to say that.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 19 hours ago

I also feel like a lot of people have a lot of barriers to plotting an assassination, besides the obvious "it's illegal" and "they'll kill you for trying" and "who has the time and money to plan an assassination." To give people some ideas of these barriers, I personally:

  • Am trans, so if I tried anything it would immediately be used as a Reichstag fire moment to start rounding up and killing trans people (I suspect the social minorities who will be most affected by the Administration will suffer the worst consequences for even trying to resist)
  • Am too young to own a gun in my state (you need to be 21, I suspect some people have the opposite reasoning as well, 'I'm too old to be an assassin bc I have kids to look after' or 'because I'm entrenched and needed at my job')
  • Since I have PTSD I don't trust myself to own a gun
  • I think I can contribute more to the world alive than throwing my life away to be a political assassin. Specifically, I'm very passionate about healthcare reform (obviously universal healthcare, also focusing more on preventative medicine instead of waiting for people to get so chronically sick the pharmaceutical industry can harvest money from them for the rest of their lives, also giving people diet & lifestyle recommendations to treat the underlying cause of their issues instead of just drugging them up to combat their symptoms of disease), and think I have a greater chance of making an impactful change by devoting myself to that

In conclusion, the most convenient person to plot a political assassination is a 25-35 yo straight white man well trained in firearms with tons of money, mentally healthy enough to get a firearm yet crazy enough to throw their life away, ideally recently unemployed so they have nothing to lose.

So... a security guard affected by the mass government downsizing?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Dr Glaucomflecken's content is classic! But yeah I have to say it's frustrating how many problems in the US just expound on themselves in a vicious cycle. People fear the healthcare system due to a lack of familiarity with it, which causes their communities to not produce doctors/not give enough patronage to primary care practices to thrive there, so instead healthcare practioners go to the cities where they're wanted and educated, then because of all the brain drain to the city rural areas start voting against their interests, making healthcare more expensive and imposing restrictions on doctors, which only makes healthcare even more inaccessible..

I'm not sure what to say. Conservatism is societal cancer. It's easy to want to throw up my hands and go 'oh well, natural selection' until I remember it's often children, the disabled, and the immunocompromised that are first to suffer..

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Apparently 42/48 of the cases are in children. I just.. ugh. In no particular order, I wish parents were smarter, I wish the government had the power to force kids to get vaccinated no matter how braindead their parents are, I wish kids had more ability to get vaccinated without their parents permission (it's limited by age & by vaccine, even in supposedly liberal states like California), I wish there was less braindead fearmongering propaganda about vaccines, I wish people would recognize the importance of vaccines before the issue starts to affect them personally, etc

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Aughaughaughsjscjf did some ppl just not get the memo, or is this more of that "I don't care if bad things happen so long as I'm not associated with the cause of it" mentality you usually see from non-voters?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

I genuinely think the type of social media you use in your youth has a very strong influence on the type of person you become:

Instagram/Snapchat: Average, slightly sociable

Reddit/Tumblr: Insightful, knowledgeable about niche topics/social issues (respectively), better at writing, worse at socializing

Twitter: Argumentative, not really capable of cohesive long-form thought, great at one liners though

TikTok: Mindless beasts conditioned through a variable-ratio positive reinforcement algorithm to uncritically believe whatever thoughts China wants to insert in their brains: "The US is awful!!" Heck yeah! "Because of this, we're going to not vote/vote for Trump!" Wait, what?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 days ago (4 children)

So, back in 2023 I discovered Lemmy, made an account, but after a bit quit again because I never checked it. I recently made an account again since Reddit has started getting really bad (tons of bots, tons of conservative posts on r/popular after the election, etc) and only recently started actually using said account.

I think using Lemmy requires a different strategy than using Reddit. On Reddit, if you wanted to subscribe to, say, a Linux discussion group, you would just go to r/linux, and there would be just 4 more even more niche subs you could join, like r/linux4noobs. On Lemmy, their are 6 main Linux groups and 14 niche Linux groups across several instances.

The first time I joined Lemmy, I subscribed to just one of these groups like I would on Reddit, but my feed didn't have enough content so eventually I got bored. The second time around, I created I've just subscribed broadly to every community related to my interests, so I if I was interested in Linux I would subscribe to all 20 Linux communities.

I then hypothesized that if I did this for every interest (ex, say my only interests were Linux & Plants, or something), that discussion of topics that was more popular on Lemmy, like Linux, would drown out my other interests. To avoid this being an issue, I made 3 accounts for 3 feeds

  • My "general account" in which I subscribed to nearly every top sub, so if I found I didn't care about a certain topic on All I could unsubscribe instead of outright blocking those communities (that's this account)
  • My "interests account" in which I subscribed to my personalized interests like privacy or environment
  • My "fun account" in which I subscribed to just meme, gaming, cats, etc communities

That's all just me though, how do y'all use Lemmy differently from Reddit? I'm curious as to how I can git gud at Lemmy lol

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

For anyone who is undocumented (and people who are documented!), it's important to know your rights regarding ICE:

  1. Don’t open the door for ICE. They aren’t allowed into your house or workplace without a warrant signed by a judge.
  2. Ask them to leave.
  3. Stay silent. Do not talk to them without a lawyer.
  4. If you ask you your immigration status, your citizenship status, etc, don’t tell them anything. Don’t even speak to them.
  5. Even if you’re a citizen, still don’t tell them anything. ICE destroys communities, and every second of their time you waste is one less second they will spend destroying people’s lives.
  6. If you are detained, ask to talk to your lawyer. Note that ICE doesn’t provide lawyers so make sure you get one in preparation.
  7. Do not sign anything or give them any documents whatsoever without a lawyer in that room.
[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago

What with how Trump is pulling out of WHO and deregulating the chicken industry, if the avian flu becomes transmissible to humans, it will make COVID-19 look like childsplay. At which point things may get so dire vaccine hesitancy is likely to get you killed, and I'd probably recommend a quick plane trip to Canada to get vaccinated, if that's even still an option..

[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The sad thing is, there actually used to be some areas in which you could trust the government. You could trust the CDC for health information, the FDIC with your money, the FDA for food regulations, the USPS to deliver your mail..

Nowadays, everything good about government will be getting axed and everything bad amplified. But what can you do~

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Talking about it here because I don't know where else to talk about it, but has anyone else noticed that Reddit has gotten incredibly bad with bots lately? I no longer have an account on Reddit, but I still browse sometime, and came across this post:

Of the top 20 comments, only 4 had karma over 10,000, 0 had profile pics that weren't snoos or NFTs, and all but 3 or so echoed the same vague message 'see a therapist.' Is it just me, or does it seem to anyone else that such cookie cutter comments are not the true thoughts of actual human beings..?

Regardless of whether it's bots or just Reddit culture to have such spammy content, I'm incredibly pleased at least with how many instances require you to write a little message about why you want to join to prevent bots. I've just seen a lot more comments of actual substance here, idk

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Because they don't think of themselves as the little guy. No matter how poor they are, they're always temporarily embarrassed millionaires.

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