I mean, you even see it here on the fediverse.
These people think that you can't just disagree, the other person has to be a fundamentally loathsome person.
They end up appealing to the disgust centers of the brain, and ironically that's the same tactic the Nazis used against the Jews. Treat the acceptable to hate group as a disease, irredeemable in the same way a virus or bacteria is irredeemable, and to be scrubbed out of History the same as one washes their hands.
These people think that you can't just disagree, the other person has to be a fundamentally loathsome person.
They end up appealing to the disgust centers of the brain, and ironically that's the same tactic the Nazis used against the Jews. Treat the acceptable to hate group as a disease, irredeemable in the same way a virus or bacteria is irredeemable, and to be scrubbed out of History the same as one washes their hands.
As I understand it the real reason that they iodized salt is nuclear weapons. By overloading a person's body with safe iodine, it prevents the body from picking up radioactive iodine in the event of a nuclear war.
It's actually interesting, a lot of our food has been corrupted by Total War. It isn't just about salt and sugar and fat, there are military technologies designed to help produce shelf-stable rations that food company is routinely use in their standard foodstuffs because it ensures that that food is shelf stable a lot longer. You can really see the difference between industrially produced bread or the bread made at the local bakery (or in your own oven). The industrially produced bread lasts forever, but the local bread or the bread that you make in your own house has a very short shelf life before the fact that it is food means that stuff like mold starts to grow.
It's actually interesting, a lot of our food has been corrupted by Total War. It isn't just about salt and sugar and fat, there are military technologies designed to help produce shelf-stable rations that food company is routinely use in their standard foodstuffs because it ensures that that food is shelf stable a lot longer. You can really see the difference between industrially produced bread or the bread made at the local bakery (or in your own oven). The industrially produced bread lasts forever, but the local bread or the bread that you make in your own house has a very short shelf life before the fact that it is food means that stuff like mold starts to grow.
There's a high level vulnerability in most linux distros, it's in the printing subsystem. This removes the affected packages from debian or ubuntu based linux disributions. Most people don't print so it's an easy thing to improve your security.
It was like 70% of the surveyed, and for young millennials at the time it was both men and women. 2007 was a different time than today, men did eventually realize they were supporting bad ideas.
One thing people today don't realize is that the current situation is a direct result of the optimism of the early and mid 2000s.
In the 90s, people (outside of the rust belt, but there were opportunities elsewhere so people just moved) were getting richer, they were seeing their wages rise, they saw that they had opportunities, and felt that their kids were going to have opportunities. In the early to mid 2000s the dot com bubble burst, but there were other things doing well, and so people generally kept that message going.
People hate Millennials for expecting to get out of college and be making 200k/yr, but that was the expectations many of them were fed. They thought they were going to all be rich, especially if they had tech skills which were widespread. It felt to many people like the future was so bright you had to wear shades. In Canada, it was common knowledge that people were making 200k/yr working in the oil and gas industry doing blue collar jobs, and down in Kitchener there were companies like RIM knocking it out of the park, so it felt like there were limitless opportunities. In the US, there were lots of stories of people doing incredibly well for themselves, mostly out of the tech industry.
When you feel like you're going to be ok, and you feel like your kids are going to be ok, that changes the calculus of the whole world. Suddenly, you start looking around at people who don't seem to have it as good as you and your family, and you start asking how you can help them. It seems like you should be trying to help others.
In 2007, a survey whose results were widely distributed in the advertising world showed that most people were progressive to the point that most advertising and branding started to re-tool aggressively. The companies started to embrace wokeness back then because people felt like they had a duty since they were doing so well to try to pay it forward.
The problem is, it was all based on a lie. In the US in 2008, it became apparently just how much of the wealth in the western world was a lie. And it continued to be propped up by selling our future to banks. From 2008 to nearly 2020, many people were sold on the fiction of the longest economic recovery in history because the numbers were kept good looking. In fact, unemployment went to an unprecedented 4%. According to the numbers, everything was perfect forever. Unfortunately, people need more than good numbers to thrive. They need personal success, and people weren't experiencing that.
There's an entire bloc, a chunk of the millennials who grew up in the golden age thinking that they'd be CEOs, and they integrated those ideas to the point that they never got rid of them. Many of them are NEETs today, but assume they're just the exception, held back from their rightful place while everyone else must have been doing ok, sort of the opposite of the left's "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" meme, a "failed potential-CEO". Some of those people woke up from the trance and realized that the world isn't as they assumed and started changing their views, but many of them are still NEETs who think everyone who looks like them is highly privileged and is living a blessed life and they look at every dollar in someone else's pocket and assume everyone else is rich and so they should get their cut after all.
Big companies and political parties aren't like speedboats, they're like cargo ships. They take forever to turn, and they have overwhelming amounts of inertia so they can't stop easily or start easily. The resistance to woke grew after 2008, including moments like gamergate where corruption in gaming journalism was brought to light but quickly dismissed, but those people were just the canary, and big companies ignored the dead bird and kept moving on. Brexit in June 2016 and later that year the election of Donald Trump as president also showed that the real consensus outside of elite circles was changing, but it was ignored and attacked as if those two things being shut down would be enough to change the underlying attitudes. It appears that now, in 2024, after years of inflation and growing suffering that you can't hide behind numbers -- when there's homeless people in every open spot in your city and food banks are running out of food, the numbers become irrelevant. They're starting to turn now, but it's a long and slow slog, and they've killed off most people who might actually do the positive things for affected industries.
Canada's trajectory was much different. In 2015, things were still reasonably good -- oil and gas had just crashed but people didn't realize how much that hurt the entire country yet, and that's one reason Justin Trudeau came to power -- people felt good still because even 2008 didn't hurt too much, and so people agreed with him that some of the wealth Canadians thought the nation had should be used to pay down some moral debts such as the lack of running water on many native reserves or inequality based on race or gender. When people wonder how a guy like Trudeau could get into power, that's the answer. Things were good under the previous liberals, good under the conservatives, and people felt like they could afford to take a hit for the greater good.
There are some people who were highly successful in the woke paradigm, and for them progressive ideology still makes a lot of sense because they personally are doing well and so they feel like they need to pay it forward, but the problem is most people don't feel so successful. Even big companies are failing using the woke paradigm. Back on the ground, there's a lot of able-bodied men who dropped out of the workforce entirely, but they don't show up in conventional numbers because to find a way to make it you have to claim you aren't actually able-bodied. That's why so many people can be NEETs but the unemployment rate claims to be at all time lows. For people who aren't NEETs, they've watched rents multiply by many times, mortgages at insane principal valuations and high interest rates, food much more expensive, and even services got way more expensive -- Netflix used to be 10 bucks a month, now it's 25 bucks a month and you actually need to subscribe to like 6 different services to get the same quality service.
I think we're seeing reality hit for much of the world. Even people with good but not elite jobs feel it, and those feelings affect people's politics. Politically when people are feeling good they want to pay it forward, but when they're feeling bad they want to be left alone.
I think this will change how the government works over time. People will eventually ask why the government makes up 50% of GDP, and what it's doing to earn all that money, and the answer is that it isn't doing a lot and it's time to trim a lot of fat. People don't feel generous when times are bad, and numbers aside I think we're in some of the worst times of our lives by far. Falsified and gamed numbers are gilding, but beneath the surface is nothing but rot.
Unfortunately, there's going to have to be a divide for a time between the working people and the bureaucrats because wokeness primarily benefits college educated bureaucrats and the sort of change in government and industry we need to see will ditch a lot of that. Government spending has to go down because debt is so high throughout the western world that you can't keep spending debt. We've paid off credit cards with other credit cards for so long that the credit cards are all maxxed out (and it doesn't really matter what the government debt limit in the US is, for example, the spending on debt maintenance is already more than the entire military)
The good news is that many of those college educated bureaucrats are actually people with high potential to do real good work. They'll fight to the last man over this, but if we stop taking our best and brightest and wasting them doing busywork at desks and start using them to build things again, the result should actually be a net increase in everyone's wealth, even though those non bureaucrat jobs aren't as comfortable or as numb as the real jobs in the real economy creating real value for other people.
It's stressful doing real things, and you actually have to deliver on your promises, and that sucks compared to just "doing stuff" towards nebulous goals The thing is, the stress is the price you pay for doing real meaningful work that actually affects the world. How many people are stuck in bureaucratic jobs or doing woke nothingness, and how many of those people are actually happy in that role? They must realize they aren't doing anything meaningful, and it must chip away at their souls.
The movies The Matrix and Fight Club became iconic for generations of people in part because they were earlier warnings of the dangers of the fake manufactured bureaucratic world. Both the narrator in Fight Club and Neo in The Matrix start their story working a corporate job. The Narrator flies a lot for work but works in an office when he's not on the road, Neo works in a stereotypical office, and it's part of the shorthand of the films that these jobs aren't fulfilling, they aren't making them happy, they aren't contributing anything meaningful to the world, and both stories are stories about finding meaningful labor. In both movies, the main character finds power and purpose in living a less privileged life -- The Narrator moving to a leaky shack next to a paper mill, Neo moving to "the real world" where they live a spartan life and eat disgusting goo. From my standpoint, those authors didn't know the right answer and so living in a more spartan existence like that seems to them like living closer to reality, but the same could be accomplished by getting people out of offices and into boots on the ground actually doing things.
In the 90s, people (outside of the rust belt, but there were opportunities elsewhere so people just moved) were getting richer, they were seeing their wages rise, they saw that they had opportunities, and felt that their kids were going to have opportunities. In the early to mid 2000s the dot com bubble burst, but there were other things doing well, and so people generally kept that message going.
People hate Millennials for expecting to get out of college and be making 200k/yr, but that was the expectations many of them were fed. They thought they were going to all be rich, especially if they had tech skills which were widespread. It felt to many people like the future was so bright you had to wear shades. In Canada, it was common knowledge that people were making 200k/yr working in the oil and gas industry doing blue collar jobs, and down in Kitchener there were companies like RIM knocking it out of the park, so it felt like there were limitless opportunities. In the US, there were lots of stories of people doing incredibly well for themselves, mostly out of the tech industry.
When you feel like you're going to be ok, and you feel like your kids are going to be ok, that changes the calculus of the whole world. Suddenly, you start looking around at people who don't seem to have it as good as you and your family, and you start asking how you can help them. It seems like you should be trying to help others.
In 2007, a survey whose results were widely distributed in the advertising world showed that most people were progressive to the point that most advertising and branding started to re-tool aggressively. The companies started to embrace wokeness back then because people felt like they had a duty since they were doing so well to try to pay it forward.
The problem is, it was all based on a lie. In the US in 2008, it became apparently just how much of the wealth in the western world was a lie. And it continued to be propped up by selling our future to banks. From 2008 to nearly 2020, many people were sold on the fiction of the longest economic recovery in history because the numbers were kept good looking. In fact, unemployment went to an unprecedented 4%. According to the numbers, everything was perfect forever. Unfortunately, people need more than good numbers to thrive. They need personal success, and people weren't experiencing that.
There's an entire bloc, a chunk of the millennials who grew up in the golden age thinking that they'd be CEOs, and they integrated those ideas to the point that they never got rid of them. Many of them are NEETs today, but assume they're just the exception, held back from their rightful place while everyone else must have been doing ok, sort of the opposite of the left's "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" meme, a "failed potential-CEO". Some of those people woke up from the trance and realized that the world isn't as they assumed and started changing their views, but many of them are still NEETs who think everyone who looks like them is highly privileged and is living a blessed life and they look at every dollar in someone else's pocket and assume everyone else is rich and so they should get their cut after all.
Big companies and political parties aren't like speedboats, they're like cargo ships. They take forever to turn, and they have overwhelming amounts of inertia so they can't stop easily or start easily. The resistance to woke grew after 2008, including moments like gamergate where corruption in gaming journalism was brought to light but quickly dismissed, but those people were just the canary, and big companies ignored the dead bird and kept moving on. Brexit in June 2016 and later that year the election of Donald Trump as president also showed that the real consensus outside of elite circles was changing, but it was ignored and attacked as if those two things being shut down would be enough to change the underlying attitudes. It appears that now, in 2024, after years of inflation and growing suffering that you can't hide behind numbers -- when there's homeless people in every open spot in your city and food banks are running out of food, the numbers become irrelevant. They're starting to turn now, but it's a long and slow slog, and they've killed off most people who might actually do the positive things for affected industries.
Canada's trajectory was much different. In 2015, things were still reasonably good -- oil and gas had just crashed but people didn't realize how much that hurt the entire country yet, and that's one reason Justin Trudeau came to power -- people felt good still because even 2008 didn't hurt too much, and so people agreed with him that some of the wealth Canadians thought the nation had should be used to pay down some moral debts such as the lack of running water on many native reserves or inequality based on race or gender. When people wonder how a guy like Trudeau could get into power, that's the answer. Things were good under the previous liberals, good under the conservatives, and people felt like they could afford to take a hit for the greater good.
There are some people who were highly successful in the woke paradigm, and for them progressive ideology still makes a lot of sense because they personally are doing well and so they feel like they need to pay it forward, but the problem is most people don't feel so successful. Even big companies are failing using the woke paradigm. Back on the ground, there's a lot of able-bodied men who dropped out of the workforce entirely, but they don't show up in conventional numbers because to find a way to make it you have to claim you aren't actually able-bodied. That's why so many people can be NEETs but the unemployment rate claims to be at all time lows. For people who aren't NEETs, they've watched rents multiply by many times, mortgages at insane principal valuations and high interest rates, food much more expensive, and even services got way more expensive -- Netflix used to be 10 bucks a month, now it's 25 bucks a month and you actually need to subscribe to like 6 different services to get the same quality service.
I think we're seeing reality hit for much of the world. Even people with good but not elite jobs feel it, and those feelings affect people's politics. Politically when people are feeling good they want to pay it forward, but when they're feeling bad they want to be left alone.
I think this will change how the government works over time. People will eventually ask why the government makes up 50% of GDP, and what it's doing to earn all that money, and the answer is that it isn't doing a lot and it's time to trim a lot of fat. People don't feel generous when times are bad, and numbers aside I think we're in some of the worst times of our lives by far. Falsified and gamed numbers are gilding, but beneath the surface is nothing but rot.
Unfortunately, there's going to have to be a divide for a time between the working people and the bureaucrats because wokeness primarily benefits college educated bureaucrats and the sort of change in government and industry we need to see will ditch a lot of that. Government spending has to go down because debt is so high throughout the western world that you can't keep spending debt. We've paid off credit cards with other credit cards for so long that the credit cards are all maxxed out (and it doesn't really matter what the government debt limit in the US is, for example, the spending on debt maintenance is already more than the entire military)
The good news is that many of those college educated bureaucrats are actually people with high potential to do real good work. They'll fight to the last man over this, but if we stop taking our best and brightest and wasting them doing busywork at desks and start using them to build things again, the result should actually be a net increase in everyone's wealth, even though those non bureaucrat jobs aren't as comfortable or as numb as the real jobs in the real economy creating real value for other people.
It's stressful doing real things, and you actually have to deliver on your promises, and that sucks compared to just "doing stuff" towards nebulous goals The thing is, the stress is the price you pay for doing real meaningful work that actually affects the world. How many people are stuck in bureaucratic jobs or doing woke nothingness, and how many of those people are actually happy in that role? They must realize they aren't doing anything meaningful, and it must chip away at their souls.
The movies The Matrix and Fight Club became iconic for generations of people in part because they were earlier warnings of the dangers of the fake manufactured bureaucratic world. Both the narrator in Fight Club and Neo in The Matrix start their story working a corporate job. The Narrator flies a lot for work but works in an office when he's not on the road, Neo works in a stereotypical office, and it's part of the shorthand of the films that these jobs aren't fulfilling, they aren't making them happy, they aren't contributing anything meaningful to the world, and both stories are stories about finding meaningful labor. In both movies, the main character finds power and purpose in living a less privileged life -- The Narrator moving to a leaky shack next to a paper mill, Neo moving to "the real world" where they live a spartan life and eat disgusting goo. From my standpoint, those authors didn't know the right answer and so living in a more spartan existence like that seems to them like living closer to reality, but the same could be accomplished by getting people out of offices and into boots on the ground actually doing things.
At this point we're getting close to my current achievable ideal, which is a conservative majority with a Bloc Quebecois official opposition.
The BQ are separatists from Quebec, so they're just a regional party who will never get any seats outside of Quebec. If they become the official opposition, it means the Liberals and NDP (the two left wing nation-wide parties) have been so badly pantsed nation-wide that a regional party got the #2 spot.
I don't just want them to fail that badly because I hate them, but because the only way parties get their heads out of their asses is to get obliterated in elections and have to ask what happened and what they can do differently.
The BQ are separatists from Quebec, so they're just a regional party who will never get any seats outside of Quebec. If they become the official opposition, it means the Liberals and NDP (the two left wing nation-wide parties) have been so badly pantsed nation-wide that a regional party got the #2 spot.
I don't just want them to fail that badly because I hate them, but because the only way parties get their heads out of their asses is to get obliterated in elections and have to ask what happened and what they can do differently.
They failed in the moment, but I think the truckers ultimately helped change the discussion entirely. Once the government fought the truckers, the truckers won even if they didn't immediately get what they wanted.
The other surprise was realizing just how horrible most famous people actually are behind closed doors, how horrible their industries are. Just because they made something you liked at one time, doesn't mean they aren't accepting advances from Weinstein, enjoying flights to Epstein's island, or doing unspeakable acts at one of Diddy's parties.
I'm happy to realize that there's still people out there who made things I liked who are sane. I never expected which people it would be!
Like... Scott Adams, Kid Rock, Kelsey Grammar, Doug TenNapel, what a strange combination of people.
Like... Scott Adams, Kid Rock, Kelsey Grammar, Doug TenNapel, what a strange combination of people.
Fire and brimstone from the angry kitsune.... would bring me to church every Sunday. Not gonna lie here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xAK108u2xAs
The current Dem platform is this 14 year old comedy video.
The current Dem platform is this 14 year old comedy video.
It's true. The Liberals don't do secret ballots. They just bully their members either into submission or out of the party.
I've never felt happier not supporting a Democrat in my adult life.
Can we take all of them and throw them in a bus, then throw the bus off a cliff into a pool filled with sulphuric acid?
Can we take all of them and throw them in a bus, then throw the bus off a cliff into a pool filled with sulphuric acid?
Though to be fair and honest, I think Diddy did support Trump in 2016. Which is probably why they finally arrested him (because it isn't like they arrested him for the things the rest of the establishment does on a daily basis)
Pathetic.
Just remember when these people judge us as moral reprobates, this is the sort of thing they spend their spare time doing.
Just remember when these people judge us as moral reprobates, this is the sort of thing they spend their spare time doing.
Played with waydroid, a platform for running android apps on linux semi-natively, for the first time ever last night. I wanted to try it out on another laptop I had, but it was armhf and that prevented me from installing wayland (I don't recall why, I think there was a key library that wasn't available on armhf)
In order to use it properly, you need to be running a distro on wayland. If you're running X, you can still run it because you can run the wayland compositor called weston on x, and all the wayland programs will run in the weston window.
Once you install waydroid, you have to run the init. It downloads a copy of lineageOS and sets up an android installation automatically.
It worked quite well even on the celeron laptop with very little memory I was playing on.
By default it doesn't install any store. You need to register with Google if you want to use the play store, I installed f-droid. Newpipe worked well, but when I tried to run moonlight it wouldn't work because it claimed there was no hardware H.264 decoding support. I'm not sure if that's due to waydroid or because of the intel integrated video chip I'm using.
Browsing worked reasonably well, since it was on a laptop I had to go into the settings and turn off on-screen keyboard.
Overall, I'd say if you have an android app that would be useful on your linux install, waydroid seems like a decent and easy to use method to run android applications.
In order to use it properly, you need to be running a distro on wayland. If you're running X, you can still run it because you can run the wayland compositor called weston on x, and all the wayland programs will run in the weston window.
Once you install waydroid, you have to run the init. It downloads a copy of lineageOS and sets up an android installation automatically.
It worked quite well even on the celeron laptop with very little memory I was playing on.
By default it doesn't install any store. You need to register with Google if you want to use the play store, I installed f-droid. Newpipe worked well, but when I tried to run moonlight it wouldn't work because it claimed there was no hardware H.264 decoding support. I'm not sure if that's due to waydroid or because of the intel integrated video chip I'm using.
Browsing worked reasonably well, since it was on a laptop I had to go into the settings and turn off on-screen keyboard.
Overall, I'd say if you have an android app that would be useful on your linux install, waydroid seems like a decent and easy to use method to run android applications.