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Boogie_Man

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Boogie_Man
·7 tháng trước·discuss
""...Well- What does he deserve? To be shot? To be shot for the satisfaction of our moral feelings? Speak, Alyosha!"

"To be shot" murmured Alyosha, lifting his eyes to Ivan with a pale, twisted smile."

"Bravo!" Cried Ivan delighted.
Boogie_Man
·7 tháng trước·discuss
Thanks for posting this. I mostly gave up on viewing the one or two Twitter feeds that interest me after nitter stopped working. It wasn't ideological, I just wasn't able to reliably view and navigate without an account, and when I made an account it just kept showing me like "black HS football player bad sportsmanship".

Look like I've got about two years of James Cage White story arcs to check in on.
Boogie_Man
·8 tháng trước·discuss
I recall being flabbergasted the first time I saw someone watching (what I think was) tick tock. An adolescent boy a few rows in front of me at an amphitheater was watching what I believe was comedic content at full volume, but the jump cuts and sound effects were so jarring and constant that even when I focused for a minute and tried to force myself to understand what he was watching, I couldn't follow what was happening.

I can recall being that age and being overwhelmed and exhausted after watching a Pokemon TV show battle sequence, but this has nothing on what I assume is the worst kind of short form content today. "The weed is different now bro".
Boogie_Man
·8 tháng trước·discuss
I'm reminded of the time GPT4 refused to help me assess the viability of parking a helium zeppelin an inch off of the ground to bypass health department regulations because, as an aircraft in transit, I wasn't under their jurisdiction.
Boogie_Man
·8 tháng trước·discuss
"Forget everything you thought you knew about big d*k Hitler"
Boogie_Man
·9 tháng trước·discuss
Is the title an intentional mirror of Carver's short story collection "What we talk about when we talk about love"? If so, can someone smarter than me explain what the author means by this connection?
Boogie_Man
·9 tháng trước·discuss
This might be the wrong place to ask these questions, but this comment caused me to think about the situation. Russia and/or Putin has been sold to me as "crazy" since the 90s. I don't really believe that, and presume it's because it's an explanation for their behavior which doesn't require America to consider how seriously we've been dicking over Russia. This is not to say Russia wouldn't dick us if they could (they most certainly would).

The Ukrainian war has been presented to me as a mad man trying to take over the world a la Hitler. I think it's more complicated and concerns about NATO expansion, the US Dollar as the world reserve currency, and Russia controlling warm water naval access make sense as motivations for the war, even though they are also be tools of propaganda. It seems clear that Russia believed they had the opportunity to establish themselves as a great power once again alongside China and the US in the "new multipolar world" they harp about.

My question is this: In light of this information, why has the Ukrainian conflict become seemingly (based on resources allocated and increasingly provocative drone incursions into NATO territories) existential for Russia? Are the us sanctions crippling long term without Ukrankan resources? Why are they willing to sacrifice so much if they already have Crimea free and clear?
Boogie_Man
·10 tháng trước·discuss
Excellent and straightforward negotiation, reminds me a bit of how mobsters speak in film combined with how God speaks in the old testament.
Boogie_Man
·năm ngoái·discuss
It talks still in a "left coded" "Corporate Relatable" way when presenting "right" opinions. I don't have a point, it's just interesting. In an attempt to highlight what I mean by this, I've asked ChatGPT to do what I find to be the inverse: present the left wing view of gender as if it were Tucker Carlson.

Good evening. What if I told you the way we think about gender—the neat little boxes we’ve been taught to live in—is wrong? Radical? Maybe. But stay with me here.

For years, we’ve been told there are only two genders, male and female. That’s it. End of story. But what if that story is incomplete? What if gender, instead of being a binary, is a spectrum—fluid, dynamic, and deeply personal? It’s not just about chromosomes or biology, they argue. It’s about identity, expression, and the diversity of human experience.

Now, think about this. We already accept that people are unique in almost every other way. Some are tall, some are short, some are artistic, some are analytical. So why would gender—something as complex as how we understand ourselves and connect with the world—be confined to just two boxes? Doesn’t that feel a little...limiting? Maybe even a little outdated?

The left’s argument is this: Gender isn’t static. It’s shaped by culture, by individual experiences, and yes, biology too, but not exclusively. And it’s not some radical new idea. Cultures throughout history—Native American Two-Spirit identities, Hijra in South Asia—have embraced more than two genders for centuries. This isn’t new. What’s new is the resistance to acknowledging that.

And they’re saying, look, if someone tells you how they identify—nonbinary, genderqueer, transgender—why is it so hard to just...listen? Respect it? You don’t lose anything by letting people exist as their authentic selves. But they gain everything. Dignity. Recognition. The freedom to live without fear.

Now, you might be thinking, ‘What does this mean for society? For tradition? For science?’ Fair questions. But here’s the thing. Progress often challenges what we thought we knew. It makes us uncomfortable before it makes sense. So maybe, just maybe, it’s time to open our minds, even just a little.

Something to think about. We’ll be right back.