[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 9 points 10 hours ago

Facial expression that says "I'll fuckin' do it again" loud and clear.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 11 points 11 hours ago

Would you take an hour with a wrench for $9 million?

If I knew I only had to last an hour and that the wrencher definitely wouldn't kill me? Maybe (though I can't say definitely). A bunch of guys who may or may not be willing to kill me and may or may not kill me unintentionally busting into my house and engaging in open-ended torture in order to get at $9 million that I apparently need so little that I can lock it up in an encrypted wallet seems like a pretty relevantly different situation, though.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 22 points 12 hours ago

I would expect that finding to mostly apply to torture in the name of obtaining ideologically significant information, though. It takes a long time to wear people down to the point where they'll betray things or people they're strongly committed to, especially if they're committed enough to be doing something that's interesting to the CIA. I wonder how much of that resistance translates to a situation in which all the torturers want is your wallet, though. I can imagine a lot of people being willing to die (or get closer to dying) to avoid giving up their comrades or strongly held beliefs. I can imagine far fewer people being willing to die to protect their Bitcoin.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 6 points 3 days ago

I think the Kuhnian "normal science --> anomalies --> paradigm shift" model of scientific progress can be seen as a kind of dialectical process.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 2 points 3 days ago

Ah, I see. It probably doesn't matter much, but honestly if my choices were a nice case or leaving it factory sealed, I think I'd leave it factory sealed. If you keep the inside of the case very clean it's probably fine, but I don't think I'd be keen to introduce a potential new problem to solve a problem that didn't exist. If you're not having problems with the factory packaging, why take the chance of contamination? If you're carrying it in a manner where you think the factory packaging is insufficient, the calculation might be different though.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 2 points 3 days ago

I get two doses for free from my work every year (school), and I keep them in a soft-sided case bouncing around at the bottom of my backpack, which goes everywhere with me and which I'm not particularly delicate with. I've never had a leak or anything like that. The one time I've had to use it (not at school), it worked just fine. I think gaskets are probably unnecessary. If you've got a friend willing to give you a nice case, though, seems like it can't hurt, yeah?

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 34 points 4 days ago

Seems fun and normal.

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 34 points 4 days ago

C-suite executives, meanwhile, are facing the heavy burden of squeezing blood from AI’s proverbial stone. 72 percent of all surveyed execs said their company’s AI strategy is causing them stress or anxiety, 32 percent of whom characterize their stress as “high” or “crippling.”

lol, lmao

[-] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 43 points 5 days ago

I had a whole chapter in my PhD dissertation arguing that we were much closer to this than was commonly believed. That was a little more than a decade ago. Sucks to be right.

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submitted 2 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net

Just aggressively learning nothing as hard as possible. amerikkka is a death cult.

16

Archive link

Off-duty from TikTok and their Fox News guest-panelist gigs, the young conservatives did exhibit a certain level of willingness to really get into it in a mostly productive way, which, I’ll admit, is more than I can say about a lot of people back in Brooklyn. Still, it was disconcerting how often a normal conversation with one of these so-called normal people could cannonball from politics and policy into, at the very least, a not-so-PC joke and, at worst, something hateful.

When I first reached out to Wexler, for example, asking to talk about her weekend plans for the inauguration, she wrote back, “Let’s do it. Full transparency, I think ‘pronouns’ are ‘ret-----.’” She asked me to tell my readers that. “Tomorrow, we’re going to have images of them rounding up illegals and deporting them. That’s exciting,” she said another time, cackling. She also called me a “man in lipstick,” though I wasn’t wearing any. Later, when introducing me to Sinclair, she said, “He’s a queer. But a friendly one.” I laughed.

“The hold the left has is coming to an end because you guys were making bad decisions,” a droll, self-confident IDF soldier tells me at Butterworth’s. “When you go too far, you isolate people, you polarize people. The pendulum effect is real.” Here, she says, “is where you can say whatever you want!”

I think one big takeaway from this (aside from how fucking insufferable these people are, of course) is that this coalition is extraordinarily fragile. A lot of people in this article are expressing support for extremely "thin" reasons--wanting to be on the winning side, wanting to be able to say slurs, aesthetics, and so on. There are former Biden and Bernie voters who are "on the Trump train" because it's the path of least resistance, and because the casual cruelty is both trendy and easier than giving a shit. It's really important to remember that a lot of these people are opportunists and/or grifters: the true believers of fascism are actually relatively rare. They had their opportunity for cultural ascendency here, and immediately squandered it by allowing those true believers to do whatever the fuck they want, which the vast majority of people find disgusting. I strongly suspect a lot of the people interviewed here will just sit out the next election. This isn't supposed to absolve them--they have blood on their hands as much as Stephen Miller does--but I think it's important to remember that this "cultural ascendency" is really a mirage. These people are fucking losers.

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Looking into it (thelemmy.club)
submitted 2 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/slop@hexbear.net

We love our misogynistic oligarchs don't we folks?

Link

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submitted 2 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/slop@hexbear.net

hitler-detector

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submitted 2 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net

The French offices of Elon Musk's X have been raided by the Paris prosecutor's cyber-crime unit, as part of an investigation into suspected offences including unlawful data extraction and complicity in the possession of child pornography.

81

Why We March

Vilifying billionaires is popular. Losing them is expensive. Most made their fortunes building companies that employ thousands and solve real problems. Their wealth is largely stock in those companies, not vaults of cash.

California benefits enormously when entrepreneurs choose to build here. We're currently watching them leave.

The Billionaire Tax Act has already pushed the founders of Google to leave the state, taking their economic contributions with them. By taxing unrealized gains and voting shares, the act would make it difficult for founders to retain control of their startups.

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submitted 2 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/slop@hexbear.net

lol, lmao

Link

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[Stocks are] really not that important in the overall context of things, but I have some money invested, so that 's good for me, I guess." -NC Hispanic man

People voted for Trump because we thought we were going to get lower costs of living, to some degree at least, and everything has just increased in price. -GA Black man

So I have an EBT card, and it's a lot harder to prove certain things in order to qualify for that. So just little things like that, they all add up, and I think they need to focus on us more than other countries. -MI white man

At first him speaking his mind was refreshing and I saw him getting a lot accomplished, but then it just got mean and nasty and very unbecoming. And it just made me cringe and I just didn't like him anymore. -AZ white woman

Deportations were a thing he was talking about, just not to the extreme. I would say yes, I was surprised. -MI Black man

I thought the focus was going to be more on securing the border, focused on hardened criminals, not so much everyday folk. -MI white man

I think the ICE has a place in this country right now because of the influx of illegals, but I also think the ICE officers have not been adequately trained. -ME white woman

All the South Koreans, I believe, that were going to be the instructors and teach Americans how to do that job--we had this whole thing where they refused to come back, and now they're going to let AI and robots do the majority of jobs. -AZ Hispanic man

And I also feel like I liken it to 1936 Germany with the brown coats [sic]. And so, there has to be a better way to do this - ME white woman

I think he should take care of the US first instead of acquiring other countries. -AZ white woman

I couldn't believe that I was complicit in deportations and I felt horribly and cried a lot about it and everything. I guess I kind of knew, but refused to pay attention to it because it just seemed ridiculous in my head to think things could really go that way - MI Hispanic woman

joker-amerikkklap

103

football-lucy football-charlie-brown neon-fell-for-it-evangelion surprised-pika

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submitted 4 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net

Because of intellectual property laws, military equipment repairs have to be done by the manufacturer now instead of in the field. Hilariously dumb. Even the global war machine is now being consumed by the vampires of capital.

92

Living in China is getting cheaper. Because rents in my neighborhood in central Beijing are dropping, my wife and I pressed our landlord to reduce ours by $140 a month in a new lease that we signed last month. He wasn’t too happy about it, but he’s lucky that we didn’t move out. Given the desperation of local landlords, we probably could’ve saved another $500 a month had we switched to a comparable apartment nearby.

BUT AT WHAT COST?

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submitted 4 months ago by Philosoraptor@hexbear.net to c/slop@hexbear.net

In the New World, they wanted to erect a New Jerusalem that would not only be religiously devout but be built on a new foundation of communal sharing and social altruism. Their goal was the communism of Plato’s Republic

data-laughing

Because of the disincentives and resentments that spread among the population, crops were sparse and the rationed equal shares from the collective harvest were not enough to ward off starvation and death. Two years of communism in practice left alive only a fraction of the original number of the Plymouth colonists.

Unironically doing "communism is when no food."

In the wilderness of the New World, the Plymouth Pilgrims progressed from the false dream of communism to the sound realism of capitalism. At a time of economic uncertainty and growing political paternalism, it is worthwhile recalling this beginning of the American experiment and experience with economic freedom.

This is the lesson of the First Thanksgiving. This year, when we, Americans sit around our dining table with family and friends, we should also remember that what we are really celebrating is the birth of free men and free enterprise in that New World of America.

The true meaning of Thanksgiving, in other words, is the triumph of Capitalism over the failure of Collectivism in all its forms.

I thought that was the true meaning of Christmas?

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Philosoraptor

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