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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

peppino-scream

The fifth track is really slow and repetitive on an album focused on repetition, I recommend starting with something else. Man do those tracks fuck crazy hard

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submitted 7 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 7 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 60 points 8 months ago

"so now that this has been automated I probably only have to work one or two hours per day right?"

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submitted 8 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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Drink the Love of God, by Tribulation (centurymedia.bandcamp.com)
submitted 8 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

This new album is overall pretty uneven, which is reasonable considering they appear to be undergoing a metamorphosis and becoming a different band, but this track is a huge highlight for me

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It's really... (cohost.org)
submitted 10 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 10 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Hello all, my good friend has been trying to get out of her disastrous living situation for several years now and the prospects are nonexistent. She's trans and without family in her life. In her words:

My roommate situation is bad. Desperately bad. My name has become a curse, one of them panics about literally the fact that I exist, and the other credibly talks about the options for physically disposing of me on a regular basis, out in the desert where half the strangers I meet bring up how 'the gays are our misfortune' unprompted. Doubt I can stick around here long, and I'm too crippled+isolated to handle being homeless again. I know what it takes having done it a few times in my teens and twenties, and I know that, due to recent injuries, I don't have it right now. No point in suffering through it to buy myself a couple weeks of precarious slow death, when there's nothing waiting on the other side, and this situation has a possibly literal deadline well before the end of the year.

I can afford to rent a place, but I need a co-signer on the rental agreement, or somebody in the city (los angeles-ish) with a spare room. See; I have real money, but it isn't banked, and real money isn't real. Only hypothetical money is real. So I need a US resident with apparent income (before expenses?) over ~4.5k and social credit score over ~720 who can be a guarantor to convince a landlording company to let me pay their generous fee to not social murder me. Or someone with a room to rent near los angeles, but I have no idea how decompressing from this is gonna look and I'm terrified of fucking up a roommate situation before I have some time to ditch a few generally maladaptive coping mechanisms I've picked up here.

if I get a kitchen, I'll be using it to feed people and organize at least a couple dozen hours a week; really all I want to do after dealing with this shit. I have some really cool ideas, but I can't really do any of them here.

small warning: it varies from company to company, but the application process is crazy invasive, not every company is the same, but they seem to be getting worse. the worst I've found asked for access to bank accounts and a background check, but several months of statements submitted to the property landlord company's background check subcontractor seems to be the norm.

I'd co-sign for her myself if I were a US resident, but I'm not. I don't think she'll survive this year without a new place to live. If you think you might be in a position to help, send me a dm.

[-] [email protected] 65 points 11 months ago

National resilience through personal responsibility. The perfect neoliberal strategy

[-] [email protected] 82 points 11 months ago

The IMF wasn't even offering to loan any money out, they were just telling China how to run their economy lmao

[-] [email protected] 59 points 11 months ago

Every time someone on here speculates about him being dead it charges his phylactery up for another year

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submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 54 points 1 year ago

UK infected blood scandal made worse by ‘chilling’ cover-up, inquiry finds

Full textUK infected blood scandal made worse by ‘chilling’ cover-up, inquiry finds

Thousands of deaths could have been avoided, final report on infection of thousands with HIV or hepatitis C concludes Haroon Siddique and Rachel Hall Mon 20 May 2024 19.42 BST First published on Mon 20 May 2024 12.30 BST

The scandal that claimed the lives of 3,000 people treated with contaminated blood was inflamed by a “chilling” NHS and government cover-up, a scathing report has found on what Rishi Sunak has declared a “day of shame”.

In the long-awaited conclusion to a five-year public inquiry, Brian Langstaff, who chaired the investigation, said on Monday the calamity could “largely, though not entirely, have been avoided” – but successive governments and others in authority “did not put patient safety first”.

He said the death toll was rising weekly among the 30,000 people who were infected with hepatitis C, HIV or both from the 1970s to the early 90s, either from receiving transfusions during surgery or through blood plasma products imported from the US to treat haemophiliacs.

The 2,527-page report contains a litany of examples of unheeded warnings about what would become the biggest treatment disaster in NHS history. Clinicians and ministers were told about the risks but patients were lied to and infected during trials carried out without their consent or, in the case of children, that of their parents. There were also delays informing patients of their infections, stretching to years in some cases.

“The NHS and successive governments compounded the agony by refusing to accept that wrong had been done,” said Langstaff, after being given a standing ovation on Monday at Central Hall in Westminster, London, by more than 1,000 victims and affected people gathered to hear the report’s findings.

“More than that, the government repeatedly maintained that people received the best available treatment and that testing of blood donations began as soon as the technology was available. And both claims were untrue.”

With the current government having come under fire in the report for its failure to compensate victims, Rishi Sunak said he would implement last year’s recommendations “whatever it costs”. He also offered a “wholehearted and unequivocal” apology for the scandal – including for “the loss and destruction of key documents including ministerial advice and medical records” – on what he called “a day of shame for the UK state”.

The NHS England chief executive, Amanda Pritchard, also apologised to those who “put their trust in the care they got from the NHS over many years” and “were badly let down”.

The report provides vindication for campaigners who, after decades and in the face of denials, have insisted that risks were disregarded, lies were told and tracks were covered.

Langstaff wrote: “The answer to the question ‘was there a cover-up?’ is that there has been. Not in the sense of a handful of people plotting in an orchestrated conspiracy to mislead, but in a way that was more subtle, more pervasive and more chilling in its implications. To save face and to save expense, there has been a hiding of much of the truth.”

He condemned a culture in which “financial and reputational considerations predominated”.

Among thousands of tragic stories, he described the use of children as “objects of research” at Treolar’s school in Hampshire, where only 30 pupils remain of the 122 who attended the specialist school for people with haemophilia between 1970 and 1987, as “unconscionable”.

In response, many of the affected experienced mixed emotions. Andy Evans, 47, the chair of Tainted Blood, who was infected as a small child with HIV and hepatitis C, said it was a “momentous day”, adding: “We’ve been gaslit for generations.”

He added: “When we told people, they didn’t believe us. They said this wouldn’t happen in the UK. Today this proves this can happen – and did happen – in the UK.

“When you’ve been building up to a single day for 40 years there’s no wrong or right emotion about it, but the campaigners who’ve been doing this for so long – relief, absolute relief, will be an overriding emotion. Certainly that’s the case for me.”

Rosamund Cooper, 50, was diagnosed with Von Willebrand disease, a bleeding disorder, when she was eight months old, and found out she had been infected with hepatitis C when she was 19. She said: “We were told it was accidental. We were told … the decisions made were the best possible at the time.”

The report “is showing that that’s not the case, and that people were covering things up, denying things, hiding things from us, which is disgraceful”.

Langstaff said the risks of hepatitis posed by blood transfusions or the use of plasma were known before the NHS’s inception in 1948 and if measures to mitigate them proposed by the World Health Organization in 1952 had been adopted, “it is reasonable to believe that a significant part of the harm on which this inquiry is focused could have been prevented”.

Significantly, he found the risks were sufficiently clear that factor VIII products imported from the US, created using blood plasma from high-risk donors including prisoners and drug addicts and used to treat haemophilia, should never have been licensed for import in 1973 – nor should other similar blood products later in the same decade.

With Aids, the report says it was apparent by mid-1982 to “some clinicians and some within government” that whatever was causing it might be transmissible by blood and blood products. But ministers continued to give safety reassurances, as did doctors. Despite the risk, in July 1983 a decision was taken not to suspend the continued importation of commercially produced blood products.

Langstaff said: “The failure of clinicians to tell people of the risks of infection from blood or blood products, the failure to tell people of the availability of alternative treatments, the failure to tell them that they were being tested for HIV or hepatitis C and, sometimes, the failure even to tell them, or to tell them promptly, that they had been infected with HIV or hepatitis by their treatment; the failure to explain these devastating diagnoses privately, in person and with sensitivity – these failures were widespread. They were wrong. They were unethical.”

Reflecting the loss of faith in the state by victims and relatives, Langstaff said he would not consider the inquiry over until the government either implemented his recommendations or gave good reasons for not doing so, giving it a year to respond substantively.

[-] [email protected] 54 points 1 year ago

My grandmother has a story about flying across parts of canada with a dude in a single engine seaplane, and whenever the engine cut out he would just land on a convenient lake and fix it

[-] [email protected] 61 points 1 year ago

Gove says three Muslim-led groups and two far-right to be assessed for extremism

Three Muslim-led organisations and two far-right groups will be assessed under the government’s controversial new extremism definition, Michael Gove has told MPs.

The communities secretary named the Muslim Association of Britain, Mend and Cage as groups with “Islamist orientation and beliefs” that would be held to account following the launch of a new definition of extremism.

Gove named the British National Socialist Movement and Patriotic Alternative as groups that promoted neo-Nazi ideology which would also be examined.

And from their live thread:

In response, Mend CEO Azhar Qayum said:

We challenge Michael Gove to repeat his claims outside of parliament and without the protection of parliamentary privilege if he believes he can provide the evidence to back up his view that Mend has called for the establishment of an ‘Islamic state governed by sharia law’.

Extremely base rhetorical maneuver to equivocate these groups with literal nazis

[-] [email protected] 72 points 2 years ago

The taliban released this man back to the anglosphere in much the same way that a platypus deploys venom from its foot spur

[-] [email protected] 79 points 2 years ago

DSA’s National Political Committee did not agree with the two most prominent democratic socialists in American public life.

doesn't really seem like a huge dunk on the DSA tbh

knowing Israel@will retaliate- do you get that they don’t give a FUCK about Palestinian lives?????

damn silverman, what if the israeli military simply... didn't retaliate? is it really solely on the prisoners inside the concentration camp to break the cycle of violence, even as that violent cycle is being continuously engineered by the guards?

[-] [email protected] 66 points 2 years ago

Biden says Gaza hospital blast ‘appears as though it was done by the other team’ and not Israel

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — President Joe Biden vowed to show the world that the U.S. stands in solidarity with Israelis during his visit there Wednesday, and offered an assessment that the deadly explosion at a Gaza Strip hospital apparently was not carried out by the Israeli military.

“Based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you,” Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting. But Biden said there were “a lot of people out there” who weren’t sure what caused the blast.

Biden didn’t offer details on why he believed the blast was not caused by the Israelis.

Genocide Joe Rides Again

[-] [email protected] 95 points 2 years ago

Definitely not. He's an odious fascist, or he would be a fascist if he had any sort of ideological commitment to anything other than drawing attention to himself. The fact that he was elected at all is a monumental condemnation of the USA. He just has the soul of a problematic Florida drag queen in there, which makes him a tremendous poster.

[-] [email protected] 99 points 2 years ago

We could say "death to anglo imperialism and its client states" but it's just not as catchy

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