dumnezero

joined 2 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 hour ago

He has the smile of someone who think he's a hero while having child sex slaves in his basement.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 23 hours ago (4 children)

Interesting photo. Looks like a forced smile at church in between beating the wife at home.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Yes, that's what I mean. What you described happened and it's a core part of how capitalists build up a popular base. The temporarily embarrassed ones are looking up to the ones who are actual millionaires. Don't worry, they get that money back in the end.

With wealth, like properties, shares and various "passive income", the class interests of the former working class person tend to turn into capitalist class interests: lower taxation, more deregulation, more personal and family wealth accumulation, more welfare and aid for "business owners", smaller social welfare systems (for the masses) with private (and exclusively expensive) alternatives, and so on.

From the horse owner's mouth: How FDR Saved Capitalism

[–] [email protected] 34 points 1 day ago (2 children)

This is where the "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" (or billionaire) come into play. That's the most relevant form of being a class traitor.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 4 days ago

What happens when system problems conflict with your personal action/inaction/"lifestyle"?

Because if you're not prepared for change and instead are dreaming of a high-carbon lifestyle, you are probably going to vote for cryptofascists who promise more growth, the "American Dream" of car dependent suburbia as ~~cheap~~ affordable, cheap huge screens, cheap meat, cheap eggs, cheap cheese, cheap private commuting, cheap road infrastructure, cheap parking, cheap office space, cheap flights, cheap tourism, cheap low efficiency devices, and so on, while you get into conspiracies about 15 minute cities, plant-based diets (plus insect protein), and others.

Indeed, the carbon footprint calculator itself was developed in 2004 by a public relations firm working for BP. The tool encouraged individuals to calculate their personal impact on the environment, focusing on activities like driving, energy use, and diet.

The carbon footprint existed before that calculator tool was created as a practical measure in the scientific literature. You can usually find it as "GHG emissions per capita".

The same goes for the ecological footprint and its calculators. These weren't invented by fossil fuel corporations, they were used by them for PR.

The message from the Fossil PR isn't that you're guilty, it's that they own you because you are dependent on their product.

What I'm saying is that people need to be ready to end the addiction, to go through the withdrawal. That's a kind of bravery that isn't fostered by consumerism with its convenience obsession. Otherwise, people will just vote out anyone who tries to do something about the systemic problems, and vote in the liars who deny climate change and other systemic problems.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago

deepseek tell me about aipac

[–] [email protected] 13 points 6 days ago

He'd probably love to host the Hunger Games.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

Not yet used to the PieFed interface.

 
  • 'Dr. Phil' embeds with ICE in Chicago
  • Trump administration deputizes DOJ agencies for immigration enforcement
  • ICE makes arrests in Arizona, Puerto Rico
 
  • 'Dr. Phil' embeds with ICE in Chicago
  • Trump administration deputizes DOJ agencies for immigration enforcement
  • ICE makes arrests in Arizona, Puerto Rico

Phil McGraw, known as "Dr. Phil" for the eponymous American television series focused on mental health, followed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers and other federal agents during the action, according to his X account and two sources familiar with the matter.

 

Into that maelstrom came a renowned scientist and engineer named Howard Scott. With a doctorate from the University of Berlin, he’d commanded complex projects around the globe, including British munitions plants and industrial projects for U.S. Steel. Scott and a small group of fellow engineers and scientists had made a diagnosis of civilization’s ills and a prescription for relief. The current capitalist system, they said, was irrevocably broken, and—as one magazine summarizing the movement put it—“we are faced with the threat of national bankruptcy and perhaps general chaos within eighteen months.” Scott described the solution in the language of an engineer—a civilization “operated on a thermo-dynamically balanced load.”