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@leviathantic

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really specific trope i like that i feel like can only be explained in a diagram
Remembering this tweet today. (For those of you who don't know, Josh Sawyer was the Project Director and Lead Designer of Fallout: New Vegas)
What a privilege to outgrow the version of you that settled for less than you deserved.

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I explained the concept of "blorbo from my shows" to my 71 year old immigrant grandfather because I referenced it in passing and I thought nothing of it, until today when he said "I think I'll watch peaky blinders tonight and see my blorbo from my shows" referring, of course, to Cillian Murphy playing Tommy Shelby
English isn't his first language so he's not super in touch with modern slang, so I've been accidentally teaching him to talk like a tumblr user. His favorite thing to say lately is "me when I'm a little hater" when he's like talking shit about the neighbor's son
I explained the “x before gta6” meme to my immigrant father and he, in turn, explained to me how back in his day in Romania, they had the same type of joke, except instead of it being gta6, it was about the imminent death of a singer named Gică Petrescu, who everyone was continuously shocked by because he refused to die. Every time a momentous event happened people would say, in essence: “This happened and Gică Petrescu hasn’t even died yet?!?”
So. He understood the gta6 meme immediately because they apparently had the same thing in Romania when he was young, except way, way more morbid
By Jocelin Carmes
Lil nas x coming back during pride month to tell us hes been taking care of his physical and mental health, finishing rehab and getting treatment for bipolar disorder, and telling us that he is excited to not only make new music but also just to live his life???? And during mens mental health awareness month????? Oh i missed him bad
The Old Town Road star was arrested last year for attacking police officers and later entered rehab.
marvellous news on 917 days left!!’
Starting to think all the backlash to the idea of the trolley problem is just people trying to hide the fact that, deep down, they know they would be too scared to pull the lever.
I suppose one of the advantages I've gained from having been in the military is that I went from a suspicion I would have the conviction to make those kinds of calls, an absolute certainty that I do have it. I've held lives in my hands, but thankfully I rose to my training and my convictions. I chose the best of the options I had available to me at the time.
There is nothing shameful about being too afraid of making the decision, in my view. But yeah, it's cowardice to project your anxiety by claiming the philosophical quandary itself is meaningless.
No reason to wonder. A ton of people openly bragged about how morally pure they were for not pulling the lever in 2024. They just hate it when you contextualize it like that and insist they were taking a third option to sound less terrible when their actions are 1:1 compared to the thought experiment.
If anything, the reason I reject it is because I consider the thought experiment ITSELF to be cowardly.
All human lives are worth the same amount, and any LOSS of human life is as large a tragedy as any other amount of lost human life. You aren't doing a GOOD thing by condemning one person to die to save four more, you're not even doing a BETTER thing. It might be the more valuable thing in a coldly utilitarian point of view, but from my moral stance death is death. You don't get to compare and contrast your way out of that.
You’d be too scared to pull the lever huh?
People hate the trolley problem because it is inherent to the problem that choosing not to act is an active choice. That's why they reject the problem itself rather than making an argument for choosing to not pull the lever. They aren't afraid to pull the lever- they're afraid to admit that their priority is keeping their own hands clean.
Hear hear.
You can tell by the "well I'M too moral and pure to think killing one person to save five is good - ". If that person had engaged with the experiment honestly they'd know that it's not ABOUT trying to establish one course as the moral one. It's not about being able to, as @darkladynyara says, come out with your hands clean; you won't. It's about making you consider what you should and would do when all the choices available are bad ones.
917 days left

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Hiya Rocket Man!~ ♥️🌟
FUCK it was in parallel australia
and if i said nolan's odyssey starring no greek actors and with no recognizable aspects of greek culture or involvement by greeks, is the direct legacy of white supremacist colonialism that treated ancient greece as not just the pinnacle of ancient culture, but of an artificially created "european" culture, which white western europeans and their settler descendants, as the new pinnacle of culture, were the sole spiritual inheritors of.
^^^ PEOPLE ARE STILL THERE. There's a metro station across the street from the colosseum where i found a hair in my pizza slice. We drove by ruins of an amphitheater next to a motorway in greece once. It's literally just real places where real people live and have lived. It's not mythical perfect lands that once existed. I went to Itacha in 2023 and there was not enough parking space.
And then get REAL good at obfuscating that you're doing this by learning how to Rationalise at a master level!!
Soon it will become muscle memory and you won’t even have to think about doing it, and will become convinced this is just your default state of being! 😃
AND that you actually AREN'T blaming yourself or hating yourself, because you have learned to phrase it as being about how you know other people/the world perceive you (bonus if you make it "people in my specific cross-section of demographics"!), whether that's accurate or not "it doesn't matter, that's just what people think and how I will be treated". Even therapists will not detect it after you get this good at it, because you'll have successfully turned the statement into one about your experiences as a minority that is so rare therapists YOU can access are never part of it, so they shy away from contradicting you and if they DO you can chalk it up to them being bigoted.
All the constant put-downs aren’t self-loathing, no no no, you’re just SO practical and realistic! You’ve got your expectations on LOCK they’re so reasonable, this way you can never be disappointed about anything ever and if you are, hey, more things to totally legitimately blame yourself for. Because you really should’ve known better. You’re SO self-aware.
Tbh I know we're like, joking around and all but today I actually did say out loud "actually, it doesn't matter WHAT I did, nobody deserves to [be treated the way my ex treated me particularly in regard to the murder attempts]" and honestly I would not have gotten there if I hadn't learned more about the prison and punitive justice system from a defence lawyer and in so doing decided I was against punitive justice so like. Starting by changing how you view other people is not a bad place to start undoing this stuff, bc the way you think society should treat the worst people is sometimes the path to treating yourself with basic compassion if you think YOU are among the worst people.
I don't think anybody, no matter what they've done, should be killed or tortured or enslaved about it. I'm "anybody" and I've certainly not done anything particularly awful to anyone even in my worst moments, so like... if I would give basic humanity to someone who has done much worse, why not me? Even if I'm as bad as I feel sometimes, I'm still a human person.
So yeah. Idk. ymmv but becoming an activist for prison abolition and restorative justice really did a lot to help me fix my relationship with myself. Joking about the bad habits I'm still stuck in is helping me break from them but so is learning that punishment doesn't work, punitive justice isn't the only kind of justice (and doesn't work), and how restorative justice works. The macrocosm is the microcosm and vice versa. If you can't start inside, start outside and work your way in.
This is so, so beautiful. This is so beautiful and you're so beautiful and I hope this stays in your bones forever because it's true.
Learning this is so hard and it's an everyday thing. Being a public defender caused me to cross this threshold slowly and painfully -- because what happened to me wasn't really abuse, and I'm just some privileged white bitch and what do I know? What do I have to say?
In a very real way, I found society's worst and least defensible people because if I could find them worth defending then I could find myself worth defending. My privilege was a barrier that I needed to learn to cross, but it also became a shield that I could use on my clients' behalf.
And your words and insights have broadened my life and my perspective as well, so thank you for being there. Truly.
::hugs:: thank you. I don't think our culture really tells people to their face that they had any impact, so it's really important to me to hear that.
It really started with going into an asylum and meeting other people both there and on the street that were severely mentally ill and yet were also now my peers, and we were alone together against the world that hated us. That helped me stop seeing myself as separate from anybody. And if I'm in an asylum, that means I can no longer think hateful things about my father without also applying them to me. I had to give him grace if I was ever going to give myself any.
Going inside an institution, prison or asylum or shelter or group home, you are suddenly peers with your fellow inmates more than you are with anyone on the outside. You are forever marred in society's eyes with that stain of impurity. So you kind a have to rearrange how you think about everyone on the inside, really. I ended up there because I ran from domestic violence--ran for my very life. And what did I get for "doing the right thing" and asking for help?
I got punished.
So that really shattered a lot of illusions I had about justice and authority, and about myself and my place in the world, and about my father and my relationship with who he was. I learned that I had to learn to forgive him, because he was no longer just ONE person I knew that was schizophrenic, or used drugs, or had been arrested/in jail. That was also a whole bunch of other people, people who were suffering and being tormented the same as me, who I saw did not deserve it and were not benefitting from any of it. And I'd seen the truth of who actually did the abuse, too. I'd met truly awful people, I'd actually had my human rights and dignity violated and I had seen it done to others.
My father was not a monster, not like I used to think he was; because now I've met monsters, I have been in the maw of the terrible machine that traumatised my father his whole life. I understand now.
I know it's cliche, but like, a huge part of this is tied up in my dad and who and what my dad was, both to me and to other people. And there's a vast difference between recognising the humanity and the human rights of everyone and saying they've never done anything to harm others. But there's no such thing as purity and there shouldn't be a sense it's important to have never done wrong.
The person who tries to wash the blood off their hands is more trustworthy than the one who has no blood there to wash. Because the latter will never TRY.
And as long as a person is alive they can try, they can strive, they can change.
Even dead, a person has human rights that are inalienable. They can be oppressed, they can be violated, but they can never truly be taken. That's what inalienable means. If you do not have shelter, that does not mean your right to it is being taken--it means your right to it is being violated and oppressed.
And if a corpse has rights, then I do too. If I say a person who has committed harm still has human rights, then what a hypocrite I am to say I alone do not have human rights! If the worst person on earth still deserves their human rights, then I must also.
It isn't truly about "deserving". I had to dismantle the structure that sorts everyone into "deserving" and "undeserving" and start thinking about rights, which are not contingent upon your behaviour or the content of your character. They are dependant on whether you are a human fucking being.
And that lifted such a burden off my shoulders. I do not need to make sure I stay "deserving", I do not have to "earn" my rights. There are simply rights that I have, and rights which are being violated. There are humans, who are part of a greater ecosystem community, not good people and bad people, or lazy people and hard working people. There are just people.
Because the attitude that you, uniquely, are fucked up and fucking up and undeserving and therefore should be punishing yourself all the time with neglect and other forms of abuse because you aren't perfect and all that matters is whether YOU are is a very Protestant structure. It's selfish, it's self-centred and plays into the exceptionalism. Nobody is alone. No one acts alone. We are a community. The way I treat myself is the way I treat my neighbours. The rights my neighbours have are rights I also have. If I violate my own rights that is not taking them away--not even I can take away my rights, they are inalienable.
I can only violate them.
That doesn't mean they go away.
They are human rights, not good person rights, not hard worker rights. H U M A N rights.
not ignoring you not replying to you but a secret third thing
forgor

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