PanGodofPanic

joined 1 year ago

You bastard! You're perpetuating the cycle!

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 18 points 6 days ago (6 children)

The legal claim is dubious, but I admire the commitment.

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

woah, it looks like someone crossed a snowy owl with an eagle

One just now, two total. One was retrieved almost immediately after the crash, the other took this operation to find.

It's not an either/or thing, nor is such a dichotomy implied. It's possible to waste money committing atrocities.

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

What a better world it would be if their greed actually just destroyed them

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 12 points 1 week ago (1 children)

what if...what if they ask nicely 🫪👉👈

boyyuri and girlyaoi will rule all in time

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I always get a wave of nostalgia to when I was playing AC4&5 when I was like, 8 and 11ish? when I see stuff like this. One of my first tastes of "was is really fucking bad and also warplanes are cool as fuck"

This one can be a very useful bit of media analysis, but yeah it's not great that it's becoming the default.

Even in a non-profit employee-owned cooperative, there will be external costs that will have to [be] funded from somewhere.

That somewhere being reduced labor compensation no matter what, meaning the labor is just worth that much less. That doesn't entitle an "owner" to jack shit.

It becomes exploitation when that ratio becomes disproportionate and the ownership starts extracting more than their fair share.

Their fair share is nothing. A disproportionate ratio is any ratio greater than 0. No labor should be "owned" by anyone not performing it. There should not be "ownership" involved. Organizational leaders, sure. And they should also just be regular laborers, paid in the same manner.

[–] PanGodofPanic@lemmy.blahaj.zone 14 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Under capitalism, it is almost by definition. Glad you're having a better time than the rest of us, but your personal anecdote is irrelevant to society at large.

You would not be employed if it wasn't profitable. Which also means the surplus value of your labor, above and beyond what you're being compensated for, is going to your employer. That's exploitation. It's mandatory in most employment under capitalist economics.

 

So in early January of last year I had one of the wildest and most beautiful experiences I could've asked for. Me and my friend were driving home from another town in the evening and my friend saw something on the side of the busy road in the snow bank that I completely missed. We couldn't make it out clearly or stop in time the first time so they asked that we circle back around to investigate, and when we did we found this little guy super vulnerable on the side of the road, clearly stressed and exhausted.

(actual picture of said little guy in my friend's arms as soon as we got back to the car)

They seemed to have a broken wing, possibly from a car collision. Neither of us knew much about owls at the time, nor had either of us had the honor of even seeing a snowy owl in person before, let alone holding one wrapped in our coat. I wouldn't even know what to do with one in the middle of the day when a relevant facility might be open, let alone this hour of night. I didn't even know for sure that they lived in our area. By some absolute miracle, my friend is friends with a really cool person in town who used to work at a raptor sanctuary somewhat near us (we're in the middle of unpopulated nowhere so that was truly a one in a million chance) and still has their contact info. By another miracle, this person was awake, and we were able to get ahold of them to bring the owl to them so they could bring it to the sanctuary the next day.

the poor baby was so stressed and exhausted it was just letting us handle it without any trouble, which was convenient but heartbreaking.

Once we got it there and were able to confirm it would be safe and housed overnight, we took a little to assess the fella's condition. Thankfully he started to perk up a little around this time, and that made it more clear where and how the wing was broken and how much pain he was in. But it also was a once in a lifetime gift to not only see but to touch and hold such a beautiful bird up close. They're very soft, btw. By the time we got home it was very late but the whole detour was very worth it. I never got to confirm later how he turned out in the long term, but we knew he was in good hands so I trust he got all the care he could hope for.

 

My partner works at the NGLVC and this saw whet owl made a home in their owl box along their boardwalk trail over the summer

It's kinda tiny in the picture but tbf we don't have a professional camera and it's a long ways from the trail for the owl's privacy/no disturbance

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