user_name

joined 1 year ago
[–] user_name@lemmy.world 9 points 4 days ago

I flew out of there last week. Best airport experience I’ve had in years. What is he smoking; did PP find Rob Ford’s secret stash?

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Internet is too slow for video for me right now. Is this the one with the guy in the wizard robe?

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Any kind of ventillation or airflow?

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

I’ve said this elsewhere but I know somebody who used to work for a startup that would automatically reject any job applicant with Palantir in their resume. Wish it was standard practice.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 17 points 2 weeks ago

I love how in only one of the thumbnails Alaska is part of the US.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I think there’s a few forces at work here on more personal levels.

  1. A lot cops are veterans which means their background is focused on the use of force to rapidly end situations, which also means a lot of encounters are escalated quickly rather than de-escalated or prolonged via non-resolving techniques (i.e., conversation rather than just cuffing the person). Especially in countries that participated in the so-called GWOT they’re background is counter-insurgency so they’re trained to approach every environment being one that could immediately turn into a firefight and approach all situations like that.
  2. A lot of cops are armed. Something about how if you have a hammer everything’s a nail…
  3. They’re often true believers. Capital does deserve to be protected. Property deserves to be protected. Men with long hair are lazy hippies, and minorities (whoever that is in the context) are dehumanized outsiders. Cops are often personally reactionary: politically conservative, actively religious people who simply believe in the existing order.
  4. Some just don’t give a shit and want the perks. Cops get their metaphorical dick sucked on a daily basis by basically everybody in politics and public life. They get sweet perks. They’re literally immune in same jurisdictions. That’s got to feel good.
  5. Some of them are just bastards, but in a different way from points 3 or 4. Think of the Pinkertons shooting strikers: some were covered as true believers or like the other perks, but some just specifically like killing. How many Kyle Rittenhouses’s have become cops just to seek violence?

But fundamentally, they’re bastards even because if they aren’t true believers, it’s their job to blindly enforce laws. They’re literally paid to dissociate from any personal moral compass they may claim to have and just be an impersonal jackboot for the state. The job description of a cop is to follow orders, no questions asked. That’ll make anybody act the bastard.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 11 points 2 weeks ago

Don’t even need them to be fully illegal to have black market demand. Eric Garner was selling loose (untaxed) cigarettes when the state executed him on the street in 2014. There’ll be demand for any black market no matter how apparently trivial the prohibition or unappealing the product, especially if the product is addictive.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 26 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This is literally the opening line of that one fucking poem, “First they came for the Communist”

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Very cool snd not particularly dull. Thanks for sharing.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago

Absolutely. I’m admittedly a bit of a clothes horse and it really used to be that, within reason, there were brand names that used to be a reasonable proxy for quality. But now I’m looking at shirts from the same place I bought them from years ago and the fabric is thin to the point where it’s actually sheer.

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 23 points 2 weeks ago

Probably will try to. Will also probably be stopped by the courts. We need to purge the judiciary (and I’ll vote for anybody in the presidential primary who promises to do that).

[–] user_name@lemmy.world 35 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

I’ve started throwing out socks I bought 4-5 months ago for developing holes. Same brand I’ve been buying for 15+ years and used to be able to go 18-24 months before needing replacements.

Contemporary fascism can’t even make the proverbial trains run on time.

1
Monopsony (en.wiktionary.org)
 
  1. A market situation in which there is only one buyer for a product.
  2. A buyer with disproportionate power.

Basically the reverse of a monopoly, a market controlled by a single or dominant seller.

7
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by user_name@lemmy.world to c/movies@lemmy.world
 

Edit: Solved, it’s “Christine” from 1987. An episode of ScreenPlay.

I have a movie on the tip of my tongue but cannot remember what it is. It’s about a teen girl, I think it’s Scottish, and she walks around her town with a plastic bag selling heroin and helping her customers shoot up. The problem is if you search “teen heroin scotland” in any form you just get Trainspotting. Might have been a TV film originally? I don’t recall it being that long, possibly sub-90 minutes.

I have it in my head that the name is something suspiciously close to a more famous teen heroin movie: Christiane F. I feel like it’s something close to that, “Christina” or maybe even just “Christian” but I could be wrong.

 

“This restaurant is disgusting, I’m going to recommend it to my boss.”

1
Polysyndeton (en.wiktionary.org)
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by user_name@lemmy.world to c/Logophilia@mander.xyz
 

Noun: The use of many conjunctions to achieve an overwhelming effect in a sentence.

Such as in the Bible or Ernest Hemingway using “and” to extend sentences and individually emphasize each element.

1
Obsidional (en.wiktionary.org)
 

Adjective

Pertaining to a siege

 
 

Just curious what this is? Spotted in suburban northeast US. Didn’t see anything wlse like it around but maybe I just missed them.

 

In Massachusetts the fees for a marriage license are set by each town. It costs $50 to get married in Boston but only $15 in Wenham. Are there any cheaper cities or towns in the Commonwealth?

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