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fines don't make any sense :boost_requested:​ 

In the Netherlands, if you're caught cycling in the dark without bike lights, you will get a fine. But... why?

Maybe you forgot to turn them on. That can happen - everybody forgets things sometimes, and some of us (particularly those with ADHD, for example) forget things often.

But... why is that punished with a fine? It isn't going to make you un-forget, nor is it going to prevent you from forgetting in the future (since forgetting is an accidental thing). So it doesn't solve the problem.

Maybe you don't have lights on your bike. Okay, why? Perhaps you're poor, and couldn't afford them. Okay, so now you get a fine, which costs you even more, and you *still* don't have lights. This clearly doesn't help either.

Maybe you do have the money, but haven't gotten yourself to buy them yet, eg. because of executive dysfunction. So now you get fined for suffering from executive dysfunction. Which again doesn't solve the problem.

How does any of this make sense? Why wouldn't you just hand out a light to anyone who is missing one instead, which would *actually solve* two of the three causes (and serve as a reminder for the third one)?

Why would you fine people for this? By what logic is it justifiable to issue fines? (And yes, that is a rhetorical question.)

It's nice to see positivity about trans people and trans men/mascs in particular.

But I find it really uncomfortable how often both cis people and trans women/femmes frame that positivity by crediting us with non-toxic masculinity.

First of all, toxic masculinity exists in trans dudes! And cis dudes aren't inevitably toxic!

But also...this is just a huge responsibility to put on a small and marginalized group. Don't leave it to the trans guys to fix masculinity. We can't do it alone.

I wonder if you get some kind of reward once you've discovered all of PayPal's different payment flows

No free view? No review! Join us in our boycott of closed-access journals as reviewers #NoFreeViewNoReview:
nofreeviewnoreview.org/

Notice:

It is the official policy of Scholar Social that

Swearing at someone exactly once because they were being racist doesn't count as "harassment" in the slightest and is honestly kind of encouraged here

Absolute nightmare of an experience at Brussels airport passport control. Likely getting profiled because the birthplace on my French passport says Turkey and the chip isn’t working (which is why I was in the manual control lane to begin with).

The joys of being white passing in racist countries. You’re fine until they see you might be a bit too Brown inside.

Now sitting in a room with other Brown and Black folks, waiting (and they have my passport).

#belgium #brussels #racism

Today is the national day of the Sámi people, who mostly live across what is now Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia. This day commemorates the first cross-border congress of Norwegian and Swedish Sámi, in 1917.

In Sweden the language is spoken by about 20,000 people, but far more have Sámi heritage, as a result of racism and assimilation policies. #sami #indigenous su.se/department-of-swedish-la

i like to imagine that the california DMV department has like a huge room full of 16 year olds where a big screen shows each license plate, and the first one to shout an obscenity relating to the plate gets a point

I'm in a lot of smaller or more local tech chats with a lot more "normie" engineers, and I'm absolutely *terrified* at the number of them saying things like, "I tried GitHub copilot this weekend" or "Had chatGPT write some code for me" and have really positive things to say about the experience.

Like, it probably says a lot about how much boilerplate there is in a lot of modern development, but we're about to enter an era where every bit of software gets crappier and buggier.

Admin meta 

Pre-influx, almost all of the days were quiet days. The effects of the influx are still rippling through fedi with the much higher base user count obviously resulting in more things happening; more people spininng up their own instances, holes in moderation of big instances being more noticeable, etc.

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Ableism and ableist language 

A lot of people seem to view ableism as just not saying certain words, and this is tremendously over-simplified.

Ableism won't be stopped by climbing the euphemism treadmill and searching for "replacement words". Just like calling someone an "idiot" isn't really an improvement over calling someone the R-slur, calling someone a "dipshit" isn't really an improvement over calling someone an "idiot".

Actually put thought into what the ableist language you're using means. A lot of the time the answer isn't to find a "replacement", it's to stop using that language at all and say something else. This is especially true because most ableism isn't actually saying anything substantive, but just expressing a kind of vapid dismissiveness.

Consider: have you ever actually thought about why "stupid" is ableist? It's certainly not from its etymology; the origin of the word "stupid" is just "in a stupor", as in, unresponsive or dazed. It morphed into an ableist term because of an ableist idea that people are unresponsive because they're "unintelligent" or otherwise lesser.

If you replace "stupid" and "idiot" with "foolish" and "dipshit" now, guess what will happen a few decades from now? They'll just take on the exact same meaning, because you're using them exactly the same.

There's some nuance with ableist metaphors (like calling situations "crazy" because they're extreme or out of the ordinary), but even those uses just getting replaced with a different word can easily turn into just yet another euphemism train. Today, referring to someone as "wild" to mean that they're unusual or mentally ill wouldn't register, but that can easily change if people transfer over this replacement "wild" metaphor to people.

Words matter, but you can't solve ableism just by playing whack-a-mole with designated "ableist words", and cutting off what you consider to be ableism at "idiot" and "stupid" is no better than what most people do, which is to cut off what they consider to be ableism at the R-slur. You need to consider your language holistically and actually deconstruct what you're saying. There is no immediate, easy fix to ableism, and until people accept this, it will continue to be ubiquitous.

🦇

linux vent 

See, updating Linux is easy. All you need is
-your distro's package manager
-something to help you keep track of third-party repos (AUR, PPAs)
-Snapd
-Flatpak
-something to keep track of your AppImages

You can choose from a variety of GUI applications, each one of which will do between one and four of these things

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Let me give you an example of a fake Instagram influencer finding his way onto the Fediverse.

Look at this guy:

https://www.instagram.com/mronevibe/

He has 253K followers on Instagram. Mostly fake.

He also has a Pixelfed account right here:

https://pixelfed.social/i/web/profile/444567745991109534

Zero posts, but 76 followers.

Who are his followers?

Take a look at this screenshot. They're all fake Instagram influencers who buy fake followers.

@mjgardner

So many people citing Henry Toureau and his Walden to evoke the idea of running away from social media and hide from trackers. To isolate and reconnect with the environment. “Walden-ponding”

I’m sorry to break the illusion but according to his diaries, his mum and sister visited him daily to wash his clothes and cook lunch. The cabin was 15min walking distance from the family house, it was built in his friend’s land for free and the lake next to it had swimmers in summer and skiers in winter 😂✨

@thufie the pixie town economy depends on it's lustrous posting fields and rich content mines

if a service gets OOM-killed and restarts without anyone noticing, did it ever really happen?

listen. the idea that the state and its military and intelligence agencies are everywhere and all-powerful and always a step ahead of you - that IS the propaganda. that IS the counterinsurgency.

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