UnderpantsWeevil

joined 2 years ago
[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 108 points 1 day ago

They had a better joke, but they converted it to a Webp and lost the punchline.

The issue wasn't "try hard enough". It was how systematic disenfranchisement hobbles people far more than their genetics.

Once you brand someone as "lesser", their actual capacity is irrelevant. They won't be given the opportunity to succeed (much less to fail and try again) while the presumed-superior cohort is offered advantage after advantage in order to prove they are better.

Okay, but the moral of the story was that "superior" people weren't actually superior. They were just racist.

The protagonist outwits and outperforms them all.

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

WTF does his VP have to do with the fact that there was a 100% Republican block against his policies

Obama had a bigger advantage in 2009 than Trump has today.

Joe Biden being a creepy racist crook with deep ties to the insurance industry is why health reform failed.

🌎 👨‍🚀 🔫 👩‍🚀

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

indefinitely preempt

So he's on paid vacation. Getting an eight figure salary to do nothing ain't so bad for a guy who got into comedy selling "Women jumping on trampolines" as his main gimmick.

Excited to see what kind of mindless AI slop they get replaced with.

Any time some group or party does something heinous in this country they are given a pass to “maintain unity”

I don't believe Fred Hampton and the Black Panthers or David Koresh and the Branch Davidians were "given a pass", particularly after national news declared them public enemies.

Quite a few organizations and organizers get squashed hard. It's within the state's capacity. Trump seems to be demonstrating the degree to which these norms can be violated.

However, at the barest minimum those who were part of the Confederacy should have been barred from holding public office of any kind or participating in anything that would influence public policy beyond maybe their right to vote

Well, they're long dead. I'm more despondent at Biden giving the J6 instigators a free pass.

I would not hold my breath

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago (2 children)

he had to fight tooth and nail for everything he managed

That's the line his voters are fed.

But when you've got a VP owned and operated by the insurance industry and Larry Summers authoring your Treasury policy, I'm more concerned with who he was fighting for.

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

"Fat little larva" is a very funny way to refer to your kids

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I’ll just keep trying until I get one.

Literally all you can ever do.

That said, I never really got one-night stands as a thing. If I connected with someone enough for sex, I was typically getting along well enough for friendship.

Had three relationships that ran 2-5 years each before I got married, with a smattering of dating and perennial party girl friends in between.

But it's so weird to want to hook up, then never see that person again.

 

South Korean workers who were detained and released by U.S. immigration authorities entered the country via Incheon International Airport on the 12th. Co-authored photography

 

The video circulated on X cuts one portion of Alter’s speech in half, during which he criticized “insurrectional anarchists” for their method of protesting, urging organization into a party to better reach people. In the full speech posted on YouTube, he notes that some anarchists have faced jail time for their methods of protest, praising their efforts but questioning whether they can achieve their goals.

“While their actions are laudable, it should be asked, to what purpose do they serve?” Alter said during his speech, which is not included in the video posted on X. The second portion of his statement is included. “Without organization, how can anyone expect to overthrow the most bloodthirsty, profit-driven, mad organization in the history of the world — that of the United States?”

 

Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer who is a specialist in counterterrorism issues and the laws of war, said that given the evidence that has emerged, the government’s statements, and after discussions with other national security lawyers in the week since the strike, he has formed stronger conclusions about the legality of the attack.

“I’m much more inclined to think this was just flat-out murder. And I’ve bent over backwards to be generous to the government in my interpretations,” he told The Intercept. “There are circumstances in which the U.S. can use lethal force but that is in the context of an armed conflict, against a lawful target — an enemy combatant. The Trump administration has not even bothered to make that argument. They have not argued that the United States is in an armed conflict governed by the law of war. They have not argued, much less substantiated, that the target of this attack was a lawful target.”

 

“I’m not sure this is legal to be teaching,” the student says. “According to our president, there’s only two genders and he said he would be freezing agencies’ funding programs that promote gender ideology. And this also very much goes against, not only myself but a lot of people’s religious beliefs.”

...

“It is unacceptable for A&M system faculty to push a political agenda,” Glenn Hegar, the school’s chancellor, said in a statement. “Early investigations appear to indicate this course failed to comply with clear instructions to align course descriptions with course materials.”

Texas A&M passed an audit earlier this year to ensure that the school complies with a new state law banning DEI in public universities, according to the Battalion, the student newspaper.

 

The Times reports when a North Korean boat, which evidence later suggested were two or three North Korean civilians diving for shellfish, approached in the water during the operation, the SEALs opened fire and killed them.

 

Advisers to President Trump have discussed the possibility of giving Mayor Eric Adams of New York City a position in the administration as a way to clear the field in November’s mayoral election and damage the chances of the Democratic front-runner, Zohran Mamdani, according to three people with knowledge of the discussions.

The talks have also involved finding a possible place in the administration for the Republican candidate, Curtis Sliwa.

The goal, the people said, would be to give former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo a better chance of defeating Mr. Mamdani in November’s general election.

 

Blue Rose Research, the firm led by Democratic establishment darling David Shor, produced a memo earlier this month digging into the effectiveness of various messages related to Trump’s takeover of Washington, D.C. The firm advised that messaging around Trump’s “rising authoritarianism” was “highly unconvincing,” while messages that say Trump wants to “distract” from his damaging tariffs or horrifying Medicaid cuts were more effective. Meanwhile, Republican messaging about how Trump is clamping down on gang violence tested through the roof.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) was asked Sunday on CNN what the party’s plan is to fight the president sending troops into Chicago. He only offered that Trump has no authority to do this, and that he supports the men and women working in law enforcement. He also, as the Blue Rose memo suggested is effective, cast the federal takeover as a “distraction” from Trump’s unpopular policies. Jeffries didn’t seem too worked up about any of this, delivering his talking points with a complacency that certainly did not bely that the United States is currently experiencing a militarized dismantling of representative democracy.

 

This comes after the representative allegedly refused to sign a "permission slip" that would assign a law enforcement detail to her, which would ensure her return to the legislature for the upcoming special session.

 

The proposal is an attempt to seize momentum on one of the campaign’s top issues — the housing crisis — and could affect nearly one million homes, or about 40 percent of the city’s rental market.

It’s also part of a continuing attack on the front-runner in the race, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, who pays $2,300 a month for a rent-stabilized one-bedroom apartment in Astoria, Queens.

 

Under this scenario Russia would have military and economic control of occupied Ukraine under its own governing body, imitating Israel’s de facto rule of Palestinian territory seized from Jordan in 1967.

...

Witkoff, who is also tasked by Trump with bringing peace to the Middle East, is understood to support the idea, which the Americans believe circumvents barriers in the Ukrainian constitution to ceding territory without holding an “all-Ukraine” referendum.

 

The dead man was 32-year-old Chaofeng Ge, originally from China. He was living in New York City last year when he was arrested in Pennsylvania for trying to use credit card numbers that did not belong to him to buy gift cards at a CVS Pharmacy. According to an ICE statement released late Wednesday after The Intercept’s inquiry, he pleaded guilty and was handed over to ICE by local authorities.

Ge had been detained at the Moshannon detention facility, which is run by the private prison firm GEO Group, for five days before taking his own life. (GEO Group spokesperson Christopher Ferreira referred questions to ICE.)

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