Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4)

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Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4)

Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4)

@GFoxlore

23 M Artist, musician, nerd, and creator of a fantastical world. (Alrehn) (All art is strictly SFW) NSFW DNI Banner by @StarrtoonArt Commissions open (3/4)

CORN, CORN EVERYWHERE Se unió Nisan 2022
443 Siguiendo1.4K Seguidores
Waffle 🇬🇧
Waffle 🇬🇧@Wfflussy·
@RivertonOtter What's really more interesting is why didn't furry exist before? It seems to be a very cross culturally appealing phenomena.
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Waffle 🇬🇧
Waffle 🇬🇧@Wfflussy·
The furry fandom retconning itself as a gay leftist space when it was really mostly just a bunch of straight millennial, vaguely libertarian or apolitical guys hanging out online (like every online space was in the beginnings of the internet, esp 2000s).
Scorched Earth Policy@Scearpo

There’s this really weird pattern I’ve noticed in tech, crypto, art, online communities, etc where a guy will create something that becomes really popular or successful and then it gets captured by a bunch of faceless nobodies who make it worse or at least don’t do any better. From that point, like scheming little court viziers, if the founder does anything other than roll over and die, they do everything possible to subvert his actions, denounce his name, and then desperately ignore his existence. If he should happen to gain any traction afterward, he gets desperately dismissed and countersignalled. There never seems to be any ambitious intent to continue, expand upon, or even try to sincerely alter the trajectory either. It’s usually just a bunch of parasites suckling off the momentum from the juggernaut originally created until it becomes an emaciated husk. Ideas get thrown out without any real volition, executed poorly, generating little to no notoriety from whatever fans, audience, or enthusiasts were left after the initial excursion. Despite their entire lives and time and energy being dedicated to orbiting around a particular thing, they have an incredible level of scorn for that thing’s creator. Left unchecked, their mindset shifts from “I could’ve done this” to “I actually did this first” while failing to do any better. These individuals often tend to be risk-averse, low agency, fearful of direct confrontation, and generally unexceptional. They default towards appeals to authority, often utilizing cancel culture, consensus astroturfing, or other disingenuous methods which emphasize the need for removal without placing emphasis on themselves. They’re often “the responsible ones just picking up the pieces” after ousting the founder or creator under pretenses of bad optics, which are often the result of the same unstable creative energy that allowed something good to be made in the first place. These kinds of court games aren’t new to history, but at least historically there’s some degree of dignity in the life-or-death consequences and stake of power that these games were played for in the past. The phenomenon of people doing this online over the past couple decades is nowhere near as sophisticated, cunning, or deliberate as, say, an ancient Chinese coup or a 19th century political usurpation. It’s often bumbling doofuses operating on pure instinct, picking up unconscious consensus tactics and riding a wave of social inertia generated by unintentional displays of weakness (like undue generosity or lack of hierarchical enforcement) from leadership. The funniest part about it is that you all think I’m subtweeting something specific but I bet each and every one of you can think of a different example of something like this happening. Maybe it was to a company, a movement, a franchise, a fandom, a forum, or even just a friend group. But all of you have either seen it happen or basked in the aftermath of it. It’s ruined something good you’ve enjoyed or something important you were a part of. As human beings learn to adapt to the next stage of evolution (the Network Hivemind), we find ourselves rediscovering the same principles and mechanisms we had to learn throughout our history as a species. The lessons of the past are harvested and recreated digitally, as we both participate and observe our own development in the great Petri dish of the Network. The sociopolitical mechanisms that online parasites have historically taken advantage of over the past twenty years are growing weaker. Fairly soon, genuine creators and contributors will have better context and weapons to equip themselves with, a proper immune system built up against the pungent thick vat of bio waste that’s encroached and corrupted everything we enjoy. Like a tragic prophecy in a Greek epic, every dire social consequence the digital cockroach has wielded as a bogeyman to cater to his interests will come true. A better, crueler world awaits them.

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SteadyDakka
SteadyDakka@SteadyDakka·
@GFoxlore Why would you do that to yourself, I just play Dota2 instead.
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Carcajou Ghibelline
Carcajou Ghibelline@MAWKVLT·
@graveair I like the implication also. It fits the overarching idea of the Church Militant leading to the Church Triumphant.
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@graveair·
I like the word “Jihad” in a purely linguistic and lyrical sense.
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Kristen W.
Kristen W.@kmcritterart·
With all this infighting, I’m beginning to wonder if we’ll get to heaven and argue about whose garments are whiter.
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Wulden
Wulden@Wulden83·
Both of my cats know the word "Food". The neighbors do not know that that word is "The F Word" in the house of Wulden... Suffice to say, this has gotten some... stares and glares... I need a thing to say instead of "Did you F them?" When I get home... Any "Alt Food" ideas?!
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Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4)
You cannot call anyone a Nazi, if you yourself are a practitioner of witchcraft of any sort. The Nazis were big into theosophy (it's where they got their idea of the Aryan race from), and their leadership was super into occult practices. (Himmler's complex comes to mind)
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Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4) retuiteado
Rabbi Brian Samuel
Rabbi Brian Samuel@rabbriansamuel·
There's a difference between: 1. Keeping God's laws to earn your salvation And 2. Keeping them because you desire to live according to God's standard of righteousness. The first is an affront to the cross. The second demonstrates the fruit of salvation.
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Josh Barzon
Josh Barzon@JoshuaBarzon·
Nebuchadnezzar dreamed of a statue. Daniel interpreted it as four successive empires: Babylonia, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome. Each was replaced by the next until a rock not cut by human hands destroyed them all. Daniel 2 is one of the most remarkably specific prophetic passages in Scripture.
Josh Barzon tweet media
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HazardousWolf 🇺🇸
HazardousWolf 🇺🇸@_Hazardous_Wolf·
It is when you realize that the federal government is using tax money to subsidize insurance companies and indirectly fund major healthcare providers while effectively destroying any real competition in the market. There is literally zero incentive for insurance and healthcare providers to be better as a result, which is why government shouldn't be involved in dictating how companies do business or forcing people to take insurance they may not want or need.
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Darrell
Darrell@darrellprograms·
@JassonKilburn @MarkNaughton9 This isn't federal law, just federal policy. These are directives, instructions to ICE officers by their employer, and the "where permitted by law" is there because this does *not* supercede state or local law.
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Gamma S. Foxlore, Comms Open (3/4)
@SandyofCthulhu @q_3st The question lies in whether God became a man, or man became a god. That is what differentiates between Mormonism, and Christianity. In one, divinity is an aquireable attribute, while in the other Divinity is immutable and eternal (without begining or end).
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Sandy Petersen 🪔
Sandy Petersen 🪔@SandyofCthulhu·
@q_3st Isn’t … isn’t this the story of Christ? Don’t all Christians believe God was a man who died and came back? It’s the foundation of our religion
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quest
quest@q_3st·
The fact that Mormons believe God was once a man who died and came back to life is still mind boggling to me
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