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173 posts

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@_JinShiC

Those who face the truth, see reality. The delusional refused to face the truth.

N Katılım Eylül 2022
7 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
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J@_JinShiC·
If there's anyone from flyover country that has a perfect SAT and three or more 5's on AP exams that didn't get into a good state university, I would be willing to fund that person as long as he is not hostile to Korean Americans. DM's open. Offer in perpetuity.
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Purple Cabbage
Purple Cabbage@purplcabbage·
twice in two days have heard “I can’t afford children” from young people on the brink of family formation, who absolutely should have children so I am working on my delivery of “have children and be poor”
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J@_JinShiC·
It was notable because the decision was unilateral, ROK flag officer counterpart was not given a heads up via official channels which rattled ROK admin. Now, can you fill in the details? The MUAV is for detecting ballistic missile launches which are easy to detect by plume.
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J@_JinShiC·
ROK is signaling to Washington DC that it has their own 90% Global Hawk. Korea's MUAV may seem like the Reaper and it's priced like one but the actual use case is ISR. Notably, using Global Hawk asset was something Trump 1 gave the green light for in Korean peninsula
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J@_JinShiC·
We already have a sizeable test. There is a non trivial segment of GWOT veterans that fraudulently got 100% VA disability. Couple that with a low intensity federal job and they already have 200k ubi. The results have not been good.
Max@minordissent

UBI advocacy stems from the naïveté and solipsism that because *I* am a deeply creative latent producer who is oppressed by my wagee job and would actualize my creative potential if only i could have my basic needs met, this must be true for everyone. Its not. First of all, it’s not even true for these “creatives”. If you aren’t creation maxxing while waging, you wont do it under luxury communism either. Creative work is extremely taxxing and your wage job isn’t actually that hard. The problem is your neuroticism and lack of discipline, not your job. All your necessities being provided for will only make you weaker and gayer such that you’ll make up some new bullshit to get overwhelmed by and then cope by playing video games all day. But worse because you won’t even have “at least i did *something* productive today”, which will magnify your depression. Second, luxury communism already exists for the bottom 20% of the population. All their food, housing, etc is completely covered by the state. Entire generations of people who haven’t worked a job in their lives. Do they go on to produce beautiful art and build companies? Or do they go on to get high and kill each other? The truth is that we are close enough to UBI today that most of the people who will ever become great artists and inventors are already going to do it, and as we get closer all that will happen is the people incapable of anything more than wage slavery (most people) will simply become dysfunctional parasites.

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J@_JinShiC·
Wife made me watch Capernaum and told me Zain reminds her of me. More reminders that I am definitely a personality pick as hard as it is to believe with this account.
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J@_JinShiC·
One of the reasons I tolerate welfare. The SNAP dollars are going towards things we make in excess to the point where we beg other countries to take our corn/grain. Our houses aren't consuming resources that could be better spent elsewhere.
VB Knives@Empty_America

They don't really have drywall and so forth south of the border. Houses are basically tile floors on a slab, with block or concrete walls, often even a concrete roof. Not a great cleaning method in a fragile American frame house!

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J@_JinShiC·
To accept a sacrifice that the other cannot sustain is the greatest sin. The resentment they receive is their just reward.
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J@_JinShiC·
If I were to become crippled or a burden to my loved ones in some irreversible way, I would immediately cut off contact after setting them up for success without me. The idea of being a burden to someone I care about is something I cannot fathom.
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J@_JinShiC·
Joseph was the original STEM schizo.
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J@_JinShiC·
Now that Rokid supports Gemini and ChatGPT, wonder how many exam scores are fake.
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Purple Cabbage
Purple Cabbage@purplcabbage·
the progressive space enthusiast, gushing over Artemis, never a peep when SpaceX catches super heavy booster I guess that would be like rooting for the enemy or something
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J@_JinShiC·
It turns out that everyone who felt they were too smart to buy gold and hence, underperformed, are the retards.
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J@_JinShiC·
@purplcabbage Live up to the standard that ought to be, not just to the standard you hold yourself to.
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Purple Cabbage
Purple Cabbage@purplcabbage·
at least a few bright kids I know want to become teachers teaching will change a lot in the coming years, I wonder what advice to offer them, as a framing device, to keep them well-oriented to the truth of teaching, while navigating the gauntlet of higher education, credentialing, and technology change
Michael Strong@flowidealism

We need new private training programs for teachers. Education schools at universities should mostly evaporate. I predict that as states allow more ways to let parents choose their child’s education, the market share going to schools that primarily hire education majors will steadily decline. In 30 years, getting an education degree at a university will be an even lower end option than it is today.

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Purple Cabbage
Purple Cabbage@purplcabbage·
it’s a strange idolatry, to uphold whatever your enemies denounce
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Michael caldwell
Michael caldwell@Absurdum14·
@_JinShiC @useful_emetic @Empty_America @purplcabbage They interestingly tend to go home and work for foreign companies in Japan / start their own businesses, and succeed that way - but yes, high openness is a very good way to think about them. Also though, specifically mostly lower class (Japan being insanely class-ridden).
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VB Knives
VB Knives@Empty_America·
It will never cease to be amazing how much serious, malicious anger was triggered (including among "nationalists" and "RW") by someone making an effort to promote revival in perhaps the deepest core of "Heritage America." Tells you a lot.
𝙷𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚖𝚊𝚗@shagbark_hick

I think some clarification is in order here: 1. I grew up in rural Upstate NY 2. I left for over a decade 3. Every time I came back home, it broke my heart to see how this place is declining -- yet the land is so beautiful and the houses are cheap. 4. I came back, not with any illusions about the culture here. I figured that maybe I could help make it better, and if nothing else, I could live cheap for a while after I got out of the military. 5. Within 6 months of leaving the military, I blew up online and wound up accidentally launching into a successful online writing career. It was totally unexpected. 6. On the fly, I tried to use my newfound online reach to attract people here, to promote this place, to try to publicly reflect on ways to improve not just Upstate NY but all of rural America. Some of my ideas were controversial, but the thrust was always oriented towards making my pocket of rural America thrive again. 7. Three years or so into that, we had a baby, and I had to start weighing the feasibility of my ambitions here more seriously out of a duty to our daughter. Does she deserve to grow up in a place that is collapsing? What is her future like here? Some of the more cynical commentators say that any negative experience I have here is me "reaping what I sowed." Some even revel in it as a form of "punishment" for my unspeakable crime: reminding American youth that rural America exists, and that maybe they could make a life for themselves here very cheaply, if they liked. But what I was actually trying to "sow" was a rebirth of my own homeland. It just didn't sit well with me that the place I grew up was just supposed to die and be abandoned, so I thought I'd try making it better. Why not try? I genuinely figured that since so many people are mad about high housing costs, and since remote work exists, maybe we could leverage the ultra-cheap housing here in deep rural Upstate NY to start up a kind of Renaissance. Seemed like maybe it could've worked out for everybody! Cheap housing for folks from unaffordable places, new life in towns that are literally about to become ghost towns, locals get to see their towns avoid total collapse, Churches filling pews again, etc. But I learned it's not quite that simple. Many of the problems here appear to be totally intractable. I found that the property tax situation is worse than I'd thought. And the locals may complain about decline here, but they also don't really want to see a Renaissance either. Meanwhile, though the general public may complain about housing, but they don't want cheap housing badly enough to move to a place like this. To be fair, Albany makes all of this worse than it has to be. But even if the NYS capital started making genuinely good legislation, you can't use policy to force a stagnant, parochial culture into being anything else. And you can't force the wider public to brave long winters, ceaseless overcast, and to take a risk on trying out a place on the far margins of the American mainstream just for cheap housing. So it goes. At this point, I'm simply glad to have tried it out. I did exactly what the "localist" types say to do: I came home. I tried to make it better. I sang the song of my homeland. I did this for about three years, and at the end of it, I've got enough equity to recoup 100% of my housing costs from while I was here. If I walk away, I can do so knowing I tried. I'm not one of those who left with his nose upturned at where he came from. From here, who knows. Maybe I do strick around, albeit without any pretensions of "solving the problem" here. Or maybe we head out to the Southwest, which has always felt more like home to me anyway. Hard to say. Big thanks to those of you who see this and have come along for the ride.

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J@_JinShiC·
@Absurdum14 You're right. I should have added "ultimately" in between Monotheism and arises.
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Michael caldwell
Michael caldwell@Absurdum14·
@_JinShiC That…… seems not to track. Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Islam, all sprung up in specifically nomadic societies railing against the moral degradation of city dwelling/city dwellers. Whereas Egypt, Rome, Greece, Mesopotamia, Aztecs etc all creating large cities, all polytheistic.
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J@_JinShiC·
Monotheism arises as a result of urban living. Hunter gatherers have no need for an all-powerful yet living God that cares for the good and dispenses justice to the wicker. NE Asia did not go this route because the patriarchy already filled this religious role.
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