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eightpix eightpix @lemmy.world

Been a student. Been a clerk. Been a salesperson. Been a manager. Been a teacher. Been an expatriate. Am a husband, father, and chronicle.

Posts 12
Comments 100
The justices of the supreme court ruled that Trump was immune and effectively above the law while being president. What is now stopping Biden from bringing a gun to the next debate?
  • Wait, maybe the justices just gave Biden the authority to do just that.

    ...

    Naw. See, if he did, that'd delegitimize the presidency and cause a constitutional crisis.

    But, if a Republican President does it, it's an exercise in upholding American freedom and the true authority of the office. See the difference?

  • So, this, now, needed saying.
  • Should the UNSG also have said nothing?

  • So, this, now, needed saying.
  • I'll print more legibly in the future.

  • So, this, now, needed saying.
  • That's just how I process information. Pencil in hand and post-its are easy to find in my house. They end up in notebooks with more writing. Better, by far, than on back of some envelope or on my kids' school work like my parents used to do.

    Also, made you look.

  • So, this, now, needed saying.
  • Ding ding. Correct.

  • So, this, now, needed saying.

    The Secretary General of the legit United Nations, said this.

    Are there any adults in the rooms where decisions like "bomb Gaza" are made? Why are so few saying what defeated Jamaal Bowman are saying, "permanent ceasefire now". And remember how Bowman was defeated. $17K/hr.

    Also, cute story, Lebanon is the only other country in the world to feature a plant on its flag. The Lebanese are beautiful, Mediterranean people. LEBANON is at the crossroads of empires, and now — as is often the case — Lebanese are victims of outland calamities; Syria, the dock, and econonic collapse.

    Hezb. are based there. Lebanon is thus remade like Afghanistan. Isr. reserves the right to "defend".

    11
    Europeans of Lemmy, what places in Europe should foreigners avoid at all cost?
  • Had a couch surfer stay with us a while in Kuwait. He'd been everywhere. He said that, of all places, Moldova had no redeeming qualities. Granted, things might have changed in 10 years. Does anyone care to weigh in?

  • What is the best movie to watch without sound?
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey

    The Qatsi films

    Solaris (2002)

  • Request: Mini truck or van racing toward a concrete pole, but never arrives.
  • Viewed. Thought it'd be even more catastrophic.

  • Request: Mini truck or van racing toward a concrete pole, but never arrives.
  • That's the one. I'm holding off on watching the ending. After I see it, this meme will be broken for me.

    I'll finish watching the dishes, and then I'll view the ending.

  • Request: Mini truck or van racing toward a concrete pole, but never arrives.

    I've seen this meme before. I have two questions:

    1. What is this meme called?

    2. Is there video of the outcome?

    9
    Have you seen someone die in front of you?
  • It seems like I've been obsessed over death and dying for decades.

    When I was thirteen, as a form of dealing with the concept of death, I imagined hearing the news of the deaths of each of my family members and a couple of the girls I liked from school. Finding out that a person is dead is a singular experience. A few years later, I viscerally understood what was said in Unforgiven, "[death] take[s] away all he's got, all he's ever gonna have."

    When I was sixteen, I did a cooperative education placement in a hospital. As fate would have it, I was placed in the histopathology department. I was surrounded by tissues removed from the dead, the dying, and those who had gotten a new lease on life. In the morgue, I helped discard any samples that were two or more years old. Removed silicone breast implants were frequent, as were containers labelled "uterine curettings." In that same morgue, I sat in on two autopsies, including one where sections of the brain were needed.

    Between 13 and 18, I began to be much more aware of conflict zones; injustice, and miscarriages of justice involving death; of the legacies left behind in their wake. I became aware of South African apartheid, war — later, genocide — in a disintegrating Yugoslavia, genocide in Rwanda. The collapse of social order in L.A. in '92. Hurricanes in the Caribbean, especially Andrew, which battered Jamaica. The Bay Area earthquake. The Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. The bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City and the bombing at the Atlanta Olympics. This period also saw the formation of my opposition to capital punishment.

    It wasn't until 9/11 that I saw people die live on TV. I didn't wake until 10 am that day, but by 1030, I saw both towers fall. By the end of that day, it was a buddy of mine who said, "Why don't they stop showing this??" It hadn't occurred to me that we were watching snuff film until then.

    Then there was 17-18 March 2003. I sat and watched as Shock and Awe were released on Baghdad. One of the oldest cities in the world bombed for political expediency. More snuff film.

    ____ and ____ would later start to collect and disseminate the deadliest and the most violate material. I wouldn't go looking for it, but it would find me. Cartel violence, industrial accidents, gun camera footage, people filming police shootings... there was so much death. Busta Rhymes said it best, "numerals of funerals every day." Another thought that has not left me.

    I didn't know why I needed to know. Then, in time, I came to understand that I was bearing witness.

    It was about 2004 when I started to develop an appreciation for the special violence of the Israeli‐Palestinian conflict and the sheer destruction it inflicts. I read a lot about the Holocaust, Jewish diaspora, anti-Semitism, and the campaign to make genocide punishable. Then, I read about the roots of the Israeli state, its funding, protections, and the special relationship it enjoys with the warlike American state and its allies. Then, I read into America and how that state has secured its place in world history. I moved to South Korea and started to understand Korea, Japan, China, and the other nations of Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Oceania, much more clearly.

    What I found out is that, to some, achievable ends are sought by bloody means. This is a pattern across most of the world. In general, average everyday people are just trying to get by and do right by their families. In the places that we can not peacefully coexist, where expropriation and indignity are inflicted by those who wield the power they seek and are corrupted by it. Frank Herbert said, "Power is magnetic to the corruptible."

    Journalists, in my opinion, are those who pursue power in the practice of relinquishing it to the public. With this in mind, I understand the threat that Julian Assange was to the power establishment in the US. I saw the "Collateral Murder" release that landed him in the Ecuadorian embassy for the better part of a decade. The truly destructive part of this episode is the proliferation of instances in which military outfits across the world are engaged in similar activities. The Dutch Safety Board investigation and publications regarding the shooting down of flight MH17 are exceptional examples.

    All of this is to say that we need to spend more time coming to terms with death and dying. We need to be more aware, not less, of the living conditions that cause people to die. War, famine, pestilence, climate upheaval, conflict zones, refugees from conflict and climate and corruption, drought, flooding, colonialism, austerity, and protectionism threaten almost all of the world's population.

    The few who are not threatened take refuge in their comfort and contrive to maintain the status quo. They change laws, lobby, employ, and help to elect and appoint those that serve the entreched interests. A future that looks like the present is a dead future, and we are witnessing the spread of atrophy and rigor mortis each day. That's about as real as it gets.

  • What do you all check instead of the news?
  • I like watching well-done cinematic synopses of characters or storylines. Watched only AFTER having seen the series.

    Here's one for Altered Carbon S01. Very BladeRunner, very neo-noir, 80s meets 20s. Here's one for the Expanse, story focused, 2 movements, so compassion-inducing

    Both are by this creator.

    Two of my top ten shows right now. I think I'm going to go finish DEVS right now.

    Devs Poster, simple

  • Name some reasons to like either Marvel Comics or DC Comics.
  • Marvel: s (NY, ) mixed in with fake locales (Genosha, A events (9/11 has made several appearances, WWII is canon), legit in-universe stakes and motivation, lots of difficult or morally grey choices. Good reading, they make you think.

    DC: fake cities (i.e., Metropolis, Gotham); never have seen a historical event (feel free to enlighten me if you would); stakes seem to be damage to infrastructure and property — maybe a hero or two will get hurt (except for that one time they put a lady in a refrigerator as motivation — that was not cool); good guys are clearly good, bad guys are clearly bad.

    My money has always been with Marvel.

  • Is everything the worst?
  • USA, 55th in the world overall, for maternal mortality in a 2018 study.

    A fast look at the UNICEF data for 2020 shows 66th.

    That's behind the State of Palestine (61st), Moldova (46th), Albania (34th), Poland (3rd) and Belarus (1st).

    https://data.unicef.org/topic/maternal-health/maternal-mortality/#data

  • Is everything the worst?
  • This is enlightening. US maternal death rates compared to other industrialized nations.

    Source: Roosa Tikkanen et al., Maternal Mortality and Maternity Care in the United States Compared to 10 Other Developed Countries (Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2020). https://doi.org/10.26099/411v-9255
L

    From: https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2020/nov/maternal-mortality-maternity-care-us-compared-10-countries

  • Is everything the worst?
  • Think that the calculus is to stem the tide and activate the electorate in recognition that the EU Parliament outcomes were a surprise?

  • What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?
  • Just an observation: I love how much you all love The Expanse. Seriously, from the bottom of my heart, thank you. You've made my day.

    And as always, thanks to James S.A. Corey — Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck — for creating and publishing this world that has linked us in such inspired interaction.

  • What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?
  • The Expanse is political/corporate intrigue set in the 24th century after humans have extended mining to the rings of Saturn. There are three major political camps:

    • the United Nations of Earth and Luna — a bloated, old, slow, and traditional nation that has the only source of live soil samples, punishing universal basic income, and 30 billion mouths to feed. They are the "takers".

    • the Martian Congressional Republic — a trim, agile, militaristic, and focused nation that makes technological advances and works hard to stay alive on a hostile world. They are the "dusters".

    • the diffuse factions known under the umbrella term "Belters." They are the workers, the downtrodden, the neglected, and the subjects of the great nations' impunity. In a few short generations, their bodies changed, adapting to the ravages of microgravity and zero G. Their needs are simple: air, water, food. Their work is hard. Their lives are nasty, brutish, and short. But, they love fiercely, have a language and culture all their own, and refuse to bow before Earth and Mars.

    "In fair Sol system, where we lay our scene, From ancient grudge break to new mutiny, Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean."

  • What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?
  • Read The Passenger, then Stella Maris.

    Blood Meridian is an amazing, terrifying, shocking, and eye-opening book. Ill never see another "Western" the same way again. It is among McCarthy's most visceral.

    I cannot recommend to anyone that they read this book. Much in the same way I love films like Requiem For a Dream, Dancer in the Dark, or Melancholia, I can't inflict them on others. Blood Meridian is this perspective in book form.

    If you've steeled yourself, by all means embark on Blood Meridian. Don't say I didn't warn you.

  • What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?
  • Ok. We can be friends.

    The Expanse is among my favourite sci-fi of all time. Others include Chris Claremont and Johnathan Hickman writing the X-Men, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Atwood's Maddaddam trilogy. Three-Body may get there, but I read it amid reading the Expanse. Maybe the physical books will shift my mind some.

    Three-Body was a great read and such incredible insight to a different perspective of sci-fi. The reveal of Dark Forest theory absolutely stopped me in my tracks. Death's End was such a great conclusion to that storyline.

  • What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?
  • I'll start:

    Cover for Stella Maris by Cormac McCarthy, fair use image from Wikipedia.  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Stella_Maris_(Cormac_McCarthy).png#mw-jump-to-license

    My fortunes converged with Stella Maris by Cormac McCarthy. My reading of the physical copy was first, and the book sung.

    Then, on opening the audiobook, the two actors really captured the cat-and-mouse interaction — each thinking the other is the prey — with such clarity and perfect tone. It was amazing.

  • Books @lemmy.world eightpix @lemmy.world

    What's a title that is worth it (to you) to have both the physical copy and the audiobook?

    There are only a few books that I've experienced both ways. I'm wondering if this is an area for exploration.

    33

    Enclosure aesthetic.

    BMO IFL in Toronto. Rumored to be coming to its end.

    1

    "Unless you invade them."

    Democracy dies when any administration can laugh off a 4-word rebuttal of a central plank of the world's most pernicious, deadly conflict(s). Regardless of public opinion, America can't be seen to undermine its own interests.

    0

    20 February 1994.

    www.gocomics.com Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson for February 20, 1994 | GoComics.com

    Comic book hero: Ya-a! Amazon: Uhn-gg! Comic book hero: Foolish amazon! I am only toying with you! Amazon: Yeah?? Well, toy with this!! Comic book hero: The hyper-phase distortion blaster? Calvin: Hehh hah hooh hahh heh hugh. Mom: No you don't. There's too much violence on TV. Why don't you go r...

    Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson for February 20, 1994 | GoComics.com

    Almost got it on the day!

    1

    So, what can you tell me about Chillout music in Russia?

    I've been listening to a webradio channel from Surgut on Radio.Garden. There seems to be a lot of music produced in Russia, Estonia, and Latvia that pops up on the channel.

    Is Chillout big in Russia? Or, is it basically elevator music that no one intentionally listens to?

    If it is regarded as music, what — if any — attendant art, writing, or other performance is there?

    Is Russia into chillout the way that Americans were into the Blues, ie. does it simply stave off the awful?

    1

    "We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty." ~ Edward R. Murrow, 1954

    "We must remember always that accusation is not proof and that conviction depends on evidence and due process of law. We will not walk in fear one of another."

    0
    The Expanse @lemmy.world eightpix @lemmy.world

    I get it now. Spoilers to S0310 and Abaddon's Gate.

    lemmy.world I get it now. Spoilers to S0310 and Abaddon's Gate. - Lemmy.world

    Warning: the following contains spoilers for the following works: The Expanse, S01E01-S03E10. Abaddon’s Gate (Book 3), James S.A. Corey Three-Body Problem &The Dark Forest, Cixin Liu If you want to try it out, read 5 books and watch almost three seasons of television. ::: spoiler spoiler The rin...

    Warning: the following contains spoilers for the following works:

    The Expanse, S01E01-S03E10. Abaddon's Gate (Book 3), James S.A. Corey Three-Body Problem &The Dark Forest, Cixin Liu

    If you want to try it out, read 5 books and watch almost three seasons of television.

    . . . .

    !!The ring gates are a Dark Forest weapons system. If this was clear to others, and I'm catching up, well, I'm slow. But, I just found out about Brin (1983).!!

    Then, I got it. It's such a well-structured Whatsit.

    I feel pretty good about this realization. I'm glad that these works work so well together.

    2

    The Corporation (2004)

    Achbar Mark et al. directors. The Corporation : A Documentary. Big Picture Media Corporation ; Filmwest Associates 2004.

    If a Corporation is a legal entity with all of the rights of persons, what is the psychological profile of one to whom "corporate personhood" is endowed? What behaviours do Corporations exhibit which support this psychological profile?

    Ask yourself honestly — If you had forever to live, access to infinite money, and no body to imprison, how would you act?

    0