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halykthered halyk.the.red @lemmy.ml
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Comments 164
Anons wife hosts a pool party
  • NO SWIM ONLY SKIM

  • D&D's lead rules designer admits he changed some spells because of how 'painful' and 'excruciating to cast' they were in Baldur's Gate 3
  • I used cloud of daggers as well. It was useful for choke points or, in the rare circumstance, of immobile enemies.

  • Please come up to the Board
  • Anyone can put out information. Checking comprehension and ensuring understanding is an entirely different thing.

  • Landchads take note
  • Sic semper tyrannis

  • Worship rule
  • Could be a few bad months from being homeless, never a few good months from being wealthy.

  • Supreme Court says cities can ban homeless from sleeping outside
  • Of course, I don't see why you're getting downvoted so hard. I think that asking people to back things up with sources should be standard practice.

    In this case, I don't have concrete proof, but I let you know that it's an opinion influenced by certain facts, like private prisons generating profits and them using lobbists to further their interests.

    Some people, however, make wild claims or assumptions that they're pushing as pure facts, but can't produce any kind of verifiable source.

    Some people are saying they don't want to do your homework for you, and just to google it. To be fair, that's all I did to get those links. But their thinking is backwards. The one who makes the claim has the burden of proof, not everyone else.

    If someone makes a claim, but can't support it at all, it can be disregarded. But if someone makes a claim, and provides proof, and someone else is able to provide proof contrary to that point, now we have a debate. More proof and evidence will be required to see who is correct.

    Otherwise we end up with people just firing off unverified claims, backed up with ad hominem and defended with strawmen and slippery slopes.

    So keep asking people for proof and sources, more people need to be checked on their shit.

  • Supreme Court says cities can ban homeless from sleeping outside
  • Nope, personal opinion. It makes sense to me that for-profit prison systems would lobby to make homelessness a crime, to gather more workers, and to get more money from the government. I don't have a source that says "Yes, this is the reason why." but you can follow the money and make your own opinions from there.

  • Supreme Court says cities can ban homeless from sleeping outside
  • The purpose is to push people into the for-profit prison system, which rakes in billions in slave labor.

  • What are some marketing tactics that you dislike ?
  • There's a pest control salesman who goes door to door every year, who I can't stand. Not only does he say outright incorrect things, but he can't take no for an answer. Every polite refusal turns into, "You know what, we can knock 80 bucks off that right now" or "How about we just make the first month free."

    Next time he comes knocking, I'm going to be immediately upfront. I'm not interested in paying money to spray poison, that will end up in the canal and the river, to kill bugs that birds and frogs and bats could be eating.

  • Blind Guardian - Mirror Mirror (1998)
  • Same, it was a night I waited 15 years for haha

  • Blind Guardian - Mirror Mirror (1998)
  • Just saw them play this live a few weeks ago, it was an amazing show.

  • This writes itself
  • What's under his shirt?

  • China: death penalty for advocating ‘Taiwan independence’
  • Do you have any other sources that can be verified? Otherwise, I'll have to dismiss your claim as baseless. But like I said in other comments, I'm referring to the article and how it sensationalized the death penalty for website clicks, not about China's intent behind the law or it's application.

  • China: death penalty for advocating ‘Taiwan independence’
  • Absolutely. I agree that life would be so much simpler if it was only black and white issues, but rarely is that the case. And I get it, those binary beliefs are comfortable. But we need to endure the difficulty of questioning our assumptions, pushing out of that simplistic worldview, and learning. It's the only way we grow as people.

  • When did you completely fuck up your chance with someone?
  • Some skinny girl climbed into my lap at a college house party. I was very fucked up. For some reason, I thought a good thing to say was, "Why not, I've fucked fatter chicks." She immediately got up and we never spoke again. No clue why I said that. I never even got her name, which is a shame, because I'd like to apologize.

  • China: death penalty for advocating ‘Taiwan independence’
  • I never discounted the inclusion of the threat of death, I only commented on the fixation on it in that article. Of course the inclusion of the death penalty needs to be a part of the discussion.

    We can spend the rest of forever discussing what-ifs and hypotheticals. I don't think it does the original discussion justice to boil it down from the severity of secession to parking issues. I fear your simplification misrepresents the original discussion, as the nuance of the China-Taiwan situation cannot earnestly be recreated with parking violations in a city.

    But yes, to answer your question, I do think that journalistic integrity is important at any level.

    If you keep reading in that translated article linked in the original article, it says that if you change your stance and make an honest attempt to undo the damage you did, the charges may be dropped. So one could end up with no punishments at all.