promethea.incorporated

brave and steely-eyed and morally pure and a bit terrifying… /testimonials /evil /leet .ask? .ask_long?


michaelblume:

kelsbraintumbler:

michaelblume:

Somehow my brain finds the phrase “the F word” intensely aesthetically offensive. Unlike the word “fuck”, which is a perfectly cromulent word.

I saw a coworker tell another coworker to take “the f* word” out of their commit message during a code review today.

what is your brain’s aesthetic opinion about euphemisms? or the phrase “the fuck word” ? is it just/related to the thing where they won’t say “fuck” even to talk about the word itself?

“the fuck word” is fucking great :D

And yeah, it’s the thing where they can’t quote/mention the word ‘fuck’, it, I don’t know, offends my chaotic sensibilities or something XD

The fuck is this wimpy-ass fucking “cursing” that’s nonetheless euphemized away?

Let me introduce you to “PERKELE!”, shouted with all the power appropriate for a pre-christian eastern european god of thunder (braided beard, beer belly and impressive viking muscles on the person doing the shouting optional but recommended for maximum effect).

Finnish doesn’t make sense, it does terrible perverted things to words, and is basically elvish mangled by inelegant modernity until suddenly it turns into black speech, but it sure as helvetti utterly desensitizes people to anglo-saxon prudishness.

“Oh, you had to hide three letters of an expression for sex, sure whatever that’s nice I guess… Me? I called upon the fury of a long-dead pagan deity when I stubbed my toe.”

2 months ago · tagged #languages are weird #it's like programming #in the sense that some features one takes for granted in one are completely missing in another #and i'm left feeling like none of these fully satisfies my needs #and speaking a weird mish-mash of uralo-germano-romanicity #always borrowing expressions from one into another #like there are ways of constructing words that english simply doesn't have #but which are exceptionally important for concisely describing things #and universal pronouns for everything #and then english has a huge variety of important words #and i'm always using those to explain concepts #and end up needing to explain not only the concept itself but also the word #if i learned every single language in the world i could express probably 90% of what i need to #as long as i was talking to people who also knew dozens of different ones · 55 notes · source: michaelblume · .permalink


theunitofcaring:

if your reaction to someone saying “what’s a math topic I should get experts to explain to me in this format, to test whether the format is useful for explaining math?” is “oh my god keep rationalists away from math fucking forever.” then I think you are doing something wrong.

It’s sort of the same objection I had to that post a few days ago about essay editing. If you think someone’s approach to learning is counterproductive, you can make suggestions or you can ignore them. I do not think it’s appropriate to laugh at them, declare that they deserve to fail, or tell them to stop trying because they don’t deserve success and them touching your Serious Field taints it somehow.

Which is exactly what happened when someone says “for the first test of our explanatory format, it’d be best to test with a concept that is relatively not homework-intensive”: people go “rationalists need to stop talking about math altogether” and “you’re not mature enough…” and “Okay, nevermind, keep rationalists away from math fucking forever”.

I don’t think this is because all math concepts require the same amount of homework to grasp, and I definitely don’t think it’s because anyone is harmed by asking “is there a topic you could teach me that is not homework-intensive?” I think it is because people regard homework as virtuous, and asking this question is saying “I don’t want to work hard”, and not working hard is contemptible, so the question must be responded to with contempt. That’s how you get the otherwise baffling phenomenon of “hey, what’s a good relatively self-contained math concept to test our explanatory format” getting a response of “you don’t deserve to be allowed near math!”

But, like, it’s okay to both be proud of the work you put in to understand something and to be decent to people who aren’t willing to do that work, or can’t, or are in the early stages of a project and want to test it on something simple and maybe build up to the hard stuff. Telling people who ask questions that the fact they’d ask proves they’re not hardworking enough to deserve to understand your subject is cruel. You don’t have to keep people away from math. They aren’t going to accidentally put the numbers back in the wrong order while you’re not looking. If someone asks a question that they’d know was stupid if they knew more, you can tell them more or you can ignore them. You really, seriously, don’t have to point and laugh.

(via metagorgon)

2 months ago · 69 notes · source: theunitofcaring · .permalink


ilzolende:

consulo-cuniculos:

ilzolende:

thekerbalkraken:

nathanielbuildsatesseract:

thekerbalkraken:

ilzolende:

araxoolie:

Neutrality is not enlightenment. It is a position only accessible to those for whom the stakes are very low, who want to feel superior to those who have no choice but to care.

If you’re opposed to neutrality, I am curious about the following:

Catalonian and Basque separatism: Good or bad?

Which is better: The Danish state church or the Finnish state church?

What is the appropriate way for Liechtenstein to respond to accidental Swiss invasions?

Are the anti-censorship attitudes that I have been told are common in the Caribbean good or bad, given that if they exist, they almost certainly include support of playing music calling for extreme homophobic violence?

If “no”, what’s the appropriate action to take, if any?

(I think neutrality is okay, because it’s hard to be right about everything, so people shouldn’t be pressured to display more confidence than they have in their opinions.)

A Jewish Holocaust survivor named Yehuda Bauer once said “ Thou shalt not be a victim, thou shalt not be a perpetrator, but, above all, thou shalt not be a bystander.“

Let me get this straight: it’s better to do evil than to realize that rushing in without a clue (particularly to issues that one has no a priori reason to believe are important) is not the best idea?

@ilzolende, what’s your take on this?

Well, while it is bad to be a perpetrator, it is better than just being a bystander and letting it happen. If you’re a bystander, you don’t really get involved with it one way or another. For example in the Holocaust, if you were a bystander, you were no better than being an oppressor. Of course, there were still people who helped, such as the Denmark people. The way I think of it is, if you’re COMPLETELY NEUTRAL, you don’t talk about what’s going on, you’re not helping anyone. You’re not bringing any sort of attention to the problem by being a bystander. If you’re a perpetrator, I can see how you could bring attention to the issue. It’s just how our minds perceive the message.

“For example in the Holocaust, if you were a bystander, you were no better than being an oppressor.”

I am parsing “bystanders are not better than oppressors” as equivalent to “oppressors are not worse than bystanders”. (If you endorse the first statement but not the second statement, I’d sincerely appreciate your reasoning for doing so, because I can’t model it.)

I disagree with [my parsing of] this statement. I take the apparently bold and controversial stance that Nazi war criminals are morally worse than randomly selected German kindergarteners in the early 1940s who may have repeated propaganda slogans or what have you.

Actually murdering real people to “bring attention to [an] issue” is bad. If an issue already involves people dying, another death will probably not generate enough additional attention to be justified. Does “108 people died!” make something sound significantly more important to random people than “107 people died!”? Probably not. And if people aren’t dying, how on earth could killing someone to raise awareness or something possibly be justified? (If you’re talking about perpetrating non-murder harms, then substitute in “had their wallets stolen” or what have you, I still stand by this argument.)

For a second I thought OP was trying to convince me invade Iraq.

#you’re either #with us #or #against us #bitches

“Are you with us or against us?” rarely has a good answer. It’s often a scary question to be asked, too.

“Are you with us or against us?”

“I’m against everyone who ever asks that question.”

(via ilzolende)

2 months ago · 16,592 notes · source: araxoolie · .permalink


thetransintransgenic:

themindislimitless:

clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead:

pterocopter:

clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead:

Uber and Lyft and this new women only drivers service are all equally bad. I get that people are excited but let me just toss a few concepts out there:

Cab drivers, as employees (when they are employees which is not all the time luckily in pdx we have radio cab) are held to certain standards. If a cab driver harasses you, you can report him.
Cabs have to be ADA compliant.
Cab drivers have to make minimum wage.

There is a REASON cabs are more expensive and that reason, in Oregon at least, is that your cabby is making minimum wage.

This is not true of your uber driver, your Lyft driver, or your fancy new all woman driver but male owned service.
They are abusing the independent contractor system, as strip club owners are! to be falsely competitive in a market place they could never otherwise survive in and they are doing it at the expense of poor, vulnerable people, at the expense of cabbies, and at the expense of every other marginalised and misclassified worker because we are ALL in the same boat.

So no, I’m not excited that some man saw an opportunity to capitalize on the frequency of sexual harassment into making a niche for himself in an already exploitative market.
I’m not excited that he is donating 2% of his profits to charity–this serves the exact same purpose as a pink yoplait top: if you want to do good, do good; don’t disguise your consumerism and liking for a product behind false altruism.
I’m not excited that in a city already drowning in literally tens of thousands of underpaid drivers, there will now be one more.

And if you think women can’t be oppressive, shitty, hate on strippers and sex workers, and otherwise totally unpleasant, you’re dreaming. Especially once these women realise what a ferociously competitive starving market they’ve entered.

You better fucking tip 30%, is all I’m saying. And at that point, you might as well have taken a cab.

Ok wait a second wait a second.  I’m seeing Uber hate on my dash.

First of all, the cab industry (at least in my city) is corrupt as hell.  There are a limited number of cab “permits”, and they are all owned by super rich people who then rent them out to cabbies for outrageous fees.

Cab drivers don’t always take the most direct route, milking you for more money, because they do not make very much money.  The REASON cabs are more expensive is the cab company is taking most of that money and putting it in the pocket of the super rich person, not in the pocket of the driver!

Uber, on the other hand, pays each driver significantly more, so even though you are paying less your uber driver is actually making more.  Uber displays your route right on your phone so you can follow along – and you are agreeing to a certain fee to get to a certain location.

You can report your Uber driver easily, and Uber will take action. Also, riders are asked to rate their driver at the end of the trip.

You receive an email receipt at the end of your Uber ride.

You don’t need to carry cash with Uber, you pay through the app.

Oh, and with Uber Taxi, cab drivers can join Uber and make more money doing it!

The cab industry as it is needs to change.  Uber has created an elegant 21st century solution.  I honestly feel 100% safer riding in an Uber.

I do not speak for the other services - I’ve never used Lyft and only just heard about this service for women.  But Uber is the bomb.

I feel like people keep reading this as a defense of cab companies when all it is is an indictment of uber.

Listen, I get that you like Uber.

But I PROMISE YOU:

Your drivers aren’t making enough to live. They aren’t. And they will continue not making enough to live because the people who are brave enough to sue for employee protections get bought off with settlements that don’t help the rest of the drivers.

So let’s put it this way:

None of your drivers, if you are outside Portland Oregon, are making enough to live, no matter what the service you use, unless it’s a surge night and you’re charged $300 and even THEN, the majority of that money is going to the man who developed the ap.

Stop defending it. It works really well for you, that’s great.

It is not working for the drivers. Trust me. I heard from them constantly. They are BEGGARED, and strategies like the introductions of thousands more into cities that are already flooded only cement the proof that the company doesn’t care about the drivers, it cares about profit.

So if it works for you that’s really great, but stop ignoring the fact that the workers across the board are getting screwed for your cheap ride.

Other points, as someone who doesn’t care much for cab companies but will defend cab workers being able to, well, survive:

  • Cab drivers generally don’t own their cabs, but rent them (thus leading, in part, to the massive fees they need to pay). Uber/Lyft don’t provide cars, and the ones they do rent– well, what’s the difference between renting from them versus the cabbie companies?
  • Cab drivers are largely immigrant and/or working class folk that work as cab drivers full-time and rely on the income. Uber/Lyft drivers don’t work on it full time: they generally have other jobs and are looking to make extra $$$, and in a large city, most of the folk who have cars also have $$$ (hint hint, gentrification).
  • Uber drivers practice “client poaching” (driving up to someone and going “Uber?” and said person possibly getting into the car before they realize this is not their ride. Not only shitty, but also extremely dangerous esp for women).
  • Not sure if they’ve changed it but up until Jan at least, Uber didn’t have a customer service number, and people accidentally calling (and suing) a design company regarding shitty drivers or poachers or whatever it may be and getting nowhere. So no, “Uber will take action” is false, bye.
  • Unless the state/city requires it, Uber (idk abt Lyft) cars are not required to undergo safety inspections, and even when required, it is a frighteningly basic “inspection” that consists of another Uber driver coming out to “inspect” the make/model/take pictures of the car and the licence plate, and getting paid $20 for it, a process that takes 30 minutes. (Hullinger). As opposed to cab drivers that, as stated, have to undergo: car/safety inspections, driving screenings, and their cabs abide by ADA regulations. 
  • Please trust me when I tell you that you want to make sure your driver can drive well, because taxi driving is one of the most dangerous jobs in the US  (and more so than for cops, but that’s a different convo)
  • Uber does not regulate their drivers as much as police them– you know, considering they’re trackable, even when not at work, and generate massive data for the company that folks aren’t compensated for? And no, Uber does not pay drivers “significantly more” and there’s a lot of info about Uber drivers not even making minimum wage. Also they dropped their rates even more recently. (Cassano)
  • Not sure why people favour Uber/Lyft over cabbies as ~well their money goes to rich people too~. Yeah. But only cab drivers and cab companies are regulated and have fees applied that Uber/Lyft drivers don’t have to abide by. Tax evasions aren’t very progressive tbqh.
  • No really, Uber/Lyft is directly aiding gentrification and it’s hurting people. Here’s an account by a cab driver why you should reconsider ride-share apps and how they aid gentrification.
  • Ultimately when it comes down to it, Uber= gentrification and it’s one thing to have to deal with shitty government policies regarding working as a cabbie (which they do, whoa, guess what! many of them are in unions and/or community organizers), but add gentrification, the loss of income, and additional racism and this becomes much worse.  

@socialjusticemunchkin this responds to many of your points and a bunch of other ones and also does yes have some philosophical differences.

I … I think for the most part you were agreeing with at least 70% of the above?

Like I think the main jut of the above comments was specifically against the “sharing economy” which denies that the workers it actively controls are. workers. that they exert control (and thus ought to have responsibilities toward) over. Which I think was the main point of your final paragraph?

Like, in order of what you said emphatically, then going back through the above posts for the points that you mentioned off-hand:

Accountability: This is a fundamental difference you have, whether being held legally accountable is more or less powerful than being held market-based accountable. (Given that, what is your opinion on the ADA and stuff? ‘Cause that seemed to work pretty well, no?…) (I also don’t quite understand why you think that because cabs are held legally accountable they won’t be held accountable by the market, too…)

Surge Pricing: I’ve seen arguments for and against it – I’m not convinced either way, and I also don’t think either of the above people are, on a moral level – but for the purpose of this context, that was only mentioned once in the above two posts, in a single fragment of a sentence, as a PS at the end. It was explicitly not a fundamental part of their argument. (Possibly a good way to handle it is with multiple companies, at least one of which has surge pricing, at least one of which doesn’t, all trying to win brand loyalty? Which… seems much more possible and fair with the multi-taxi-company apps like Way2Ride and Arro, than single-app-per-company stuff like Uber, Lyft, and Chariot.)

Employee vs. no: Uber actually specifically has a system (which they brag about) to create drivers without control over their means of production:
- Rode with a Lyft driver who also drives for Uber. His car is lease-to-own, paid via Uber. If he doesn’t make $350/week, his car won’t start. – sha
‏@shashashasha 6:47 AM - 17 Jan 2016

- http://ww2.kqed.org/news/2015/04/24/one-uber-drivers-story-how-he-was-trapped-by-auto-loan-program

I don’t know about Lyft, or the new one, but especially for something advertising itself as “Uber but ~Feminist~ in this one specific way”, I seriously don’t have much hope.

I’m pretty sure they would agree with you after only a small discussion about the medallions.

(Frankly, I think I’m a bit frustrated at Uber about this, because wow, you looked at this bleeped-up system and found out how to make a copy of it – without medallions propping it up – so much worse.)

Also, here’s an entire article about how no, Uber drivers are in very few ways their own independent contractors. Comes with a published academic paper and 9 months of collected data. Samples: “Uber’s system enforces blind acceptance of passengers, as drivers are not shown the passenger’s destination or how much they could earn on the fare.” “In order to remain active on the system, drivers must meet an average rating target that hovers around 4.6 out of 5 stars.”

So I think they would agree that there are advantages to not being an “employee” – just that the’re pretty sure Uber deliberately removes most of them.

Unions: Uber, at least, is VERY anti-union. I dunno about Lyft?

Um… okay this post got unfocused and I think I claimed I would keep a consistent argument throughout but I’m not sure I did. I’m ending this now.

Tagged: Uber is EVIL, (And I’m glad we all agree on that fact. And the disagreement is more ‘is their more than a single thing they might have done okay-ly’.).

(Joining the two threads for trackkeepability)

So first of all, Uber is evils georg and I don’t know how bad the situation is with the competitors, other than “less bad” but that’s once again best described as “burying the bar”. I’ve even heard that Uber has an easy time attracting talent because conservative douchebros find the rest of Silicon Valley a bunch of neotenic degenerates who aren’t douchebro-y enough while Uber has a sufficiently respectable and elitist “screw the poor” attitude for them. “Ridesharing” as an idea is excellent and if Uber etc. bust the cartels and then get replaced by better and less abusive alternatives it would probably be the ideal outcome. I don’t oppose fairly maligning things that need to be maligned as long as it’s not used to defend other things that need to be maligned just as well.

And speaking of maligning, that cab driver’s account in huffpost was…pretty much what one’d expect from a working-class cartelmember. Sympathetic, but terrible.

For cabbies to earn a decent living there has to be proper regulation of the industry. Too few cabs and the public isn’t served and too many and drivers can’t make decent money.

If there are “too many” cabs and drivers don’t make decent money, where do the drivers come from? Where do they go if they can’t be cab drivers? Whatever it is, it’s likely to be even worse than being a cab driver who can’t make decent money. (Unless there’s fraud or coercion, which Uber’s financing schemes seem to, unsurprisingly, be very good at. In fact, the financing is exactly as predatory as the medallion cabs’ in Toronto. That thing needs to be stopped with overwhelming force if necessary.)

The article basically says, “we’re poor, and should be allowed to have [disguised welfare]” and I don’t like [disguised welfare]. This would be solved by UBI (I’m starting to keep track of how many times I repeat my standard talking points of “UBI” and “liberalized zoning and better urban planning” (abbr. LZ) because I suspect they are going to come up a lot) so that everyone would make ends meet anyway.

Good jobs are scarce in this city for the working-class and driving a cab is one of those good jobs.

Good jobs are scarce, let’s maintain that scarcity, never mind those who can’t become cab drivers because they can’t get the medallions. Most of the customers are poor so they are effectively subsidized by the few who aren’t. UBI + LZ would help with the one-two of better income and lower housing costs. And unlike a cartel, it would also help those who aren’t cab drivers.

Then we get a broadside of binary politics and applause lights about how there are pros and cons and cons are bad and pros are good and pros must support regulation. As a lel I feel erased and marginalized and oppressed by this discourse, and this pro really needs to check his binary-political privilege. My eyes glazed over because there was no substance.

And then exciting words like gentrification! If 10 000 hipsters really want to move in to where 10 000 poor people live, they really can’t be stopped in any reasonable way. Hipsters are effectively a force of nature, an inevitable calamity, so it’s better that the neighborhood is rebuilt to accommodate 20 000 people so the original residents don’t need to move away just because hipsters move in. LZ, turn rent control into bostadsrett, etc. instead, and try to achieve a mix of classes and races which is the Objectively Correct Way to do cities because it leads to higher social mobility, better services for the poor and black people because they live where the rich and white people live and thus get rich white people services, and because the rich white people have more money they inject it into the local economy (the complaints about staffing bars with non-locals only are perfectly valid though, and I support voluntary initiatives to increase the diversity of workers in hipster bars and would participate if I ran a hipster bar and would pressure bars to participate if such a thing existed and I was a patron of an eligible hipster bar) which is better than poor black people being segregated in separate areas and economies with poor black people only. (If any city suffering from such issues wants to hire me as urban planning czar to experiment with cracking the question of how to replace regular gentrification with this kind of “hybrid gentrification” which could benefit the poor as well, I’m available.)

And then something about unions, and asfdgasfgd the current system is so broken. Right-to-work is bullshit, state-enforced collective bargaining is bullshit, everything in the current labor laws of apparently everywhere is bullshit. Let’s just introduce the UBI and erase most of the labor laws, let workers unionize and negotiate freely, let employers not employ if they disagree, and let someone else outcompete the troglodytes by offering something of actual value to then-inherently-consensual labor because people can just tell the employers to do something anatomically impossible if they don’t make a fair offer. And then something about local politics and “hail regulatory capture!” (total: 3 UBI and 2 LZ)

Okay, back to the rest of it. So Uber is terrible, treats workers like shit, news at eleven. So does the government. Everyone treats poor people like shit, except sometimes other poor people who know what they are dealing with, and I wouldn’t trust regulations a priori as not effectively treating poor people like shit exactly the same. The questions about safety etc. are not exactly lgbtq rights where the state just follows popular opinion and probably is a net negative, and I’m a fan of some things like ADA (or at least parts of it, not familiar with everything) because accessibility is awesome and at least California seemed to have made substantially more progress on that front than Finland, but those things can also be overdone. I don’t know the specifics of ADA requirements so I deliberately avoided commenting on that part.

Sexual assault is where the government obviously should be protecting people, but has proven to be relatively reluctant in practice, which is kind of what I’m referring to with the claim that the markets (broadly interpreted) are what actually deliver the outcomes. Unlike curb cuts and wheelchair ramps, sexual assault is one of those things that are disgustingly open to interpretation, so just banning it doesn’t help much if the actual de facto will to enforce it isn’t there. Cops are often not very cooperative, etc. so the standard tendency is to just sweep stuff under the rug everywhere. If there are actual credible methods for dealing with abuses, and not just a nominal complaint system, then great. But Uber still has the advantage of being inherently more capable of addressing them (because it tracks more data, while hailing a cab from the street is a hail mary in comparison); the same deal with driver safety, as they don’t carry money and riders are less anonymous.

Other regulations obviously sound superficially appealing to many, but my prior is to be skeptical, because often such things seem to devolve into mere barriers to entry with little actual content. At least around here a lot of certifications are basically paying some crony’s company to deliver a specified amount of lessons (which far exceeds the time an effective course would need, and still doesn’t really teach the material half as well) because it managed to lobby such a criterion. And then there’s the fact that there’s no way to avoid all tragedies; I do know that my utopia would have a steady stream of unfortunate fates because the harm from stopping people from having them is too great, and that’s terrible but I don’t pretend I can fix everything YGM. It’s easy to sweep the unfortunate fates under the rug with regulation, and thus we get things like the FDA which prevent spectacular bad things from happening, at the cost of creating far more bad things in a less spectacular form (I wouldn’t necessarily abolish it completely but I’d tone down the strictness a lot and accept that every now and then we’ll get a thalidomide or vioxx as the price of getting important things to the market faster; of course that’s probably impossible in a democracy because the voters would just vote back the regulations as big unspectacular tragedies are more politically viable than smaller spectacular ones, just ask anyone who’s gotten sick from the coal we burn to avoid scary ~nukular powaa~).

And I don’t consider taxpaying necessarily virtuous either; anyone who’s done the GWWC pledge has IMO a carte blanche ethically to do all the tax evasion they want because EA is so much better than the state. Bednets don’t shoot black people. There seems to be a “standard progressive fallacy” that if the tax is nominally paid by the employer it reduces the employer’s profit instead of the workers’ wages, which just isn’t expected in an elastic market; if you slap a tax of $20 on a thing costing $100 which initially is divided 50/50 with the worker and employer, I’d guess the prior for the actual outcome would be more like 40/40 once the market has adjusted, regardless of where it’s hidden. And once again there’s this “a real progressive is a socdem” thing which is really turning me off from progressivism even if I probably agree with many of the values regarding whether poor people should stay poor or not.

The situation with employee vs. contractor vs. fake contractor I agree with, and would definitely prefer to see an actual market instead of this bullshit, but I really think that there should be a better distinction; Uber isn’t evil because it has contractors instead of employees, it’s evil because it lies and calls its employees “contractors”, and this should be addressed properly so that a honest platform for independent workers wouldn’t be saddled with the fallout of re-designating Uber as an employer, because I’m kind of afraid that something along those lines might be a risk.

And surge pricing is very important, and it was called “fucking surge pricing”, so I kind of assumed that the writer of that part disagrees with me. I like flexible prices, I even buy my electricity by the hour (because I can’t buy it by the minute YGM) from Nord Pool Spot. Of course, the actual impact of optimizing my electricity consumption this way isn’t technically “worth it” but my kink is the great chain instead of the party whip (sorry, I simply had to say it) so it’s kind of a hobby and a cheap signaling effort to shift my consumption around the prices because I’m contributing! to! the! market!

Whether Uber is actually worse or just slightly less terrible than traditional cabs when accounting for the totality, not just the drivers (because being in a cartel can definitely be comparatively nice and distorts the data if the people who can’t get a job because of it aren’t accounted for) is not a question I can answer here right now because it would require scrutinizing a lot of data I don’t have. What I can say is that I could totally do better.

To the question in the tags: I do think Uber is doing relatively well (for a certain value of “well”) in many things; the things they claim to be doing sound good on paper and I think the actual problem is the inherent exploitability of a desperate workforce on a shitty market. As long as it exists unscrupulous companies will keep trying to find loopholes for exploiting, and patching the loopholes without addressing the core issues just creates a regulatory hell that leaks constantly and makes legislators and unions play a silly whack-a-mole that ends up whacking a lot of innocent people too. And this is what’s letting Uber get away with being evilness georg and not delivering what it promises, not the lack of enough regulations everywhere.

(via thetransintransgenic)

2 months ago · tagged #i'm only angry at the left because i care about the poor #this is a social democracy hateblog #the best heuristic for oppressed people since sharp stick time · 1,618 notes · source: clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead · .permalink


Anonymous asked: [prompt] Alexander Hamilton is brought back from the dead to fill in for Lin-Manuel Miranda

luminousalicorn:

(context)

“Alex, you’re on in five.  …You’re not in costume yet?”

“No, no, fetch that Muñoz character, or call back Miranda, I’ve been unavoidably -”

“…is that Wordpress.”

“I believe that is the name of the publication, yes.  Who designed this arrangement of the alphabet this device comes with - that will be my next post -”

“WHO GAVE ALEXANDER HAMILTON A WORDPRESS?!”

2 months ago · tagged #nothing to add but tags · 128 notes · source: luminousalicorn · .permalink


ilzolende:
“ chroniclesofrettek:
“ frosty-smosh:
“ iwantineedthebooty:
“ bronzewitch30928:
“ appropriately-inappropriate:
“ starcrossedcherik:
“ bootleg-firework:
“ shrinking-ulzzang:
“ rabid-logan:
“ barbie-isalive:
“ This is very important if...

ilzolende:

chroniclesofrettek:

frosty-smosh:

iwantineedthebooty:

bronzewitch30928:

appropriately-inappropriate:

starcrossedcherik:

bootleg-firework:

shrinking-ulzzang:

rabid-logan:

barbie-isalive:

This is very important if you’re ever in a situation similar this pretend that you’re dead don’t scream and @#!*%

my dad told us this if someone shoots up our school

SUPER IMPORTANT

BEST TIP

PLEASE REMEMBER THIS

not even a joke we learned this in Police Explorers and put it on your clothing as well but go quickly because you don’t know where the person is.

This is what school children in America are taught.
That is so wrong on so many fucking levels and there are still people who believe gun control in any form is a bad thing.

let me reiterate
SCHOOL CHILDREN IN A SUPPOSEDLY FIRST WORLD COUNTRY ARE TAUGHT THE SAME THINGS AS PEOPLE IN ACTIVE WAR ZONES BECAUSE THE THREAT OF BEING KILLED IN A SHOOTING IS SO HIGH.

the bit in caps here is making me rethink my stance on gun control 

shit

I’m reblogging this because as my follower count goes up, the odds of this saving a life do too.

My elementary school had drills telling us what to do in such an emergency. This is exactly what they told us. AND NOW FOR A FACT: IN CALIFORNIA YOU DO NOT HAVE TO REGISTER A SHOTGUN!

I live in America, and I was only taught to hide and be quiet. I had to learn this on Tumblr. If one more person says that technology is ruining children, they best shut the hell up because this could be saving lives

We had more lockdown drills at school than we did fire drills…

Being afraid of a thing is different than the thing actually being dangerous. 

School shootings are rare. Want to know what the most common cause of death is for teenagers? Car accidents. (Fix public transit enough that you can make more stringent requirements for drivers’ licenses and/or increase driver liability for accidents, please.)

“Look! All these people are freaking out and giving out advice for dealing with a problem!” does not mean that the problem is actually a big deal. If I start handing out flyers on how to handle superintelligent bioengineered rats, do they become a threat?

The First Rule of Outfreaking: the degree to which people get upset about something reflects the degree to which a single instance of it is spectacular, not the actual risk. Nuclear accidents, airplane crashes and school shootings are rare but get a fuckload of media attention so everyone spends ridiculous amounts of time and effort on them, while particulate pollution, car crashes and everyday bullying are far bigger problems but nobody gives a proportionate shit because they don’t make headlines. I’d be angry but I don’t have any right to expect better from mere humans.

(via ilzolende)

2 months ago · tagged #clockwork people #death cw #violence cw #blood cw #guns cw #humans being humans cw · 1,549,146 notes · source: laharl-sama · .permalink


Anonymous asked: by "too short" i mean that the page itself is too short. in terms of actual height. the result is that the captcha and "ask" button clip through the askbox, making them impossible to complete. as a matter of fact, i have found a way around this (audio captcha isn't as tall, and pressing tab gets you to the ask button) but it's rather annoying.

ilzolende:

deusvulture:

Huh, weird. Next time I’m on desktop I’ll see what I can do about that.

@socialjusticemunchkin your blog has the same problem.

I’ll look at it when I have time; will probably do a visual overhaul and update the “about me” as well. For now, blame the default settings of the theme because I haven’t fucked with it.

2 months ago · 6 notes · source: deusvulture · .permalink


leighalanna:

clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead:

Uber and Lyft and this new women only drivers service are all equally bad. I get that people are excited but let me just toss a few concepts out there:

Cab drivers, as employees (when they are employees which is not all the time luckily in pdx we have radio cab) are held to certain standards. If a cab driver harasses you, you can report him.
Cabs have to be ADA compliant.
Cab drivers have to make minimum wage.

There is a REASON cabs are more expensive and that reason, in Oregon at least, is that your cabby is making minimum wage.

This is not true of your uber driver, your Lyft driver, or your fancy new all woman driver but male owned service.
They are abusing the independent contractor system, as strip club owners are! to be falsely competitive in a market place they could never otherwise survive in and they are doing it at the expense of poor, vulnerable people, at the expense of cabbies, and at the expense of every other marginalised and misclassified worker because we are ALL in the same boat.

So no, I’m not excited that some man saw an opportunity to capitalize on the frequency of sexual harassment into making a niche for himself in an already exploitative market.
I’m not excited that he is donating 2% of his profits to charity–this serves the exact same purpose as a pink yoplait top: if you want to do good, do good; don’t disguise your consumerism and liking for a product behind false altruism.
I’m not excited that in a city already drowning in literally tens of thousands of underpaid drivers, there will now be one more.

And if you think women can’t be oppressive, shitty, hate on strippers and sex workers, and otherwise totally unpleasant, you’re dreaming. Especially once these women realise what a ferociously competitive starving market they’ve entered.

You better fucking tip 30%, is all I’m saying. And at that point, you might as well have taken a cab.

And there ARE alternatives, in more and more places – if you need to hail via your phone or pay with your card you can still support drivers that have to have accessible cars and have unions and are further down the road of creating reasonable working conditions and compensation for their drivers, you can use Way2Ride and Arro and quite a few others at this point, depending on where you are. And they don’t have fucking surge pricing.

Rideshare drivers could be held to the same standards if the rideshare companies wanted (aka. were forced by pressure from the public) to implement proper accountability. Cab companies can ignore reports that don’t have enough proof/social clout to get them in trouble with cops/social media, and at least Uber can reliably check who drove whom from its databases so abuses are inherently more investigable (and that’s why not taking sufficient action when they happen is even more damning).

Surge pricing is the best. I’m totally a fan of surge pricing, speaking as a person who has once hit a 3.1 multiplier. Supply and demand. I find it slightly ironic that a post simultaneously supports higher compensation for drivers and rejects it when it happens in its most natural form. Surge pricing gives the drivers extra compensation, to reward them for their work when their contribution is the most important. In fact, I get a slight joy from paying surge prices because it means that not only is the system working and probably making the waiting times a lot shorter, but also that I am paying the worker the fair price (some terms and conditions apply; “less unfair” is closer to reality) of the moment, not an unfair fixed rate that deprives them of the full value of their work. I ship free markets and economic fairness so hard.

Also, why has nobody mentioned the downsides of being an employee? Control over one’s means of production for example. Driving a cab is materially not that capital-intensive, so of course the System (I’m antropomorphizing it because this is one of the things that makes me angry enough to warrant it even if there probably isn’t such intentional malice involved) creates alternative barriers to entry to establish an owning class that can get free money from others’ work without needing to create any value (or comparable value) themselves. An assembly line worker can’t just save up a bit of cash and start their own factory, so they will remain bound to wage slavery and dependent on the local capitalist, but anyone with a car can start carrying people around unless something is done to stop it.

Enter regulation, to legislatively deprive people of the means of production even when they materially could control them pretty easily.

When one needs a medallion to drive a taxi, and the medallions are artificially scarce and thus expensive as fuck and thus probably owned by companies or rich people instead of the workers, the capitalists don’t need to fear competition. They just send the cops (their cops, it’s always the interests of the powerful that are protected and served first and foremost) to chase down anyone who doesn’t submit to vehicular serfdom in which the non-value-creating rentier class exploits the workers and slaps a little bit of socdem PR like minimum wages on top like a pink yoplait, and if challenged, fills the media with propaganda about how evil it is to only take 20% instead of $100 a day (yes, the taxi capitalists, propped up by the state apparatus of violence and nothing more, make the workers toil the equivalent of one and a half days of minimum wage before they get to keep a single cent to themselves; compared to that pure rent and exploitation, ridesharers’ 20% for something that actually creates value (as a customer, I’m willing to pay slightly more for the convenience etc.) seems downright saintly). When a permit to work costs a million dollars, the industry is inherently controlled by millionaires.

(Incidentally, this is also why I get immensely angry at anyone on the left who ever says the words “licensed brothels” because the rule #1 of communism is you never enclose the commons and licensed legalization is a fucking forcible enclosure act; decriminalization and deregulation is how one does not piss in the cereal of sex workers. Free sex workers are inherently in control of their own means of production, and only violence can take it away so why the fuck do so many leftists want to turn them from independent workers to brothel proletariat ausetdiuesideutoiuuhunao (that’s dvorak for “asdf…”))

As far as unions are concerned, my emotional reaction to them is quite… all over the place. Free unions make my brain go all solidarity! liberty! workers of the world unite! while the instant the state gets involved and enforces collective bargaining my brain does a 180 and starts screaming about leeches! and moochers! and redwashed rentiers! (”right to work” laws are just as terrible; I’m definitely not taking a knee-jerk “pro-business” stance); so I’m not exactly the most impartial observer to comment on them. But I’m not surprised that tomato pickers in Florida (left outside normal labor laws because redwashed rentiers always need a precariat beneath them to exploit) extracted concessions from even Walmart by voluntary organizing, using tactics that would be illegal for corporatist state-sanctioned unions; while stevedores in Finland get super-comfy wages and benefits because they can nuke the economy any time they want and labor regulations prevent them from being replaced with less extortionate and rentseeky laborers (and they still threw a hissy fit and nuked the economy a few years ago because they wanted their employers to pay them an entire years’ wages for zero work if they got laid off, despite being already entitled to 500 days [sic!] of state-mandated income-dependent unemployment insurance only the middle class gets because fuck the poor and precarious).

And obvious disclaimer: Uber is evil anyway. But it’s not evil because it competes with taxi capitalists, it’s evil despite competing with them. The obvious ideal solution is to cut out the middleman and create an independent, worker-owned-and-controlled system for tracking reputation, ensuring safety, processing payments and matching riders to passengers (and having surge pricing! surge pricing is important!), but even ridesharing corporations are actually doing a lot of things right and should be only fairly maligned, instead of unfairly.

(via thetransintransgenic)

2 months ago · tagged #free markets x fairness is my otp #the best heuristic for oppressed people since sharp stick time #i'm only angry at the left because i care about the poor #this is a social democracy hateblog #bitching about the country of birth · 1,618 notes · source: clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead · .permalink


2centjubilee:

I think I have thoroughly disproved the null hypothesis as to why my exercise was more difficult.  I actually let myself slack off for not multiple days but multiple weeks (the horror!) due to trying to extend my caffeine withdrawal further to reset my tolerance closer to “zero.”  Today, I started exercising again.  And I had commenced taking stimulants

On the balance exercise, I was as good as I had been at the top of my form, roughly, which wasn’t stellar, but… it wasn’t bad.  So the cause wasn’t food, or lack of practice…

It was the drugs.

My experience as well.

Most interestingly, ADHD meds turned my reaction to fatigue completely around. Previously even slight exertions of effort were like “I know I “””could””” do it if I just “””tried properly”””; it’s not a question of muscles but a question of willpower; but I can’t try properly and I know that a lot of people think I’m a shitty person because of it and scorn me and I’m going to cry”, whereas now I still might start that way (but not as badly as before) but after a few hours it’s turned upside down and I’m completely non-ironically endorsing corny fitness motivational slogans like “PAIN IS JUST WEAKNESS LEAVING THE BODY” (very much something I had not expected to ever find myself doing) so that at the end of a long bike trek my thoughts are basically a looping of one of those sites collecting the most over-the-top ones to make fun of them, except that I’m mocking the mockers by wearing it with pride.

I was not lazy or weak-willed like people tend to assume by default, just stimulant-deficient. Vices and virtues don’t exist. There is only chemistry (and electromagnetism), and those who don’t have the knowledge or opportunity to use it.

2 months ago · tagged #drugs cw #gfy cops i've got a prescription #clockwork people · 12 notes · source: 2centjubilee · .permalink


wirehead-wannabe:

ozymandias271:

I have come up with a WAY OF MEASURING CUCKS

The gram of our cuck-measuring system is the cuck proper: a small-penised unmanly white man’s white wife has casual sex with a manly large-penised man of a race white nationalists are insecure about, she gets pregnant and he raises the child, and he gets off on it because it is humiliating. This will be rated “1″. 

Things that participate to a degree in the Form of Cuck may now be ranked. For instance, using a sperm donor is about 0.2 cucks; supporting open borders is about 0.6 cucks (points have been subtracted for it being metaphorical). One may easily deduce which man is cucking which man, by carefully assessing which one’s cuck score is higher. Thus, we have settled such thorny issues as “if I’m poly but my husband’s dick is bigger than my boyfriend’s, who am I cucking?” (The husband, unless the boyfriend has spent at least $100 per extra inch on you.)

In rare cases, one may have over one cuck: for instance, if one has sex with the local cult leader one’s husband dislikes and then hangs around in a shirt saying “Harem Member of the Rightful Caliph” in order to annoy him, that would be at least two cucks. However, these extreme circumstances should be left to the experienced cuckologist, because of the danger they may pose to the unwary.

This is good, but I feel like habitual cucking should get more points than a single instance of casual sex.

Okay but a few important questions about cuckness levels that I can’t find the answer for anywhere:

If a trans woman has sex with a neoreactionary’s wife, is it less cuck (because women don’t count) or more cuck (because neoreactionaries see trans women as failed men and thus especially humiliating to be surpassed by)? How does the state and proportion of her genitals factor into this?

All in all, what is the relationship of penis size and cuckness? Does it invert in “non-legitimate” situations; is it extra cuck for a manly big-dicked guy to still fail to keep his wife monogamous, and supercuck if the guy cucking the husband has a micropenis?

If there is an inversion where the big-dicked husband is cucking the poly boyfriend, but the micropenised paramour is cucking the husband, can we construct a situation of exactly zero cucks for any given combination by manipulating the degree of legitimacy of the relationships?

How about gender and cuck? Is this strictly binhet only or is the model able to deal with bis and enbies? Is there an inflection point where enbies stop being counted as members of the gender everyone misgenders them as or is it roughly linear all the way? Or are there “uncanny valleys” of enbie cuck that are especially un/cuck; what kind of a fuction should we use to fit the graph? How is cuck counted for lesbians or gay men?

Is ability to theoretically/actually get pregnant/sire a spawn how significant? If a trans woman and a trans man have a genetic child together, how does the cuckulus work?

How do political views factor into cuck? In the standard measurement reference, what are the assumed opinions of the participants? Is supporting open borders still cuck if one is of a race white nationalists are insecure about? Can we get a thorough ordering of nationalities in order of cuckness; I know Sweden is first but which one comes next (for the sake of simplicity let’s just assume a median or mean representative of the populations)? How about ethnicities and religions? Is a white muslim convert more or less cucky than a syriac christian?

So many important questions.

2 months ago · tagged #cucked in the cuck by my own cuck #nsfw text #cissexism cw #racism cw · 51 notes · source: ozymandias271 · .permalink


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