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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: January 8th, 2025

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  • Written terminations of contract are not accepted here. Please, bring your petition in writing physically to our offices located at the spot your house will be at 00:00 on Jan 1st, 2027. If this is unacceptable, it can also be delivered to our branch office in your cerebelum.






  • There is a reason you are saying each thing you are saying. Saying ‘but I would never order a banana split’ in this context has a different subtext than if you said it after watching someone else order one. I won’t re-explain it, because I was fairly clear, but yes, saying ‘I would never’ is an inherently judgemental negation of the supposedly non-judgemental ‘you do you.’ It is trying to claim both the stance of ‘I don’t judge,’ and ‘I am judging.’ It is a lie, either to the listener or to yourself.

    I don’t like liars, but I try to give people a chance to realize their mistake, if it is one, by explaining their error. After that, I have to assume idiocy or ill will. Whichever it is, goodbye.



  • Intelligence agencies will always try to gather more info, but they also love having private corporations do the legwork to get the data they can then just steal. Reducing private data collection would reduce government surveillance as well, or at least make the governments do it themselves which would make it subject to certain laws that are circumvented by having private entities do it.


  • The best working definition I have come up with is banning ‘one party giving payment, in the form of money, goods, and/or services, to a second party in exchange for the display of media to a third party, in specific or in general, who did not explicitly request to be shown that media.’ This would cover the vast majority of problematic advertising. And it’s absurd to pretend it has to be ‘done in one.’ If more laws need to be made to counter loopholes because the sociopaths in the marketing department refuse to get real jobs, more laws can be made until companies’ decision-makers realise how much the marketing department is costing them in fees and implementation relative to the imperceptible benefit of having them.

    Companies can still use their own spaces to display relevant product information. (i.e. factual, specific information on products that are present and being offered at the location of the informational media)

    Word of mouth, if not caused by coercion or compensation, is not disingenuous, so not a problem. If you really love Brand X so much that you want to let everyone know about it when you talk to them, great. That means it’s such a genuinely good product that you feel love for it. That’d essentially be the goal. If they have to pay you to praise it, it’s not a good product.

    Corporate personhood also needs to go, so no difference should be recognized between what a company does and what its proprietor does. The owner should not ask/allow their representatives to do things in their name for which they do not wish to be held responsible.

    As for ‘…companies showing a word of mouth…’ That’s going to need rephrasing.

    Trust me. I haven’t been just spouting off about how harmful advertising is without thinking about it. I already know it will make starting new small businesses harder, and I have considered loosening the rule to only apply to businesses with positive cashflow AND/OR with revenues over <some number, maybe 10>x the median wage. That would allow small business owners to have some leeway during their early days and scale with inflation/economic changes.

    Other than that, I’ve never heard any remotely sensible arguments against it. Advertising is like nuclear weapons. It pollutes the (information) environment around it and distorts people’s behaviour in all sorts of ways, and companies only need to have it because other companies have it. As seen with american tobacco companies when their ads were banned, it lowers expenses and people who want the product still buy the product. It’s a net benefit for everyone except for marketing firms, but so what? We didn’t keep putting lead in the gasoline just to keep the jobs in the lead mining industry.


  • I keep saying it: just ban advertising.

    They want to track what you buy to more efficiently manipulate you into buying what they want you to buy. The data would be almost useless if they couldn’t advertise to you, so they wouldn’t bother. Other places wouldn’t be able to monetize their spyware if advertisers weren’t buying. Political campaigns wouldn’t have even a use for millions in ‘donations’ if they weren’t blowing it all on advertising. It’s an entire multi-billion dollar industry built on lying to people for profit.



  • The point is, that’s a preference, not an innate ‘better,’ I generally use librewolf myself, but when the list of ‘problems’ with the browser is a set of optional things that you specifically have to turn on to experience, it’s kind of like saying pizza is bad because you don’t like pineapple, banana peppers, black olives, and chile flakes.


  • Woman: I am experiencing pain.

    Power: Bah, you’re just complaining because you’re a woman.

    Man: I too am experiencing pain.

    Power: Bah, you’re just complaining because you’re a woman.

    Transwoman: I too am experiencing pain. Hunh… Maybe I am a woman.

    Power: Nope, you’re just complaining because you’re a wom-, uh… man…? Er, wait… how do we patronize you? What the…?

    Transman: I also –

    Power: Stop! Just… Stop thinking and feed the machine that makes us powerful, damn it! Fuck’s sake, this was so much simpler when we could just claim divine right.



  • It’s not about me. It was never about me or some art that I don’t have. It’s about you and people like you, and the lies hidden in silence.

    The issue is not with the ‘you do you,’ but with the ‘but I would never.’ People only express the negation as applicable. You wouldn’t, for instance, say ‘I would never run backwards to Turkmenistan,’ because there is no reason to assume you would. If we all spent time saying the obvious negatives, we’d be babbling non-stop from waking to exhaustion. It’s more like the guy who says ‘I would never wear a dress.’ It doesn’t say openly that there’s something wrong with wearing the dress, but he wants you to know he’s not one of those lowly dress-wearers so badly that he’s going out of his way to say it. When you say ‘but I would never display such’n’such class of art,’ it is inherently a disavowal to place yourself apart from those who would. It is a signal, not silence. You can ignore the hypocrisy of your pretence, but it’s there regardless. The prejudice of the ‘but’ phrase is just as present in ‘but I would never’ as it is in whatever follows ‘I’m not a racist, but…’