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I like bickering about useless nonsense with people who most definitely will not be changing their minds. Yes, I know it's a waste of time. No, I don't plan on stopping.

🇨🇦 (He/Him)

  • Partly that, and partly the fact that the system rewards psychopathic attitudes and a machiavellian willingness to stomp on whoever you have to in order to get your way. It's the reason why CEOs and executives exude such a disproportionate level of anti-social behaviour.

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  • Damn, sorry I managed to hit a nerve I guess. Pretty crazy of you to compare Linux snobbery to literal racism lol.

    When did I ever imply Linux is "superior" to any other platform? You can use Windows, Mac, or Linux, and you shouldn't need to think twice about the "rightness" of your decision any further than what it means to you. There's nothing inherently wrong with any of those choices and they all have their own strengths and weaknesses. You seem to think that because I have a general preference and fondness for Linux and a distaste for multi-billion dollar corporations, that inherently means my opinion is stupid and wrong. Which is silly, obviously, and I'm sorry for thinking I didn't have to lay that out directly for you.

    Not once did I imply my opinion is unique compared to all the others, nor did I virtue-signal through the self-righteous "objectivity" of it. I like Linux, and you seem to have a seething hatred of its userbase which surpasses all reason and good faith. That's okay, but it's not okay to immediately lump me in with the annoying Linux users which seem to have made more than a large impression on you. People are not one-dimensional characters, not even the people you dislike so much. They all have their own reasons, experiences, and biases for treating things the way they do, which is why it's not okay to judge people based on cliches/stereotypes or even cognitively assign people to them. Ironically, those are both traits of those racists you seem to hate.

  • I mean in theory there could be (not saying there will be) and let’s not forget that until around WWII the Republican party was considered the “progressive” one. I think it’s more about them perpetuating the idea of having principles as opposed to them actually having the potential for any. They are eternal bullshit artists after all, they can just say they have the page without showing how empty the other side is.

  • It's baffling how it's been over twenty years at this point and still essentially no one with influence has ever heard of the Streisand effect before. Like they're obviously delusional, but it's like their brains are sucked into vacuums.

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  • So I'm not entitled to my opinion? It's a little disingenuous to act like I'm worshipping Linux when I literally just denounced that behaviour.

    I know it's a crazy thought, but people are allowed to appreciate creations on an emotional level. I'm not shaming you either way whether you like it or not, I'm just laying out some reasons for why people treat Linux the way they do. People are allowed to like their tools and the work put into making them, and so the same thing goes for any software.

    It seems to me like you're just having a hard time understanding that people tend to feel sentimental about their interests, which is what, y'know... Humans do. Your principles aren't universal imperatives. You're entitled to them, but you're treating them as objectively as any Linux snob treats their favourite distro.

    Funnily enough you're also not entirely consistent with your holier-than-thou attitude towards any biases. This whole back and forth started with you calling Linux boring and dumb, facetious or not.

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  • I agree that there's a lot of overexaggeration in the Linux sphere about how great it is (along with the snobs that come with it), but it's not entirely without merit either. Linux has a big emphasis on user choice and configuration, and it's pretty much the only OS in the world which can run on basically any machine that has the specs for it.

    It tends to go relatively underappreciated how big of an impact Linux has had and continues to do so in how diverse & ubiquitous it is, so it's not too surprising that insecure users tend to compensate by dunking on Windows/Mac and its users whenever they get the chance. That's not to say it doesn't have its shortcomings (it certainly does) but Linux is one of the few software creations that managed to maintain the majority of its principles over its lifespan without enshittifying itself. So there's also that moral factor which makes many feel justified in glorifying it.

    Overall I'd say it's balanced between being overrated and the rise of RNGesus. It's a great ecosystem to take part in (albeit with an occasional degree of confusion) and as long as you treat the Linux supremacist crowd as unserious (which they are when it comes down to it) there's really no reason to dislike it in general. Especially if you want to stick it to Microslop or Slopple :)

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  • Did Linus Torvalds sleep with your wife or something

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  • This made sense until the insinuation that intelligence and autism are mutually exclusive

  • That’s the thing though. The US is already a highly fascistic state and has been for more or less over a century. If we go over the standard criteria, there’s relatively centralized autocracy with the President, militarism which has pervaded American culture and politics for essentially its entire existence (especially apparent in globalized media such as Hollywood productions), suppression of opposition through shunning of any political ideologies left of the centre (clear in tactics seen throughout the red scare), belief in a natural social order with the working, middle, and upper classes, along with “undesirables” like the homeless and other marginalized communities, alignment of the economy with the state through the military-industrial complex, and explicit conditioning of individual identity to be aligned with the national one through the pledge of allegiance and US-centrism.

    The only thing that’s up in the air is the President’s status as a dictator, but I would argue that’s simply a result of the US government’s focus heretofore on soft power, i.e. focusing on diplomacy and relatively peaceful occupation as opposed to force or violence. The ability of the President to have such drastic effects on the economy and current policy is already tipping the scales against the non-dictatorship argument in any case.

    I’m not necessarily trying to make a call to action, that would be narrow-minded. I’m simply pointing out that real change on a societal level doesn’t truly happen until people realize things are getting desperate, and at that point the already long-standing problems were made a whole lot worse by believing they could be managed with less overt means.

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  • Coughing Baby (annoying YouTube popup trying to make me to turn off ad-block) vs. Nuclear Bomb (right-click block element with uBlock Origin)

  • Reading this comment makes me feel like I tuned into inter-dimensional cable

  • This should be in a Mad Libs at this point

    "If you ____ I have ____ to sell you"

  • The problem is that US politicians are not acting with voter's futures in mind, and the "progressive" ones & their constituents seem to believe that the only way things will get better is if they continue to bend the knee and cater to a constantly devolving status quo. Progress doesn't happen when you reduce your goals, and change doesn't happen without force. If reality doesn't account for you, you need to make it so. I suppose it's just a matter of it needing to get so bad that you realize the future was never promised to anyone to begin with.

  • And yet the illegal alcohol market boomed and it gave massive rise to organized crime and government corruption to allow it. It doesn’t “work” in any practical sense, it just concentrates the problem and makes it even harder to control.

  • They probably think the US prohibition didn’t work because they just didn’t try hard enough

  • Did you try the medicine drug?

  • Hi, I'm Trevor Moore. Did you know that it's illegal to say "I want to kill the President of the United States of America"?

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