you misunderstoood-- it's not different between instances. it's just not how lemmy blocks work anywhere on lemmy. it's a platform issue. different platforms on the fediverse like mastodon or pixelfed may handle blocks differently, but, regardless of the lemmy instance (or piefed or mbin which interoperate with lemmy), all blocks work the same way: they're one-sided.
oh, it's not an instance-based option. it's simply not how the service handles blocking.
Edit: there was a big debate about it several years ago, and the lemmy devs were pretty straightforward that they chose to make it this way for a reason and wouldn't be changing it.
That’s a different platform (mastodon in this instance, which has symmetrical blocking). I’m referring to Lemmy. I believe piefed and mbin do the same thing.
edit: the post discusses account portability-- while the block, itself, carries across federated services, how that block functions depends on the service itself. Lemmy/piefed/mbin and Mastodon blocks don't work the same way.
no, blocks don't work here like they do on reddit. a block only mean they you won't see them anymore. they can still see you and interact with your posts/comments.
well, sure. it's not even against Catholic Charities in general, but a specific attack against Catholic Charities in Miami - a huge voting district for him where, in the 2024 election, Trump brought in 55.2% of the county votes, while Kamala Harris logged 43.71%, an abysmal showing compared to 2016.
This is stupid because Catholic Charities isn't even part of the Catholic Church-- it's a USA-based charity organization that's happens to be Catholic. And while they have developed many associations with the Catholic Church both here and around the world, that's all they are: associations. The Church doesn't run the charity. It's an independent organization.
was the first season any good?