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PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Boil em, Mash em, Stick them in a Stew2·7 months agoUnpopular opinion: Instead of being a fighter for social justice, it could have been just some rando hitman hired by an even richer rival. Guy then was spirited away on the next private flight to Mauritius or wherever.
They’re selling spaying spray?
Maybe the guy sitting next to her was in the wrong bathroom.
They just started shooting “Tenet 2.” Proof: Look at the last few frames, the wheels of the car are rotating backwards.
Very well done!
Minor nitpick though, it’s “Telugu”, not “Telegu.”
Surviving in love, surviving in hate
We still have to die, there can be no escape
Clock in, clock out, forty hours a week
Our lives being spent with no real truth to speak(Sung by the guy who hung himself at age 40 to the sound of Sean Lennon’s “Into The Sun.” Don’t try this at home, kids.)
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•People outside the US, how do you feel US expats or exiles would do in your country or region?1·8 months agoIn tech, is there really a need, though? All of this year’s new hires I’ve met communicate exclusively in English. No-one cares.
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•People outside the US, how do you feel US expats or exiles would do in your country or region?1·8 months agoThe housing crisis is prevalent everywhere in Europe, though. But it’s not like droves of people have to sleep rough. Yes, rents keep going up, but they are still only a fraction of what you would pay in the US.
And you can actually still buy houses. Really cheap, even. Far off the highways, but some people opt in to exactly that.
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Mine was the fact that Anne Frank and Martin Luther King Jr were both born in 1929 😭4·8 months ago'Member that song “74-75” by The Connells? That was a big hit in the Nineties.
We’re now at 31 years after the release of this single and 49 years after the class of 1975 graduated.
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto memes@lemmy.world•Don't mind me, just reposting this today for no particular reason...11·8 months agoHard disagree. Else, there would never be any revolution, but history shows otherwise.
Or, as Marcuse put it, the prerequisite for radically rejecting something is not that you have to know what will come afterwards, but at first, you’ll enter a process of rejection of the existing situation and during this process of rejection, you’ll gradually free yourself from shackles and figure out what is to come next.
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•When I was a kid in the 80s, "computers will teach your kids in school" was one of those future utopia predictions. Now the thought of a computer teaching kids is horrifying to me.2·8 months agoAs you might remember, it used to be called “information superhighway.” As it turns out, not only does it make information flow faster from A to B, it also divides people that lie to either side of the road, in a metaphorical sense.
Required reading See especially figure 3b. TLDR: Increased information access and increased connections lead to more echo chambers.
It does. Because now somebody can jerk YOU off, and it won’t inflate your own score.
In a very traditional Afghan restaurant I used to frequent, if you ordered something really spicy, they’d bring you these small mint drops afterwards to chew on, no extra charge. Worked very well for me.
I remember this type of discussions and the exact same arguments on Reddit, or was it Digg, way back when. Classic rock then was Phish or Grateful Dead.
Well, as a result, I’ve never gotten into these two particular bands, but I did start listening to music that’s like 10 or 20 years older than the stuff I grew up with. In fact, only recently, I’ve gotten a record player and some vinyl records. Works great for lo-fi rock which is imperfect by design.
PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Be Wholesome@lemmy.world•This counts as wholesome, right?3·9 months agoYou might take the Q&A with Frank Lloyd Wright as a counterexample (abridged, emphasis mine):
Q: Do you think that you are at any less rebellious, less of a radical in your art and life than you were a quarter of a century ago, Mr. Wright?
A: Rather more so. Only more quiet about it. Warren McArthur, a very good friend of mine, once said to me, “Frank, hear, you don’t have to paint your shirt front red and stand out in the street and holler about this,” and I began to think it over and I think he’s right.
If it is right and if it is good and it is sound, it’ll defend YOU if you give it a chance.
Lloyd Lewis came to me once when I was rolling the reporters downhill in a kerosene barrel to get rid of them. “Frank,” he said, “these boys have to live. Don’t you understand that you’re bringing all this down on yourself just because you haven’t got the wit to be kind to them and to see that they’re sent out here to get something and if they don’t get it, they may get fired.”
He said: “It takes all kinds, Frank, to make a world.”
And so I began to give. Here I am, giving again.~~
Bear in mind that in this interview, he is looking back on a life full of accomplishments, and had to overcome strong headwinds at times. The other snippets on the page linked above can give you an idea of this as well.
The ham is the critical part here. It gives the pineapple juice something to work on.