LengAwaits

joined 2 years ago
[–] LengAwaits 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I appreciate your concern, and your candor.

I generally agree that life is worth living, and don't have any immediate plans to take the sort of drastic action you seem to be supposing. This is a good summation of my situation. I've been to therapy, and don't currently feel that it's needed. I'm doing well these days, overall, both economically and mentally. I've been dealing with my post-teen-angst depression for over 30 years now, and I choose not to medicate against it, as it's not solely the product of a chemical imbalance, but rather primarily a reflection of the material conditions of humanity at large.

As for humanity being worth saving... we'll just have to agree to disagree. I won't cheer on its downfall, or vote for accelerationism, but I've yet to see compelling evidence that humanity is valuable to anyone or anything but ourselves.

[–] LengAwaits 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

Why should anyone value what you have to say? Are you just here to expose us to your misanthrope?

I didn't ask anyone to value what I have to say. I'm here to express myself, just like everyone else. Sorry if I bummed you out.

Become vegan, you’ll feel better

No thank you. I've chosen a vegan diet in the past but it didn't make me feel better about humanity. Worse, even. My physical health suffered, too, so I don't want to repeat that experiment. I'm fine with my current flexitarian diet.

[–] LengAwaits 1 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Is a "right winger" who doesn't follow liberalism even a "right winger" at all, insofar as the term is used in modern US politics? Considering that without the central bird of liberalism there wouldn't be a need for the division into right and left wing. Maybe I'm off the mark, though?

[–] LengAwaits -2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (6 children)

There was a time, ten or twenty years ago, that I cared; When you could strum those chords on my heart-strings. I used to think that humanity was worth saving. That each human life had some inherent value.

Human life is not inherently more valuable than the cow that died to make the cheeseburger I had for dinner last night. It had a family, too, and probably did less damage to the earth than any of us humans can claim to have done.

I've lost patience with my species and their constant bickering and one-upsmanship. Endless competition is tired and trite. I'm bored of it. We're not each-other's enemies in any material way other than the ways we've created in our own minds, and with our own geopolitical and financial games. We're one species, and none of us are so valuable as we'd like to think. Frankly, at this point, I'd completely understand if I were one day killed by a foreign adversary intent on teaching my government a lesson. Without consequences, nothing matters.

I hate that this is what I've become, but it's the honest truth of how I've come to feel about us. I don't even know where that leaves me, but something's got to give. I'll hold on to hope, but I don't think we've got it in us to come together to save ourselves. We'll be fighting each-other even as the world burns around us.

[–] LengAwaits 1 points 2 months ago (8 children)

Exactly. Actions should never have consequences. That's how we maintain a free and fair society.

[–] LengAwaits 2 points 2 months ago

Wow. What an asshole.

I think the chip on your shoulder has a chip on its shoulder.

[–] LengAwaits 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Perhaps to you the saying is a platitude, but that seems subjective. To someone who hasn't considered the impacts of their consumption habits, or the ways that different economic systems can serve to reward different patterns of human behavior, it can be a thought provoking statement.

There is no ethical consumption.

If you view ethics as a binary, then sure. If you view ethics as a complex and nuanced spectrum, well, not so much.

Capitalism doesn’t encourage anything.

What a reductionist take, especially considering the paragraph you'd written just above it.

[–] LengAwaits 26 points 2 months ago
[–] LengAwaits 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

What will the incentive be for these supposed new manufacturers, who just spent a whole lot of money building factories, to offer significantly lower prices than what Americans will have already gotten used to paying by the time said manufacturers have been able to build out their production facilities?

Better yet; Why would these manufacturers even invest in building out these supply lines when they can't be sure that the next administration won't remove the tariffs? Seems like a risky investment.

[–] LengAwaits 7 points 2 months ago

https://www.backblaze.com/blog/the-3-2-1-backup-strategy/

This person lost 3 months of work because they couldn't be assed to backup their data despite having three months to do so.

Never trust an OS, or a piece of software, to protect you. Protect yourself.

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