cynar

joined 2 years ago
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[–] cynar 152 points 2 months ago (11 children)

The International Space Station. The sheer confusion value would be amazing, particularly if I stayed quiet about how it happened ("I went to bed, then woke up floating here. I've no clue how it happened").

I would get to cause a major incident of complete chaos, with little to no harm. I would get to experience space and weightlessness. I would also get a near guaranteed lift home (eventually). There's also almost no way it could be kept quiet, so I get to be a minor celebrity for a while.

[–] cynar 2 points 2 months ago

So how do you see deflation going then? Particularly deflation of the defacto reference currency for most of the world?

As far as I can tell, it would make the disruption of covid look like a minor market blip. And that's without looking into how the various chain reactions would play off and amplify each other on the global stage.

[–] cynar 36 points 2 months ago

They do have different uses, as well as "flavours".

E.g. if you end up in fairyland, you'd likely expect something more child friendly and whimsical. If you end up in the land of the fey, that's a far scarier prospect.

It's also akin to having different words for dwarf, elf, orc, and human. They are all big, with 2 legs, 2 arms and a head on top.

[–] cynar 5 points 2 months ago (3 children)

There's a difference between pumping the brakes and throwing a grenade into the fuel tank. A large scale economic collapse would be devastating. The world economy is so interdependent now that even minor disruptions cause problems.

I'm all for pumping the brakes, but we either need to stop gracefully, or have an alternative to jump to.

[–] cynar 11 points 2 months ago (10 children)

In our current economic model, any deflation creates a perverse incentive to not spend. It is extremely bad for the economy, and all of us reliant on it. The rich are one of the few groups that come out ahead (relatively).

Like it or not, we are all stuck on that merry go round. Until we find a graceful way off, it's in no-one's interest to jam it up.

[–] cynar 6 points 2 months ago

It's a balancing act. Push it too hard, and the dream collapses. Don't push enough, and you relax back into true sleep again.

Try and tweak 1 thing at a time. You'll also need to roll with the narrative. It's like improv, saying no is dangerous, it can leave the other party with nowhere to go. Always agree with their premise, bit add your own spin to it.

As for techniques, I've found dream checks to be most effective. You need to do it regularly, while away. This will make you also do it in a dream. Mine is to check my back pocket for "hammerspace" type capabilities. I will never have an AK47, or a giant mallet in my back pocket. When I pull one out, I know I'm dreaming. It also makes nightmares a non issue.

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

The side profile does not match the cartoon.

[–] cynar 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

There are use cases where long passwords could be problematic. 64 would be long enough for most purposes, but short enough not to cause issues for things like microcontrollers.

It should be paired with a strongly recommended larger value, however.

[–] cynar 2 points 2 months ago

Gender affirming care, for minors, is about 2 things.

  1. Helping them figure out what is actually going on.

  2. Stopping difficult or irreversible changes.

The first is exactly what you want. It's helping the children figure out exactly what they feel. It might also involve changing outward appearance (clothing etc) to see how it feels. Basically get their head straight with what they really want and feel.

The second is mostly puberty blockers. Puberty makes irreversible changes to the body. Blocking it doesn't do any harm. It's been used for decades to help with other conditions. When the blockers are removed, puberty proceeds normally. If the patient truly wants to transition, then an artificial puberty can be induced. This is far safer and more effective than surgery to fix things later.

No one is chopping up children.

[–] cynar 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

From memory, we are statistically more likely to be geniuses. Unfortunately we are also equally as more likely to be clinically insane.

[–] cynar 4 points 2 months ago

Give it a couple of grenades, and let it go out in glory!

[–] cynar 4 points 2 months ago

I know, first hand, how strong the illusion is, that depression causes. It's like having a mountain poised to avalanche down on you. You just want to escape, even if it's via extreme means.

The key is that it is still an illusion. It's a paper tiger, once you get a handle to fight it, it dissolves like mist. Most people who attempt suicide, due to mental health, are not dealing with a steady chronic condition. They are at a crisis point. If they receive appropriate help, clawing their way back is perfectly possible for most.

There are exceptions, but they are quite rare. I would bundle them with terminal illness, though proving that is a lot harder. It's also a balancing act between being OK with dying, and being of sound mind to make that decision.

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