The new live laugh love
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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The new live laugh love
by glass_museum on tiktok
pdf of the quoted essay by jeremy waldron
Can someone please write out what theyre saying? The closed captions on screen are too short and fast for me :(
I tried my best, here's what she says in the video:
Everbody wants third spaces until a homeless guy shows up. Now theres a lot of talk about third spaces for a reason. We need places to form community beyond just home and work, but that begs the question of who gets to be a part of our communities? You want more parks, more libraries but then you complain when these public infrastructures are, well public.
For the unhoused the importance of public spaces isn't just a matter of wanting somewhere to chill with friends it's a matter of existence and freedom. In his landmark essay "homelessness and the issue of freedom," Jeremy Waldron argues that the freedoms of the poor are dispraportionately restricted under the law since their material conditions coerce them into a state in which they must choose between survival and the violation of the law. He writes that freedom exists for the homeless "only to the extent that our society is communist."
Now before your redscare ass starts to hemmorage over the C-word let me explain, but first let's define our terms. Specifically let's distinguish between postive freedoms and negative freedoms. While postive freedom is the capacity to act according to ones free will, negative freedom is the capacity to act free from the coercion of others.
So things like loitering laws [and] public indecency violations though they apply to the rich and poor alike, they apply disproportionatly to those who posses no private property of their own and thus who exist solely in the collective space, and so while a homeless person may posses the positive freedom to, say, physically lay down in a park, they have their negative freedom restricted since they'll be forcebly removed for doing so, because of the regulations placed on public spaces that prohibit certain actions that are typically relegated to the private, like sleeping, pissing, showering.
All these actions are natural and necessary, and yet theyre prohibited in the public space. And this limitation is no problem for owners of private property, since the public is conceived of as being complementary to the private.
However, as Waldron notes, "This complementarity works only for those who have the benefit of both sorts of places" so if youre homeless you're stuck in a situation where you're forced to violate the law in order to survive, because in order to exist, one needs somewhere they can exist.
There's oftentimes a contradiction with how people consider the homeless if they even consider them at all, people don't want them pissing in the streets, but they also don't want them pissing in the Mcdonald's bathroom. People don't want encampments, but they also oppose the construction of affordable public housing.
There seems to be a desire for increased public life, but only a certain kind of public.
But if you want to advocate for community building then we need to reconsider who gets to be a part of our community.
Bought a car today just a shitbox to get around in and i was like man cant describe it but this car just feels kinda greasy like its a drug dealer looking ass car
So far ive found 3 secret compartments that im pretty sure are stock and i have a mystery switch i cant figure out what its purpose is
Idk why but as a kid I used to get hysterically upset everytime I would imagine a gif of a rotating cow because I could never stop the cow from rotating no matter how hard I tried and I would be crying and no one knew why
This is probably an unnecessary addition, but OCD is missed in cases like these because it's deeply misunderstood by most people.
It's talked about like being obsessively neat or repeating pointless tasks is the main part of it, when really those are just potential symptoms.
The main thing behind OCD is not being about to turn off a thought. There's a thing where most people can just stop thinking about something. If it's over, it's not relevant, it doesn't matter anymore, people can turn their attention away. For OCD, that mechanism can get stuck. And some thought that was supposed to just temporarily pass through your head just stays there. An image of an object rotating. An anxiety about something bad happening. A wish that you made on a dandelion. These are all things that have at some point gotten stuck in my head, sometimes for years at a time.
The compulsions, the rituals, are the person trying to address the thought so it can go away. After all, if you're worried about the door not being locked you can check the lock. But for someone with OCD, that doesn't make the stuck thought go away. So they check it again. And again. And they made a ritual, maybe if I check it exactly five times, I'll know that it's locked and I can let this worry go.
It helps a little. It feels like you're doing something. But it doesn't solve the problem. Actual therapy for OCD involves not doing the compulsion. Instead, you ignore the thought, move around it, try not to give it space in your life. Your mind won't let the thought go normally, so instead you fill yourself with other thoughts. Other parts of your life.
It's not easy at first. Your mind fights you on it. But as you get practice, it gets easier. You learn tricks around your own mind, ways to look at the thought and go, hm. I guess I'll go distract myself now. It does get better. I promise
OCD Heritage Post
15 April 2026 marked the 35th anniversary of the handing down of the final report on Aboriginal deaths in custody, yet the crisis has only g
The Minns government passed laws to crack down on Aboriginal youth in March 2024, this was followed by the Victorian government tightening youth bail in August. But it was the coming of the Finocchiaro government in the Northern Territory and the Crisafulli government in Queensland that same year that really resulted in some extreme and abhorrent laws to punish Indigenous kids. Yet, despite Thorpe continuing to call on Albanese to intervene at the national level to ensure minimum standards for kiddie prisons and the treatment of child inmates, the PM continues to feign powerless to do anything from the federal jurisdiction, when the Justice and Equity Centre released the expert advice of barristers last year, stipulating that the federal government could intervene. The Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung senator has even produced a plan to guide the PM in how he might carry out such a national justice overhaul, which would include a national oversight body, a framework of penalties for state and territories that continue to criminalise First Peoples, especially youth, along with legislated national minimum standards for child prisons and bail reform. “The Commonwealth cannot keep hiding behind the states and territories. The Albanese government has the power to legislate national minimum standards, to attach conditions to funding, and to force change, but Albanese refuses,” Thorpe made clear on 15 April. “At this point, after 35 years, we need to get back on the streets, start shutting down cities, and demand that these deaths are stopped,” the senator added in conclusion. “Every day of delay will mean more deaths, and those deaths will be on Albanese’s hands.”
Australia is still a colonial state.
15 April 2026 marked the 35th anniversary of the handing down of the final report on Aboriginal deaths in custody, yet the crisis has only g
The Minns government passed laws to crack down on Aboriginal youth in March 2024, this was followed by the Victorian government tightening youth bail in August. But it was the coming of the Finocchiaro government in the Northern Territory and the Crisafulli government in Queensland that same year that really resulted in some extreme and abhorrent laws to punish Indigenous kids. Yet, despite Thorpe continuing to call on Albanese to intervene at the national level to ensure minimum standards for kiddie prisons and the treatment of child inmates, the PM continues to feign powerless to do anything from the federal jurisdiction, when the Justice and Equity Centre released the expert advice of barristers last year, stipulating that the federal government could intervene. The Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung senator has even produced a plan to guide the PM in how he might carry out such a national justice overhaul, which would include a national oversight body, a framework of penalties for state and territories that continue to criminalise First Peoples, especially youth, along with legislated national minimum standards for child prisons and bail reform. “The Commonwealth cannot keep hiding behind the states and territories. The Albanese government has the power to legislate national minimum standards, to attach conditions to funding, and to force change, but Albanese refuses,” Thorpe made clear on 15 April. “At this point, after 35 years, we need to get back on the streets, start shutting down cities, and demand that these deaths are stopped,” the senator added in conclusion. “Every day of delay will mean more deaths, and those deaths will be on Albanese’s hands.”
Australia is still a colonial state.
When you thought it would be easy peasy lemon squeezy but it turns out to be difficult difficult lemon difficult.
Wait that’s actually really good, gonna pop this out of the tags
Does anyone have that post that made the rounds a while back thats had a link to an entire book of medival caligraphy (i think it might have been a song book) and all the drawings where like kinda horny or just straight up weird
I need it for reasons...
It was the songbook of zeghere van male
Still trying to track down the pdf
Does anyone have that post that made the rounds a while back thats had a link to an entire book of medival caligraphy (i think it might have been a song book) and all the drawings where like kinda horny or just straight up weird
I need it for reasons...
It was the songbook of zeghere van male
Still trying to track down the pdf
Does anyone have that post that made the rounds a while back thats had a link to an entire book of medival caligraphy (i think it might have been a song book) and all the drawings where like kinda horny or just straight up weird
I need it for reasons...
the version of you from five years ago would be genuinely amazed by what you’ve handled since then. sit with that for a second
new mug design. planning to add some colour to the flowers and such
colour ☑️
All my friends be getting engaged and its got me thinking i dont want a relationship i want a housemate that we sometimes hang out but mostly do our own thing and we fuck every now and then
Australia’s most famous soldier has been taken into custody over the alleged murders of unarmed Afghan civilians and prisoners.
Former army lawyer David McBride will soon face trial accused of leaking classified defence information. What does this say about Australia?
My aunties neighbours cat is being held for ransom
Who ever took him is asking for $40 for his safe return
Oh yeah, I've done stuff. That's good, you're halfway there.