wallacepolsom

@theartofmadeline

JVL
I'd rather be in outer space đž
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Sweet Seals For You, Always

izzy's playlists!
d e v o n
Not today Justin
Stranger Things

titsay
almost home

Discoholic đȘ©

Product Placement
we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”
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@joy-parade
economists really took the divine right of kings and turned it into billionaire CEOs
âitâs kinda fucked up to reject the business practices of jeff bezos when he rightfully earned his position under capitalismâ
âAbout twenty years ago, I attended a lecture by a Harvard professor who talked about how corporations operate like modern-day kingdoms. At one time, she said, people believed kings ruled by divine right, and today we seem to believe the same thing about corporations. Toward the end, she asked, âDo you know what it is that allowed people to let go of, overcome, and reject the notion of the divine right of kings?â I held my breath and got ready to take some notes. Her answer: âThey just stopped believing in it.â
- Frances Moore Lappé
psychological violence is violence.
Hey so the trolley problem is dumb because the real person at fault for any of the deaths is the person who designed the trolley without an emergency braking system, the people who put in the purchase order for a trolley without an emergency braking system, the people who approved a PO for a trolley without an emergency braking system, the people who delivered a trolley without an emergency braking system, the organization that inspected and certified a trolley without an emergency braking system,and the operator who did not make a huge stink about being assigned to a trolley without an emergency braking system.
Whether you pull the lever is irrelevant, because a whoooole mess of people fucked up for you to be in that hypothetical situation.
Seriously, like, as a professional engineer, I find the premise of the trolley problem offensive. Cause like, so many safety regulations have been violated that it's just... insane.
"But, Cody, what if there was an emergency braking system, and it failed?"
Failure to perform regular maintenance and inspection. So, it's still someone else's fault.
"What if maintenance and inspections were done correctly, and it still failed?"
Some engineer somewhere failed to design a failsafe with the necessary redundancies. Again, it's someone else's fault.
"What about sabotage?"
The saboteur is obviously to blame.
"What if it's just a freak accident?"
Once again there's that engineer failing to place redundancies.
"What if it was just an act of God, and the engineer and everyone else did everything right?"
Then God is to blame. Duh. Not sure why this is so hard to get.
Any accident investigator will tell you that an accident is caused by a chain of incidents, and there were always several places the disaster could have been stopped.
Trolley problems are just philosophers being cruel to their audiences.
I would look at whoever is tying people to trolley tracks. That might be the issue right there.
WITH BOTH THE LORD AND POLICE!! âđŸ
DRAG THEM!!!
Holy shit, Bernie just popped off on the Senate floor
the best moment in tv history
why canât people accept âthe media is over-hyping coronavirusâ and âcoronavirus is concerning given the lack of knowledge surrounding itâ are both true? like can I order some nuance
and also "stop panicking about dying because most deaths will be due to previous immunocompromisation" and "we should work to reduce the spread as much as possible to keep those immunocompromised safe" are both true
Canât qwhite put my finger on the problem Brits have with Meghan đ§
Different
âYouâreâŠdifferent. Iâve never met a girl like you.â
She stares at him, hands stilling over her sword. âWhat?â
âAll the girls in my village are so boring,â he says. âSo focused on finding husbands that they donât bother learning about the world.â
âGirls in your village arenât allowed to own property or vote,â she says, somewhat incredulous.
He winces at her tone. Need she be so harsh? âWellâŠitâs not like theyâve ever needed to, weâre a very progressive village and I always vote in favor of their needs. Youâre not like that though, you fight for your rights yourself.â
âThey are fighting for their rights,â she says. She sets down her sharpening stone, a frown stretching across her face. âNo voting, no property, no wages of their own to purchase necessities. Besides finding a kind husband, what else do you think they can do to find a good future?â
âTh-they could leave,â he says. He did not expect the conversation to go this way. He expected her to blush like she had when he complimented her sword skills. He finds himself oddly defensive. âThe men in my village arenât slavers. The girls can leave any time.â
She snorts. âOn foot? Your village is a hard, three day ride from the nearest city and thatâs by horseback. And, even if they made it, what skills do they have? What references? The risk is too high for any woman to leave, thatâs as good as trapping them. The fact that it takes me holding a sword for your opinion of women to change just shows how small-minded you are.â
 He bristles, unable to refute her. âLook, I was just trying to pay you a compliment! Thereâs no need to attack me.â
âTrust me,â she says, standing when he moves to loom over her. Theyâre of near equal height and, if he was trying to intimidate her, he fails. âYouâll know it when Iâm attacking you. This isnât it.â
He doesnât seem to hear her, flustered to be seeing her eye-to-eye. âFurthermore, I think Iâd know what sort of girls I grew up with! Theyâre timid and lack a desire to explore the world.â
âThe world you created for them doesnât take long to explore,â she says. Her sword is bare in her hand. âMarry or descend into poverty. Bear an heir or be cast into poverty. Behave or be thrown into poverty. I was there for a week and figured it out. But,â she continues, looking him up and down, âmaybe I shouldnât be so quick to judge. After all, youâve lived there your whole life and you still havenât figured it out.â
He splutters. âThatâs notâthere are other optionsââ
âWhen the revolution is done,â she says, coldly, âand your people are forced to give women rights, see how many stay and how many leave. See how many suddenly discover their wander-lust. See how many end up like me.â
She leaves him there and stalks off to the edge of camp. She leaves him there with his mouth opening and closing, and heart pounding in his chest.
She leaves him there with the unsettling realization that he doesnât want the women in his village to end up being like her, so different and strong. Because, if they did, where would he be? Where would his home be?
Itâs an upsetting realization to have, mid-revolution. No chance to back out now.