An imperial agent, now centaur-ified >:D
Mike Driver
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Peter Solarz
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will byers stan first human second
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@sidran32
An imperial agent, now centaur-ified >:D
Emacs and its horrible ‘Exit’ key sequence
I use Emacs nearly every day for work and even personal projects. It’s one of my favorite text editors of all time. The sheer power that it has in its built-in functionality plus the easy Elisp scripting interface within it make it a programmer’s dream. But there’s one fundamental function that I absolutely abhor. It’s the default key sequence to exit the program: C-x C-c
For those that don’t know, that basically means while holding down the Control key on the keyboard you type, in sequence, ‘x’, and then ‘c’. I hate this key combo. It has made me exit the editor accidentally and lose my workspace far too many times. The reason is that such a large amount of basic functionality in Emacs requires a key combination that starts with the C-x (Control+x) key sequence. Since the ‘c’ key is right next to the ‘x’ key on any QWERTY keyboard, there’s been far too many instances where I accidentally hit the space between them, unintentionally triggering the exit command.
Fortunately, the aforementioned programmability of Emacs comes to the rescue, here! I’ve remapped the key sequence for ‘exit’ to be C-x x (Control+x, x). It’s similar enough and easy to press but I rarely find myself accidentally inputting this sequence. And when I do accidentally press C-x C-c, instead of exiting Emacs, it will print a message in the modeline reminding me to use C-x x instead.
I used this code in my ~/.emacs file to make this change. I figure others might find it useful as well!
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-c") (lambda () (interactive) (message "Use C-x x to close Emacs instead."))) (global-set-key (kbd "C-x x") 'save-buffers-kill-terminal)
I’m pro-life because...
I’m pro-life because:
I believe that life begins at conception and the intentional killing of unborn children who would have otherwise survived to term is wrong.
I believe that the mother undergoing an unwanted pregnancy needs compassionate care and should be provided resources to protect both the child and to protect the well-being of the mother, from medical support, financial support, social support, emotional support, and psychological support. Especially if the result of rape or other traumatic experiences. This also means allowing the mother to give up the child for adoption by another family if this is the best option available. And that those children who are in foster care, waiting for a family to come and take care of them, should be provided for. I believe that we should encourage more people to adopt children, especially in cases where infertility is present, yet the couple still desires to have kids.
I believe that life, after having been born, is still precious and deserves protection, nurture, and advocacy. This means that those who are unable to financially support themselves and their families should receive aid in all forms from the community and the state so that they may be able to live healthy, productive lives and gain self-sufficiency so that they may eventually be able to give back to those that helped them. This especially applies to those men and women who bring new children into the world but may not have the money and ability to care for them on their own without help.
I believe that access to quality education and vocational training is a human right and that all should be able to benefit from these services. I believe that denial of these services to individuals because of social class, financial status, or other reasons is morally wrong. I feel it is a contradiction to expect that people should lift themselves up out of poverty while at the same time denying them these resources, which enable them to do so.
I believe that capital punishment is a moral evil and is never justified, even in extreme cases. I believe that, while in the centuries past it may have been a practical solution for the protection of a community, we are now able to incarcerate and reform individuals effectively enough that it completely negates any practical necessity for execution. I believe that calls for execution as a punishment for crimes committed is always because of a desire for revenge, which is the antithesis of justice. I believe that, since the right to life is God-given, it is incredibly arrogant to presume that we have the right to revoke it because the individual did something that we, as fallible human beings, deemed socially unacceptable.
I believe that all people are valuable, even in old age. I believe that it is absolutely correct to honor those who have lived and experienced life for longer periods than I have because such experiences will have granted them wisdom, knowledge, and perspective that I may not have yet achieved or gained. I also believe that these qualities make them an invaluable resource for society and that any decision to end one’s life prematurely, whoever makes it, denies such respect and dignity for the person.
However, if death is inevitable, then it is selfish and cruel to attempt to extend it beyond its natural means. While this does not allow for the shortening of the life of the person, we should allow for the natural courses to occur, all the while ensuring that the individual is entirely comfortable until the very end. Preserving life also requires preserving the quality of life. While taking a life through intentional means is immoral, maintaining existing life so that it is as comfortable as possible for as long as it still exists is a great good.
I believe that when I engage in society with intent to practice these values, I cannot focus only on one and ignore any of the others. I believe that all of our actions should be directed in order to do the most good that is possible. So, while practicality may mean that I may not be able to promote all of these values immediately through public policy, I will try to achieve that which I can while continuing to advocate in support of the others so that we may eventually succeed with them as well. In addition, I feel that these are all interconnected values, and so we cannot rightly achieve one at the fullest while ignoring the others. In fact, if we neglect others by focusing only on one or two of them, we will likely make the situation worse, overall.
Why Affirmative Action Is Still Needed
Affirmative Action isn't necessarily "reverse discrimination". This relies on one or more of three arguably false premises:
1) That candidates that are racial minorities are less qualified than their white applicants,
2) That the school has to lower their standards in order to fill a quota of students of minority races and reject qualified majority race students as a result,
3) Or that the admissions process wasn't racially biased (intentionally or unintentionally) in any way already.
The reason that affirmative action and other reforms were introduced was because, as a result of the civil rights movement, it was found unequivocally that racial bias did exist and was deeply entrenched. This disproves assertion #3.
Assertion #1 or #2 are more benign on their face but once you look at them more deeply, reveal the reason why affirmative action and other laws combating racial bias need to remain. Underachievement by minority groups is a real issue that must be addressed, but when you are considering an applicant pool for a college, there is some self-selection taking place. Those that apply, we can assume, have a reasonable expectation that they might be qualified. Therefore, it would be safe to say that those applying have already overcome whatever social barriers there might have been to achieving academic success. As that difference has been eliminated, the only thing left is competition on the applicants' merits. This disproves assertion #1.
In addition, it is arguable that the colleges have more students that are qualified who apply than they have available slots (I can attest to this having been wait-listed when I was applying for college). This disproves assertion #2.
These two factors, that majority race and minority race applicants are on average equally qualified, and that they have more qualified applicants than positions to fill, mean that the college has already acknowledged each student and now must select from all qualified applicants a population that they would like to attend. At this point, they can use many other non-qualifying factors, such as personality and attitude (remember those essay questions on applications?) and demographics.
The intent of affirmative action is to remove unfair racial bias as a factor or method of discrimination. It was determined to be unfair discrimination already (see the paragraph about point #3), and so it was determined that a proper reparation would be to ensure that, if possible, colleges should give students of minority races equal representation and opportunity as those of white heritage. This is not a quota, but a directive to ensure that there isn't a pattern of race discrimination.
Fast food workers in NY just won a $15/hr wage. I’m a paramedic. My job requires a broad set of skills: interpersonal, medical, and technical skills, as well as the crucial skill of performing under pressure. I often make decisions on my own, in seconds, under chaotic circumstances, that impact people’s health and lives. I make $15/hr. And these burger flippers think they deserve as much as me? Good for them. Look, if any job is going to take up someone’s life, it deserves a living wage. If a job exists and you have to hire someone to do it, they deserve a living wage. End of story. There’s a lot of talk going around my workplace along the lines of, “These guys with no education and no skills think they deserve as much as us? Fuck those guys.” And elsewhere on FB: “I’m a licensed electrician, I make $13/hr, fuck these burger flippers.” And that’s exactly what the bosses want! They want us fighting over who has the bigger pile of crumbs so we don’t realize they made off with almost the whole damn cake. Why are you angry about fast food workers making two bucks more an hour when your CEO makes four hundred TIMES what you do? It’s in the bosses’ interests to keep your anger directed downward, at the poor people who are just trying to get by, like you, rather than at the rich assholes who consume almost everything we produce and give next to nothing for it. My company, as they’re so fond of telling us in boosterist emails, cleared 1.3 billion dollars last year. They expect guys supporting families on 26-27k/year to applaud that. And that’s to say nothing of the techs and janitors and cashiers and bed pushers who make even less than us, but are as absolutely crucial to making a hospital work as the fucking CEO or the neurosurgeons. Can they pay us more? Absolutely. But why would they? No one’s making them. The workers in NY *made* them. They fought for and won a living wage. So how incredibly petty and counterproductive is it to fuss that their pile of crumbs is bigger than ours? Put that energy elsewhere. Organize. Fight. Win.
Jens Rushing (via albinwonderland)
We’ve bought a new house. And our new next door neighbours (two delightful gentlemen) will not stop being nice.
- bought us a seagull proof refuse bag (yes, they are actual things)
- loaned us garden tools when we didn’t have any
- invited us around for Friday night drinks so we could meet the other people on the lane
- one of them brought me a bunch of sweetpea flowers that he’d picked from his garden
- and tomorrow he’s coming to cut our hedge for us with his electric hedge trimmer thing idk, and all I have to do is hold the ladder.
Basically, I am UNSETTLED and am now having to enter into an arms race of niceness and I am already so behind oh god.
Long story short - I just baked a lemon drizzle cake, and it looks great but I can’t even eat it because MR AND MR NICE MUST RECEIVE AN OFFERING.
ABSOLUTE CRISIS I GAVE THEM THE LEMON DRIZZLE AND THEN THEY INVITED ME IN TO HAVE A SLICE AND A COFFEE WITH THEM AND GAVE ME A TOUR OF THEIR HOUSE AND LET ME HOLD THEIR PUPPY. AND THEN THEY CAME AROUND TO HELP ME BAG UP THE HEDGE CLIPPINGS. THESE MEN ARE NICENESS PROS AND I CANNOT WIN.
HELP WE HAD AN HOUR LONG POWER CUT ON THE STREET AND IN THAT TIME THE OTHER MR NICE CAME AROUND WITH MATCHES AND CANDLES ‘JUST IN CASE YOU DIDN’T HAVE ANY’. IT WAS BARELY DARK.
BASTARDS - I’M GOING TO HAVE TO HOST A DINNER PARTY AREN’T I?
The Gay Agenda, everyone.
this is fucking i n c r e d i b l e
Gay marriage now legal: A Catholic response
So, in my last post I described my position regarding gay marriage becoming legal in the entirety of the USA through the Supreme Court ruling that banning it violates the Constitutional rights of gay people. I described that, I believe that this was inevitable and probably a good thing from a practical perspective. However, as a Catholic, I also hold the Catholic Church's position that God will only recognize marriage between a man and a woman, and that it is sinful for anyone to engage in sexual activity outside of that context. Of course this means that the idea of gay marriage cannot exist in Catholic theology. The Catholic Church in the United States, therefore, has to respond to this development in some way. And the only way it can is to reaffirm its beliefs and teachings.
No, the Catholic Church cannot change its position in this case. It is impossible for it to begin marrying homosexual couples. Marriage, as understood by the Catholic Church, is an institution that trancends nations or laws. It is the fulfillment of a fundamental human need, implanted by God when He took the rib from the first man, Adam, and created Eve, his wife. In the book of Genesis, chapter 2, verses 20 through 24, it says:
Thus Adam gave names to all the cattle, and all that flies in the air, and all the wild beasts; and still Adam had no mate of his own kind. So the Lord God made Adam fall into a deep sleep, and, while he slept, took away one of his ribs, and filled its place with flesh. This rib, which he had taken out of Adam, the Lord God formed into a woman; and when he brought her to Adam, Adam said, Here, at last, is bone that comes from mine, flesh that comes from mine; it shall be called Woman, this thing that was taken out of Man. That is why a man is destined to leave father and mother, and cling to his wife instead, so that the two become one flesh.
Now, this of course is very likely to be a metaphorical description, but I'll describe what the lesson here is. We have the first human being, who God, in having created him in His image, has destined a special place in Creation to act as His steward on the Earth. However, at first he was alone--without a mate. God wished that this first human did, so he separated part of His essence from this human and created this mate. As a result, we have the first man and first woman--the first husband and wife. In this action, God has precided over, in essence, the first marriage.
They are now separate, each containing a different aspect of God's image. Ultimately, though, since they originally were one, these two would therefore desire each other. This desire that draws a man and a woman together is what is fulfilled by the marriage. When a man and a woman comes together in this way, they become One, as stated in Mark 10:
God, from the first days of creation, made them man and woman. A man, therefore, will leave his father and mother and will cling to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.
So here we know that God has specifically designed the two sexes to complement each other and, in coming together, they create a new unit, espousing the full spirit of God and able to do God's works on Earth.
With this fundamental theological understanding underlying the Catholic understanding of who we are as human beings in relationship to each other, the world, and with God, we therefore cannot form any sort of Catholic understanding of marriage between two men or two women. Indeed, it makes no sense, because marriage implies a coming together of these opposite, but complementary aspects of God, represented in these opposite, but complementary human beings.
So when the Catholic Church talks about and teaches about marriage, it is focused specifically on this spiritual union. It is a supernatural union designed and intended by God from the very beginning--from even before the first sin had corrupted the world.
But here in the United States, and in most other countries of the world, the term "marriage" has also become a legal status. It is a term with a meaning that is also wholly distinct from any religious context. And it is this legal, non-religious marriage, that the United States Supreme Court has ruled on. Its order declares that this secular marriage must include people of the same sex and that they have the right to marry if they so choose.
The problem that arises from this, from the Catholic perspective, is it now (arguably even more than it used to, which I'll get into later) causes what the general public means when it refers to marriage to differ fundamentally from what the Church means when She refers to marriage.
The reason that the Church has been decrying the legalization of "gay marriage" so strongly is because of this particular confusion and discord in terminology and culture it results in. This institution that is understood to be so fundamental that its underpinnings go even so far back as the creation of the first human beings now becomes something that is less understood and appreciated in society.
I understand this and share this concern. However, I believe that this issue is not a new problem to the Church. Rather, I believe that the Church has perhaps missed (or not recognized the significance of) the actual turning point in history that eventually led to the understanding that gay marriage is a human right to be protected by the governments of the world.
That event would be the adoption of marriage as a legal status and something overseen by governments.
The Church is probably somewhat complicit in this happening. I am not a historian, but I do know that marriage, as a legally binding contract in the Christian world, goes at least as far back as when the King of a nation was appointed by the Church. This interweaving of Church and State created a muddlement of what is something that is governed by God and something that is governed by man. By turning marriage into a legal status, it shifted the responsibility of defining what marriage is to the heads of State, rather than God. This, then, removes the spiritual underpinnings of what a marriage is. Once the Church was broken away from the governing of nations, this legal institution of marriage was carried with it, and stripped of its spiritual underpinnings--becoming yet another secular contract between two people. It was only inevitable that the notion of who can enter in such a contract would change over time.
So the claim that the US Supreme Court has redefined marriage is true. However, the marriage definition that has changed has for centuries been outside the control and jurisdiction of the Church. Perhaps she never noticed it, or perhaps she didn't care quite so much, but the Church and secular Law never was referring to the same thing when they refer to marriage. They may have been outwardly similar. They may have looked the same. But the fundamental--the [i]spiritual[/i]--aspect which defines marriage in the Church was never present within a marriage by the State.
The legalization of gay marriage in this country, I believe, finally and in no uncertain terms drove this difference home. The problem we have, now, is that we have two things called marriage, two things that are drastically different, but are also fundamental issues of morality and human identity. The Church needs to address this if she wants to effectively continue its mission of catechesis in the secular world. The good news is that marriage in the Church can still exist as marriage by Law. She just now has to do a better job at teaching the difference, and the significance of it.
This, by the way, is why in my previous post I layed out what I believe would have been a better legal framework for managing the family unit. It described something that was flexible enough to cover what we have now, and what I believe it will evolve into the future, but also while avoiding much of the trigger issues that come up when people want to exercise their freedoms. It also allows the Church to do what it always has done and in a way that is not in conflict with the State.
[b]The Church must reassert what marriage is and what it means.[/b] But because of the shared terminology between two very different institutions, I believe that the Church is now forced into a position where she must change up its language. Simply saying "marriage" will inevitably cause confusion in this country. (I like the term "Holy Matrimony", myself.) The Church, therefore, should perhaps use more specific language in her common parlance, and avoid using the word "marriage" altogether. She should take care to never conflate secular marriage and Holy Matrimony.
The Church also should give up its legal authority to declare two people married under the State. I believe that this ability is somewhat in conflict with the concept of separation of Church and State as it is, and I also believe it is contributory to the problem of people equating Holy Matrimony with a marriage by a Justice of the Peace. If a Catholic couple would like to get married in this country, they should have a ceremony at Church with a priest to officiate it under God, but also be required to go to the local government to be declared married under Federal law. This is already done in some parts of Europe, and I believe it would be most appropriate.
I also think this would be important from the perspective of self defence against, I believe, the inevitable lawsuits we will see brought upon the Church in an effort to force them to marry gay couples, now that it is declared a human right by the Courts. Since the Church is acting with legal authority, there could be argued that the Church, acting as an agent of the State, is legally obligated to marry them. This argument would invoke the confusion of terms that I described above. The Church, in granting legal marriage status to couples, is implying that they are the same, and this creates a gray area where it is up to the courts and the strength of the arguments by both parties which right--to marry or of free religious expression--trumps the other.
If the Church absolves itself of the ability to declare two people legally married, then the ceremony becomes a purely religious exercise, and it eliminates this ambiguity. Any attempt to force a church to perform a religious service that has no legal authority, if it contradicts its religious beliefs, would be very clearly seen as an encroachment upon the Church's right to free religious expression by the government and could never happen.
Overall, I believe that while this is a setback for the Church in her mission to evangelize and catechize, it was somethign that was bound to happen. I think that ultimately it is making her job a little harder, but is not making it impossible or encroaching on her rights and ability to do it. The secular world has doubled down on its position and has further separated itself from the Christian understanding. The Church, in response, must do what it really has always done, more strongly and clearly declare her message of the Gospel and God's will for humanity. With love, understanding, and respect. Never condemning, but never faltering, either. In essence, I think that this should be a catalyst for the Church to do better in her mission than she has done in the past.
file this under the shit-load of under appreciated people who you never learn about in school
By fucking hand, bro.
you always hear about the first man on the moon but never this
Gay marriage now legal in all 50 US states
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/14pdf/14-556_3204.pdf
The Supreme Court ruled that homosexual couples now have the legal right to marry in all 50 states of the United States of America.
I predicted that this would eventually happen ever since Massachusetts legalized gay marriage and I saw the kinds of arguments made for and against. Honestly, the arguments for it had much better legal backing than against. The best arguments against gay marriage were religious in nature, and these arguments are not applicable in a country governed by secular Law. We are not a theocracy, and so we cannot base our legal decisions solely on the theology of a single religious faith.
Now personally, I am a Catholic. I follow the Church's position in opposition of marrying gay couples. I am also bisexual (leaning gay) so I find myself in the overlap of those two groups. It took me a long time to work out my position but at this point I am, as much as I can be, in line with the Church. I may find the idea of being married attractive, but I am not pursuing it. There's a lot that I could go into about this but I will not here.
I will say, though, that despite my religious beliefs, I also believe that gay marriage, as a legal right, was inevitable and is also the morally correct course of action for the country to take. Marriage as it is treated by the USA affords certain rights and statuses. These rights and statuses are designed with the understanding that the married couple are bound together for life, live together, and engage in joint legal ventures, and raise children together. This creates unique situations and challenges that only married couples tend to face. This decision allows for the protections and support that heterosexual married couples enjoy to be extended to homosexual couples as well.
Things like financial assistance, guardianship for children, visitation rights at the hospital, and being allowed to represent the spouse's interests in other matters, are now possible for gay couples as well. Tax statuses are also allowed, which provide a more fair financial treatment for gay couples, as straight couples already have.
So, I applaud those who now have this protection. My only disappointment is that it had to be done under the term "marriage". In fact, I think that this was inevitable, not simply because gay people should have these rights and privileges, but because the state had, centuries ago, decided to codify "marriage" into a legal status for couples.
I can only speak from my own Catholic understanding. But marriage, to the religious Christian, is a spiritual state, not just a legal one. It is the spiritual joining of two souls together. It is a spiritual state of being. Two people are now one, under God. When the religious ceremony of marriage occurs, a legal transaction simultaneously occurs in this country. So what you have is a spiritual ceremony combined with a legal ceremony. Those who get married in a courthouse only experience the legal ceremony. Those who get married at a church without state marriage certificates only experience the religious ceremony.
These two ceremonies resemble each other, but because the Church only has jurisdiction over the spiritual, and the State only has jurisdiction over the legal and secular, these are actually distinct and separate things. Those who have a religious marriage but not a state marriage may experience the religious obligations of what marriage is, but the state does not recognize it or protect their life situation. Similarly, those who have a state marriage but not a religious one, are not (in the eyes of the Church) afforded the rights given to married couples and are not spiritually bound to each other.
Because these are really two separate things, I believe that the State never should have called what it grants as marriage. I think that much of the debate over whether gay marriage should be legal has arisen because of this confusion in terms. Because, aside from calling it marriage, it really does grant two people things that are good for anyone who decides to live together and share a life together, whether it be romantic or not.
So, I believe that the State should've not termed it marriage, but rather instead created a process by which you legally declare a "household".
Households can be defined as those who maintain a permanent residence at the same address and maintain a guardianship or sense of shared social and fiscal responsibility to each other. This could compose of a traditional nuclear family, or it could compose of a single parent and their child. It could compose of a homosexual couple. It could be two parents, their children, and the children's grandparents. It could be two siblings. It could also compose of a group of adults living in a commune, a group of friends living together as roommates and supporting each other, or any other cluster of individuals who decide to live permanently with each other. It could even allow for polyamorous couples, if they so choose to live in such an arrangement.
The benefits of defining households, rather than affording "marriage" status is the flexibility it allows, but also in removing the moral implications of the status, which really are outside the scope of legal argument. In a household, one could declare any other adults as coequals, such that you could do all that spouses are allowed to do for each other in legal contracts. You could jointly open loans, own a home, raise children, manage each others' health needs, share income, and enjoy a tax status that recognizes their living situation. The personal relationships between the people can then be freely chosen by those involved, based on their own moral beliefs. The Church will still maintain its moral authority and can give guidance as to how people should maintain their relationships with each other and with God. The religious marriage status would easily fit into a legal household declaration. But it also would give people better freedom to create living arrangements that suit their needs. Perhaps two people would like to pool resources and share the burden of home ownership, and help care for each other. In our current system, this might require a marriage contract. In fact, this is not an uncommon reason people might get married. It is a "marriage of convenience". They may not love each other or wish to raise children, but simply want the financial stability such an arrangement affords. I even have family members who've done this, myself. However, this means that you then close yourself out of the possibility of entering a romantic relationship and getting married to them, if you might find yourself falling in love, down the line.
I believe that if we had this "household" arrangement, the issue of gay marriage would never have come up, because it wouldn't have had to come up. Gay people would have already, automatically been able to declare their same-sex partner as a member of their household and live together as a couple in the same way that opposite-sex couples would be able to. Whether or not they could get married would then fall strictly into a religious-only debate. Some churches may still decide that they want to celebrate same sex wedding ceremonies, and some may not. However, they all would be free to do so, as they are today, under the 1st Amendment's protection of our right to free religious expression. Religious groups would not feel as if their religious freedoms and beliefs are under attack by the government because the government would be making no declarations about marriage. Living arrangements are a morally-neutral issue. Rather, those religious could focus on the morally important issues of how we should interact and treat each other.
This kind of solution, I believe, would have been healthiest and best for our nation. Really, I think it would be best for any democratic, secular, free nation. Unfortunately, I believe that the cat has been let out of the bag, so to speak, when marriage became a legal status. I don't believe that the general populace will be willing to give up the language of marriage, even if it is only a legal status for them (perhaps with personal, but non-religious, significance attributed to it). The notion of marriage has a certain quality to it in our culture, which it gained because of the Romanticism movement. Historically, marriage was not always an issue of who you loved, but simply that legal status. But because it is now wrapped up with both religious and secular implications, it would be best if they were separate and distinct. Short of a major revolution, or even a new government being written up, however, I don't forsee it happening any time soon.
So this is the best we can do for now. Congratulations to all who now can legally wed!
On addressing poverty
The problem when trying to address how to reduce poverty today, whether it be via government assistance programs, raising the minimum wage, etc, is that people will push back against such things by declaring the problem isn't a lack of fair compensation, but due to some sort of moral failing on the part of the poor. Somewhere there arose the notion that being poor is a judgement of one's moral character and that they must be poor because they are not willing to do their part. This also implies that those with wealth have gained it due to a moral superiority in their character--that they are wealthy because they must have worked harder for it and have done something better than those who lack wealth. This may be true for some, but it is far from the full story. It would be long winded of me to quote statistics and numbers and anecdotes. These are easy to find. I cannot, either, claim to know the correct solution. However I do know that it is a grave mistake to buy into such moral judgments based on the size of one's paycheck. It is a lie spun by those who have wealth, in order to justify that they deserve to keep it. It also is a distraction. Rather than offering a solution to poverty, out simply lays blame. Money is not an unlimited resource. For someone to receive something, someone must lose that thing. Poverty is not a problem only for the poor, but also for the wealthy. If this excuse and accusation is allowed, it stops the ability of wealth to change hands and stagnates any potential for those that are poor to grow their resources, which are necessary to allow them to move towards sustaining their own higher wealth. Remember that none of us got to where we are today by our own power and only our own power. We all received resources and opportunities from others, given freely, so that we could make something of ourselves. Without those circumstances we may not have been able to get to where we are. We cannot build on nothing. Rather, we must have someone before us build a foundation on which we can build our lives. The poor, arguably and demonstrably, often lack these foundations, and as has been typical all through human history, those with wealth are loathe to give it up, and rather would use it to claim superiority over the lower classes. It is a caste system again, but based solely on material gain. We must look to those less fortunate and who lack the ability to pull themselves out of the cycle of poverty and offer them compassion and support. Do not judge them because they're poor. By doing so, you are laying judgement on your own character. It could be you in their position one day, even through no fault of your own.
Jeff Jackson, a young Democratic NC State senator is the only senator in the general assembly today due to the snow.
While in the shower, I might have had either a ridiculously brilliant or fundamentally flawed idea on how to design and build a self propelled, almost solid state, levitating autonomous robot. What freaks me out is the concept is so absurdly simple! I will have to work out some of the math to be sure that it might be possible with the kinds of weight it would be carrying from batteries and electronics and so forth. But if so, I'm going to have to grab myself a RaspPi and see if I can build a prototype. Holy smokes this is really cool! :-o
My fursona is a representation and reflection of myself, and does not live in a static time or alternate universe (aside from physically being a huskytaur, which obviously isn't the case in real life). Given that, I've recently been thinking about what if I went by my real, legal name in the fandom and associate it with my fursona as well. The idea of doing this appeals to me a lot (and would resolve my dilemma of what name to give to other furries when meeting and hanging out). But, making that change retroactive would be difficult. I would have to change references to my name in a lot of places and would have to inform the many people who know me as Pamiiruq. But I suppose the other option is to keep Pamiiruq as a pseudonym and default to my real name more. I haven't decided though. Just some things I'm musing over.
To love gives life. Life, for others. Belonging. Acceptance. Forbidden. Denied. A throbbing emptiness. To numbness brings death. The soul cries out to love. The soul cries out to live. For itself. For others. For you.
YES.YES.YES. People need to realise this
Hell Yes!
I feel like this needs to be shared with a ton of people.
Sorry for the color but i love this.